Viśuddhacāritra | |
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Sanskrit | विशुद्धचारित्र Viśuddhacāritra |
Chinese | 淨行菩薩 ( Pinyin: Jìngxíng Púsà) |
Japanese | 浄行菩薩 ( romaji: Jōgyō Bosatsu) |
Khmer | វិសុទ្ធចារិត្រ (vi-sut-chaa-reut) |
Korean | 정행보살
( RR: Jeonghaeng Bosal) |
Tagalog | Bisuddhakaritla |
Tibetan | སྤྱོད་པ་རྣམ་པར་དག་ Wylie: spyod pa rnam par dag |
Vietnamese | Tịnh Hạnh Bồ Tát |
Information | |
Venerated by | Mahāyāna, Vajrayāna |
Religion portal |
Viśuddhacāritra ( Sanskrit: विशुद्धचारित्र; also known as Pure Practice), is one of the four great primarily or eternally evolved bodhisattvas mentioned in the 15th chapter of the Lotus Sutra. [1] [2] He is considered to represent the "purity" characteristic of buddhahood, "Nirvana's freedom from all that is impure." [3]
Viśuddhacāritra | |
---|---|
Sanskrit | विशुद्धचारित्र Viśuddhacāritra |
Chinese | 淨行菩薩 ( Pinyin: Jìngxíng Púsà) |
Japanese | 浄行菩薩 ( romaji: Jōgyō Bosatsu) |
Khmer | វិសុទ្ធចារិត្រ (vi-sut-chaa-reut) |
Korean | 정행보살
( RR: Jeonghaeng Bosal) |
Tagalog | Bisuddhakaritla |
Tibetan | སྤྱོད་པ་རྣམ་པར་དག་ Wylie: spyod pa rnam par dag |
Vietnamese | Tịnh Hạnh Bồ Tát |
Information | |
Venerated by | Mahāyāna, Vajrayāna |
Religion portal |
Viśuddhacāritra ( Sanskrit: विशुद्धचारित्र; also known as Pure Practice), is one of the four great primarily or eternally evolved bodhisattvas mentioned in the 15th chapter of the Lotus Sutra. [1] [2] He is considered to represent the "purity" characteristic of buddhahood, "Nirvana's freedom from all that is impure." [3]