
In
Vajrayana Buddhism, the Ādi-Buddha () is the "First
Buddha" or the "Primordial Buddha".
Another common term for this figure is
Dharmakāya Buddha.
The term emerges in
tantric Buddhist literature, most prominently in the
Kalachakra.
[Buswell, Robert E.; Lopez, Jr., Donald S. (2013). ''The Princeton dictionary of Buddhism''. Princeton: Princeton University Press. . Entry on "ādibuddha".] "Ādi" means "first", such that the Ādibuddha was the first to attain
Buddhahood.
"Ādi" can also mean "primordial", not referring to a person but to an innate wisdom that is present in all sentient beings.
In Indo-Tibetan Buddhism
In
Indo-Tibetan Buddhism, the term Ādibuddha is often used to describe the Buddha Samantabhadra (in
Nyingma),
Vajradhara or
Kalachakra (in the Sarma schools).
[Wayman, Alex; The Buddhist Tantras: Light on Indo-Tibetan esotericism, page 53.]
There was also a tradition in India which saw
Mañjuśrī as the Ādibuddha, as exemplified by Vilāsavajra's commentary to the ''
Mañjuśrīnāmasamgīti.'' Vilāsavajra states in his commentary:
The gnosis-being Mañjuśrī is not the '' bodhisattva'' who is the master of the ten stages (''bhumi''). Rather, he is the non-dual gnosis (''advayajñāna''), the perfection of wisdom (''prajñāpāramitā
A Tibetan painting with a Prajñāpāramitā sūtra at the center of the mandala
Prajñāpāramitā ( sa, प्रज्ञापारमिता) means "the Perfection of Wisdom" or "Transcendental Knowledge" in Mahāyāna and Theravāda B ...
'') itself.
According to Anthony Tribe, this tradition may have influenced the Jñānapāda tradition of ''
Guhyasamāja'' exegesis, which places Mañjuvajra (a tantric form of Mañjuśrī) at the center of the ''Guhyasamāja'' mandala.
In the Nyingma (Ancient) School

In the Nyingma School, the Adi-Buddha is called Samantabhadra (Skt.; Tib. ཀུན་ཏུ་བཟང་པོ་, ''Kuntu Zangpo''; Wyl. ''kun tu bzang po''). Nyingma art often depicts this figure as a naked blue Buddha. According to
Dzogchen Ponlop:
The color blue symbolizes the expansive, unchanging quality of space, which is the ground of all arisings, the basis of all appearances, and the source of all phenomena. The absence of robes symbolizes the genuine reality beyond any dualistic, conceptual, or philosophical clothing. That is the dharmakaya buddha: the genuine body of absolute truth.[Dzogchen Ponlop (2003). ''Wild Awakening: The Heart of Mahamudra and Dzogchen,'' p. 180. Shambhala Publications]
According to Jim Valby (a translator of the ''
Kunjed Gyalpo Tantra''), in the Nyingma school's
Dzogchen
Dzogchen (, "Great Perfection" or "Great Completion"), also known as ''atiyoga'' ( utmost yoga), is a tradition of teachings in Indo-Tibetan Buddhism and Yungdrung Bon aimed at discovering and continuing in the ultimate ground of existence. ...
tradition,
Samantabhadra ("All-Good") is not a
God but "our timeless Pure Perfect Presence beyond cause and effect." In Nyingma, Samantabhadra is also considered to be the source of all Dzogchen teachings.
The ''
Kunjed Gyalpo Tantra'' calls Samantabhadra the "All-Creating King" (Tib. ''Kunjed Gyalpo''), because all phenomena are said to be manifestations or displays of Samantabhadra. According to
Namkhai Norbu, this does not mean there is some being called Samantabhadra that creates the universe, instead what it refers to is that all things arise from "the state of consciousness Samantabhadra, the state of
Dharmakaya." In this sense, Samantabhadra is seen as being a symbolic personification of
the ground or basis (''ghzi'') in
Dzogchen
Dzogchen (, "Great Perfection" or "Great Completion"), also known as ''atiyoga'' ( utmost yoga), is a tradition of teachings in Indo-Tibetan Buddhism and Yungdrung Bon aimed at discovering and continuing in the ultimate ground of existence. ...
thought.
Namkhai Norbu explains that the Dzogchen idea of the Adi-Buddha Samantabhadra "should be mainly understood as a metaphor to enable us to discover our real condition." He further adds that:
If we deem Samantabhadra an individual being, we are far from the true meaning. In reality, he denotes our potentiality that, even though at the present moment we are in samsara, has never been conditioned by dualism. From the beginning, the state of the individual has been pure and always remains pure: this is what Samantabhadra represents. But when we fall into conditioning, it is as if we are no longer Samantabhadra because we are ignorant of our true nature. So what is called the primordial Buddha, or Adibuddha, is only a metaphor for our true condition.
Karl Brunnhölzl states:
Longchenpa's ''Treasure Trove of Scriptures''...explains that Samantabhadra—one of the most common Dzogchen names for the state of original buddhahood—is nothing other than the primordial, innate awareness that is naturally free, even before any notions of "buddhas" or "sentient beings" have emerged.
In Dzogchen thought, there are said to be five aspects of Samantabhadra.
Longchenpa explains these as follows:
* Samantabhadra as teacher: "Means that all buddhas while residing in the forms of the
sambhogakaya and the
dharmakaya in ''
Akaniṣṭha'', promote the welfare of all sentient beings through sending forth countless emanations to all the distinct realms of those to be guided."
[Brunnhölzl, 2018, p. 18.]
* Samantabhadra as ground: "Is the
dharmata of all
phenomena
A phenomenon ( : phenomena) is an observable event. The term came into its modern philosophical usage through Immanuel Kant, who contrasted it with the noumenon, which ''cannot'' be directly observed. Kant was heavily influenced by Gottfried W ...
— suchness. This is also called "Samantabhadra as nature".
* Samantabhadra as adornment: "The appearance of all phenomena, which are self-arising as the play of the bearers of the nature of phenomena. This consists of all that is completely pure, in that its nature is illusory."
* Samantabhadra as awareness: "self arising wisdom, the sugata heart," i.e. the
Buddha-nature
Buddha-nature refers to several related Mahayana Buddhist terms, including '' tathata'' ("suchness") but most notably ''tathāgatagarbha'' and ''buddhadhātu''. ''Tathāgatagarbha'' means "the womb" or "embryo" (''garbha'') of the "thus-gone ...
described in the
Uttaratantra.
* Samantabhadra as realization: "The fundamental basic nature. Through realizing it well, the eyes of freedom are found. This is also called "Samantabhadra as the path."
In the Sarma (New Translation) Tradition
Vesna Wallace describes the concept of Ādibuddha in the
Kalachakra tradition as follows:
when the Kalacakra tradition speaks of the Ādibuddha in the sense of a beginningless and endless Buddha, it is referring to the innate gnosis that pervades the minds of all sentient beings and stands as the basis of both samsara and nirvana. Whereas, when it speaks of the Ādibuddha as the one who first attained perfect enlightenment by means of imperishable bliss, and when it asserts the necessity of acquiring merit and knowledge in order to attain perfect Buddhahood, it is referring to the actual realization of one's own innate gnosis. Thus, one could say that in the Kalacakra tradition, Ādibuddha refers to the ultimate nature of one's own mind and to the one who has realized the innate nature of one's own mind by means of purificatory practices.
The ''
Guhyasamāja Tantra'' calls Vajradhāra (the "
Vajra holder"),
the Teacher, who is bowed to by all the Buddhas, best of the three vajras, best of the great best, supreme lord of the three vajras.
Alex Wayman notes that the ''Pradīpoddyotana'', a tantric commentary, explains that the "three vajras" are the three mysteries of Body, Speech, and Mind, which are the displays of the Ādibuddha. Wayman further writes:
Tsong-kha-pa's ''Mchan-'grel'' explains the "lord of body": displays simultaneously innumerable materializations of body; "lord of speech": teaches the Dharma simultaneously to boundless sentient beings each in his own language; "lord of mind": understands all the knowable which seems impossible.
According to the
14th Dalai Lama
The 14th Dalai Lama (spiritual name Jetsun Jamphel Ngawang Lobsang Yeshe Tenzin Gyatso, known as Tenzin Gyatso (Tibetan: བསྟན་འཛིན་རྒྱ་མཚོ་, Wylie: ''bsTan-'dzin rgya-mtsho''); né Lhamo Thondup), known as ...
, the Ādibuddha is also seen in Mahayana Buddhism as representation of the universe, its laws and its true nature, as a source of enlightenment and karmic manifestations and a representation of the
Trikaya.
In East Asian Buddhism

In
Chinese Esoteric Buddhism, and in Japanese
Shingon, the Ādibuddha is typically considered to be
Mahāvairocana.
In Japanese Shingon, the terms Primordial body (''honji-shin'') and
Dharmakaya principle (''riho-jin'') are used to refer to the Ādibuddha. It is also associated with the letter A, the first letter of the
Siddham Alphabet, and is seen as the source of the universe.
Meanwhile, in the Japanese
Amidist or "Pure Land" sects,
Amitabha Buddha ("Amida") is seen as being the "Supreme Buddha" or the One Original buddha (''ichi-butsu'').
The
Lotus Sutra states that
Sakyamuni Buddha is the "Eternal Buddha." This was the view of
Nichiren, and of some modern
Nichiren Buddhist schools. However, the
Nikko-lineage, specifically the
Soka Gakkai
is a Japanese Buddhist religious movement based on the teachings of the 13th-century Japanese priest Nichiren as taught by its first three presidents Tsunesaburō Makiguchi, Jōsei Toda, and Daisaku Ikeda. It is the largest of the Japanese ...
and
Nichiren Shoshu, regard Nichiren himself as the Ādibuddha and dispute the contentions of other sects that view him as a mere
bodhisattva.
In Vaishnavism
In the Medieval Orissan School of
Vaishnavism,
Jagannath was believed to be the first Buddha
avatar of
Vishnu, or Adi-Buddha; with
Gautama Buddha and
Chaitanya Mahaprabhu being further incarnations of the Buddha-Jagannath.
Gurus of
Gaudiya Vaishnavaism argue that epithets for the Buddha like
Sugata Buddha and Adi Buddha refer to the 9th avatar among the
Dashavataras of Vishnu, who was a different person from Gautama Buddha, based on
Amarakosha and other Buddhist texts.
See also
*
Kulayarāja Tantra
*
Divine presence
*
Sanghyang Adi Buddha
Sanghyang Adi Buddha is a concept of God in Indonesian Buddhism. This term was used by Ashin Jinarakkhita at the time of Buddhist revival in Indonesia in the mid-20th century to reconcile the first principle of the official philosophical found ...
*
Vairocana
*
Gautama Buddha in Hinduism
Citations
General and cited references
* Brunnhölzl, Karl (2018). ''A Lullaby to Awaken the Heart: The Aspiration Prayer of Samantabhadra and Its Commentaries.'' Simon and Schuster.
*Grönbold, Günter (1995)
Weitere Adibuddha-Texte Wiener Zeitschrift für die Kunde Südasiens / Vienna Journal of South Asian Studies 39, 45-60
*Norbu, Namkhai; Clemente, Adriano (1999). ''The Supreme Source: The Kunjed Gyalpo, the Fundamental Tantra of Dzogchen Semde.'' Snow Lion Publications.
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