Yana Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
- For the Native American Yana tribe see Yana (native American tribe).
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2 The one yana 3 The three yanas 4 The four yanas 5 The five yanas 6 The six yanas 7 The nine yanas 8 The twelve yanas 9 External links |
Origins of -yana: Vehicles and Paths
It appears that the distinction between vehicles and paths arises in early Mahayana sutras, such as the Lotus Sutra, where it is stated that there is one path - the path to Nirvana -, but there are different vehicles. In this sense, the vehicles are described as representing the fruit of three types of Buddha found in Nikaya sutras. For instance, in Chapter three of the Lotus Sutra, there is a parable of a father promising three carts to lure sons out of a burning building, where the goat-cart represents Sravaka-Buddhahood; the deer-cart, Pratyeka-Buddhahood; and the bullock-cart, Samyaksam-Buddhahood.
Yana has been used subseqently in a number of schematicizations of the Buddhist teachings in which there have been one, three, five, six, and nine vehicles.
This idea comes from the late Mahayana and refers to teachings contained in texts such as the White Lotus Sutra and the Avatamsaka Sutra which claim to unite all the different teachings into a single great way. Hence they are callled Ekayana which is Sanskrit for 'one vehicle'
Two different schema's of three yanas are used:
Firstly is the three yanas from the point of view of the Mahayana which paths to liberation as culminating one of three manners:
The one yana
The three yanas
A second classification came into use with the rise of the Vajrayana, which created a hierarchy of the teachings with the Vajrayana being the highest path. The Vajrayana itself become multilayered especially in Tibetan Buddhism.
The five yanas plus the Vajrayana. This schema is associated with Shingon Buddhism in Japan. It was invented by Kukai in order to help to differentiate the Vajrayana teachings that he imported from China in the early 9th century. Kukai wanted to show that the new teachings were entirely new.
The Nyingma school of Tibetan Buddhism has nine yanas, a list made by combining the first type of three yanas, and adding the six classes of tantras.
This is an Article on Yana. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Yana The four yanas
The four yanas are the two different schemes of the three yanas subsumed:
The five yanas
This is a Mahayana list which is found in East Asian Buddhism.
The six yanas
The nine yanas
The twelve yanas
See also: Hinayana, Mahayana, VajrayanaExternal links
