• Dear friends,

    At the request of our Mongolian students, Geshe la will be doing a Yamantaka Purification on Saturday, March 8, 2025 at 11am-1pm. This will be beneficial for the coming year.

    Yamantaka is the emanation of Manjushri the Buddha of Wisdom, This powerful ritual includes purifying, healing, pacification of all negativities and protection from negative elements.  This ritual is very effective for the sick, especially those who are suffering from strokes and mental anxiety.

    This event is open to the public and everyone is welcome to attend at no charge. Donations are welcome and gratefully appreciated.

    Thank you

    March Schedule

    The schedule is subject to change. Please keep checking our calendar for the most up-to-date event timings.

    2 MAR, SUN

    11am – 12:30pm

    Cancelled: Stupa Sangsol Prayers

    5 MAR, WED

    6:30 – 8pm

    Meditation and Tara Prayer

    8 MAR, SAT

    11am – 1pm

    Yamanaka purification

    9 MAR, SUN

    11am – 12:30pm

    Closed. Geshe la unavailable for Dharma teachings

    12 MAR, WED

    6:30 – 8pm

    Meditation and Tara Prayer

    16 MAR, SUN

    11am – 12:30pm

    Regular Dharma teaching

    19 MAR, WED

    6:30 – 8pm

    Meditation and Tara Prayer

    26 MAR, WED

    6:30 – 8pm

    Meditation and Tara Prayer

    30 MAR, SUN

    11am – 12:30pm

    Dharma teaching Q&A

    Continue reading →: Yamantaka Purification
  • Dear friends,

    To celebrate the Tibetan New Year (Losar) Wood Snake 2152, Jam Tse Choling Tibetan Buddhist temple (924 36 St. SE.) will be open on Friday, February 28, 2025, from 10am to 6:30pm. We invite everyone to join us in celebration of this auspicious occasion. Refreshments, including auspicious sweet rice and Khapze will be served throughout the day. 

    Thank you 

    Continue reading →: Losar Tashi Delek
  • Events subject to change, check the our calendar for the latest schedule

    9 FEB, SUN

    11am – 12:30pm

    • Regular Dharma teaching
      • twelve links of dependent arising

    1:30 – 2:30pm

    • Tibetan Language class 4/6
      • subscripts

    12 FEB, WED

    6:30 – 8pm

    • Meditation and Tara Prayer
      • 20m meditation followed by Tara prayer

    16 FEB, SUN

    11am – 12:30pm

    • Regular Dharma teaching

    1:30 – 2:30pm

    • Tibetan Language class 5/6

    19 FEB, WED

    6:30 – 8pm

    • Meditation and Tara Prayer
      • 20m meditation followed by Tara prayer

    23 FEB, SUN

    11am – 12:30pm

    • Dharma teaching Q&A

    1:30 – 2:30pm

    • Tibetan Language class 6/6

    26 FEB, WED

    6:30 – 8pm

    • Meditation and Tara Prayer
      • 20m meditation followed by Tara prayer

    28 FEB, FRI

    10:00am – 6:30pm

    • Losar Open house
      • The Temple is open for the day for visitors to come for Tibetan new year

    Previous teaching summary

    Feb 2 key points:

    Buddha’s three turnings of the wheel of dharma: 

    • First Turning at Varanasi: Focused on the Four Noble Truths, taught at a basic level for those with less developed understanding
    • Second Turning at Vulture’s Peak: Focused on emptiness, addressed those with sharper intelligence
    • Third Turning at Yangpa Chen (Skt. Vaishali): expands on emptiness with the true nature of all phenomena

    Touched on the four tenets, their major scholars, and their relation to the three turnings of the wheel

    • chedrak mawa (Skt. Vaibhāṣika; Tib. བྱེ་བྲག་སྨྲ་བ་) – first turning
    • Dodépa (Skt. Sautrāntika; Tib. མདོ་སྡེ་པ་) – first turning
    • semtsam pa (Skt. Cittamātra; Tib. སེམས་ཙམ་པ་) – second turning
    • uma pa (Skt. Mādhyamika; Tib. དབུ་མ་པ་) – all three

    Geshe la explained how these teachings led to four main schools of Buddhist thought, with particular focus on two major divisions: 

    • Theravada (using Pali language) 
    • Mahayana (using Sanskrit) 

    This division isn’t based on different groups of people, but rather with Mahayana practitioners being more focused on others’ liberation, while Hinayana practitioners focus primarily on self-liberation. 

    The talk then detailed the stages of the Mahayana path: 

    • Realizing bodhicitta (enlightened mind) and becoming a bodhisattva
    • Progressing through the paths:
      • Path of Accumulation 
      • Path of Preparation 
      • Path of Seeing (first bhumi/level) 
      • Path of Meditation (leading through remaining levels)

    The two main types of obscurations that must be eliminated: 

    • Afflictive obscurations (eliminated by 7th level, leading to arhat status) 
    • Cognitive obscurations (worked on from 8th-10th levels) 

    Geshe la used the metaphor of cutting down a tree to explain that merely praying or wishing for liberation isn’t enough – one needs the right tools (wisdom understanding emptiness and bodhicitta) and must actively work to eliminate obscurations. 

    Continue reading →: February Schedule

Our events are open to the public and free of charge.

Events are open to attend in-person, and are often cast on Zoom.

Our resident teacher is available for private consultation by appointment.

Our Address:
Jam Tse Cho Ling Tibetan Buddhist Temple Calgary
924 36 St SE
Calgary, Alberta   T2A 1B9
Canada

Phone:
587-434-4011

Email:
contact@jtclcalgary.ca

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  • Tibetan word of the day: ལྷན་ཅིག་བྱེད་པའི་རྐྱེན་

    ལྷན་ཅིག་བྱེད་པའི་རྐྱེན་

    co-operating conditions

    Spelling (jorlok; Tib. སྦྱོར་ཀློག་) and pronunciation:
    ལྷན་ – la ha-tak hla na hlen
    ཅིག་ – ca gigu ci ga cig (chik)
    བྱེད་ – ba ya-tak ja drengbu je da je
    པའི་ – pa a gigu i pe
    རྐྱེན་ – ra ka-tak ka ya-tak kya drengbu kye na kyen
    hlen chik je pe kyen

    From class, we discussed results that do and don’t use the
    co-operating conditions of soil and water, such as a tree and fire, respectively.


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