Tripitaka, the Three Collections (sde snod gsum)
The three collections of the teachings of Buddha
Shakyamuni: Vinaya, Sutra, and Abhidharma. Their purpose is the
development of the three trainings of discipline, concentration and
discriminating knowledge while their function is to remedy the three
poisons of desire, anger and delusion.
The
Tibetan version of the Tripitaka fills more than one hundred large volumes,
each with more than 600 large pages. In a wider sense all of the Dharma,
both Sutra and Tantra, is contained within the three collections and
three trainings.
To
paraphrase Khenpo Ngakchung in his Notes
to the Preliminary Practices for Longchen Nyingtig: "The three
collections of Hinayana scriptures, namely Vinaya, Sutra, and Abhidharma,
respectively express the meaning of the training in discipline, concentration
and discriminating knowledge. The teachings describing the details of
precepts for the bodhisattva path belong to the Vinaya collection while
the meaning expressed by these scriptures are the training in discipline.
The sutras expressing the gateways to samadhi are the Sutra collection
while their expressed meaning, reflections on precious human body and
so forth, are the training in concentration. The scriptures on the sixteen
or twenty types of emptiness are the Abhidharma collection while their
expressed meaning is the training in discriminating knowledge. Scriptures
expounding the details of the samayas of Vajrayana are the Vinaya collection
while their expressed meaning is the training in discipline. The scriptures
teaching the general points of development and completion belong to
the Sutra collection, while their expressed meaning is the training
in samadhi. All the scriptures expressing the Great
Perfection belong to the Abhidharma collection, while their expressed
meaning is the training in discriminating knowledge."
Tibetan Kangyur
from the Glossary in Advice
from the Lotus-Born