Ribur Rinpoche described how Phabongkhapa met his root Guru: His root guru was Dagpo Lama Rinpoche Jampel Lhuendrub Gyatso, from Lhoka. He was definitely a
bodhisattva, and Pabongkha Rinpoche was his foremost disciple. He lived in a cave in Pasang, and his main practice was bodhichitta; his main deity was
Avalokiteshvara and he would recite 50,000 manis [the mantra,
Om mani padme hum] every night. When Kyabje Pabongkha first met Dagpo Rinpoche at a tsog offering ceremony in
Lhasa, he cried out of reverence from beginning to end. According to Ribur Rinpoche:Dagpo Lama Rinpoche would teach him a Lamrim topic and then Pabongkha Rinpoche would go away and meditate on it. Later, he would return to explain what he’d understood: if he had gained some realization, Dagpo Lama Rinpoche would teach him some more, and Pabongkha Rinpoche would go back and meditate on that. It went on like this for ten years. According to Rilbur Rinpoche, any of Phabongkhapa's anger "had been completely pacified by his bodhichitta." He would ask everyone in a line how they were and tap them on the head. Sometimes, he dispensed medicine. In his memoir of his root
Guru, Rilbur Rinpoche said: When he taught, he would sit for up to eight hours without moving. About two thousand people would come to his general discourses and initiations, and fewer to special teachings, but when he gave
Bodhisattva vows, up to ten thousand people would show up. The introduction to
Liberation in the Palm of Your Hand noted that: Pabongkha Rinpoche was probably the most influential Gelug lama of this century, holding all the important lineages of
sutra and
tantra and passing them on to most of the important Gelug lamas of the next two generations; the list of his oral discourses is vast in depth and breadth. He was also the root guru of the Kyabje
Ling Rinpoche (1903–83), Senior Tutor of the
Dalai Lama,
Trijang Rinpoche, and many other highly respected teachers. His collected works occupy fifteen large volumes and cover every aspect of Buddhism. If you have ever received a teaching from a Gelug lama, you have been influenced by Pabongkha Rinpoche. In Geshe Ngawang Dhargyey's commentary to the
Wheel of Sharp Weapons, he says: Likewise, Lama Trijang Dorje Chang, Junior Tutor to His Holiness the present Dalai Lama, folds his hands upon the crown of his head whenever he mentions Kyabje Pabongkha Rinpoche. He was such a great lama, unsurpassed by any, that hardly any lamas or geshes of the Three Pillars (the monasteries of Ganden, Sera and Drepung) had not been his disciples. In 1921, at Chuzang Hermitage near Lhasa, Pabongkha Rinpoche gave a historic 24-day exhibition on the
Lamrim, or "stages of the path," that was attended by around 700 people. About 30 lamas and reincarnations of lamas came from the three major monasteries in Lhasa, and many more travelled weeks from the Central Province, from
U-Tsang, and from as far away as
Amdo and
Kham. There were also many lay people present.
Rato Khyongla Rinpoche, who was present, noted: During that summer session, several traders and at least two high government officials found their lives transformed by his eloquence: they forsook their jobs to study religion and to give themselves to meditation. Zong Rinpoche said: Kyabje Trijang Rinpoche and Kyabje Ling Rinpoche were tutors to His Holiness the Dalai Lama. They taught His Holiness everything from basic teachings to advanced levels. Kyabje Phabongka passed all of his lineages to Kyabje Trijang Dorje Chang. He often said this in discourses. The purpose of this detailed exposition is to affirm the power of the lineage. If we lose faith in the lineage, we are lost. According to
Kyabje Zong Rinpoche: Once Kyabje Phabongka invoked the wisdom beings of Heruka’s mandala to enter into a statue of Heruka
Chakrasamvara. Heruka then offered nectar to Kyabje Phabongka and prophesied that seven generations of his disciples would be protected by the body mandala of Heruka. Kyabje
Trijang Rinpoche is cared for by Heruka Chakrasamvara, as are his disciples. ==Position on politics and religion==