Toh 331
The Sūtra of the Moon (2)
ཟླ་བའི་མདོ།
Candrasūtra
zla ba’i mdo
Translator: Translated by the Pema Yeshé Dé Translation Teamunder the patronage and supervision of 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha
Read time: 4 min
Version: v1.0.5
The KangyurDiscoursesGeneral Sūtra Section
Summary
The Sūtra of the Moon (2) is a short text that presents a Buddhist description of a lunar eclipse. On one occasion, while the Buddha is residing in Campā, the moon is covered by Rāhu, lord of the asuras, which causes an eclipse. The god of the moon asks the Buddha for refuge, after which the Buddha urges Rāhu to release the moon. Seeing this, Bali, another lord of the asuras, asks Rāhu why he did so. Rāhu explains that if he had not released the moon, his head would have split into seven pieces. Thereafter, Bali utters a verse praising the emergence of buddhas. Besides being included in the Kangyur, in the Chinese Āgamas, and the Pali Nikāyas, The Sūtra of the Moon (2) was included in collections of texts recited for protection.