Skip to content
Currents Home

By JCS Editor – February 7, 2025

  • Announcements
  • Articles
Quick read

Special Issue Article

Supreme Patriarch Suk Kai Thuean’s Method of Visualizing the Elements

Currents Home

By JCS Editor – February 7, 2025

  • Announcements
  • Articles
Quick read

Special Issue Article

Supreme Patriarch Suk Kai Thuean’s Method of Visualizing the Elements

“Supreme Patriarch Suk Kai Thuean’s Method of Visualizing the Elements” by Potprecha Cholvijarn is a part of Special Issue 4: Philosophy and Contemplation in Tantric Buddhism, Guest edited by Yaroslav Komarovski.

Abstract: The paper aims to shed further light on the boran kammaṭṭhāna, or “old meditation,” tradition by providing a summary and an analysis of a meditation manual titled “Baep Doen That” (literally, “Model for walking the elements”) attributed to the Supreme Patriarch Suk Kai Thuean (1733–1822), the fourth Saṅgharāja of Bangkok, Thailand. It is a manual for advanced practitioners that consists of visualizations of the six elements (earth, water, wind, fire, space, and consciousness), plus citta (mind), represented by sacred Pāli syllables in eight verses, in order to achieve the eight supernormal knowledges and powers (vijjās). The eight verses, each verse aimed at developing one of the powers, are taken from the well-known Iti Pi So Eight Directions protective chant (paritta), a variation of the canonical Iti Pi So Bhagavā (Thus is the Blessed One) formula. The analysis of the manual incorporates the author’s interviews with Phra Khru Sitthisangwon (Wira Ṭhanāvīro) of Wat Ratchasittharam, the current lineage holder of Supreme Patriarch Suk’s meditation.

Keywords: boran kammaṭṭhāna, Iti Pi So Bhagavā, kammathan baep boran, Matchima Baep Lamdap, meditation, Pāli, Theravāda

Read the Article

Online Reader
PDF Download
DOI: https://doi.org/10.57010/KHKK6213

Contemplative Currents

Related Posts

  • Josh Brahinsky, Jonas Mago, Mark Miller, and Michael Lifshitz • October 23, 2025

    Two Paths, One Spiral

    Comparative Insights from Jhāna Meditation and Speaking in Tongues

    Jhāna meditation and the practice of speaking in tongues could hardly look more different. In jhāna, the body settles into stillness: quiet, seated, composed. From the outside, nothing stirs—an almost austere calm, cultivated through generations of Buddhist teaching that has…
  • JCS Editor • August 29, 2025

    Special Issue Announcement

    Special Issue #08: Contemplation in Education and Human Development

    The JCS Editors are delighted to announce Special Issue #08: Contemplation in Education and Human Development with guest editors Robert W. Roeser (Emory University), Brendan Ozawa-de Silva (Emory University), Yuki Imoto (Keio University), and Kimberly Schonert-Reichl (University of Illinois, Chicago)….
  • JCS Editor • August 29, 2025

    Special Issue Announcement

    Special Issue #09: Contemplative Computing

    The JCS Editors are delighted to announce Special Issue #09: Contemplative Computing, with guest editors Angela Orebaugh (University of Virginia), Alex Soojung-Kim Pang (Stanford University), and Gunter Bombaerts (Eindhoven University of Technology). This Special Issue invites scholars to explore the…

Related Posts

  • JCS Editor • June 5, 2025

    Special Issue Article

    Beyond Technical Fixes: Sufism, Contemplation, and Climate Change as Human Predicament

    “Beyond Technical Fixes: Sufism, Contemplation, and Climate Change as Human Predicament” by Muhammad U. Faruque is a part of Special Issue #03: Contemplative Ecology. Abstract: Building on the works of the Sufi philosopher Seyyed Hossein Nasr and the German sociologist Hartmut…
    Read more
  • JCS Editor • June 5, 2025

    Special Issue Article

    Love’s Deepest Abyss: A Contemplative Ecology of Darkness

    “Love’s Deepest Abyss: A Contemplative Ecology of Darkness” by Douglas E. Christie is a part of Special Issue #03: Contemplative Ecology. Abstract: “Love’s deepest abyss is her most beautiful form,” so claims Hadewijch of Antwerp, the great medieval Flemish mystic. This…
    Read more
  • JCS Editor • May 8, 2025

    Special Issue Article

    The Contemplative Mood of Nan Shepherd’s The Living Mountain: Toward an Embodied Ecocentric Epistemology

    “The Contemplative Mood of Nan Shepherd’s The Living Mountain: Toward an Embodied Ecocentric Epistemology” by Jared R. Lindahl is a part of Special Issue #03: Contemplative Ecology. Abstract: Nan Shepherd (1893–1981) was a Scottish novelist, poet, educator, and mountaineer. Her primary work of…
    Read more

Connect with us on social media

Instagram
Facebook

Copyright © 2025
Images credits


Published by the Contemplative Sciences Center at the University of Virginia
JCS ISSN: 3066-9030

Search

Subscribe

to updates through the Contemplative Forum.

Highlight

Contemplation +
What is Contemplation?

Filters

All Posts
Announcements
Articles
Events
Interviews
Op-Eds
Proceedings
Reviews
Special Issues

Submit

to Contemplative Currents.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.