Thursday, June 9, 2011

六波羅蜜 Six Paramitas ཕ་རོལ་ཏུ་ཕྱིན་པ་དྲུག་


'Good man, the Bodhisattva, Mahasattva, takes prajna-paramita as his mother, clever expedients as his father, dana-paramita as his wet-nurse, sila-paramita as his foster mother, the paramita of patience as his adornments, the paramita of vigor as his nourishment, and dhyana- paramita as the one who cleanses him.'
(EDR VIII 132)


The Buddha knows the hearts of living beings, And each of their different natures, According with what they ought to receive, In that way he speaks the Dharma.


For those who are stingy, he lauds giving.
For those who break the prohibitions, he praises the precepts.
For those with much anger, he praises patience.
For the lazy, he lauds vigor.
For those with scattered minds, he praises dhyana-concentration.
For the stupid, he praises wisdom. . . .(FAS Ch10 )


施波羅蜜 Generosity (Skt. Dana-paramita); selfless and impartial generosity; also translated as Charity


戒波羅蜜 Discipline (Skt. Shila-paramita); observance of the ethical regimen; also translated as Morality

忍波羅蜜 Patience (Skt. Kshanti-paramita); patient endurance of difficulties;; also translated as Forbearance

精進波羅蜜 Energy (Skt. Virya-paramita); zealous energy in perseverance; also translated as Effort

禪波羅蜜 Meditation (Skt. Dhyana-paramita); mindful absorption in meditation

般若波羅蜜 Wisdom (Skt. Prajna-paramita); wisdom of transcendent insight, to understand the inner principle of all things

Often, four more Paramitas are added:

十波羅蜜 - Ten Paramitas - ཐབས་ལ་མཁས་པ།

方便波羅蜜 Skillful Means (Skt. Upaya-paramita); also translated as Expedient Means

願波羅蜜 Vows (Skt. Pranidhana-paramita) To make and uphold vows especially the Four Great Vows -- including the vow to realize full enlightenment - Bodhicitta

力波羅蜜 Manifestation of The 10 powers (Skt. Bala-paramita) To perfect the Ten Powers

智波羅蜜 True understanding of all dharmas (Skt. Jnana-paramita) to realize omniscience (the simultaneous ultimate perfection of non-dual compassion and wisdom


The six paramitas are mentioned and explained in many of the most important Indian sources, such as


[SOURCE]
Rigpa Wiki

Meditation On Buddha Shakyamuni


Prepare for this meditation by doing a few minutes of breathing meditation (focus your attention on your breath) to calm your mind. Then bring your attention to the suffering that all sentient beings undergo: the sufferings of heat and cold, hunger and thirst. Just as you experience many sufferings, remember that all mother sentient beings experience suffering at least equal to--if not greater than--your own. Determine to undertake this practice in order to awaken your own buddha-nature, quickly attain enlightenment and lead all other sentient beings to that same state of permanent, lasting happiness.

Visualization
The visualization of Lord Buddha is composed entirely of light, not mundane materials. In the space before you, at the level of your forehead, imagine a jewel-encrusted, golden throne. Each corner is supported by two snow lions with white bodies and turquoise manes and tails; these are the embodiment of bodhisattvas. On the flat surface of the throne is a fully opened lotus; this is symbolic of the awakened mind, arising from the mire of samsara. On the petals of the lotus are the flat disks of the sun and moon which serve as cushions for the Buddha, representing the Buddha's realizations of emptiness and bodhicitta. On the moon disk sits Buddha Shakyamuni.

Buddha's body is made of golden light. He is seated in the "full vajra" or lotus posture. He is dressed in the robes of a monk which do not actually touch his body, but are separated from it by about an inch. His face is very serene and beautiful; each hair on his head is individually curled to the right, not mingling with or touching others; his ear lobes are long; and his eyes are slightly opened.

His left hand rests in his lap in the meditation pose, holding a begging bowl, filled with nectar. The palm of his right hand rests on his right knee and his fingers touch the moon disk upon which he sits; this symbolizes his great control over anger, attachment and ignorance.

Taking Refuge
From your heart, recite the refuge prayer and visualize that streams of golden-white light radiate from the Buddha's body in all directions, blessing you and all sentient beings.

You may also visualize texts of Dharma teachings on thrones near the Buddha which emanate with the sounds of the teachings contained in them. Imagine teachers you have read or heard seated on similar thrones around the Buddha.

Imagine also that you are surrounded in space by all sentient beings in human form; your father and male friends and relatives are seated on your right; your mother and female friends and relatives are seated on your left; those you don't know and call "strangers" reach out to the vastness of space; those you call "enemies" are seated between you and the Merit Field of the Buddha, Dharma and Sangha, symbolic of anger in our mindstreams that separates us from feeling loving-kindness toward all beings and hinders our advancement to full buddhahood.

Imagine that you lead all these sentient beings in reciting the refuge prayer three times:

I take refuge until I am enlightened
In the Buddhas, the Dharma and the Sangha.
Through the positive potential I create by practicing generosityand the other far-reaching attitudes,
May I attain buddhahood for the benefit of all sentient beings.

Requests and Inspiration
From your heart, generate the request to the Buddha that he grant you inspiration to follow the path to full enlightenment; make this request on behalf of all living beings who are trapped in samsara.

Rays of light stream from the figure of the Buddha before you. This light enters your body and quickly removes all negativities, obscurations and hindrances, freeing you to progress quickly on the path. Imagine that this light flows not only to you, but to all living beings situated in space around you. Imagine that they all receive such inspiration and blessings as you recite the name mantra of Shakyamuni Buddha as many times as possible.

tayata om muni muni maha munaye soha

The Blessing of Body, Speech and Mind
Imagine that rays of light stream from the crown of Buddha's head to your crown; this light purifies the negativities of your body and removes the hindrances to attaining the enlightened body of a Buddha.

tayata om muni muni maha munaye soha

Rays of light then stream from the Buddha's throat to yours, pufifying the speech that communicates clearly to all sentient beings, regardless of their level or capacity.

tayata om muni muni maha munaye soha

Finally, rays of light emanate from the Buddha's heart and enter your own heart center. This light purifies the negativities of your mind and remove hindrances to the awakened, omniscient mind

tayata om muni muni maha munaye soha
Imagine that these light rays flow to all sentient beings, helping them to quickly reach a state of supreme awareness.

Maintain this visualization for as long as you can, reciting the mantra quietly to yourself or aloud and imagine that the light continues to stream from the Buddha to you and all sentient beings. Imagine that nectar accompanies the light and nourishes you completely, such is the nature of the Dharma.

Absorption
Imagine that the teachers and their thrones dissolve into light and are absorbed into the Buddha's body. Next, imagine that the texts and their thrones dissolve similarly and absorb into the Buddha. Imagine now that the throne is absorbed into the lotus, the lotus into the sun, the sun into the moon and the moon into the body of the Buddha. Buddha now comes to the crown of your head, facing the same direction as you, dissolves into brilliant, white light and dissolves into your body through the crown of your head, filling your body once again with this brilliant light.

Feel great bliss and joy as your body, speech and mind are completely transformed. Hold this feeling for as long as you can, experiencing the removal of all hindrances and obstructions to omniscience.

From this state, imagine in the space where you are sitting, arising from emptiness are the snow lions, the throne, lotus, sun and moon disks and yourself seated upon them in the same aspect as you visualized the Buddha before. Visualize and really feel that you have attained the state of omniscience; feel the enlightened compassion and wisdom of buddhahood.

At your heart appear sun and moon disks. At the center of the moon disk, standing upright, is the syllable MUM. Surrounding this are the syllables of Shakyamuni Buddha's name mantra:

tayata om muni muni maha munaye soha

Streams of light flow from the MUM and mantra at your heart center to all sentient beings, completely removing their hindrances, obstructions, wrong views, delusions and traces of ignorance and thereby transforming them into the form of the Buddha as well. Meditate in this way for as long as possible, reciting the mantra quietly to yourself.

This portion of the meditation is called "bringing the result into the path." It is a very powerful method for transforming our normal view of and how we behave in the world. The result of our practiceis to attain full enlightenment; this activity of bringing the result of buddhahood to our present state is a powerful, transformative tool. You should not imagine that your body, speech or mind are the same; they have arisen from emptiness and manifested in the form of a buddha. This activity enables you to transform yourself and surroundings into vehicles that lead to full, perfect enlightenment.

Dedication
When you have completed this meditation, dedicate the positive potential of this practice to the benefit of all living beings, that they may be liberated from the hardships of cyclic existence and placed in a state of perfect peace and happiness. Remind yourself that your initial motivation for doing this meditation is to actually attain such a state as the means to be able to lead all other sentient beings to full enlightenment.


In your daily routine, bring to mind the feeling and attitude that you felt when you were just imagining the state of buddhahood. When your activities become particularly stressful, remember that such a state comes about by grasping after your "I" or some sort of non-existent self, by putting the interests of this "self" before all other mother sentient beings. Simply remembering a peaceful, blissful state--filled with love and compassion--is often enough to relieve a stressful situation; such times can be transformed into happiness by such a rememberance.

At other times, when you want to eradicate all traces of a disturbing attitude, simply reciting the Buddha's mantra om muni muni maha munaye soha is often enough inspiration to transform that state into one of peace and happiness. Reminding yourself that you are a "Child of the Buddha" and wishing to attain happiness for yourself and others helps to gradually remove such states of mind completely. When you do so, remember to dedicate the merit or positive potential to all beings, that they might do the same.

The Parable Of The Burning House


Let us suppose the following case, Sariputra....There was a certain housekeeper, old, aged, decrepit, very advanced in years, rich, wealthy, opulent; he had a great house, high, spacious, built a long time ago and old, inhabited by some two, three, four, or five hundred living beings. The house had but one door, and a thatch; its terraces were tottering, the bases of its pillars rot- ten, the coverings and plaster of the walls loose. On a sudden the whole house was from every side put in conflagration by a mass of fire. Let us suppose that the man had many little boys, say five, or ten, or wven twenty, and that he himself had come out of the house.

Now, Sariputra, that man, on seeing the house from every side wrapt in a blaze by a great mass of fire, got afraid, and...calls to the boys: "Come, my children; the house is burning with a mass of fire; come, lest you be burnt in the mass fire, and come to grief and disaster," But the ignorant boys do not heed the words of him who is their well-wisher; they are not afraid nor know the purport of the word "burning"; they run hither and thither, walk about, and repeatedly look at their father; all, because they are so ignorant.

..The man has a clear perception of their inclinations. Now these boys happen to have many and manifold toys to play with, pretty, nice, pleasant, dear, amusing, and precious. The man, knowing the disposition of the boys, says to them: "My children, your toys, which you are so loath to miss, which are so various and multifarious, [such as] bullock-carts, goat-carts, deer-carts, which are so pretty, nice, dear, and precious to you, have all been put by me outside the house-door for you to play with. Come, run our, leave the house; to each of you I shall give what he wants.

Come soon, come out for the sake of these toys." And the boys, on hearing the names mentioned of such playthings as they like and desire, quickly rush out from the burning house, with eager effort and great alacrity, one having no time to wait for the other, and pushing each other on the cry of "Who shall arrive first, the very first?'

The man, seeing that his children have safely lnd happily escaped, goes and sits down in the open air on the square of the village, his heart is filled with joy and delight. The boys go up to the place where their father is sitting, and say: 'Father, give us those toys to play with, those bullock-carts, and deer-carts." Then, Sariputra, the man gives to his sons, who run swift as the wind, bullock-carts only, made of seven precious substances, provided with benches, hung with a rnultitude of small bells, lofty, adorned with rare and wonderful jewels, embellished with jewel wreaths, decorated with garlands of flowers, carpeted with cotton mattresses and woolen coverlets, covered with white cloth and silk, having on both sides easy cushions, yoked with white, very fair and fleet bullocks, led by a multitude of men. To each of his children he gives several bullock-carts of one appearance and one kind, provided with flags, and swift as wind. That man does so, Sariputra because being rich,... he rightly thinks: Why should I give these boys inferior carts, al1 these boys being my own children, dear and precious? I have such great vehicles, and ought to treat all the boys equally and without partiality. As I won many treasures and granaries, I could give such great vehicles to all beings, how much more then to my own children," Meanwhile the boys are mounting the vehicles with feelings of astonishment and wonder. Now, Sariputra, what is thy opinion? Has that man made

himself guilty of a falsehood by first holding out to his children the prospect of three vehicles and afterwards going to each of them the greatest vehicles only, the most magnificent vehicle? Sariputra answered: By no means, Lord.

That is not sufficient to qualify the man as a speaker of falsehood, since it only was a skilful device to persuade his children to go out of the burning house and save their lives. Nay, besides recovering their very bodies, O Lord, they have received all those toys. If that man, O Lord, had given no single cart, even then he would not have been a speaker of falsehood, for he had previously been meditating on saving the little boys from a great mas of pain by some able device.

The venerable Sariputra having thus spoken, the Lord said to him: Very well, Sariputra, quite so; it is even as you say. So too, Sariputra, the Tathagata is free from all dangers, wholly exempt from all misfortune, despondency, calamity, pain, grief, the thick enveloping dark mists of ignorance. He, the Tathagata, endowed with Buddha-knowledge, forces, absence of hesitation, uncommon properties, and mighty by magical power, is the father of the world, who has reached the highest perfection in the knowledge of skilful means, who is most merciful, long-suffering, benevolent, compassionate. He appears in this triple world, which is like a house the roof and shelter whereof are decayed, [a house] burning by a mass of misery,.... Once born, he sees how the creatures are burnt, tormented, vexed, distressed by birth, old age, disease, death, grief, wailing, pain, melan- choly, despondency; how for the sake of enjoyment, and prompted by sensual desires, they severally suffer various pains. In consequence both of what in this world they are seeking and what they have acquired, they will in a future state suffer various pains, in hell, in the brute creation, in the realm of Yamaraja (king of the dead); suffer such pains as poverty in the world of gods or men, union with hateful persons or things, and separation from the beloved ones. And while incessantly whirling in that mass of evils they are sporting, playing, diverting themselves; they do not fear, nor dread, nor are they seized with terror; they do not know, nor mind; they are not startled, do not try to escape, but are enjoying themselves in that triple world which is like unto a burning house, and run hither and thither. Though overwhelmed by that mass of evil, they do not conceive the idea that they must beware of it. Under such circumstances, Sariputra, the Tathagata reflects thus: "Verily, I am the father of these beings; I must save them from this mass of evil, and bestow on them the immense, inconceivable bliss of Buddha-knowledge, wherewith they shall sport, play, and divert themselves, wherein they shall find their rest. If, in the conviction of my possessing the power of knowledge and magical faculties. I manifest to these beings the knowledge, forces and absence of hesitation of the Tathagata, without availing myself of some device, these beings will not escape. For they are attached to the pleasures of the five senses, to worldly pleasure." they will not be freed from birth, old age, disease, death, grief, wailing, pain, melancholy, despondency, by which they are burnt, tormented, vexed, distressed. Unless they are forced to leave the triple world which is like a house the shelter and roof whereof is in a blaze, how are they to get acquainted with Buddha-knowledge?"

Now, Sariputra, even as that man with powerful arms, without using the strength of his arms, attracts his children out of the burning house by an able device, and afterwards

gives them magnificent, great carts, so Sariputra, the Tathagata possessed of knowledge and freedom from all hesitation, without using them, in order to attract the creatures out of the triple world which is like a burning house with decayed roof and shelter, shows, by his knowledge of able devices, three vehicles, viz. the vehicle of the disciples, the vehicle of the pratyeka-buddhas, the vehicle of the bodhisattvas. By means these three vehicles he attracts the creatures a speaks to them thus: "Do not delight in the triple world, which is like a burning house, these miserable forms, sounds, odors, flavc and contacts. For in delighting in this triple world you are burnt, heated, inflamed with thirst inseparable from the pleasures of the five senses. Fly from this triple world; betake yourselves to the three vehicles.... I give you pledge for it, that I shall give you these three vehicles, make an effort to run out of this triple world. And to attract them I say "These vehicles are grand, praised by the Aryas, and provided with most pleasant things; with such you are sport, play, and divert yourselves in a noble manner. You will feel the great delight of the faculties, powers, constituents of Bodhi, meditations, the eight degrees of emancipation, self-concentration, and the results of self-concentration, a you will become greatly happy and cheerful."

From David J. Lu, Sources of Japanese History, Vol 1, (New York: MgGraw-Hill, 1974), 52-54, repr. in Mark A. Kishlansky, ed., Sources of World History, Volume I, (New York: HarperCollins CollegePublishers, 1995), pp. 152-54



[Kishlansky Introduction] In the eighth century CE, a new form of Buddhism spread from China to Japan. It was known as the Tendai sect and it derived its inspiration from a series of Sanskrit texts that focused on the Lotus Sutra, regarded by the Tendai as the final and most authentic teaching of the Buddha. The Tendai sect was established in Japan by Siacho (767-822) who had made several missions to China and was permitted to remain there in search of Buddhist texts. On his return Siacho was given imperial permission to found a new Buddhist secy on Mt. Hiei based on the teaching of the Lotus Sutra.



The use of parables was one of the favorite methods of Tendai teaching. The Parable of the Burning House, which is a part of the Lotus of the Wonderful Law is designed to show the superiority of the single sutra (that of the Lotus) over traditional Buddhist teaching of the equal power of the three sutras. Tendai Buddhists believed that all humans could be redeemed and reach universal enlightenment.



The Blessing of Seeing our Faults

When I was younger just starting out on the Buddhist Path, I used to lament in dissatisfaction over all my faults, bad habits, and habitual tendencies. I was generally a very negative person. Over the years, through the long process of self-examination and meditation, I have become calmer, and the quality of my inner world has improved greatly. I don’t hold so tightly to personal opinions, and I am much less angry of a person. Most importantly, I have learned to see my faults as a positive thing.


And by that I mean, awareness of my faults is the positive thing. The individual faults themselves aren’t so relevant (although there are a transformative qualities possible with the negativities as well, but that is another story) the ability or willingness to recognize them is.

We all have faults. Some of us see them and work to correct them. Some of us see them and allow them to bring us down, falling into the pit of self-loathing and depression. Some don’t notice at all, or even care for that matter.

If there is no inner dialogue, no self-reflection or examination, we fumble through life, missing the opportunities for self-improvement. If we notice our faults and become sad or dissatisfied with ourselves, we are forever stuck with the faults, and we feel bad about it at the same time. Not only do we not improve our situation, we fuel the fire of negativities endlessly.

So it hit me one day, the fact that I constantly notice my negative tendencies was actually a blessing in disguise, not an occasion to hate myself. (Self-hatred is a prevalent Western characteristic).

Now, when I realize that I have become distracted (which is often) I see it in a whole new way: I’m missing the chance to be mindful of this very moment, which includes all of my impurities. Instead of wishing to run away from my defects, I want to clearly see, examine, understand, and embrace them. Exposed in this light, they become weaker and less automated.

So the next time you notice some fault or habit that displeases you, acknowledge it and take joy that you are noticing it. Instead of negativities weighing you down, you are directly confronting reality, transforming faults into Wisdom

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Longchen Nyingtik Lineage Refuge Tree


CLICK IMAGE FOR CHART

The Sur Offering in Tibetan Buddhism

A sur offering is a Tibetan Buddhist practice in which a mixture of flour, sweets and dairy products, sometimes with additional valuable or aromatic substances, is consecrated and placed in a fire or burned as incense. The resulting fragrant smoke is offered to the objects of refuge and shared with all sentient beings.

Tiny, high-pitched cymbals called tingshas may be struck while the offering is burned; these call sentient beings, especially hungry ghosts (pretas), to share it and satisfy their hunger. Partaking of this blessing purifies their karma and allows them to pass on to a blessed rebirth.

The practice may be long or short, as time and circumstances allow, and generally does not require initiation from a lama. The merit of the practice is dedicated to the benefit of deceased persons or animals, especially during the 49 days after death, during which they are believed to be in the bardo state. Sur offerings may also be done to dispel negative or harmful influences, such as ghosts.


From Tibetan Treasures:

The sur substance is made of roasted barley flour (tsampa), yogurt, butter, milk, sugar, molasses, and honey (the three whites and the three sweets). Reciting the prayers and mantra syllables in the text, one purifies and consecrates the offering, sprinkles a small amount of it onto a burning coal, and sounds the tingsha to summon beings to partake of it.

Together, the aroma and the practitioner's motivation, visualization, and dedication of merit provide an offering that both delights enlightened beings and satisfies all ordinary beings.

In particular, sur offerings nourish those in the bardo, the intermediate state after death. These beings experience hunger and thirst but can be nourished only through their sense of smell. This practice can be done for forty-nine days after someone's death, with emphasis on dedicating the merit of this virtuous activity for the benefit of the deceased.


Tengerism Prayers

Preparing the Altar
Translation of Khorchin Shaman's songs
Inner Mongolia

Place the High Table in the center,
O ancestors.
The sacred light is bright.
The followers kneel to pray,
O ancestors,
With honor we call to you.
We have set you a throne with a fine tiger skin,
O ancestors,
Light one stick of incense.
The followers knee to pray,
O ancestors,
The rattling drum is sounding.

God's Descent
Translation from the Mongolian

Round the three-sided tent
He has circled three times.
Counting 33 tent poles,
He is now descending.
Round the four-walled guest-house
He has circled four times,
Counting 48 rafters.
Oh come and be with us!
Oh Lord, come with light!
Light shines on my hair,
Through my body and joinings,
The Lord is flowing into me!
The Lord is descending down as a mist.
A halo is forming over my head.
Lord borrows my body:
I carry the Lord.


Thanks to Amu Gulong, Hurelbaatav, Ouzuchimeg and Kevin Stuart.
Text provided by Marguerite E. Garner, ©2000.

[LINK]

Monday, June 6, 2011

The Perfection Of Giving

One of the Great Attributes or Accomplishments of the Bodhisattvayana is Perfect Generosity, also known as Dana Paramita. Like all of the Paramitas, it signifies the end result of Practice, as well as the means or method of Practice. In other words, we perfect Generosity or Conduct or Concentration by practicing those very attributes. So, one could say that when the Bodhisattva gives rise to the Bodhi Mind and undertakes the Path of Awakening with the altruistic motivation to deliver all sentient beings, one has already Perfected the methods, even as one undertakes them.

One of the ways generosity helps us develop our character, is that it reduces selfishness or greed. As Greed is one of the Root “poisons” in Buddhism, This is a vital practice for Awakening.

Generosity can be generally understood as simply the willingness to give, but in Buddhism, there are specific ways in which giving can be expatiated.

One such way is considering generosity in the Threefold way of Body, Speech, and Mind. Further consideration divides generosity into Three divisions of Wealth, Fearlessness, and Dharma. So in other words, we could, as an example, give of the body (physical) of actual goods or food , shelter or money, and physical labor, (Wealth). We could extend Generosity through speech, as in good words, encouragement, or comfort. And finally, we show Generosity of the Mind by generating the altruistic Intention of Bodhi, offering the Dharma through Right View, Self-Cultivation, and actual Instruction of the True Way to all Sentient Beings.

In the Tibetan Tradition, generosity is divided into four categories

1. Artha - Giving of resources ( food, clothing, shelter, money, energy, time, sharing one's relationships and acquaintances)

2. Maitri - Giving of loving kindness

3. Pala - Giving of protection, encouragement, enthusiasm

4. Dharma - Giving of wisdom and compassion teachings and practices

From this simple survey, one can see that the Perfection of Generosity goes well beyond a mere act of sharing a bite of food, or the willingness to loan ones car to a friend. We must consider Generosity in a very deep and subtle way.

When perfected, we have mastered our own actions, and brought down the wall of dualistic thinking, seeing all beings as oneself.
There is giving of both "inner and outer wealth. Outer wealth includes one's country, wife, and children. The Sutras abound with stories of people giving up their wives and children. A few years ago, a laywoman also resolved to give up her husband, but nobody wanted him! From this you can see that a husband is not that easy to give away. Inner wealth refers to one's own head, brain, eyes, marrow--parts of one's own body." (EDR V 212)
"What is meant by the giving of Dharma. It is to speak the Dharma to benefit living beings, to teach and transform all living beings by explaining the Buddhadharma for them. Of all offerings, the Dharma-offering is supreme. . . ." (DFS II 132)
Good man, amongst all offerings, the Offering of Dharma is most supreme. This is the offering of cultivating according to the teachings, the offering of benefiting living beings, the offering of gathering in living beings, the offering of standing in for living beings who are undergoing suffering, the offering of diligently cultivating good roots, the offering of not renouncing the karma of the Bodhisattva and the offering of never forsaking the Bodhi mind. (UW 59)
"If someone encounters a frightening experience and you comfort them and deliver them from distress and terror, you have made a gift of fearlessness." (EDR V 215)
[QUOTE SOURCE]

Bodhidharma's Advice On Removing Obstacles

The Patriarch Bodhidharma once outlined four practices which Buddhist disciples should take to heart. They are summarized below.

1. The Practice of Compensating for Previous Wrongs

From time immemorial we have been lost along the six Evil Paths. In each lifetime we have incurred karmic debts, large and small, in connection with either love-attachment or hatred. These are truly countless. Although our efforts in cultivation dissolve part of this karma, it is not entirely eliminated, and must be gradually repaid. Thus, someone who is always ill, or is disabled, has created heavy karma of killing in past lives. Those who are the targets of a great deal of slander and calumny were, in earlier times, intelligent and influential people who, proud of their good fortune, despised others. Or else, they created the karma of vilifying the Dharma or the Order. Those who are always lacking in means lacked compassion and failed to practice charity in past lives. Those who must endure banishment, imprisonment, bondage and torture, were, in past lives, in the habit of chaining, beating or imprisoning sentient beings. Those who are lonely and isolated, lacking supportive friends, did not have bonds of affinity with other sentient beings in the past.

These karmas are countless. If today we encounter animosity and opposition to our cultivation, we should remain calm and forbearing, accepting that we must repay our karmic debts without chagrin or complaint. In the wasteland of Birth and Death, all sentient beings have been related at one time or another, sharing the same table, living in the same house -- as family members or as friends. Therefore, of all karmic obstructions, those of killing sentient beings and of love-attachment are the deepest.[1] The ancients have lamented:

In the vast ocean of karma, love-attachment is the most difficult thing to sever. In the great wide world, killing sentient beings [for food] is the most common transgression!

In East Asian folklore, there is the tale of a famous poet who journeyed to the mountains during the Mid-Autumn Festival in search of inspiration. In the moonlit night, he witnessed the Immortals "mount the wind and ride the fog," as they gathered around a huge marble table laden with succulent fruits and rare wines, playing musical instruments and reciting poetry ... Among the fairies was a maiden by the name of "Mountain Moon," with lovely, ethereal features and a gracious, enchanting voice. The poet, eavesdropping, was moved to the point of confusion. Suddenly, an elderly Immortal, having savored his cup of wine, began to recite verses:

Those of common destiny, Meet at the Assembly of Immortals; I consent to the poet Wedding Mountain Moon!

 Hearing this stanza, the poet reluctantly emerged from hiding and joined the assembly. The elderly Immortal decreed that the young maiden had a karmic affinity with the earthly poet, and that they should live together for thirteen years. He thereupon ordered that the register of Immortals be brought over, and crossed her name out. After thirteen years of life together, her earthly life having come to an end, Mountain Moon rendered herself invisible and flew back to the mountains to pursue her cultivation. Thus, even Immortals are within the cycle of Birth and Death, causes and conditions.

Regarding the karma of killing, both Elder Master Arya Simha (the Twenty-fourth Indian Patriarch of Zen) and Elder Master Hui K'o (the Second Chinese Patriarch), despite having achieved Enlightenment, still had to repay their debts by calmly submitting to violent death.[2] Take also the case of Maudgalyayana, a well-known disciple of Sakyamuni Buddha, with the highest spiritual power among Arhats. Because he wished to repay his previous karmic debts, he let a group of bandits kill him with sticks and stones and bury his body in an excrement pit. The Buddha, moved by this scene, ordered his disciples to unearth the body, cleanse and bathe it with perfume, then cremate it and retrieve the relics.[3]

On the path of cultivation, no one knows who is really perfect. Thus, we should neither be complacent nor look down on others. Because the karmic debts of sentient beings are countless, sometimes they must repay one layer after another. Some cultivators seem to be free of karmic debts, but this may not be the case. It may just be that the time and conditions for repayment have not yet arrived. To eliminate evil karma, we should be patient, practice repentance, and strive to cultivate. Nguyen-Du, a famous Vietnamese poet of recent times, had perhaps deeply assimilated the Buddhas' teaching on karma and the possible transmutation of cause and effect when he wrote:

Having committed evil karma, Let us not blame Heaven for being near or far, While Providence plays a part, So do we ...

These words are generally recognized as a reflection of the truth.

2. The Practice of Adapting to Conditions

This means that the practitioner should adapt flexibly to his situation and conditions. For example, living in conditions of wealth or poverty, he lives in accordance with conditions of wealth or poverty. The same applies to conditions of underdevelopment or prosperity, adversity or good fortune, loss or gain, right or wrong ...

Contentment with conditions means being wealthy without being arrogant, being destitute and beset by misfortune without being sad and depressed or altering one's determination. Why is this so? It is because instances of prosperity, decline, misfortune, and/or blessings are all illusory.[4] They appear for a while according to our karma and then disappear. It is really not worthwhile to become attached, discouraged or sad.

Confucius and his disciples were once surrounded by rebel soldiers. They had been short of food for seven days, yet Confucius was happily playing the lute. His leading disciple inquired, "How is it, Master, that in the face of death you can still smile happily?" Confucius replied, "Whatever misfortunes befall a man after he has done his best to prevent them, can only be the will of Heaven. Why, then, bemoan them and weep?" Confucius may be considered a sage conversant with the will of heaven and earth -- always calm and clear sighted, never bewildered or wavering, regardless of the circumstances. The practitioner should be likewise, realizing that wealth and property, family and friends, are all the result of illusory, temporary conditions. He should not be unduly attached to or preoccupied with them, if he is to progress along the path to liberation.

3. The Practice of Being in Accord with the Dharma

"Dharma" here means "True Thusness Dharma." For Pure Land practitioners, it represents the Buddha Recitation Samadhi. For Zen followers, whether they are walking, standing, reclining or sitting, the mind should always accord with True Thusness, just as water blends with water and empty space is one with the atmosphere. The Pure Land practitioner is the same: his mind is always focused on the words "Amitabha Buddha."

The ancients have said:

If a practitioner is not in samadhi for one instant, at that moment, he is no different from a corpse.
This is because if a cultivator's mind is scattered, he has been effectively "captured" by worldly Dusts. Once captured and dragged away, his "Dharma-Body Wisdom-Life" is lost and gone. On the other hand, if the practitioner is always focused on the Buddha's name, his mind will gradually become silent, still and illuminated, in unison with Buddha Amitabha. He is thus assured of rebirth in the Pure Land.

4. The Practice of Non-Seeking

This refers to the pure practice of not seeking after anything. All dharmas are illusory and dream-like, born and destroyed, destroyed and reborn. What is there which is true, everlasting and worth seeking? Furthermore, worldly phenomena are all relative; in calamities are found blessings, in blessings there is misfortune. Therefore, those who have wisdom are always calm and unruffled, their minds undisturbed in all situations.

For example, when a monk cultivates alone in a deserted hut, his living conditions are miserable and lonely and he has few visitors. Although his mundane conditions may be wanting, his cultivation is diligent. After a while, if virtuous people learn of his situation and come with offerings, his hut will gradually grow into a large temple, filled with monks and nuns. By then, while his blessings may be great, his cultivation has effectively declined, because his mind is now preoccupied with external events. The truth of misfortunes and blessings, mutually dependent, is similar. Therefore, ideally, the cultivator should seek neither untoward occurrences and rebirth as a sentient being nor auspicious occurrences and Buddhahood.

Some may ask, "If we recite the Buddhas's name seeking neither rebirth in the Pure Land nor the ultimate blessings and wisdom of Buddhahood, how can we progress in our cultivation?" Answer: It is because Buddhahood is True Emptiness. The more we seek it, the farther we are from it, and the more likely we are to lose it. Thus, the Lotus Sutra states:

Even if countless Arhats, Pratyeka Buddhas, and other sages, up to the level of Non-Regressing Bodhisattvas, were to ponder and seek it for innumerable kalpas, they still would not be able to see or understand the true wisdom of the Buddhas.

As far as rebirth in the Pure Land is concerned, the practitioner's method is to seek yet not seek, not to seek yet seek. This paradox resembles the case of a bright and clear mirror. When an image appears before the mirror, the mirror reflects it; when there is no image, the mirror remains empty and still. To cling to sight, knowledge and seeking is to "stray" into deluded thought. On the other hand, not to see, know or seek is to be no different from inanimate wood or stone! Speaking more broadly, the practice of non-seeking encompasses all "three doors of liberation": emptiness, signlessness and wishlessness.

If the cultivator can follow these four practices taught by the Patriarch Bodhidharma, he will be able to remain calm and unruffled in the face of all obstructing conditions.

(1) According to Buddhist teachings, if there were another obstruction or force as strong as love-attachment, no cultivator could ever hope to attain Enlightenment and Buddhahood.

(2) Master Arya Simha lived in Central Asia during the sixth century A.D. While he was preaching Buddhism in Kashmir, King Dammira, an enemy of Buddhism, razed temples and murdered a number of monks. When he finally beheaded Master Arya Simha, it was said that pure white milk gushed from Arya Simha's neck. The Patriarch Hui Ku (Hui K'o) was the Second Chinese Patriarch after Bodhidharma.

(3) Maudgalyayana was one of Sakyamuni Buddha's ten major disciples, known as the foremost in occult power. He died before Sakyamuni, killed by a hostile Brahmin while on his alms round. The Patriarchs Arya Simha and Hui K'o and the Elder Maudgalyayana are all revered figures in Mahayana Buddhism. Through their symbolic deaths, sentient beings are taught the crucial importance of adhering to the precept against killing -- a cornerstone of Buddhist ethics.

(4) See Glossary, "Illusion" :

Illusion (Maya). One of the key concepts in Buddhism.
Things in the phenomenal world are not real or substantial, as ordinary people regard them to be. They are transient, momentary, indefinite, insubstantial, and subject to constant alteration. In reality, they are like phantoms or hallucinations. (G.C.C. Chang). Phenomenal "existence," as commonly perceived by the senses, is illusory; it is not real inasmuch as, though it exists, its existence is not permanent or absolute. Nothing belonging to it has an enduring entity or "nature" of its own; everything is dependent upon a combination of fluctuating conditions and factors for its seeming "existence" at any given moment." (Fung Yu-Lan.) Thus, we have the expression, "illusory but not non-existent."

Dharma Master Thich Thien Tam
Translated and edited by the Van Hien Study Group
Sutra Translation Committee of the United States and Canada

The Buddha Hall is Everywhere

The Sramenara Ben Guan came from a far away land to a large Monastary on an island to learn the True Dharma. During his stay, he had heard over and over again that the Buddha was all things, existing everywhere.

One day, as is customary at this time, the monks lined up after the mid-day meal. The Temple Bell rang out, signaling the Bhikkhus to turn towards the Buddha Hall and bow.

After the bow, Sramenara Ben Guan addressed the Ch’an Master Wisdom Light, asking indignantly “If the Buddha is everywhere, why must we turn towards the Main Hall to Bow?”

The Venerable Patriarch immediately answered “If the Buddha is everywhere, then turn towards the Main Hall and Bow.”

All present could only see the Master’s finger.

Sunday, June 5, 2011

The Personification of Wisdom




Ch'an Master Huei Guang Chants the Mantra of 

Manjushri Bodhisattva

MP3
Click on picture for a description of Manjushri

Link for a Manjushri Sadhana called:

Click here for an Explanation of the Manjushri Sadhana 
By Venerable Thubten Chodron

Compassion

As Kalu Rinpoche (d. 1989) said in Luminous Mind:

Compassion, Kindness, and Love together form the essential Mahayana attitude. Their foundation is a non self-cherishing frame of mind oriented towards others, aspiring to the well-being and happiness of all other beings, whether human or non-human, friends or enemies.


There are 3 kinds of compassion:


·         1. Compassion with reference to beings.

It arises when we perceive the suffering of others. It is the first kind of compassion to arise, and causes us to strive deeply to do everything we can to help all those who suffer. It emerges when we perceive the pain and sufferings or others.

This form of compassion is marked by our no longer being able to remain unmoved by the suffering of beings and by aspiring to do everything possible to help alleviate their suffering.

·         2. Compassion with reference to reality. 

It arises when we have a genuine experience of the power of ignorance; when we actually perceive how beings create their own suffering. This compassion occurs when we really see how others strive to be happy and avoid suffering but how, not understanding the causes of happiness nor the means of avoiding suffering, they produce more causes of suffering and have no idea how to cultivate the causes of happiness. They are blinded by their ignorance, their motivations and actions contradict one another.

Through understanding the illusory nature of reality, genuine perception of this situation beings forth this 2nd type of compassion, which is more intense and profound than the1st kind.

·         3. Compassion without reference.

It retains no notion of subject, object, or intention.  It is the ultimate form of a Buddha's or great Bodhisattva's compassion and depends upon the realization of emptiness. There is no longer any reference to a 'me' or 'other'.
This compassion opens naturally and spontaneous.


It is important to be familiar with these 3 types of compassion; to understand their order, and to being to work at the first level, which is the most accessible to us.

Clear understanding extends our radiance towards all, without distraction, while incomplete understanding limits us to those touched by misery. In fact, we easily have compassion for the poor, but we think the rich, the powerful and those who appear happy need not be objects of compassion.


Right Compassion is directed toward all beings, including the rich and powerful.

Like all beings, they have been our mothers and fathers in past lives; each has his or her suffering. Their present situation, their wealth or power, results from previous positive karma, but they are no less marked by a strong sense of ego and by many afflictions.

It has been said by Buddha Shakyamuni,  "Desire is wealth's companion. Harmful actions are the companions of the powerful."

Desire and Harmful actions lead them to lower realms and consequent suffering, so these people should be special objects of our compassion.



At first, we try through meditation to engender compassion and cultivate the wish to help a person toward whom it is easy to feel this way.  Afterward, we expand this attitude of love-kindness to others, to everyone we meet in out daily life, then little by little, to all humans and nonhumans, and finally, even toward those for whom it is most difficult, our enemies and those who hate us, without exception.

Bodhisattva Vow

Introduction

What makes someone a Mahayana Buddhist is her or his dedication to the ultimate welfare of other beings.

May I attain Buddhahood for the benefit of all sentient beings.

This is the root Mahayana aspiration. No one has to take this vow, but the decision to adopt it is a turning point in anyone's practice.  It is usually based on the conclusions that we reach after extensive analysis and profound insight into the nature of existence and of our own origins.

Khenpo Karthar, who is the abbot of Karma Triyana Dharmachakra, has said that it is important that we recognize the distinction between feeling loving-kindness to others, acting out of general compassion for others, and this special bodhisattva aspiration.  For in taking this vow, we voluntarily give up the pursuit of individual enlightenment except that it may benefit all sentient beings in their quest for enlightenment.

The Bodhisattva Vow



May I assist all sentient beings to attain Buddhahood, and may I be the last one to attain Buddhahood when all sentient beings have attained Buddhahood, as did Avalokiteshvara (Tib.Chenresi) pictured here.

It is not possible to succeed on the Mahayana path without keeping in mind the 64 bodhisattva vows.  They are found in Highway for Bodhisattvas (Tib.: Jangchub Shunglam) by Je Tsongkapa (1357-1419) which contains Asanga's root text along with a commentary.
  
In it are the definition and types of bodhichitta, the types of morality, the types of vows and how bodhisattva vows are taken, an explanation of the eighteen root bodhisattva vows and the forty-six secondary ones; the four factors that cause one to break bodhisattva root vows, how the vows are broken, how they may be lost; how to keep them, how to restore them, and all the benefits of keeping the bodhisattva vows.

May I be a guard for all those who are protector-less,
A guide for those who journey on the road,
For those who wish to go across the water,
May I be a boat, a raft, a bridge.


For all those ailing in the world,

Until their every sickness has been healed,

May I myself become for them
The doctor, nurse, the medicine itself.


~ Shantideva (more of his famous aspiration poem below)

On Bodhicitta, The Compassionate Heart of the Enlightened Mind

It is the supreme elixir
That overcomes the sovereignty of death.
It is the inexhaustible treasure
That eliminates poverty in the world.
It is the supreme medicine
That quells the world's disease.
It is the tree that shelters all beings
Wandering and tired on the path of conditioned existence.
It is the universal bridge
That leads to freedom from unhappy states of birth.
It is the dawning moon of the mind
That dispels the torment of disturbing conceptions.
It is the great sun that finally removes the misty ignorance of the world.

   ~ from Bodhisattvacharya Avatara by Shantideva (700 CE)

The Difference Among Caring (Skt. maitri, Pali metta,) Compassion, and Bodhicitta

Khenchen Konchog Gyaltshen Rinpoche explains:

"Loving-kindness and compassion alone are not bodhicitta. They constitute the critical foundation for bodhicitta, but should not be mistaken for the mind of enlightenment itself. Some places say that compassion is the same as bodhicitta, but this is not always so. There are many beings, even animals, who have love and compassion, but they do not have bodhicitta. On the other hand, if you have bodhicitta, then compassion and loving-kindness are definitely also present as they are its predecessors. So, in order to cultivate bodhicitta properly, it is important to study and practice these two first.

Plant the seed of bodhicitta in the well-ploughed ground of your mind that has been fertilized with compassion and moistened with loving-kindness."


~ courtesy Ani Trinlay


What does a bodhisattva look like? 

"When the 16th Karmapa came to America, at one time he was asked, "Are there other emanations of bodhisattvas in the world? For example, do they exist in our society, in countries like America and Europe, and so on?" 

In answer, His Holiness said, "There are a lot of them. They are all over the place. But they are difficult to recognize. They are not necessarily going to look like me. They are not necessarily going to have a shaven head, wear the robes of a Buddhist monk, and so on."  


~  Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche. Densal, Spring/Summer 2000 [v.15, n.1] 9. 

Corollaries or Vows that Follow from the Bodhisattva Vow:


We pledge to AVOID:


1. Praising yourself and belittling others because of your attachment to receiving offerings, being respected and venerated as a teacher, and gaining profit in general.



2. Not giving material aid or teaching the Dharma to those who are pained with suffering and without a protector because of your being under the influence of miserliness and wanting to amass knowledge for yourself alone.



3. Not listening to someone who has previously offended you but who declares his offense and begs forgiveness, and holding a grudge against him.



4. Condemning the teachings of the Buddha and teaching distorted views.



5. Taking offerings to the Three Jewels of Refuge for yourself by such means as stealth, robbery or devious schemes.



6. Despising the Tripitaka and saying these texts are not the teaching of the Buddha.



7. Evicting monks from a monastery or casting them out of the Sangha even if they have broken their vows, because of not forgiving them.



8. Committing any of the five heinous crimes of killing your mother, your father, an Arhat, drawing blood intentionally from a Buddha or causing a division in the Sangha by supporting and spreading sectarian views.



9. Holding views contrary to the teachings of the Buddha such as sectarianism, disbelief in the Three Jewels of Refuge, the law of cause and effect, and so forth.



10. Completely destroying any place by means of fire, bombs, pollution and black magic.



11. Teaching Sunyata to those who are not ready to understand it.



12. Turning people away from working for the full enlightenment of Buddhahood and encouraging them to work merely for their own liberation from suffering.



13. Encouraging people to abandon their vowed rules of moral conduct.



14. Causing others to hold the distorted views you might hold about the Hinayana teachings, as well as belittling the Hinayana teachings and saying that their practice does not lead to Nirvana.


15. Practicing, supporting or teaching the Dharma for financial profit and fame while saying your motives are pure and that others are pursuing Dharma for such base aims.

16. Telling others, even though you may have very little or no understanding of Sunyata, that if they obtain as profound an understanding as you have, that then they will become as great and as highly realized as you are.


17. Taking gifts from others and encouraging others to give you things originally intended as offerings to the Three Jewels of Refuge.



18. Taking anything away from those monks who are practicing meditation and giving it to those who are merely reciting texts.



     ~ from The Complete Six-Session Guru-Yoga Primer, 

      courtesy K. McD.


Some related links:

Ven. Thrangu Rinpoche on the ever-renewable nature of the vow.

Taking the vows:  S. Gilman's pilgrimage.
                                  
Thirty-Seven Practices of a Bodhisattva, or "What a Bodhisattva Does," a colloquial version explaining the classical text by the Sakyapa, Thogmed Zangpo (1245-1369) a.k.a. Ngulchu T'oh-meh.

bodhichitta: An attitude of compassion towards other beings that can be aroused through contemplation and and meditation.