Commentary on A Lamp for the Path to Enlightenment
Khunu Lama Rinpoche |
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A teaching given to the monks and nuns of the
International Mahayana Institute at Boudhanath, Nepal, 2
February 1975. Edited by Nicholas Ribush. For a
translation of the root text, see Appendix 1 of His
Holiness the Dalai Lama's Illuminating the Path to
Enlightenment. Translated by Lama Zopa
Rinpoche |
Before listening to this teaching, first cultivate
bodhicitta, thinking, “I want to receive enlightenment for the
benefit of all mother sentient beings.” In other words, before
listening to teachings, it is necessary to think of, to
remember, all mother sentient beings.
The subject today is Lam-drön, A Lamp for the Path to
Enlightenment, which was written in Tibet by Atisha, who was
also called Dipamkara Shrijnana, who was born the son of a
Bengali king. Bengal is in northeast India.
Buddhadharma had already been established in Tibet before
Atisha’s arrival there, but an evil king called Langdarma
(Udumtsen), who was said to have horns growing from his head,
hated the Dharma and cause it to degenerate in Tibet. But even
though the teachings had been corrupted, they still existed,
but not as purely as before. It took about sixty years to
restore the teachings to their original purity in what became
known as the later spreading of the Dharma in Tibet.
How that happened was that in western Tibet, in the kingdom
of Gugé, there lived a Tibetan king, Lha Lama Yeshe Ö, and his
nephew, Jangchub Ö. They decided to invite a learned and
realized teacher from the great Indian monastery of
Vikramashila to spread Dharma in Tibet. When they investigated
to see who was the most learned and realized person there,
they discovered that Atisha would be by far the best one to
invite.
But before Lha Lama Yeshe Ö could request Atisha to come
from Vikramashila to Tibet, he needed to find gold to make a
proper offering, so went to a place called Garlog in search of
it. But the ruler of Garlog threw him in prison, where he
died. In that way, Lha Lama Yeshe Ö he sacrificed his life to
bring Atisha to Tibet.
Then his nephew, Jangchub Ö, sent emissaries to India to
invite Atisha to Tibet. When he finally met Atisha, he
explained how the Dharma there had degenerated during
Langdarma’s rule and how correct teachings no longer existed
in Tibet. He requested Atisha to write the precious teaching,
A Lamp for the Path to Enlightenment, to give fundamental
teachings to the Tibetan people because they were so ignorant.
He requested Atisha to explain about refuge, bodhicitta and so
forth. Therefore, Atisha wrote the precious teaching, A Lamp
for the Path to Enlightenment, the source of all the Gelug
lam-rim texts, as well as those of the Sakya and the other
schools of Tibetan Buddhism, who all practice the graduated
path to enlightenment and quote the Lam-drön in their
teachings. Furthermore, the Lam-drön is based on the
Prajnaparamita teachings of Shakyamuni Buddha.
After generating bodhicitta, our main task is to attain
enlightenment. Now, even though we might think that life in
samsara is pleasant, it’s not. There is no true pleasure in
samsara. Enlightenment can be attained only through the
practice of Dharma. Therefore, we should all practice Dharma.
In terms of teachings in general, there are two types:
Buddhadharma and the teachings of the mu-teg-pa (Skt:
tirthika) [See Meditation on Emptiness, pp. 320-21.] The
latter are teachings based on mistaken beliefs, an
understanding opposite to that of Buddhadharma - teachings
followed by outsiders. By following such non-Buddhist
teachings, you can be born anywhere from the lower realms to
the peak of samsara, the highest of the four formless realms,
but can never escape samsara.
Within the Buddhadharma, there are also two divisions:
Hinayana and Mahayana. By following Hinayana teachings, you
can escape from samsara but cannot attain enlightenment. To
attain enlightenment, you have to practice Mahayana teachings.
Within the Mahayana, there are the teachings spoken by the
Buddha himself and those recorded later by the learned
followers of the Buddha, the great Indian pandits. Included in
the latter are such teachings as those written by the six
great pandits, the ornaments of the world. Then there are also
the teachings written by learned Tibetan masters. The teaching
we are discussing here is that written by the learned pandit
Dipamkara Shrijnana.
What does the Lam-drön contain? It derives from the
Abhisamayalankara and explains the three levels of teaching:
the paths of the lower, intermediate and highest practitioner,
especially that of the highest.
The text opens with the title of this teaching in Sanskrit,
which in Tibetan is Jang-chub lam-gyi drön-ma. This is
followed by homage to Manjushri.
1. The first verse includes three things. First there is
homage to the Triple Gem: the buddhas of the three times, the
oral teachings and realization of them, and the sangha—those
who have received the unshakable, or noble, path. Second, he
mentions that his pure disciple, Jangchub Ö, requested him to
give this teaching. Third, he makes the promise, or vow, to
write this teaching, this lamp for the path to enlightenment,
the Lam-drön.
2. In the second verse, Atisha explains what he’s going to
write about: the graduated paths of the persons of least,
intermediate and greatest capacity. These are also the paths
that Lama Tsong Khapa explains in his short, middle-length and
great lam-rim teachings; in the various lam-rim teachings of
Lama Tsong Khapa, he, too, explains the graduated paths of the
persons of least, intermediate and greatest capacity.
3. Of the three levels of follower, Atisha first explains
the graduated path of those of least capacity. Such people
think, “I don’t care what suffering or happiness I experience
in this life; I must avoid rebirth in the lower realms and
attain an upper rebirth.” With this in mind, beings of least
capacity abstain from negative actions and practice virtue.
4. Persons of intermediate capacity develop aversion to not
only the sufferings of the three lower realms but also to
those of the upper realms; to the whole of samsara. Such
practitioners abstain from negative actions in order to free
themselves from samsara, without concern for other sentient
beings.
5. Who, then, are the beings of greatest capacity? They are
those who, having understood their own suffering, take it as
an example of the suffering that other beings are also
experiencing and generate the great wish of wanting to put an
end to the suffering of all sentient beings.
6-11. There are six preparatory practices. First, visualize
the merit field and make offerings. Then kneel down with your
hands in prostration and take refuge in the Triple Gem. After
that, generate love for other sentient beings by thinking of
the sufferings of death, old age, sickness and rebirth as well
as the three sufferings and the general suffering of samsara.
In that way, generate bodhicitta.
12-17. It is necessary to generate the aspiration to attain
enlightenment, and the benefits of doing so have been
explained in the sutra called Array of Trunks. Atisha also
quotes three verses from another sutra, the Sutra Requested by
Viradatta, to further explain the benefits of bodhicitta.
18-19. There are two types of bodhicitta, relative and
absolute. Within the category of relative there are two
further divisions, the bodhicitta of aspiration—wanting to
receive enlightenment for the benefit of other sentient
beings, thinking, “Without my receiving enlightenment, I
cannot enlighten others”—and the bodhicitta of engagement,
actually following the bodhisattva’s path by taking the
bodhisattva precepts and engaging in the actions of a
bodhisattva, thinking, “In order to engage in positive actions
and avoid negative ones, I am going to practice the six
perfections.”
20-21. The teachings explain that in order to practice
engaged bodhicitta, we should take the bodhisattva ordination,
but in order to do so we should hold one of the seven levels
of pratimoksha ordination, such as gelong, gelongma, getsul,
getsulma and so forth. Ideally, then, we should hold one of
these fundamental ordinations before taking the bodhisattva
vow, but the learned ones say that in general, those who avoid
negative karma and create virtuous actions can receive
bodhicitta, even if they don’t hold any pratimoksha precepts.
22. The bodhicitta of aspiration can be generated without
dependence upon a lama, but engaged bodhicitta depends on a
lama. To find a lama from whom we can take the bodhisattva
vow, we have to know the qualifications of such a lama.
23-24. First, the lama should know all about the ordination
and how to bestow it. He should have compassion for the
disciple and himself be living in the bodhisattva ordination.
That’s the kind of lama we need to find in order to take the
ordination. But what if we can’t find a perfect lama like
that? Atisha then goes on to explain what we should do in that
case.
25-31. The Ornament of Manjushri’s Buddha Land Sutra
explains how, long ago, Manjushri received bodhicitta. This is
what we can do. Visualize the merit field and all the buddhas
and generate bodhicitta, the wish to receive enlightenment.
Then promise, “I invite all sentient beings as my guest to the
sublime happiness of liberation and enlightenment. I will not
get angry or harbor avarice, covetousness, jealousy and so
forth. I will not harm other sentient beings in any way. I
will live in pure discipline by avoiding all negative actions,
even worldly desires and sense objects of attachment, such as
attractive sounds and beautiful forms and so forth. I shall
give up such things. As all the buddhas have followed pure
moral conduct, so shall I.
“I will not try to receive enlightenment for myself alone.
Even though it takes and endless amount of time to work for
even one sentient being, I shall remain in samsara. I shall
make pure the impure realms of sentient beings, places where
there are thorns, rocks and ugly mountains. I shall also
purify my three doors of body, speech and mind and keep them
pure. I shall create no negative actions from now on.”
32-35. The best way of keeping our three doors pure is by
generating the bodhicitta of aspiration and engaging in
bodhicitta and following the path to enlightenment. This
depends on observing the three different levels of moral
conduct. If we do this properly, we can complete the two
collections of merit and transcendent wisdom. One thing that
really helps us complete these two collections is the ability
to foresee the future, therefore we should try to acquire
clairvoyance. Without it, we are like a baby bird that has not
yet grown feathers and whose wings are undeveloped, and
remains stuck in its nest, unable to fly. Without
clairvoyance, we cannot work for other sentient beings.
36-37. The person who has achieved the psychic power to
foresee the future can create more merit in a day than a
person who does not have this ability can create in a hundred
years. Therefore, to complete the collections of merit and
transcendent wisdom quickly, it is necessary to acquire the
psychic power to see past, present and future.
38. In order to do this, it is necessary to achieve
samadhi—single-pointed concentration. For this, we must
understand the details of the method of attaining samadhi,
such as the nine stages, the six powers and the four mental
engagements. [See Opening the Eye of New Awareness pp. 53-66.]
39. In order to practice samadhi meditation properly, we
must ensure that the conditions are perfect. If they are not,
then even though we try practicing it hard for even a thousand
years, we’ll never achieve it. Therefore, we should find a
perfect environment, remain quiet and avoid having to do work
such as healing the ill and making astrological
predictions—any activity that keeps us busy.
40. The way to meditate to attain single-pointed
concentration is to focus our mind on a virtuous object, such
as an image of the Buddha. Visualize such an image in front of
us and simply concentrate on that. As we focus our mind on the
object again and again, we’ll be able to hold it for
increasingly greater periods of time, and through the
continuity of such practice will eventually attain calm
abiding (shamatha) and single-pointed concentration. Thus we
will gain ngön-she or, literally, higher seeing, the psychic
power to see the future and so forth.
41-43. But that is not the point. Next we have to practice
lhag-tong, or vipashyana—penetrative insight. Without it, our
samadhi cannot remove our delusions. In order to eradicate our
two levels of obscuration—the obscurations of delusion
(nyön-drib) and the obscurations to knowledge (she-drib)- we
must achieve the wisdom realizing the non-self-existence of
the I. Doing so also depends upon achieving method, such as
compassion and so forth. It’s a mistake to practice only
wisdom and not method. This can lead us to fall into
individual liberation, the lower nirvana. Similarly,
practicing only method and not wisdom is also a mistake and
causes us to remain in samsara.
44-46. The Buddha taught that of the six perfections, the
last of the six is the path of wisdom and the first
five—charity, morality, patience, effort and concentration—are
the path of method, or skillful means (Tib: thab). First, we
should meditate on method, then on wisdom, then on both
together. By practicing both together, we can receive
enlightenment; by practicing the wisdom of selflessness alone,
we can’t.
47-49. Realizing the five aggregates (Skt: skandhas), the
twelve sources and the eighteen constituents as empty of
self-existence is recognized as higher wisdom. There is
existence and non-existence: there is no such thing as the
production of the existent, nor is there such a thing as
production of the non-existent. There is no such thing as
production of both existent and non-existent, nor is there
production of neither existent nor non-existent. That is one
form of logic negating the production of both the existent and
the non-existent. There is also another form of logic negating
production of a thing from self, other, both or neither—the
four extremes. The main thing to discover here is
non-self-existence. That can be found through the first line
of logical reasoning, which negates production of the existent
and the non-existent, and through the second, which negates
production of the four extremes.
50-51. It can also be discovered through a third line of
reasoning that examines things to see whether they are one or
many. These lines of reasoning are elaborated by Nagarjuna in
his Seventy Stanzas on Emptiness and in other texts such as
his Treatise on the Middle Way.
52-54. These things are explained in those texts, but here
they are mentioned just for the purpose of practicing
meditation. Meditating on the non-self-existence of the I and
the non-self-existence of all other phenomena is meditation on
shunyata, or emptiness. When the wisdom realizing emptiness
analyzes the subject and the object, it cannot discover
self-existence in either of those. Moreover, it cannot find
self-existence in the wisdom of emptiness. Thus, we realize
the emptiness of even the wisdom of emptiness itself.
55-58. Since this world is created by superstition (Tib:
nam-tog) [conceptuality], if we eradicate the creator,
superstition, we can attain liberation. The Buddha said that
it is superstition that causes us to fall into the ocean of
samsara. Therefore, that which is to be avoided is
superstition, but the emptiness of superstition, which is like
the sky, like empty space, is that which is to be practiced.
By achieving this, we will be able to see the absolute nature
of existence. Therefore, the bodhisattvas’ practice is to
avoid superstition and thus to achieve the non-superstitious
mind. Through the various different means of logic—by
realizing the emptiness of the produced and of inherent
existence—we can avoid superstition and achieve the wisdom of
shunyata.
59. Then we can also attain the different levels of the
path of preparation (Tib: jor-lam), the second of the five
paths. We attain the four levels of this path and gradually
the ten bhumis (Tib: sa), or bodhisattva grounds, as well.
Finally, we attain the eleventh level, enlightenment itself.
60-67. Having realized shunyata, we can also gain the
general realizations of tantra, such as the four powers of
pacification, wrath, control and increase, and other
attainments, such as accomplishing the “good pot.”
Accomplishing the good pot means doing a particular meditation
in retreat for a long time, and if you are successful, just by
putting your mouth to the opening of a pot and saying
something like, “May I become the king of this country,” your
wish will be fulfilled—in this case, you will become king of
that country. Or, we can gain the tantric power of “eye
medicine.” By accomplishing this technique, if you apply this
ointment to your eye, you can see such things as gold, jewels
and other precious things even hundreds of miles beneath the
surface of the earth; no matter how far away it is, you can
see it.
By practicing tantra, we can receive enlightenment without
the need of much austere practice. The tantric was to
enlightenment is through happiness, while other paths to
enlightenment are through hard, austere practice.
There are four different level of tantra, such as highest
yoga tantra and so forth; four different aspects of the
tantric teaching. So, first we have to receive initiation. In
order to do so, we have to make material offerings, such as
gold, or even members of your family; a spouse, or a sibling,
requesting our guru for the initiation with great devotion. If
our guru is pleased, he will then give us the initiation out
of his compassion. Having taken an initiation, we also receive
the great fortune of being able to receive enlightenment and
all these high realizations that come with it.
There are four different initiations: the vase, secret,
transcendent wisdom and word initiations, the latter being
where the guru imparts clarification, or proof, through verbal
explanation. However, the secret initiation should not be
given to those living in ordination. If monks, for example,
take the secret initiation, they have to leave the monastic
order, because those who have taken the secret initiation are
required to practice with a female consort. If they do these
practices without first returning their ordination, they lose
it, the consequence of which is rebirth in the hells.
To receive tantric commentaries, you first have to receive
initiation. Without initiation, you cannot receive tantric
teachings. You also cannot perform pujas of burnt offering or
give tantric teachings.
68. In the last verse, Atisha closes this text by
describing himself as an elder (Tib: nä-tän), a full monk who,
in the first twelve years after taking ordination, hasn’t
created any moral falls; a senior full monk. He states that he
has briefly explained the teaching on the steps of path as
requested by his noble follower, Jangchub Ö.
Conclusion
Every lam-rim teaching ever written refers back to this
text, A Lamp for the Path, irrespective of the Tibetan
Buddhist tradition; not only Gelug, but also Nyingma, Kagyu
and Sakya. Where does the Lamp itself refer back to? That is
to the prajnaparamita teachings. In terms of prajnaparamita
texts, there are elaborate, intermediate and short, but the
author of all of them is the Buddha. Therefore, all lam-rim
texts have their source in the teachings of the Buddha.
If you want to understand the lam-rim well, you should
study it as extensively as possible. When you understand the
lam-rim well, you will understand the Lamp for the Path. Once
you do, you should teach it all over the world. Even within
the Mahayana tradition, the teaching has many aspects, but in
general, it contains great knowledge. The main thing, however,
the fundamental thing, is concern for others, working for
others, benefiting others. Followers of the Hinayana are
concerned with only their own samsaric suffering; in order to
escape it, they follow the path of the three higher trainings:
higher conduct, higher concentration and higher wisdom. But
there are many ways in which the Mahayana is different from
and higher than the Hinayana, many ways in which this can be
explained, but the main difference is that Mahayana
practitioners are more concerned with working for the welfare
of others than their own.
People nowadays might think of helping other people, but
Mahayana practitioners benefit not only other people but also
suffering hell beings, pretas, animals and every other
sentient being. There is not one sentient being who has not
been our mother; all sentient beings have been our mother
numberless times, therefore, we should be concerned for their
welfare, wanting them to become enlightened as quickly as
possible. This, then, is the fundamental difference between
the Hinayana and the Mahayana, this concern more for others
than oneself, in particular, the wish to enlighten all
sentient beings. That’s what makes the difference.
It is excellent that you are studying the vast and profound
teachings of the Mahayana, thinking about them, analyzing them
intently, and you should continue to do so. In general, there
are many religions and everyone thinks that the teaching of
his or her own religion is the best. But just saying that
one’s own religion is the best doesn’t prove it’s the best;
that doesn’t mean anything. Therefore, simply saying that
Buddhadharma is the best religion in the world doesn’t make it
so. However, there are many logical reasons you can use to
prove that Buddhadharma is, in fact, the best.
For example, even accepting and practicing bodhicitta is
very different from not practicing bodhicitta. Even in this,
there’s a big difference between Buddhism and other religions;
the fact of the presence of the practice of bodhicitta shows
that Buddhism is higher than other religions, that Buddhism is
the best. Buddhism also talks about dependent origination and
emptiness; it explains dependent origination as it exists,
right there. So, not only in conduct but also in view,
Buddhism is very different from other religions and therefore
the best. There are many ways to prove this.
However, Buddhadharma is something that the more and more
you study it, the deeper and deeper it becomes, the more and
more profound you find it to be. This is a quality unique to
Buddhadharma. With other teachings, the more you study them,
the lighter they become.
If you have understood any of what I have taught here, keep
it in mind and build upon it. When you have understood more,
keep that as your foundation and build further upon that. In
this way, your knowledge will continually increase. Then, like
the sun rising, spread Dharma in the West.
There are many countries, such as Vietnam, where Buddhism
existed for centuries, but none were like Tibet. In those
countries, there existed only one aspect of the Buddhadharma,
not all, but in Tibet, all the aspects of the teaching
existed, Hinayana, Sutrayana and Vajrayana. In order to study
all this, you should learn the Tibetan language, study its
grammar, and follow your lama properly.
[Dedication prayers are made and then the monks and nuns
try to make offering to Rinpoche.]
Please, don’t offer me anything. I have enough to eat and
drink; that’s all I need. The reason I have given you this
teaching is not to receive something but for you to practice
purely. I’m not building monasteries or making offerings to
statues and so forth, so I have no need for money. I accept
offerings only when I lack for something. When I have enough,
I don’t accept offerings, especially not from monks or nuns.
My idea of wealth is different. Otherwise, teaching and taking
money is a bit like making business. For now, I just want you
to practice, but if things get bad and I don’t have enough to
eat or drink, then maybe I’ll accept something.
[Then everybody received a blessing from Rinpoche, one by
one.] |