Wednesday, August 16, 2023

The Ten Stages of the Bodhisattva Path - Fifth Bhumi (5/10)

 
Ksitigarbha Bodhisattva
In Buddhism, Bhumi, or stage. Every stage represents a level of attainment in that case and serves as the basis for the next one. Each level marks a definite advancement in one's training that is accompanied by progressively greater power and wisdom.

Stages, or Bhumiis a Sanskrit word for "land" or "ground," and the list of ten Bhumis are ten "lands" a Bodhisattva must pass through on the way to Buddhahood. The Bhumis were important to early Mahayana Buddhism. A list of ten Bhumis appears in several Mahayana texts, although they are not always identical. The Bhumis are also associated with the perfections, or Paramitas.

The ten Bhumis literally mean the "grounds" or levels of Bodhisattvas in which the qualities of their training unfold. With the attainment of the tenth Bhumi, one arrives at and eventually reaches perfection at complete enlightenment.
Many schools of Buddhism describe some kind of path of development. Often, these are extensions of the Eightfold Path. Since this is a description of the progress of a Bodhisattva, much of the list below promotes the turning from concern for oneself to concern for others.

In Mahayana Buddhism, the Bodhisattva is the ideal of practise. This is an enlightened being who vows to remain in the world until all other beings realise enlightenment.

Here is a standard list taken from the Dashabhumika-sutra, which is taken from the larger Avatamsaka, or Flower Garland Sutra.
Forest Goddess, Parnashavari
I
n the Ten Bhumis of the Dasabhumika Sutra. It refers to the following ten Bhumis:
  1. The stage of joy, in which one rejoices at realising a partial aspect of the truth. 
  2. The stage of freedom from defilement, in which one is free from all defilement.
  3. The stage of the emission of light, in which one radiates the light of wisdom.
  4. The stage of glowing wisdom, in which the flame of wisdom burns away earthly desires. 
  5. The stage of the Difficult to Master. (Sanskrit: sudurjaya), in which one surmounts the illusions of darkness, or ignorance as the Middle Way. 
    The fifth level is called "Difficult to Master" because it involves practises that are so arduous and require a great deal of effort to perfect. It is also called the "Difficult to Overcome level because, when one has completed the training at this level, one has profound wisdom and insight that are difficult to surpass or undermine. According to Nagarjuna,

The fifth is called extremely difficult to overcome.
Since all evil ones find it extremely hard to conquer him,
He becomes skilled at knowing the subtle
Meanings of the noble truths, and so forth.

Bodhisattvas on this level cultivate the perfection of samadhi. They develop strong powers of meditative stabilisation and overcome tendencies towards distraction. They achieve mental one-pointedness, and they perfect calm abiding. They also fully penetrate the meanings of the Four Noble Truths and the two truths (conventional truths and ultimate truths) and perceive all phenomena as empty, transient, and prone to suffering.

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