Tuesday, July 23, 2024

The Essential Teachings of Vajrayana Buddhism (3/5)

Buddhism in Tibetan Following China's conquest of Tibet, the religion known as Tibetan Buddhism was driven from its native territory and into exile. It was once believed that one in six Tibetan men was a monk practicing Buddhism.

The Dalai Lama, who has been living in exile in India since escaping the Chinese takeover of his nation in 1959, is the most well-known representative of Tibetan Buddhism. 

Tibetan Buddhism incorporates elements from an old Tibetan religion known as Bon, Tantric, and Shamanic teachings, as well as the core teachings of Mahayana Buddhism.

While Vajrayana Buddhism and Tibetan Buddhism are sometimes confused, they are not the same. In Tibetan Buddhism, Vajrayana is taught alongside the other vehicles. 

The characteristics of Tibetan Buddhism

1) The status of the teacher, or "Lama.
2) The significance of initiations and rituals. 
3) Rich symbolism in the visual
4) Parts of the ancient Tibetan religions
5) Mantras and meditation practices. 

Mantras and yogic techniques are just two. of the many rituals and spiritual exercises that are part of Tibetan Buddhism.  

Tibetan Buddhism places a strong emphasis on supernatural entities. There are many Buddhas and Bodhisattvas—gods and spirits. The ancient Tibetan faiths are still revered. Bodhisattvas are shown as both merciful deities and vengeful ones. 
Faith-related aspects

A teacher is a lama. Although they are typically a senior member of the monastic community, such as a monk or nun, lamas can also be laypeople or married individuals. Frequently, they are the rebirths of former lamas.

In addition to what they study from Buddhist texts and philosophy, lamas frequently possess specialized ritual talents. 

Dalai Lama's knowledge.

The 3rd Dalai Lama, Sonam Gyatso, was the first to hold the title. (The names "Dalai Lama" were given to the two earlier incarnations following their passing.)

Born in 1935 in Amdo, Tibet, Tenzin Gyatso is the fourteenth Dalai Lama and the current one as of 2002. 

The Karmapa literally translates to "one who performs the activity of a Buddha." The seventeenth Karmapa is the present incarnation (2002).

The 17th Karmapa has been recognized in two persons: While Trinlay Thaye Dorje, the leader of an opposing Buddhist sect, has gained the support of the general public, Orgyen Trinley Dorje is legally acknowledged as the 17th Karmapa.

Tibetan Buddhism was much influenced by Tantra, and this has brought in a wealth of complex rituals, symbols, and techniques.

Tantra originated in India and appears in both the Hindu and Buddhist traditions. It gives Tibetan Buddhism a magical element and a rich portfolio of heavenly beings. 

It also brings a wide variety of spiritual techniques, such as mantras, mandalas, ceremonies, and many varieties of yoga


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Please help us develop our Dharma activities that will not only benefit you but all Dharma readers on the planet. Please consider showing your support. Your generosity will certainly help us enhance our work and accomplish more for a better and brighter future.

Thank you for reading. May you find peace and great bliss. With your support, it helps to spread the Buddha’s precious teachings and turn the Dharma wheels in the world.

Aspiration For Bodhichitta
For those in whom the precious Bodhichitta has not arisen
May it arise and not decrease.
But increase further and further.

Dedication of Merit
By this merit, may we then obtain omniscience then.
Having defeated the enemies wrongdoings
May we liberate migratory from the ocean of existence.
With its stormy waves of birth, old age, sickness, and death.

*Note
I do not own or infringe any copyright on the picture(s).
Picture(s) courtesy and credit to the rightful distributors and/or studios
The picture(s) are intended for editorial use only.





Thursday, July 11, 2024

The Essential Teachings of Vajrayana Buddhism (2/5)

Buddhism in Tibetan Following China's conquest of Tibet, the religion known as Tibetan Buddhism was driven from its native territory and into exile. It was once believed that one in six Tibetan men was a monk practicing Buddhism.

The Dalai Lama, who has been living in exile in India since escaping the Chinese takeover of his nation in 1959, is the most well-known representative of Tibetan Buddhism. 
Tibetan Buddhism incorporates elements from an old Tibetan religion known as Bon, Tantric, and Shamanic teachings, as well as the core teachings of Mahayana Buddhism.

While Vajrayana Buddhism and Tibetan Buddhism are sometimes confused, they are not the same. In Tibetan Buddhism, Vajrayana is taught alongside the other vehicles. 
The characteristics of Tibetan Buddhism
1) The status of the teacher, or "Lama.
2) The significance of initiations and rituals. 
3) Rich symbolism in the visual
4) Parts of the ancient Tibetan religions
5) Mantras and meditation practices. 

Mantras and yogic techniques are just two. of the many rituals and spiritual exercises 
that are part of Tibetan Buddhism.  

Tibetan Buddhism places a strong emphasis on supernatural entities. There are many Buddhas and Bodhisattvas—gods and spirits. The ancient Tibetan faiths are still revered. Bodhisattvas are shown as both merciful deities and vengeful ones. 
In Tibetan Buddhism, paintings and other visual aids are employed as understanding tools at all social levels, thanks to the metaphysical framework that has allowed Tibetan Buddhism to grow a robust artistic heritage.

Tibetan Buddhism is widely practiced by laypeople as well as in monastic communities.

In contrast to the inner spiritual life, the lay version places a great emphasis on external religious activities. 
For example, rituals are frequently practiced at temples, pilgrimages are common and frequently involve numerous prostrations, and prayers are repeatedly said with the help of private or public prayer wheels and flags. There are several celebrations, and burials are significant rituals.

In addition to assisting the monks with ceremonial organization, villagers also physically maintain the monasteries.
Donations for our Buddhist research and development. 

Do you earnestly cherish our devoted work? Assuming this is the case, we are delighted that you are finding our blog useful and valuable. Would you consider making a donation for our Buddhist research and development?

We need your help to secure the future of scholarly interaction with Buddhism. Since our very first publication of Dharma works and activities in 2008, we have been effortlessly providing free distribution of Dharma posts and articles throughout the previous 16 years. 

We have exceptionally constrained support and do not receive subsidies or funding from people in general.

Please help us develop our Dharma activities that will not only benefit you but all Dharma readers on the planet. Please consider showing your support. Your generosity will certainly help us enhance our work and accomplish more for a better and brighter future.

Thank you for reading. May you find peace and great bliss. With your support, it helps to spread the Buddha’s precious teachings and turn the Dharma wheels in the world.

Aspiration For Bodhichitta
For those in whom the precious Bodhichitta has not arisen
May it arise and not decrease.
But increase further and further.

Dedication of Merit
By this merit, may we then obtain omniscience then.
Having defeated the enemies wrongdoings
May we liberate migratory from the ocean of existence.
With its stormy waves of birth, old age, sickness, and death.
*Note
I do not own or infringe any copyright on the picture(s).
Picture(s) courtesy and credit to the rightful distributors and/or studios
The picture(s) are intended for editorial use only.




Thursday, July 4, 2024

The Essential Teachings of Vajrayana Buddhism (1/5)

Buddhism in Tibetan Following China's conquest of Tibet, the religion known as Tibetan Buddhism was driven from its native territory and into exile. It was once believed that one in six Tibetan men was a monk practicing Buddhism.

The Dalai Lama, who has been living in exile in India since escaping the Chinese takeover of his nation in 1959, is the most well-known representative of Tibetan Buddhism. 

Tibetan Buddhism incorporates elements from an old Tibetan religion known as Bon, Tantric, and Shamanic teachings, as well as the core teachings of Mahayana Buddhism.

While Vajrayana Buddhism and Tibetan Buddhism are sometimes confused, they are not the same. In Tibetan Buddhism, Vajrayana is taught alongside the other vehicles. 

History
By the end of the eighth century CE, Buddhism had grown significantly in Tibet. The Tibetan ruler, Trisong Detsen, welcomed two Buddhist masters to Tibet and had key Buddhist writings translated into Tibetan before bringing them back from India. 

The first person to arrive was Shantarakshita, the Indian abbot of Nalanda, who established the first monastery in Tibet. After him arrived Padmasambhava, who used his might and knowledge to subdue "spiritual" forces halting construction on the new monastery. 

The Four Lineages of Tibetan Buddhism Over the hundreds of years that the four main schools of Tibetan Buddhism :

1)Nyingmapa, was the oldest sect,  founded by Padmasambhava and is well-known in the West for its adherence to the Tibetan Book of the Dead.

2)Kagyupa: Led by the Karmapa Lama, the Kagyupa tradition was founded by Tilopa (988–1069). Three notable Kagyupa instructors are Milarepa, Marpa, and Naropa.

3)Sakyapa: Gonchok Gyelpo (1034–1102) and his son Gunga Nyingpo (1092-1158) are credited with creating Sakyapa.

4) Gelugpa: The School of Virtuosity This tradition was started by Tsong Khapa Lobsang Drakpa (also known as Je Rinpoche) in 1357 and is currently led by the Dalai Lama.

The New Kadampa Tradition is a prominent Buddhist institution in the United Kingdom, established by Geshe Kelsang Gyatso, a Tibetan by birth. The NKT is seen as being outside of the mainstream tradition by certain Buddhists and non-Buddhists. 

Tibetan Buddhist practice features a number of rituals and spiritual practices, such as the use of mantras and yogic techniques. Supernatural beings are prominent in Tibetan Buddhism. 

Buddhas and Bodhisattvas abound, and gods and spirits taken from earlier Tibetan religions continue to be taken seriously.

Tibetan Buddhist practice features a number of rituals, and spiritual practices, such as the use of mantras and yogic techniques. Supernatural beings are prominent in Tibetan Buddhism. Buddhas and Bodhisattvas abound, and gods and spirits taken from earlier Tibetan religions continue to be taken seriously. 
Donations for our Buddhist research and development. 

Do you earnestly cherish our devoted work? Assuming this is the case, we are delighted that you are finding our blog useful and valuable. Would you consider making a donation for our Buddhist research and development?

We need your help to secure the future of scholarly interaction with Buddhism. Since our very first publication of Dharma works and activities in 2008, we have been effortlessly providing free distribution of Dharma posts and articles throughout the previous 16 years. 

We have exceptionally constrained support and do not receive subsidies or funding from people in general.

Please help us develop our Dharma activities that will not only benefit you but all Dharma readers on the planet. Please consider showing your support. Your generosity will certainly help us enhance our work and accomplish more for a better and brighter future.

Thank you for reading. May you find peace and great bliss. With your support, it helps to spread the Buddha’s precious teachings and turn the Dharma wheels in the world.

Aspiration For Bodhichitta
For those in whom the precious Bodhichitta has not arisen
May it arise and not decrease.
But increase further and further.

Dedication of Merit
By this merit, may we then obtain omniscience then.
Having defeated the enemies wrongdoings
May we liberate migratory from the ocean of existence.
With its stormy waves of birth, old age, sickness, and death.
*Note
I do not own or infringe any copyright on the picture(s).
Picture(s) courtesy and credit to the rightful distributors and/or studios
The picture(s) are intended for editorial use only.

Wednesday, June 26, 2024

What Do Tibetan Buddhists Practice?

Tibetan Buddhism, also known as Vajrayana or tantric Buddhism, embraces a wide variety of practices—including visualization, mantras, and yogic practices—and harnesses mental and physical energies for use on the path to enlightenment.

After Buddhism arrived in Tibet from India in the 7th century, Tibet became the center of Buddhism in central Asia. Over the centuries, the teachings and traditions of Tibetan Buddhism spread to neighboring Mongolia, Bhutan, Nepal, and parts of what are now Russia and India. 

Tibetan Buddhism is the predominant religion in the Himalayan region today. Since the Chinese communist takeover and resulting Tibetan refugee crisis in the mid-20th century, Tibetan Buddhism has spread to the West and become one of the most widely practiced forms of Buddhism around the world. 
What are the practices of Tibet? 
The religious practices found in the Tibetan cultural world, accepted by and even conducted by the monastic order, include the incantation of mystic, magical formulas, the exorcism and destruction of demons, divination, auguries, oracles, and symbolic sacrifice and ransom aspects associated with Shamanism.

What is the history of Tibetan Buddhism? 
After Buddhism arrived in Tibet from India in the 7th century, Indian Buddhist practices were combined with Vajrayana practices to create a distinct religion. 
What are the different schools of Tibetan Buddhism? 
The many schools of Tibetan Buddhism are often divided into two main groups: older traditions and newer traditions. 

What are some important texts in Tibetan Buddhism? 
Among the many Tibetan Buddhist texts, Bardol Thodol (often mistranslated as The Tibetan Book of the Dead) is the most well-known. 
Who are some prominent figures in Tibetan Buddhism? 
From Padmasambhava to His Holiness, the 14th Dalai Lama, these important teachers have shaped and preserved Tibetan Buddhism. 

What is Buddhist tantra? 
Tantra seeks to harness a wide variety of experiences and mental and physical energies for use on the path to enlightenment.

What is the role of retreat in Tibetan Buddhism? 
Tibetan Buddhism embraces retreat as a way to withdraw from everyday life and immerse oneself in practice. 

Where is Tibetan Buddhism practiced, and how did it come to the West? 
The religion is practiced not only in Tibet but also across the Himalayan region and around the world. 
What’s the difference between a monk, a nun, a tulku, a rinpoche, and a lama?  
Monks and nuns lead lives of renunciation and simplicity, while rinpoches and tulkus are considered reincarnated teachers. 

Do you have to learn the Tibetan language to practice Tibetan Buddhism? 
The short answer is no. Many contemporary Tibetan teachers use hybrid practice texts that include the original Tibetan script and translations. 
Why are there so many images of Buddhas, godlike creatures, and demons in Tibetan art and temples? 
Many of the figures in Tibetan art and temples are actually buddhas and bodhisattvas appearing in either a peaceful, semi-wrathful, or wrathful form.

What is the Tibetan mind technique?
Lojong, or Tibetan mind training practices, enable us to stay strong and positive in how we face the challenges of life. Through training our minds, we can transform any negative circumstance into an opportunity to develop love, compassion, and understanding.
Donations for our Buddhist research and development. 
Do you earnestly cherish our devoted work? Assuming this is the case, we are delighted that you are finding our blog useful and valuable. Would you consider making a donation for our Buddhist research and development?

We need your help to secure the future of scholarly interaction with Buddhism. Since our very first publication of Dharma works and activities in 2008, we have been effortlessly providing free distribution of Dharma posts and articles throughout the previous 16 years. 

We have exceptionally constrained support and do not receive subsidies or funding from people in general.

Please help us develop our Dharma activities that will not only benefit you but all Dharma readers on the planet. Please consider showing your support. Your generosity will certainly help us enhance our work and accomplish more for a better and brighter future.

Thank you for reading. May you find peace and great bliss. With your support, it helps to spread the Buddha’s precious teachings and turn the Dharma wheels in the world.

Aspiration For Bodhichitta
For those in whom the precious Bodhichitta has not arisen
May it arise and not decrease.
But increase further and further.

Dedication of Merit
By this merit, may we then obtain omniscience then.
Having defeated the enemies wrongdoings
May we liberate migratory from the ocean of existence.
With its stormy waves of birth, old age, sickness, and death.

*Note
I do not own or infringe any copyright on the picture(s).
Picture(s) courtesy and credit to the rightful distributors and/or studios
The picture(s) are intended for editorial use only.


Friday, June 14, 2024

The Essence of Buddhist Mantras

It's normal to feel overburdened and disengaged in the busy modern world, with all of its obligations and uncertainties. Chanting Buddhist mantras and engaging in Buddhist chants that resonate with the human experience and support you in overcoming obstacles in life is one of the best ways to center yourself, achieve a sense of equilibrium, and experience personal progress. 

These spiritual tools have the power to change people's lives, whether they are mantras for prosperity, happiness, protection, or mental clarity. 

What Makes Buddhist Mantras Essential Chanting in Buddhism 

Essential chanting is an exercise that helps you connect to the universal truths of existence, not only a ceremonial rite. These chants, which have their roots in the Buddha's teachings, help you go past negative energy, feelings, and mental states in order to gain a better understanding of the cosmos and yourself.

In Buddhist meditation, mantras are essential tools for improving focus, awareness, and introspection. A practitioner can transcend the chatter of the mind and reach a state of concentrated awareness by chanting a particular Buddha mantra. 

Repeatedly chanting this produces a frequency that harmonizes with the body's and mind's inherent vibrations, resulting in a state of peace and enlightenment. 

Buddhist mantras are fundamentally about developing compassion, knowledge, and awareness. The core of Buddhist theory and practice are these three virtues. 

Mantras are performed with devoted love and compassion, just like the peaceful deities; others, like the Buddhist mantra for protection, invoke wisdom and understanding. 

Mantra recitation with intention promotes mindfulness, which is the discipline of being totally aware of and absorbed in the present moment.

Tibetan mantras are well known for their profound significance and ethereal sound. They have a significant impact on daily living, ceremonies, and meditation techniques in Tibetan Buddhism. 

These mantras are frequently uttered in order to call a particular deity, blessings, or enlightenment. 

The power of Buddhist chants to alter the mind and spirit is what gives them their charm. With consistent practice, these chants improve one's inner clarity, fortify one's relationship with the divine, and give one the strength to face obstacles in life.

There's no hard-and-fast rule for picking the right mantra for a specific need. Choosing the right mantra is a personal and spiritual destiny. 

It requires you to understand your own needs, intentions, and spiritual goals. Some people may be drawn to mantras for peace and healing, while others may seek protection or success.

If you're a beginner, doing guided meditations would be a great help for a head start.

Buddhist mantra chanting is a kind of meditation that calls for concentration, dedication, and appropriate form. It goes beyond simple repetition. 

The following are some fundamental chanting techniques: 

1) Position: Take a comfortable seat with your back straight, and let the energy come in. 

2) Breath control: Take a deep breath and concentrate on the mantra's sound and vibration. 

3) Pronunciation: Acquire the proper pronunciation to feel the energy of the mantra. 

4) Repetition: Say the mantra out loud or softly while maintaining mindfulness. 

5) Visualization: To strengthen the bond, visualize the related god or goal. 

6) Using mala beads: You can use mala beads to record your repetitions.

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Do you earnestly cherish our devoted work? Assuming this is the case, we are delighted that you are finding our blog useful and valuable. Would you consider making a donation for our Buddhist research and development?

We need your help to secure the future of scholarly interaction with Buddhism. Since our very first publication of Dharma works and activities in 2008, we have been effortlessly providing free distribution of Dharma posts and articles throughout the previous 16 years. 

We have exceptionally constrained support and do not receive subsidies or funding from people in general.

Please help us develop our Dharma activities that will not only benefit you but all Dharma readers on the planet. Please consider showing your support. Your generosity will certainly help us enhance our work and accomplish more for a better and brighter future.

Thank you for reading. May you find peace and great bliss. With your support, it helps to spread the Buddha’s precious teachings and turn the Dharma wheels in the world.

Aspiration For Bodhichitta
For those in whom the precious Bodhichitta has not arisen
May it arise and not decrease.
But increase further and further.

Dedication of Merit
By this merit, may we then obtain omniscience then.
Having defeated the enemies wrongdoings
May we liberate migratory from the ocean of existence.
With its stormy waves of birth, old age, sickness, and death.

*Note
I do not own or infringe any copyright on the picture(s).
Picture(s) courtesy and credit to the rightful distributors and/or studios
The picture(s) are intended for editorial use only.


Wednesday, June 12, 2024

The power of chanting

A mantra—literally “that which protects the mind”—is a series of Sanskrit syllables that evoke the energy of a particular Buddha or Bodhisattva. It works as a sacred sound that brings blessings to ourselves and others and as a tool to transform our mind into one that is more compassionate and wise.

Introduction

For thousands of years, in a wide range of cultural traditions, people have been using sounds in a variety of ways to contribute to health and well-being. There are traditional songs, chants, and music to accompany many social activities. 

In some indigenous tribes, virtually every activity is preceded by a ceremonial chant, whether it is hunting, gathering or preparing food, going to war, marriage or any type of celebration. These chants help to prepare the participants mentally, physically, and spiritually for the coming event. 

In this article, we will focus on one aspect of this common practice: the use of certain vocalized ‘power sounds’ that we will call mantras. We will look at information about mantras and discuss some of the ways that they can affect human consciousness. 

Vibrational meaning

What are mantras? Why do they have such a strong capacity to affect us? To answer these questions, we must first acknowledge that sound, in general, has a powerful effect on human consciousness. 

Some sounds, such as nails on a blackboard, are irritating, while other sounds, such as a gently babbling brook, soothe us. For the most part, all humans tend to react to these

sounds similarly, although there may be some variation as to which sounds affect which people. It may be useful to think of a sound as a relationship of frequencies.’ 

Every single, solitary sound is a vibration with a specific frequency. Most of the sounds we hear consist of several sounds combined, or a collection of frequencies. It is the way that these frequencies relate to each other that determines the way they affect human consciousness. 

With noise or discordant sound, the frequencies have no mathematical relationship with each other. In music, the frequencies (the notes) relate to each other. They are in harmony with each other and are more naturally pleasing to the ear.

A good way to understand a mantra’s power is to look at the way a chord affects us in music. A major A chord, which is a harmonic relationship of three frequencies or notes, has a built-in emotional quality, an inherent way of affecting human consciousness. 

It makes us feel a certain way. A minor chord, which is a different harmonic relationship of three notes, has a completely different emotional quality than the major chord. It affects us completely differently. Humansseem to recognize and react to these sounds in a similar way. It is built-in. 

We don’t know why it affects us this way—it just does.Similarly, a mantra is a collection of sounds, a relationship of frequencies. Every mantra has an innate ability to affect human consciousness. Said another way, each sound and each syllable have a natural, inherent power. 

Certain combinations of these sounds have a ‘vibrational meaning,’ a vibratory quality that relates to aspects of humanity and divinity. Repeated exposure to these sounds can bring about a shift in human consciousness, bringing that consciousness into harmony with that vibratory quality. 

A mantra has the built-in power to balance energy and change.Our beliefs change the way we act, think, and feel. We’re not sure exactly how it works. I believe that some ancient root languages, such as Hebrew and Sanskrit, and some indigenous languages were built upon this realization, so that the vibrational meaning of certain sounds contributed to the literal meaning of words. 

It seems likely that, back when human consciousness was more right-brained and intuitive, the language was developed in such a way that there was a truer connection between the vibrational meaning and the literal meaning of a ‘word. 

Our modern languages, developed during a time when human consciousness was more left-brained and less intuitive, seem less connected in this vibrational way.

Some mantras evolved to become the names of deities. In other words, the sounds that represented a certain set of human or divine qualities were eventually assigned a divine persona. and the sound became the name of that persona, that deity.

These deity names and mantras are believed, in many traditions, to have power even when they are in the form of a thought. In other words, the name itself has been identified as carrying power. 

It appears likely that the actual sound of pronouncing the name may lend it further power, although the written name and a mental focus on the name are also said to carry power. 

If we broaden our standard definition of the word sound,’ we can view a thought as a type of sound in that it is also a vibratory expression. Some traditions believe that a thought form is like an electromagnetic transmission.

Chanters in the study also reported what mantra chanters have known for thousands of years: mantras have the power to sooth anxiety and create joyous feelings. It's believed that the sound vibrations produced during mantra chanting stimulate and balance the chakras (energy centers of the body).

Chanting mantras helps to heal the body, protect the mind, and manifest human desires by connecting the person who is chanting with the divine.  

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Do you earnestly cherish our devoted work? Assuming this is the case, we are delighted that you are finding our blog useful and valuable. Would you consider making a donation for our Buddhist research and development?

We need your help to secure the future of scholarly interaction with Buddhism. Since our very first publication of Dharma works and activities in 2008, we have been effortlessly providing free distribution of Dharma posts and articles throughout the previous 16 years. 

We have exceptionally constrained support and do not receive subsidies or funding from people in general.

Please help us develop our Dharma activities that will not only benefit you but all Dharma readers on the planet. Please consider showing your support. Your generosity will certainly help us enhance our work and accomplish more for a better and brighter future.

Thank you for reading. May you find peace and great bliss. With your support, it helps to spread the Buddha’s precious teachings and turn the Dharma wheels in the world.

Aspiration For Bodhichitta
For those in whom the precious Bodhichitta has not arisen
May it arise and not decrease.
But increase further and further.

Dedication of Merit
By this merit, may we then obtain omniscience then.
Having defeated the enemies wrongdoings
May we liberate migratory from the ocean of existence.
With its stormy waves of birth, old age, sickness, and death.

*Note
I do not own or infringe any copyright on the picture(s).
Picture(s) courtesy and credit to the rightful distributors and/or studios

The picture(s) are intended for editorial use only.





Friday, June 7, 2024

A Practitioner's Guide to Mantra (3/3)

A Complete Guide to Buddhist Mantra Yana Practice. 

Precious guru, embodiment of all buddhas of the three times; Great bliss, the lord of all accomplishments; wrathful power, who dispels all hindrances and subdues demons; Pray and bestow your blessings. 

Please remove the outer, inner, and secret obstacles and grant your blessings to accomplish your wishes spontaneously.
A devoted Buddhist of faith chants mantras. The important points of practice are the foundations of faith and compassion.

How do we correctly chant mantras for maximum benefit? What are the rules for guiding the mantrayana practice? What are the prerequisites for mantra practice? 

Guru Rinpoche, the great Lotus-born Padmasambhava, advised his great disciple, Lady Yeshe Tsogyal, on how to practice the mantrayana:

“You must possess the key point of faith free from fluctuation, like a river. 
You must possess the key point of compassion, free from enmity, like the sun.
You must possess the key point of generosity, free from prejudice, like a spring of drinking water.

You must possess the key point of samaya free from flaws, like a crystal ball.” This is the foundation for practicing the mantra yana. All four of these are far more important than mechanics like “proper pronunciation.” 
Faith and compassion are indispensible. What did Guru Rinpoche mean when he talked about the key points of faith and compassion? 

For a mantra, or any other Buddhist practice, to have a profound impact on our lives, we have to start from the right place—before we even worry about how to pronounce the mantra.
For example, every location on a map needs two coordinates. For the mantra, the two coordinates are faith and compassion. In Buddhism, faith arises from wisdom, not blind adherence to doctrine. 

For this reason, in the Mantrayana, the two wings of the bird of enlightenment are wisdom and compassion.

Put another way, to practice Mantrayana in a worthwhile way, we have to be motivated by Bodhichitta, the intention to benefit all sentient beings. 
Without that motivation, it is not a Mahayana Buddhist practice. Once we have the motivation, we have to have the wisdom of faith.

We have faith in the correctness of the teachings, the Dharma, the Budhda, and our lineages of teachers. With that faith, motivated by our compassion and Bodhichitta, we have all the qualifications we need to practice the mantrayana.

His Eminence Garchen Rinpoche, in Guidelines for Mantra Practice, wrote, "The main requirement for mantra chanting of any Enlightened Deity according to the teachings, is Bodhichitta intention.
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Do you earnestly cherish our devoted work? Assuming this is the case, we are delighted that you are finding our blog useful and valuable. Would you consider making a donation for our Buddhist research and development?

We need your help to secure the future of scholarly interaction with Buddhism. Since our very first publication of Dharma works and activities in 2008, we have been effortlessly providing free distribution of Dharma posts and articles throughout the previous 16 years. 

We have exceptionally constrained support and do not receive subsidies or funding from people in general.

Please help us develop our Dharma activities that will not only benefit you but all Dharma readers on the planet. Please consider showing your support. Your generosity will certainly help us enhance our work and accomplish more for a better and brighter future.

Thank you for reading. May you find peace and great bliss. With your support, it helps to spread the Buddha’s precious teachings and turn the Dharma wheels in the world.

Aspiration For Bodhichitta
For those in whom the precious Bodhichitta has not arisen
May it arise and not decrease.
But increase further and further.

Dedication of Merit
By this merit, may we then obtain omniscience then.
Having defeated the enemies wrongdoings
May we liberate migratory from the ocean of existence.
With its stormy waves of birth, old age, sickness, and death.

*Note
I do not own or infringe any copyright on the picture(s).
Picture(s) courtesy and credit to the rightful distributors and/or studios
The picture(s) are intended for editorial use only.