Saturday 31 March 2012

35 BUDDHAS FROM WIKIPEDIA,THE FREE ENCYCLOPEDIA.


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The 35 Buddhas are known from the Sutra of the Three Heaps (Sanskrit: Triskandhadharmasutra; Tib. phung po gsum pa'i mdo), popular in Tibetan Buddhism. This Mahayana sutra actually describes a practice of purification by confession and making prostrations to these Buddhas, and is part of the larger Stack of Jewels Sutra (Sanskrit: Ratnakutasutra; Tib. dkon mchog brtsegs pa'i mdo). Their names are:
Tibetan (Wylie)English
ton pa chom.dan.da de.zhin.sheg dra.chom yang.dag.pa dzog.pa sang.gya pal.gyal.wa shakya tub.pa (ston pa bcom ldan 'das de bzhin gshegs dgra bcom yang dag pa rdzogs pa sangs rgyas dpal rgyal ba sha kya thub pa)The founder, Bhagawan, Tathagata, Arhat, Perfectly Completed Buddha, Glorius Conqueror Shakyamuni Buddha
dor.je nying.po rab.tu jom.pa (rdo rje snying pos rab tu 'joms pa)Thoroughly Destroying with Vajra Essence
rin.chen o.tro (rin chen 'od 'phro)Radiant Jewel
lu.wang.gyi.gyal.po (klu dbang gi rgyal po)King, Lord of the Nagas
pa.wo.de (dpa' bo'i sde)Army of Heroes
pal.gye (dpal dgyes)Delighted Hero
rin.chen.me (rin chen me)Jewel Fire
rin.chen da o (rin chen zla 'od)Jewel Moonlight
tong.wa don.yo (mthong ba don yod)Meaningful to See
rin.chen da.wa (rin chen zla ba)Jewel Moon
dri.ma me.pa (dri ma med pa)Stainless One
pal.jin (dpal sbyin)Bestowed with Courage
tsang.pa (tshang pa)Pure One
tsang.pa.jin (tshang pas sbyin)Bestowed with Purity
chu.lha (chu lha)Water God
chu lha lha (chu lha'i lha)Deity of the Water God
pal.zang (dpal bzang)Glorious Goodness
tsan.dan.pal (tsan dan dpal)Glorious Sandalwood
zi.ji.ta.ya (gzi brjid mtha' yas)Infinite Splendour
o.pal ('od dpal)Glorious Light
nya.ngan me.pa.pal (mya ngan med pa'i dpal)Sorrowless Glory
se.me kyi.bu (srid med kyi bu)Son of Non-craving
me.tog.pal (me tok dpal)Glorious Flower
tsang.pa o.zer nam.par rol.pa ngon.pa kyen.pa (tshang pa 'od zer rnam par rol pas mngon par mkhyen pa)Pure Light Rays Clearly Knowing by Play
pa.ma o.zer nam.pa rol.pa ngon.par kyen.pa (pad ma'i 'od zer rnam pa rol pas mngon par mkhyen pa)Lotus light Rays Clearly knowing by Play
nor.pal (nor dpal)Glorious Wealth
dran.pa.pal (dran pa'i dpal)Glorious Mindfulness
tsan.pal shin.tu yong.dag (mtshan dpal shin tu yongs grags)Glorious Name is Widely Renowned
wang.po tog.gi gyal.tsan gyi gyal.po (dbang po'i tog gi rgyal mtshan gyi rgyal po)King Holding the Victory Banner of Foremost Power
shin.tu nam.par non.pa.pal (shin tu rnam par gnon pa'i dpal)Glorious One Totally Subduing
yul.la shin.tu nam.par gyal.wa (g.yul las shin tu rnam par rgyal ba)Utterly Victorious in Battle
nam.pa non.pa sheg.pa.pal (rnam par gnon pa'i gshegs pa'i dpal)Glorious Transcendence Through Subduing
kun.na nang.wa ko.pa.pal (kun nas snang ba bkod pa'i dpal)Glorious Manifestations Illuminating All
rin.chen pa.ma nam.par non.pa.pal (rin chen pad ma'i rnam par gnon pa'i dpal)Jewel Lotus who Subdues All
dra.chom yang.dag.pa.dzog.pa sang.gya rin.po.che dang.pa.ma la rab.tu.zhug ri.wang.gi.gyal.po (dgra bcom yang dag pa rdzogs pa sangs rgyas rin po che dang pad ma la rab tu bzhugs ri dbang gi rgyal po)All-subduing Jewel Lotus, Arhat, Perfectly Completed Buddha, King of the Lord of the Mountains Firmly Seated on Jewel and Lotus.END=RESEARCH BUDDHIST DHARMA BY BACH LIEN HOA.( TAM THANH ).MHDT.OM MANI PADME HUM.( 3 TIMES ).1/4/2012.

THE 35 BUDDHAS FOR CONFESSION OF MORAL DOWNFALLS.

      

The thirty five Buddhas for confession of moral downfalls, when they were bodhisattvas, made very strong prayers that those beings who recited their names after the bodhisattvas became enlightened would accumulate vast merits and purify lifetimes of negative karma, planting the seed for their own enlightenment as well. the blessing comes from saying these Buddhas' name's while performing full body length prostrations to them. The verses repeated (in English) are as follows:
To the Founder, Bhagavan, Tathagata, Arhat, perfectly completed Buddha, glorious conqueror Shakyamuni Buddha, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Thoroughly Destroying with Vajra Essence, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Radiant Jewel, I prostrate.
To Tathagata King, Lord of the Nagas, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Army of Heroes, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Delighted Hero, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Jewel Fire, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Jewel Moonlight, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Meaningful to See, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Jewel Moon, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Stainless One, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Bestowed with Courage, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Pure One, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Bestowed with Purity, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Water God, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Deity of the Water God, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Glorious Goodness, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Glorious Sandalwood, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Infinite Splendor, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Glorious Light, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Sorrowless Glory, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Son of Non-craving, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Glorious Flower, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Pure Light Rays Clearly Knowing by Play, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Lotus Light Rays Clearly Knowing by Play, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Glorious Wealth, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Glorious Mindfulness, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Glorious Name Widely Renowned, I prostrate.
To Tathagata King Holding the Victory Banner of Foremost Power, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Glorious One Totally Subduing, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Utterly Victorious inBattle, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Glorious Transcendence Through Subduing, I prostrate.
To Tathagata Glorious Manifestations Illuminating All, I prostrate.
To Tathagata All-Subduing Jewel Lotus, I prostrate.
To Tathagata, arhat, perfectly completed buddha, King of the Lord of Mountains Firmly Seated on Jewel and Lotus, I prostrate. (3x).END=RESEARCH BUDDHIST DHARMA BY BACH LIEN HOA.( TAM THANH ).NAM MO SHAKYAMUNI BUDDHA.( 3 TIMES ).MHDT.OM MANI PADME HUM.( 3 TIMES ).1/4/2012.

MAHAYANA BUDDHIST RESOURCES.

 



Tripitaka Index



The original Chinese Sutra

Buddha speaks Amitabha Sutra Translated by Buddhist Text Translation Society

Introduction:
A pure land that much more beautiful and happier than heaven.

Audio: (Right click & Save As)
Amitabha (493 KB) Be reborn in Pure Land Dharani (586 KB)

The original Chinese Sutra

Sutra of the Past Vows of Earth Store Bodhisattva Translated by Buddhist Text Translation Society

Introduction:
A really affecting story. An entrance of Mahayana.

Audio: (Right click & Save As)
Mantra for eliminating doomed evil Karma(176K) Text of The Mantra

The original Chinese Sutra

Great Compassion Dharani Sutra Translated by Silfong Chen

Introduction:
The Sutra of the famous Great Compassion/Maha Karuna/Maha Karunikacitta/Nilakantha Dharani

Audio of this Dharani: (Right click & Save As)
Chinese chant(4.75 MB) Sanskrit chant(2.3 MB) The Mudras

The original Chinese Sutra

Medicine Master Buddha Sutra Translated by Buddhist Text Translation Society

Introduction:
Introduces another Mantra that can cure diseases.

Audio: (Right click & Save As)
Medicine Master Buddha Dharani (736 KB)

The original Chinese version(CHM)

A Guide To the Bodhisattva Way Of Life Translated by BIONA ED.

Introduction:
How to become a Bodhisattva? The key is here.

The original Chinese Sutra

The Practices and Vows of Samantabhadra BodhisattvaTranslated by Simpei Shao
The Practices and Vows of Samantabhadra Bodhisattva (PDF)Translated by Upasika Chihmonn

Introduction:
Wish as Bodhisattvas wish; Do as Bodhisattvas do

The original Chinese Sutra
Shurangama Sutra Translated by B.T.T.S.
  • Revised 10-chapters version, with more guides for reading, and Shurangama Mantra in Sanskrit.
Introduction:
Shurangama Sutra is in this world, then the True-Dharma is in this world.

Commentaries on this sutra Help you to understand the sutra.

Audio: (Right click & Save As)
Shurangama Mantra Heart (217 KB)

The original Chinese Sutra

Wonderful Dharma Lotus SutraTranslated by B.T.T.S.

Introduction:
The king of Sutras, makes our hearts open like a lotus.


The Sutras of Dharma Lotus Group

The original Chinese Sutra

Mahayana Mahaparinirvana SutraTranslated by Kosho Yamamoto


Introduction:
The ultimate teachings.


The original Chinese Sutra

Tathagata's Unimaginable State Sutra Translated by Silfong Chen

Introduction:
A Miraculous teaching; A shortcut to Buddhahood.

Images for meditation

The original Chinese Sutra

Mahayana Sublime Treasure King Sutra Translated by Silfong Chen

Introduction:

Here comes the famous "Om Ma Ni Pad Me Hum"!

Audio: (Right click & Save As)
Om Ma Ni Pad Me Hum(262K) Om Ma Ni Pad Me Hum(119K)

The original Chinese Sutra

Maha-Cundi Dharani Sutra from e-sangha forum

Introduction:

Sutra of Cundi Dharani

Audio: (Right click & Save As)
Cundi Dharani(236K) Cundi Dharani(152K) Cundi Dharani Heart(118K)

The original Chinese Sutra


Sanghata Sutra (excerpt) Translated by Silfong Chen


Introduction:
The merits gained by reading this Sutra are countless.


The original Chinese Sutra

Mahayana Lankavatara Sutra Translated by Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki

Introduction:
The Heart-mark of Buddhas.
An important sutra of Dhyana(Zen) school.

The three versions of this sutra

The original Chinese Sutra

The Sixth Patriarch's Dharma Jewel Platform Sutra Translated by B.T.T.S.

Introduction:
The Buddhas' topmost secret -- True-Dharma-Eye-Store had been delivered to China by Bodhidharma, who is the 1st Patriarch of the Dhyana(Zen)-School in China; and Hui Neng is the 6th Patriarch.



More Mahayana Buddhist Resources

May these merits and virtues
be spread universally to everything,
so that we and other living beings
all together will attain the Buddha Way.END=RESEARCH BUDDHIST DHARMA BY BACH LIEN HOA.( TAM THANH ).NAM MO SHAKYAMUNI BUDDHA.( 3 TIMES ).MHDT.1/4/2012.OM MANI PADME HUM.( 3 TIMES ).

CONFESS BY RECITING THE NAMES OF THE 35 BUDDHAS.

 


(Taisho Tripitaka 0326)

(Also known as:)
Mahayana Sutra Of The Three Superior Heaps
Namo: The Bodhisattva's Confession of Moral Downfalls

Pictures of the 35 Buddhas



I, whose name is . . . , at all times go for refuge to the Guru, go for refuge to the Buddha, go for refuge to the Dharma, go for refuge to the Sangha.

To the Teacher, World Honored One, Tathagata, Foe Destroyer, Completely Perfect Buddha, Glorious Conqueror Shakyamuni I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Complete Subduer with the Essence of Vajra I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Jewel of Radiant Light I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Powerful King of the Nagas I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Leader of the Heroes I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Glorious Pleasure I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Jewel Fire I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Jewel Moonlight I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Meaningful to Behold I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Jewel Moon I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Stainless One I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Bestower of Glory I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Pure One I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Transforming with Purity I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Water Deity I prostrate.

To the Tathagata God of Water Deities I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Glorious Excellence I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Glorious Sandalwood I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Endless Splendor I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Glorious Light I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Glorious One without Sorrow I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Son without Craving I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Glorious Flower I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Clearly Knowing through Enjoying Pure Radiance I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Clearly Knowing through Enjoying Lotus Radiance I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Glorious Wealth I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Glorious Mindfulness I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Glorious Name of Great Renown I prostrate.

To the Tathagata King of the Victory Banner Head of the Powerful Ones I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Glorious One Complete Subduer I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Great Victor in Battle I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Glorious One Complete Subduer Passed Beyond I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Glorious Array Illuminating All I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Jewel Lotus Great Subduer I prostrate.

To the Tathagata Foe Destroyer, Completely Perfect Buddha, King of Mount Neru Seated Firmly on a Jewel and a Lotus I prostrate.

O All you [Tathagatas] and all the others, however many Tathagatas, the Foe Destroyers, the Completely Perfect Buddhas, the World Honored Ones there are dwelling and abiding in all the worldly realms of the ten directions, all you Buddhas, the World Honored Ones, please listen to me.

In this life and in all my lives since beginning-less time, in all my places of rebirth while wandering in samsara, I have done negative actions, have ordered them to be done, and have rejoiced in their being done. I have stolen the property of the bases of offering, the property of the Sangha, and the property of the Sanghas of the ten directions, have ordered it to be stolen, and have rejoiced in it being stolen. I have committed the five unbounded heinous actions, have ordered them to be committed, and have rejoiced in their being committed. I have completely engaged in the paths of the ten non-virtuous actions, have ordered others to engage in them, and have rejoiced in their engaging in them.

Being obstructed by such karmic obstructions, I shall become a hell being, or I shall be born as an animal, or I shall go to the land of the hungry ghosts, or I shall be born as a barbarian in an irreligious country, or I shall be born as a long-life god, or I shall come to have incomplete senses, or I shall come to hold wrong views, or I shall have no opportunity to please a Buddha.

All such karmic obstructions I declare in the presence of the Buddhas, the World Honored Ones, who have become exalted wisdom, who have become eyes, who have become witnesses, who have become valid, who see with their wisdom. I confess without concealing or hiding anything, and from now on I will avoid and refrain from such actions.

All you Buddhas, the World Honored Ones, please listen to me. In this life and in all my previous lives since the beginning-less time, in all my places of rebirth while wandering in samsara, whatever root of virtue there is in my giving to others, even in my giving a morsel of food to one born as an animal; whatever root of virtue there is in my maintaining moral discipline; whatever root of virtue there is in my actions conducive to great liberation; whatever root of virtue there is in my acting to fully ripen sentient beings; whatever root of virtue there is in my generating a supreme mind of enlightenment; and whatever root of virtue there is in my unsurpassed exalted wisdom; all of these assembled, gathered, and collected together, by fully dedicating them to the unsurpassed, to that of which there is no higher, to that which is even higher than the high, and to that which surpasses the unsurpassed, I fully dedicate to the unsurpassed, perfect, complete enlightenment.

Just as the Buddhas, the World Honored Ones of the past, have dedicated fully, just as the Buddhas, the World Honored Ones who are yet to come, will dedicate fully, and just as the Buddhas, the World Honored Ones who are living now, dedicate fully, so too do I dedicate fully.

I confess individually all negative actions. I rejoice in all merit. I beseech and request all the Buddhas. May I attain the holy, supreme, unsurpassed, exalted wisdom.

Whoever are the Conquerors, the supreme beings living now, those of the past, and likewise those who are yet to come, with a boundless ocean of praise for all your good qualities, and with my palms pressed together I go close to you for refuge.END=RESEARCH BUDDHIST DHARMA BY BACH LIEN HOA.( TAM THANH ).NAM MO SHAKYAMUNI BUDDHA.( 3 TIMES ).MHDT.1/4/2012.OM MANI PADME HUM.( 3 TIMES ).

BUDDHIST IMAGES RESOURCE.

 



Tripitaka Index



Groups of Buddhas

The 35 Buddhas
The Buddhas of the five directions
The 7 Buddhas


The Buddhas of the three times(past, present and future)


From left to right: Amitabha Buddha, Sakyamuni Buddha, Medicine Master Buddha .END=RESEARCH BUDDHIST DHARMA BY BACH LIEN HOA.( TAM THANH ).NAM MO SHAKYAMUNI BUDDHA.( 3 TIMES ).1/4/2012.MHDT.SYDNEY AUSTRALIA.
The 35 Buddhas
The 35 Buddhas

THE BODHISATTVA'S CONFESSION.

There are a variety of purification practices, "The Bodhisattva's Confession of Ethical Downfalls" being one of the most popular. We all have done actions that we now feel badly about doing, and we have aspects of ourselves that we do not like and wish to change. Purification practices are excellent means to remove emotional burdens such as guilt, as well as to pacify the obstacles to our happiness and self-improvement created by the imprints of our destructive actions. Guilt over past actions is useless, only leaving us feeling helpless and hopeless. On the other hand, acting to purify negative imprints and afflictions is very productive. It helps us to change our bad habits and subdues obstacles to long life and success in our spiritual practice.

A complete purification practice consists of four opponent powers:

1. The power of regret for having done the negative action.

2. The power of reliance: taking refuge, which restores our relationship with holy objects, and generating the altruistic intention, which restores our relationship with other sentient beings.

3. The power of the remedial action, e.g. prostration, offering, reciting the names of the Buddha, reading or contemplating the Dharma, etc.

4. The power of the promise not to repeat the action.

These four opponent powers are found in "The Bodhisattva's Confession of Ethical Downfalls," the Vajrasattva meditation, and other practices.

The Bodhisattva's Confession of Ethical Downfalls: Prostrations to the Thirty-Five Buddhas

There are several visualizations of the thirty-five Buddhas. The easiest is to visualize Shakyamuni Buddha, golden in color, with thirty-four light rays coming from his heart. These light rays form five rows and upon each ray is seated a Buddha. The Buddhas in each row resemble one of the five Dhyani Buddhas.

Akshobya BuddhaIn the first row, are the next six Buddhas mentioned in the prayer. They resemble Akshobya Buddha, blue, the left hand in his lap in the gesture of meditative equipoise, the right hand in the earth-touching gesture (on the right knee, palm down). However, the One Thus Gone, the King with Power over the Nagas, looks slightly different: he has a blue body, a white face, and his hands are folded together at his heart.

Vairocana Buddha


In the second row, the next seven Buddhas resemble Vairocana Buddha, white, with both hands at the heart, the index fingers extended.



Ratnasambhava Buddha

In the third row, the next seven Buddhas resemble Ratnasambhava Buddha, yellow. His left hand is in meditative equipoise, and his right hand is in the gesture of giving (on the right knee, palm outwards).


Amitabha Buddha


In the fourth row, the next seven Buddhas resemble Amitabha Buddha, red, with both hands in meditative equipoise on his lap.


Amogasiddhi Buddha


In the fifth row, the next seven Buddhas resemble Amogasiddhi Buddha, green. The left hand is in meditative equipoise and the right hand is bent at the elbow with the palm facing outwards.


Visualize that you are surrounded by all sentient beings in human form and that you are leading them in prostrating to the Buddhas. While prostrating, imagine much light coming from the Buddhas and flowing into you and into all the sentient beings around you. This light purifies all imprints of negative actions and all afflictions.

After reciting the names of the thirty-five Buddhas and the prayer of the three heaps -- confession, rejoicing and dedication -- you may also want to recite the "General Confession."

After this, visualize the thirty-four Buddhas dissolve into Shakyamuni Buddha. He comes on top of your head and melts into golden light. The light descends through the crown of your head and goes to your heart chakra, in the center of your chest. Feel that all negative karma and obscurations have been completely purified and that your mind has become inseparable from the Buddha's pure mind of wisdom and compassion.



To increase the benefit of each prostration, first prostrate three times while reciting:

om namo manjushriye namo sushriye namo uttama shriye soha.

Continue to prostrate while reciting the names of the Buddhas and the confession prayer.

I, (say your name) throughout all times, take refuge in the Gurus; I take refuge in the Buddhas; I take refuge in the Dharma; I take refuge in the Sangha.

To the Founder, the Transcendent Destroyer, the One Thus Gone(1), the Foe Destroyer, the Fully Enlightened One, the Glorious Conqueror from the Shakyas I bow down.


To the One Thus Gone, the Great Destroyer, Destroying with Vajra Essence I bow down.

To the One Thus Gone, the Jewel Radiating Light I bow down.

To the One Thus Gone, the King with Power over the Nagas I bow down.

To the One Thus Gone, the Leader of the Warriors I bow down.

To the One Thus Gone, the Glorious Blissful One I bow down.

To the One Thus Gone, the Jewel Fire I bow down.


To the One Thus Gone, the Jewel Moonlight I bow down.

To the One Thus Gone, Whose Pure Vision Brings Accomplishments I bow down.

To the One Thus Gone, the Jewel Moon I bow down.

To the One Thus Gone, the Stainless One I bow down.

To the One Thus Gone, the Glorious Giver I bow down.

To the One Thus Gone, the Pure One I bow down.

To the One Thus Gone, the Bestower of Purity I bow down.


To the One Thus Gone, the Celestial Waters I bow down.

To the One Thus Gone, the Deity of the Celestial Waters I bow down.

To the One Thus Gone, the Glorious Good I bow down.

To the One Thus Gone, the Glorious Sandalwood I bow down.

To the One Thus Gone, the One of Unlimited Splendor I bow down.

To the One Thus Gone, the Glorious Light I bow down.

To the One Thus Gone, the Glorious One without Sorrow I bow down.


To the One Thus Gone, the Son of the Desireless One I bow down.

To the One Thus Gone, the Glorious Flower I bow down.

To the One Thus Gone, Who Understands Reality Enjoying the Radiant Light of Purity I bow down.

To the One Thus Gone, Who Understands Reality Enjoying the Radiant Light of the Lotus I bow down.

To the One Thus Gone, the Glorious Gem I bow down.

To the One Thus Gone, the Glorious One who is Mindful I bow down.

To the One Thus Gone, the Glorious One whose Name is Extremely Renowned, I bow down.


To the One Thus Gone, the King Holding the Banner of Victory over the Senses I bow down.

To the One Thus Gone, the Glorious One who Subdues Everything Completely I bow down.

To the One Thus Gone, the Victorious One in All Battles I bow down.

To the One Thus Gone, the Glorious One Gone to Perfect Self-control I bow down.

To the One Thus Gone, the Glorious One who Enhances and Illuminates Completely I bow down.

To the One Thus Gone, the Jewel Lotus who Subdues All I bow down.

To the One Thus Gone, the Foe Destroyer, the Fully Enlightened One, the King with Power over Mount Meru, always remaining in the Jewel and the Lotus I bow down.(*)


All you thirty-five Buddhas, and all the others, those thus gone, foe destroyers, fully enlightened ones and transcendent destroyers who are existing, sustaining and living throughout the ten directions of sentient beings' worlds -- all you Buddhas, please give me your attention.

In this life, and throughout beginningless lives in all the realms of samsara, I have created, caused others to create, and rejoiced at the creation of negative karmas such as misusing offerings to holy objects, misusing offerings to the Sangha, stealing the possessions of the Sangha of the ten directions; I have caused others to create these negative actions and rejoiced at their creation.

I have created the five heinous actions(2), caused others to create them and rejoiced at their creation. I have committed the ten non-virtuous actions(3), involved others in them, and rejoiced in their involvement.

Being obscured by all this karma, I have created the cause for myself and other sentient beings to be reborn in the hells, as animals, as hungry ghosts, in irreligious places, amongst barbarians, as long-lived gods, with imperfect senses, holding wrong views, and being displeased with the presence of a Buddha.

Now before these Buddhas, transcendent destroyers who have become transcendental wisdom, who have become the compassionate eye, who have become witnesses, who have become valid and see with their omniscient minds, I am confessing and accepting all these actions as negative. I will not conceal or hide them, and from now on, I will refrain from committing these negative actions.

Buddhas and transcendent destroyers, please give me your attention: in this life and throughout beginningless lives in all the realms of samsara, whatever root of virtue I have created through even the smallest acts of charity such as giving one mouthful of food to a being born as an animal, whatever root of virtue I have created by keeping pure ethics, whatever root of virtue I have created by abiding in pure conduct, whatever root of virtue I have created by fully ripening sentient beings' minds, whatever root of virtue I have created by generating bodhicitta, whatever root of virtue I have created of the highest transcendental wisdom.

Bringing together all these merits of both myself and others, I now dedicate them to the highest of which there is no higher, to that even above the highest, to the highest of the high, to the higher of the high. Thus I dedicate them completely to the highest, fully accomplished enlightenment.

Just as the Buddhas and transcendent destroyers of the past have dedicated, just as the Buddhas and transcendent destroyers of the future will dedicate, and just as the Buddhas and transcendent destroyers of the present are dedicating, in the same way I make this dedication.

I confess all my negative actions separately and rejoice in all merits. I implore all the Buddhas to grant my request that I may realize the ultimate, sublime, highest transcendental wisdom.

To the sublime kings of the human beings living now, to those of the past, and to those who have yet to appear, to all those whose knowledge is as vast as an infinite ocean, I go for refuge.



General Confession

Woe is me!

O Spiritual Masters, great Vajra Holders, and all the Buddhas and bodhisattvas who abide in the ten directions, as well as all the venerable Sangha, please pay attention to me.

I, who am named _________ , circling in cyclic existence since beginningless time until the present, overpowered by mental distortions such as attachment, hostility and ignorance, have created the ten negative actions by means of body, speech and mind. I have engaged in the five heinous actions and the five parallel heinous actions(4). I have transgressed the vows of individual liberation(5), contradicted the trainings of a bodhisattva(6), broken the tantric commitments(7). I have been disrespectful to my kind parents, spiritual masters, spiritual friends, and those following the pure paths. I have committed actions harmful to the Three Jewels, avoided the holy Dharma, criticized the arya Sangha, and harmed living beings. These and many other destructive actions I have done, have caused others to do, and have rejoiced in others' doing. In short, I have created many obstacles to my own higher rebirth and liberation, and have planted countless seeds for further wanderings in cyclic existence and miserable states of being.

Now in the presence of the spiritual masters, the great Vajra Holders, all the Buddhas and bodhisattvas who abide in the ten directions, and the venerable Sangha, I confess all of these negative actions, I will not conceal them and I accept them as negative. I promise to refrain from doing these actions again in the future. By confessing and acknowledging them, I will attain and abide in happiness, while by not confessing and acknowledging them, true happiness will not come.



Notes

(1) The Buddhas are called the ones thus gone (Sanskrit:tatagata) because they have gone beyond the misery of cyclic existence to complete enlightenment and thus have abandoned all defilements and subtle obscurations. They also have realized the ultimate nature of all phenomena, thusness or emptiness.

(2) The five heinous actions are: causing a schism in the Sangha, killing one's father, killing one's mother, killing an arhat, and drawing blood from the Buddha's body.

(3) The ten non-virtuous actions are: killing, stealing, sexual misconduct, (three of the body); lying, divisive speech, harsh words, idle talk, (four of the speech); covetous thinking, maliciousness, and wrong views (three of mind).

(4) The five parallel heinous actions are: killing a bodhisattva, killing a superior being (one who has realized emptiness directly), stealing the provisions or funds of the Sangha community, destroying a monastery or stupa with anger, commiting incest with one's mother who is an arhat.

(5) The vows of individual liberation include the five lay precepts as well as the precepts of the novice and fully-ordained monk and nun, and the one-day vows.

(6) The trainings of the bodhisattva include the guidelines for aspiring bodhicitta and the 18 root and 46 auxillary bodhisattva precepts.

(7) The tantric commitments include the 14 root and 8 auxillary tantric vows, the 19 samaya of the five Buddha families, and other commitments taken at the time of empowerment into practices of the higest class of tantra.

(*) Prostrations to the seven Medicine Buddhas can be included here. The names of the seven Medicine Buddhas are as follows:

To the One Thus Gone, the King of Glory Renowned with an Excellent Name, I bow down.
To the One Thus Gone, the Jewel Moon, I bow down.
To the One Thus Gone, the Stainless Morality of Golden Fortune, I bow down.
To the One Thus Gone, the Supreme One Without Death, I bow down.
To the One Thus Gone, the Ocean of Melodious Dharma, I bow down.
To the One Thus Gone, the King of Direct Knowledge, I bow down.
To the One Thus Gone, the Lapis Buddha of Medicine, the King of Light, I bow down. REARCH BUDDHIST DHARMA BY BACH LIEN HOA.( TAM THANH ).NAM MO SHAKYAMUNI BUDDHA.( 3 TIMES ).MHDT.1/4/2012.

FROM PRINCE TO HOLY MAN PRIVILEGED YOUTH.

 


Siddhartha Gautama was born around the 6th century BC in the village of Lumbini, which is in the present-day Nepal and was the founder of Buddhism. Upon his birth a holy man said Gautama would either be a military conquerer or a spiritual leader. When Gautama was just a few days old he performed several miracles, proclaiming "Supreme am I in the world, Greatest am I in the world, Noblest am I in the world. This is my last birth. I shall never be re-born." Gautama born into a royal family and was the son of a king who who shielded and insulated him from the the life of suffering and misfortune outside the royal palace.

Life transition


At the age of 29 Gautama was married and had a child. Out of curiosity one day he ventured outside the palace Gautama and saw human suffering for the first time. He saw an elderly man, a sick man, a corpse and a ascetic. Gautama's sightings that day would later be called the Four Sights. Upon returning to the palace Gautama was no longer happy with the luxuries which his father provided him. He shaved his head, dressed in a street person's clothes and left the palace to live the life of homeless holy man. After performing several forms self-denial such as fasting for several years Gautama started to focus on breathing patterns through meditation. His companions who had been solely focused on self-denial abandoned him. Gautama's method of meditation became known as the Middle Way, a way of moderating oneself between self-indulgence and self-inflicted pain. For Gautama this Middle Way represented a balance between his lavish youth and experiences of hardship after having left the palace. After meditating for a long time under the sacred Bodhi Tree Gautama reached Enlightenment at the age of 35, thus becoming the Buddha, or "Awakened One". The Buddha was able to understand and see life's truths through his dedicated spiritual journey by being totally absorbed in meditation.

Venerable Master

After reaching enlightenment the Buddha dedicated the remaining 45 years of his life towards traveling through what is now northern India and teaching disciples about the path to Enlightenment. The core of the Buddha's teachings focused on helping people to find the path to Enlightenment themselves and not on preaching rigid doctrines. This remains a core concept of Buddhism today. After great travel the Buddha died at the age of 80 with a large following.END=RESEARCH BUDDHIST DHARMA BY BACH LIEN HOA.( TAM THANH ).NAM MO SHAKYAMUNI BUDDHA.( 3 TIMES ).1/4/2012.MHDT.

SIDDHARTHA GAUTAMA CA.563-ca.483 BC.


Siddhartha Gautama lived in the present-day border area between India and Nepal in the 6th century before Christ; his exact birth date is unknown. Because the life of the historical Buddha is inseparable from legend, the following text is not meant to be a historically exact biography, but a short life story based on what has been passed down by generations. The dates are based on present day historians' mainstream view.
563 BC - Birth
Siddhartha Gautama is born in Lumbini, near the Nepalese-Indian border to his father, King Suddhodana, ruler of the Sakya tribe, and his mother, Queen Mayadevi. The father gives his son the name of Siddhartha (=the one who obtains success and prosperity), his second name is Gautama (=name of the clan).
Seers predict that Siddhartha will either become a Universal Monarch or a Buddha. Asita, the wisest of the seers, is sure that he will become a Buddha (=one who has supreme knowledge). His mother dies seven days after the birth.
563-547 BC
Siddhartha spends his childhood in the palace of his father at Kapilavastu, Southern Nepal, where he is raised by his aunt Mahaprajapati until the age of seven. In his early childhood, during a ploughing ceremony, Siddhartha makes his first unprecedented spiritual experience, where in the course of meditation he develops the first jhana (=meditative absorption) through concentration.
As a young boy he learns the skills of a warrior, including the technical and athletic skills of man-to-man fight. Siddhartha is trained in spiritual disciplines and becomes proficient in the art of archery.
547 BC
At the early age of sixteen, he marries his beautiful cousin Princess Yasodhara, who is of equal age.
547-533 BC
The young prince spends thirteen more years together with his wife in the royal court of his father. Three palaces are built for him, one for the cold season, one for the hot season, and one for the rainy season. Siddhartha enjoys the lavish court life while his father is trying to screen him from all troubles and worries. A son is born while Siddhartha is in his late twenties.
533 BC - The Four Sights
Despite of the amenities of life, Siddhartha is not satisfied with the mere enjoyment of fleeting pleasures due to his inquiring and contemplative nature. One day, he leaves the palace for an excursion and there he encounters what so far has been purposely veiled from him:
He sees a decrepit old man, a diseased person, a corpse being cremated, and a sadhu (=holy man, hermit). Siddhartha realises that there is old age, sickness, and death, and that people ultimately have little control over their lives. The fourth sight provides the inspiration that leads to a dramatic change in his life.
533 BC - The Renunciation
In the night of his 29th birthday, Siddhartha gives up his life as a prince and secretly leaves the court while everyone is asleep. He travels far and crosses the river Anoma, where he shaves his hair and hands over his princely garments to his groom Channa, with instructions to return them to the palace.
533-528 BC
The Bodhisattva (=future Buddha), who once lived in luxury, becomes a penniless and homeless wanderer. He leads a life of self-mortification and spiritual study, becomes first a disciple of several then famous Brahman teachers, and later attracts his own disciples.
After a long and exhausting period of searching and self-mortification, he finally becomes disillusioned with the Indian caste system, Hindu asceticism, and the religious doctrines of his time. He gives up the ascetic life and loses all of his disciples as a result. Nevertheless, he continues his search for truth through the practice of meditation.
April/May 528 BC - Enlightenment
While meditating under a Bodhi tree in Bodh-Gaya, south of Gaya in the state of Bihar, India, the Bodhisattva experiences the Great Enlightenment, which reveals to him the way of salvation from suffering. He spends seven weeks meditating in the vicinity of the site of the Bodhi tree and attains the status of a fully realised Buddha at the age of 35.
June/July 528 BC - First Sermon
Buddha finds his former five disciples in Benares. In his first sermon he teaches them what will become the gist of Buddhism. Upon hearing it, one of the disciples instantly attains the status of an arhat (=one with enlightened wisdom). This event marks the beginning of the Buddhist teaching and his disciples become the first five members of the sangha (=Buddhist order).
528-527 BC
During a short period of time, Buddha establishes a great reputation in western Hindustan by converting thousands of people to the dhamma (=the Buddhist teaching). People hear the dhamma delivered either by himself, or by the monks of his order. During this time he delivers the fire sermon.
March 527 BC
The Buddha briefly returns to the palace of his father to convert the royal family and ordains many of the Sakya tribe.
523 BC
Four years later Siddhartha's father, King Suddhodana, dies. Buddha returns to the palace and Mahaprajapati, where Buddha's aunt -upon meeting Buddha- becomes the first woman to ordain, despite of the protest of some contemporaries. From this moment on women were admitted to the sangha. According to Indian tradition, however, they were separated and under the authority of male monks.
523-483 BC
In the 45 years following his enlightenment, Buddha travels around Northern India to teach the tenets of Buddhism. He is extremely successful and attracts first thousands, then ten thousands, and later hundred thousands of people from all walks of life, who voluntarily decide to follow his teachings, the dhamma. During the monsoon, when travelling becomes difficult due to the weather, Buddha and his close followers interrupt their journey. During these month, monks, as well as laypeople, receive the teachings at a site selected for retreat. One such site is Sravasti in Nepal, which has become very famous since then.
Buddha's success does not only attract admirers, but also provokes envy and ill will. Several attempts are made on his life, but all of them fail. Although he is being criticised and defamed, this does not affect the popularity of his teaching.
483 BC - Death and Pari-Nirvana
Having achieved the goal of spreading the teaching to the greatest number of people, Buddha dies at the age of eighty years, as a result of food poisoning. He dies in a forest near Kusinagara, Nepal, in the company of his followers reclining on a bed where he speaks his last words: "All compounded things are ephemeral; work diligently on your salvation." With these words on his lips, he passes into the state of Pari-Nirvana.RESEARCH BUDDHIST DHARMA BY BACH LIEN HOA.( TAM THANH ).NAM MO SHAKYAMUNI BUDDHA.( 3 TIMES ).1/4/2012.MHDT.

35 Buddhas Text

www.bodhipath.org/473/
35 Buddhas Practice Text Compiled by the 14th Shamar Rinpoche with translation by Pamela Gayle White. REARCH TIBET BUDDHIST DHARMA BY GESHE TASHI TSERING.OM MANI PADME HUM.( 3 TIMES ).MHDT.31/3/2012.

MY VERY DEAR JUNE.

My very dear June,
I heard from Geshe-la that you memorized or almost finished memorizing the Thirty-five Buddhas practice. This is very encouraging, because in the East they memorize a lot in monasteries and in schools, but in the West they don’t like to memorize things, both laypeople and Sangha. Because of that, in retreats or in groups, one person has to read the practice. This means that the person who is reading doesn't get to do the prostrations. Also, the group that hasn’t memorized the Thirty-five Buddhas’ names doesn’t get the chance to purify thousands of eons of negative karma by reciting the names even one time.
So, I am very happy to see your strong interest in Dharma besides intellectual learning. You also want to practice and purify, so that is great. The world is suffering so much, with so many problems, and the practice of the Thirty-five Buddhas is the solution for that, to purify past negative karma, and especially for successful realizations on the path to enlightenment. I am sure you will be able to memorize Lama Tsongkhapa Guru Yoga and other important prayers as well, like daily life practices, also the King of Prayers, which I think you will enjoy very much, and which has so many extensive bodhisattva prayers in it. Also, you can memorize the eight verses of thought transformation. These are just some basic ideas. Within Lama Tsongkhapa Guru Yoga is a lam-rim prayer, so that is a very good combination. To receive lam-rim realizations you need the blessings of the guru, so you need to practice guru yoga to develop realizations. This is a very unique and fundamental practice in daily life in order to grow on the path to enlightenment.
I hope everything is OK with your family.
With much love and prayers...
Thirty-five Buddhas Confession and Purification Practice
This advice was compiled from teachings given by Rinpoche at Istituto Lama Tsongkhapa in Italy, during the Lama Tsongkhapa Guru Yoga Retreat in 2003.
There are four remedy powers. The one that reduces and purifies negative karma is regret. The stronger the regret, the more the negative karma is purified. All phenomena affect each other; that is what dependent arising means—fire can burn, water can make things wet. It works similarly in our mind: our positive thoughts have one effect; negative thoughts have a different effect. So, there is happiness and there is suffering—this is a dependent arising.
Reciting the mantra of Vajrasattva, who attained qualities such as compassion and power in order to benefit sentient beings, purifies negative karma through dependent arising. In the same way, by reciting the names of the Thirty-five Buddhas many times or just once, eons of negative karma is purified.
Lama Atisha explained why reciting the names of the Thirty-five Buddhas has so much power. In the past, when the Thirty-five Buddhas were bodhisattvas, they made many prayers to be able to benefit sentient beings, to easily purify our defilements and negative karma. When they achieved enlightenment, they achieved the Buddha’s ten qualities or powers, one of which is the power of prayer. So, their names have the power of all those past prayers. That is why, when sentient beings recite their names, they have so much power to purify defilements and eons of negative karma. Every single quality the Thirty-five Buddhas attained was in order to benefit sentient beings, there was no other reason or motivation for it, so we should use this advantage.
Think: “The purpose of my life is to free all the hell beings, hungry ghosts, animals, sura, asura, human, and intermediate state beings—every single sentient being in the six realms of suffering, all unenlightened beings who have defilements.
“I must free all the hell beings, from whom I receive all my past, present, and future happiness, realizations of the path, and enlightenment, who are the most precious, most kind ones in my life, from all sufferings and their causes, and bring them to enlightenment by myself alone.
“I must free all the preta beings, from whom I receive all my past, present, and future happiness, realizations of the path, and enlightenment, who are the most precious, most kind ones in my life, from all the sufferings and their causes, and bring them to enlightenment by myself alone.
“I must free all the animals, every one of them, from whom I receive all my past, present, and future happiness, realizations of the path, and enlightenment, who are the most precious, most kind ones in my life, from all the sufferings and their causes, and bring them to enlightenment by myself alone.
“I must free all the human beings, from whom I receive all my past, present, and future happiness, realizations of the path, and enlightenment, who are the most precious, most kind ones in my life, from all sufferings and their causes, and bring them to enlightenment by myself alone.
“I must free all the sura beings, from whom I receive all my past, present, and future happiness, realizations of the path, and enlightenment, who are the most precious, most kind ones in my life, from all sufferings and their causes, and bring them to enlightenment by myself alone.
“I must free all the asura beings, from whom I receive all my past, present, and future happiness, realizations of the path, and enlightenment, who are the most precious, most kind ones in my life, from all sufferings and their causes, and bring them to enlightenment by myself alone.
“I must free all the intermediate state beings, from whom I receive all my past, present, and future happiness, realizations of the path, and enlightenment, who are the most precious, most kind ones in my life, from all sufferings and their causes, and bring them to enlightenment by myself alone.
“Therefore, I must achieve enlightenment. In order to do this, I need to actualize the path and purify my defilements, negative karmas, and downfalls collected from beginningless rebirths.”
Just one complete negative karma that is committed through the ten non-virtuous actions—killing, sexual misconduct, telling lies, etc.—produces four suffering results. As well as the ripened aspect result of rebirth in the lower realms, there are three other sufferings: experiencing the result similar to the cause; creating the result similar to the cause; and the possessed result, which is related to the environment and the suffering that is experienced when, for example, you are born after some time as a human being due to your good karma.
Creating the result similar to the cause means committing the same negative action again as a result of the past. Then, that complete negative karma produces another four suffering results, including creating the result similar to the cause; then that complete negative karma produces another four suffering results. As long as we don’t purify that one negative karma and abstain from it we will experience the result again and again. Like this, it goes on and on, forever—the effect becomes endless.
Think: “If I put effort into not creating that one negative karma, I don’t have to experience all the endless suffering that comes from it. It makes a huge difference whether that one negative karma is committed or not.”
To make your practice really effective and powerful, contemplate the endless effect of even just one complete negative karma—having to experience so much suffering in samsara for that one negative karma—so that you can’t stand to live even one more second without purifying it immediately. There are so many negative karmas committed each day, month, and year, from beginningless past lives—it is unimaginable. If you think of all these karmas from beginningless past lives, it becomes more and more unbearable. There is no way to relax for even a second without practicing purification.
On top of this, you need to remember broken pratimoksha vows, and bodhisattva vows, which are much heavier. Then, having taken and broken the tantric vows in this and past lives, which is heavier again. Pabongka Rinpoche’s commentary on the Six-Session Yoga says that breaking a bodhisattva root vow is 100,000 times heavier than breaking a pratimoksha root vow. Breaking a tantric vow is 100,000 times heavier than breaking a bodhisattva root vow. The vow that results in the heaviest, longest suffering, and is the heaviest obstacle to actualizing the path is the negative karma collected regarding the relationship with the virtuous friend. Remember all of that collected from beginningless rebirths. This is the situation we are in. In those hot hell realms even one tiny spark is much hotter than all human beings’ fire energy, which, comparatively, is extremely cool and pleasurable. This was explained by Buddha, the Omniscient One, with compassion for sentient beings, to save us from the unbearable suffering of samsara, particularly the lower realms.
Think: “Death can come any time, even today; it can come this hour or minute. That means I can be in the most terrifying suffering of the lower realms today, any minute, any second. The minute my breath stops, it is there, actualized. Therefore, I must purify right away, not delaying for even a second.” As is normally explained in the teachings, it is as if you have eaten poison and are going to experience great pain and die, so you want to get rid of the negativity in the quickest possible way.
This also applies when you practice Vajrasattva meditation in daily life or in retreat. You can meditate like this at the beginning of any purification practice, to make it really powerful. How much we can purify negative karma depends on the mind. Our mind creates negative karma but, with strong regret, the mind can purify so much. Regret is like medicine for us.
In Western psychology, regret may be interpreted as negative, but there is negative, harmful regret and useful, positive regret. One becomes medicine for our mind; the other becomes negative, for example, regretting our or other people’s virtue or positive actions. If somebody becomes a monk or nun and you express regret, “Oh, terrible! Oh, I’m sorry!”, or somebody is doing retreat in an isolated place and you say, “Oh, I’m so sorry you are living in a cave, poor thing”, your regret is misplaced. That person may actually be attaining realizations every year and offering the most benefit to sentient beings. That is incorrect regret. There is also correct and incorrect patience and tolerance. Similarly, perseverance in virtue is right perseverance, but perseverance in actions that are negative karma, the cause of samsara or of the lower realms—bearing great hardship to achieve power or reputation for happiness in this life, putting much effort into that, sacrificing, even endangering life, as many people in the world are doing—is incorrect tolerance. Correct tolerance has to be perseverance in virtue; that is the definition of perseverance. There has to be positive action. If an action is negative karma, it doesn’t have that definition of perseverance—it is incorrect perseverance, incorrect patience, or incorrect regret. Non-virtue only harms you and others.
Think: “Therefore, I’m going to perform prostrations by reciting the names of the Thirty-five Buddhas and practicing the Confession of Downfalls, which purifies eons of negative karmas. I am so fortunate, having this opportunity, to create happiness and benefit for every single one of my kind mother sentient beings, every hell being, hungry ghost, animal, human being, sura, asura, and intermediate state being.”
At the end you must think of the happiness of others. If you think too much of your own negative karma and the suffering result of that, then, since we don’t have a realization of bodhicitta or of compassion, there is the danger of performing the prostrations for your own happiness. You need to come back to thinking of the happiness of others. With that attitude, every prostration you perform or prayer you recite is for other sentient beings.
You prostrate not only to the Thirty-five Buddhas but to all the gurus, Buddha, Dharma, Sangha, and all the holy objects of the ten directions. If you prostrate to many merit fields—to billions of buddhas—you create billions of causes of enlightenment. This way is much more profitable. You can recite the Thirty-five Buddhas’ names in whichever language you normally use.
The mantra OM NAMO MANJUSHRIYE NAMAH SUSHRIYE NAMA UTTAMA SHRIYE SOHA multiplies the prostrations one thousand times. If you recite it every day, it helps to develop a direct perception of emptiness in this life, also to not encounter harm or obstacles. If you recite this mantra and the Buddha’s name seven times, then each prostration or circumambulation is increased millions of times. Recite:
OM NAMO MANJUSHRIYE NAMAH SUSHRIYE NAMA UTTAMA SHRIYE SOHA (3X)
CHOM DEN DE DEZHIN SHEKPA DRA CHOM PA YANG DAKPA DZOK PE SANG GYE RINCHEN GYALTSEN LA CHAG TSAL LO (7X)
OM NAMO BHAGAWATE RATNA KETU RAZAYA TATHAGATAYA ARHATE SAM YAK SAM BUDDHAYA TAYATHA OM RATNE RATNE MAHA RATNE RATNA BIZAYE SOHA (7X)
Then, prostrate and recite the Thirty-five Buddhas’ names and the Confession of Downfalls.
After completing any purification practice it becomes more powerful if you seal it with emptiness by meditating on the three circles: the performer of the action, the action, and the object, what is accomplished—looking at them all as empty. Think: “In emptiness there is no creator, me; there is no action of creating; and there is no creation, negative karma.”
Remain in that state of mindfulness, allowing the awareness that all things are empty to continue, that they do not exist from their own side, and then dedicate the merits:
“Due to all the merits of the three times collected by me and by others, may I achieve the Thirty-five Buddhas’ enlightenment and lead all sentient beings to the Thirty-five Buddhas’ enlightenment by myself alone.”
Then, dedicate the merits:
Jang chub sem chog rinpoche
Ma kye pa nam kye gyur chig
Kye pa nyam pa me par yang
Gong ne gong du pel bar shog

May the precious bodhicitta not yet born, arise and grow
May that born have no decline but increase forever more.END=RESEARCH TIBET BUDDHIST DHARMA BY GESHE TASHI TSERING.OM MANI PADME HUM.( 3 TIMES ).31/3/2012.MHDT.

HEAVEN --TIBET.

Heaven – Tibet
by Ning Ken 宁肯
Beijing October Arts and Literature Publishing House
June, 2010
Set in today’s Tibet, Heaven – Tibet explores three different characters’ spiritual experiences in that human heaven.
Wang Mojie was once a professor of philosophy in Beijing. In the late 1980s he left Beijing for Tibet to work in a primary school in the suburbs of Lhasa, where he lived like a philosopher, trying to construct his own spiritual homeland in Tibet. But Wang has a secret: his penchant for masochism, and the thrill of being abused by women dressed as police officers.
Martin is a French professor of biology who gave up his life in France to practiced Buddhism in a Tibetan temple. His father is a sceptic philosopher who doesn’t understand his son’s choice. When his father makes a short trip to Lhasa to visit him, they begin a long debate on eastern and western philosophy that forms the heart of the novel.
Weige is from a Han-Tibetan family. She grew up in Beijing and studied French, and Martin is her spiritual teacher. She falls in love with Wang Mojie, but can’t stand his masochism, and is torn between staying with him, or devoting herself to her work in the Tibetan Museum.
Heaven – Tibet consists largely of monologue and dialogue on the subjects of religion belief, philosophy and life, exploring the state and direction of human existence. During the course of the novel the author experiments in style, sometimes narrating in the first person, sometimes in the third person, blending modernism and post-modernism into a new sort of realism. Though it’s a novel of ideas, it is an easy and fluid read. The author’s delicate descriptions of the landscapes around Lhasa form an important setting for the story.
The author Ning Ken was born in Beijing in 1959. He began his literary career with poems, such as "Snow Drift Dreams" (积雪之梦). His best-known novel is Veiled City (Mengmian Zhicheng, 蒙面之城), which won the Best Novel Award in the second Laoshe Literature Prize of 2002.
The book’s editor, October’s Wang Deling says that the book is aimed mostly at lovers of literary fiction and those interested in Tibetan culture, but acknowledges that the philosophical and religious content, may deter some readers. Even so, the book appeals to a current of soul-seeking on the rise among Chinese readers.
In the month or so since the book's release, "much" of its initial print run of 10 thousand has sold out, and it has made Sina.com's list of the best books of the first half of 2010. All overseas copyrights are currently available.END=RESEARCH TIBET DHARMA BY GESHE TASHI TSERING.OM MANI PADME HUM.( 3 TIMES ).MHDT.31/3/2012.
 

Friday 30 March 2012

THE FOOD AND DRINK OF THE MONKS AND NUNS.





Usually eating of Buddhist practitioners who are less likely to mention before, only when they have completed the necessary steps is important, then the mention, by the way also for yet.
have practice the Buddha, the Buddha's what we try to follow:
- That is the second day to eat a vegetarian meal, ancient Buddha ate a vegetarian Horse sessions only, but it is the temporary two sessions morning and afternoon, do not eat afternoon and evening. Because why? because there are a lot of disadvantages, filed this application yet for the parents, soot listen!
The same meal:
+ Breakfast - The gods eat in the morning
+ Lunch - Buddha ate lunch at noon sessions
+ Dinner - animal feed in the afternoon
+ Dinner - collapsed eat in the evening
so we did not eat for afternoon and evening, (which is somewhat difficult to do, but trying to do).
The breakfast and lunch (not dinner and evening) will be: The items following benefits: + no cause deep soul, easy to achieve meticulous concentration on the afternoon-evening sessions; + no way feel the animal species and collapses; + Quan species considered Other funds often hungry hungry, now out of compassion we should have no dinner (dinner for causing them pain, resentment ta); + Quan beings at all because the food is above all, one of five items Education, devour each other for pieces of food, raised the Cross what it is, there is no dinner and evening; + Economically also less expensive, not be time-consuming hassle, busy to worry eating at home in the afternoon and especially when you went away; + Body disease at birth, the body digests food very good energy in the afternoon; afternoon and evening when feeding on the internal organs are work is very weak, (night work overtime, paid a high price), the next morning so we are tired, hoped to wisdom; + When a disaster life, wars, rebellions, chaos was overcome hunger abuse-dimensional one at night, maintaining the long-lived than others. The disadvantages: + Frequent provoked, not even those who support in the home and outside, including Master, Master his (for this); + hard work, have to say is very difficult to overcome intestinal fever, the appetite of countless lifetimes; + The trick is to maintain long do new and experienced when properly a year is considered as the Horse eating our success; This was filed and the experience so far has successfully filed. Please rejoice yet. And drink not to wait until another new drink, especially in the current situation very uneven heat should always drink lots of water every day, to be very beneficial, healthy body New good practice. Namo Amitabha Buddha.END=VIETNAMESE TRANSLATE ENGLISH BY BACH LIEN HOA.( TAM THANH ).NAM MO SHAKYAMUNI BUDDHA.( 3 TIMES ).31/3/2012.MHDT.

Thursday 29 March 2012

WHAT IS THEREVADA BUDDHISM.?


 
 

Theravada (pronounced — more or less — "terra-VAH-dah"), the "Doctrine of the Elders," is the school of Buddhism that draws its scriptural inspiration from the Tipitaka, or Pali canon, which scholars generally agree contains the earliest surviving record of the Buddha's teachings.[1] For many centuries, Theravada has been the predominant religion of continental Southeast Asia (Thailand, Myanmar/Burma, Cambodia, and Laos) and Sri Lanka. Today Theravada Buddhists number well over 100 million worldwide.[2] In recent decades Theravada has begun to take root in the West.

Many Buddhisms, One Dhamma-vinaya

The Buddha — the "Awakened One" — called the religion he founded Dhamma-vinaya — "the doctrine and discipline." To provide a social structure supportive of the practice of Dhamma-vinaya (or Dhamma for short [Sanskrit: Dharma]), and to preserve these teachings for posterity, the Buddha established the order of bhikkhus (monks) and bhikkhunis (nuns) — the Sangha — which continues to this day to pass his teachings on to subsequent generations of laypeople and monastics, alike.
As the Dhamma continued its spread across India after the Buddha's passing, differing interpretations of the original teachings arose, which led to schisms within the Sangha and the emergence of as many as eighteen distinct sects of Buddhism.[3] One of these schools eventually gave rise to a reform movement that called itself Mahayana (the "Greater Vehicle")[4] and that referred to the other schools disparagingly as Hinayana (the "Lesser Vehicle"). What we call Theravada today is the sole survivor of those early non-Mahayana schools.[5] To avoid the pejorative tone implied by the terms Hinayana and Mahayana, it is common today to use more neutral language to distinguish between these two main branches of Buddhism. Because Theravada historically dominated southern Asia, it is sometimes called "Southern" Buddhism, while Mahayana, which migrated northwards from India into China, Tibet, Japan, and Korea, is known as "Northern" Buddhism.[6]

Pali: The Language of Theravada Buddhism

The language of the Theravada canonical texts is Pali (lit., "text"), which is based on a dialect of Middle Indo-Aryan that was probably spoken in central India during the Buddha's time.[7] Ven. Ananda, the Buddha's cousin and close personal attendant, committed the Buddha's sermons (suttas) to memory and thus became a living repository of these teachings.[8] Shortly after the Buddha's death (ca. 480 BCE), five hundred of the most senior monks — including Ananda — convened to recite and verify all the sermons they had heard during the Buddha's forty-five year teaching career.[9] Most of these sermons therefore begin with the disclaimer, "Evam me sutam" — "Thus have I heard."
After the Buddha's death the teachings continued to be passed down orally within the monastic community, in keeping with an Indian oral tradition that long predated the Buddha.[10] By 250 BCE the Sangha had systematically arranged and compiled these teachings into three divisions: the Vinaya Pitaka (the "basket of discipline" — the texts concerning the rules and customs of the Sangha), the Sutta Pitaka (the "basket of discourses" — the sermons and utterances by the Buddha and his close disciples), and the Abhidhamma Pitaka (the "basket of special/higher doctrine" — a detailed psycho-philosophical analysis of the Dhamma). Together these three are known as the Tipitaka, the "three baskets." In the third century BCE Sri Lankan monks began compiling a series of exhaustive commentaries to the Tipitaka; these were subsequently collated and translated into Pali beginning in the fifth century CE. The Tipitaka plus the post-canonical texts (commentaries, chronicles, etc.) together constitute the complete body of classical Theravada literature.
Pali was originally a spoken language with no alphabet of its own. It wasn't until about 100 BCE that the Tipitaka was first fixed in writing, by Sri Lankan scribe-monks,[11] who wrote the Pali phonetically in a form of early Brahmi script.[12] Since then the Tipitaka has been transliterated into many different scripts (Devanagari, Thai, Burmese, Roman, Cyrillic, to name a few). Although English translations of the most popular Tipitaka texts abound, many students of Theravada find that learning the Pali language — even just a little bit here and there — greatly deepens their understanding and appreciation of the Buddha's teachings.
No one can prove that the Tipitaka contains any of the words actually uttered by the historical Buddha. Practicing Buddhists have never found this problematic. Unlike the scriptures of many of the world's great religions, the Tipitaka is not regarded as gospel, as an unassailable statement of divine truth, revealed by a prophet, to be accepted purely on faith. Instead, its teachings are meant to be assessed firsthand, to be put into practice in one's life so that one can find out for oneself if they do, in fact, yield the promised results. It is the truth towards which the words in the Tipitaka point that ultimately matters, not the words themselves. Although scholars will continue to debate the authorship of passages from the Tipitaka for years to come (and thus miss the point of these teachings entirely), the Tipitaka will quietly continue to serve — as it has for centuries — as an indispensable guide for millions of followers in their quest for Awakening.

A Brief Summary of the Buddha's Teachings

The Four Noble Truths

Shortly after his Awakening, the Buddha delivered his first sermon, in which he laid out the essential framework upon which all his later teachings were based. This framework consists of the Four Noble Truths, four fundamental principles of nature (Dhamma) that emerged from the Buddha's radically honest and penetrating assessment of the human condition. He taught these truths not as metaphysical theories or as articles of faith, but as categories by which we should frame our direct experience in a way that conduces to Awakening:
  1. Dukkha: suffering, unsatisfactoriness, discontent, stress;
  2. The cause of dukkha: the cause of this dissatisfaction is craving (tanha) for sensuality, for states of becoming, and states of no becoming;
  3. The cessation of dukkha: the relinquishment of that craving;
  4. The path of practice leading to the cessation of dukkha: the Noble Eightfold Path of right view, right resolve, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, and right concentration.
Because of our ignorance (avijja) of these Noble Truths, because of our inexperience in framing the world in their terms, we remain bound to samsara, the wearisome cycle of birth, aging, illness, death, and rebirth. Craving propels this process onward, from one moment to the next and over the course of countless lifetimes, in accordance with kamma (Skt. karma), the universal law of cause and effect. According to this immutable law, every action that one performs in the present moment — whether by body, speech, or mind itself — eventually bears fruit according to its skillfulness: act in unskillful and harmful ways and unhappiness is bound to follow; act skillfully and happiness will ultimately ensue.[13] As long as one remains ignorant of this principle, one is doomed to an aimless existence: happy one moment, in despair the next; enjoying one lifetime in heaven, the next in hell.
The Buddha discovered that gaining release from samsara requires assigning to each of the Noble Truths a specific task: the first Noble Truth is to be comprehended; the second, abandoned; the third, realized; the fourth, developed. The full realization of the third Noble Truth paves the way for Awakening: the end of ignorance, craving, suffering, and kamma itself; the direct penetration to the transcendent freedom and supreme happiness that stands as the final goal of all the Buddha's teachings; the Unconditioned, the Deathless, Unbinding — Nibbana (Skt. Nirvana).

The Eightfold Path and the Practice of Dhamma

Because the roots of ignorance are so intimately entwined with the fabric of the psyche, the unawakened mind is capable of deceiving itself with breathtaking ingenuity. The solution therefore requires more than simply being kind, loving, and mindful in the present moment. The practitioner must equip him- or herself with the expertise to use a range of tools to outwit, outlast, and eventually uproot the mind's unskillful tendencies. For example, the practice of generosity (dana) erodes the heart's habitual tendencies towards craving and teaches valuable lessons about the motivations behind, and the results of, skillful action. The practice of virtue (sila) guards one against straying wildly off-course and into harm's way. The cultivation of goodwill (metta) helps to undermine anger's seductive grasp. The ten recollections offer ways to alleviate doubt, bear physical pain with composure, maintain a healthy sense of self-respect, overcome laziness and complacency, and restrain oneself from unbridled lust. And there are many more skills to learn.
The good qualities that emerge and mature from these practices not only smooth the way for the journey to Nibbana; over time they have the effect of transforming the practitioner into a more generous, loving, compassionate, peaceful, and clear-headed member of society. The individual's sincere pursuit of Awakening is thus a priceless and timely gift to a world in desperate need of help.

Discernment (pañña)

The Eightfold Path is best understood as a collection of personal qualities to be developed, rather than as a sequence of steps along a linear path. The development of right view and right resolve (the factors classically identified with wisdom and discernment) facilitates the development of right speech, action, and livelihood (the factors identified with virtue). As virtue develops so do the factors identified with concentration (right effort, mindfulness, and concentration). Likewise, as concentration matures, discernment evolves to a still deeper level. And so the process unfolds: development of one factor fosters development of the next, lifting the practitioner in an upward spiral of spiritual maturity that eventually culminates in Awakening.
The long journey to Awakening begins in earnest with the first tentative stirrings of right view — the discernment by which one recognizes the validity of the four Noble Truths and the principle of kamma. One begins to see that one's future well-being is neither predestined by fate, nor left to the whims of a divine being or random chance. The responsibility for one's happiness rests squarely on one's own shoulders. Seeing this, one's spiritual aims become suddenly clear: to relinquish the habitual unskillful tendencies of the mind in favor of skillful ones. As this right resolve grows stronger, so does the heartfelt desire to live a morally upright life, to choose one's actions with care.
At this point many followers make the inward commitment to take the Buddha's teachings to heart, to become "Buddhist" through the act of taking refuge in the Triple Gem: the Buddha (both the historical Buddha and one's own innate potential for Awakening), the Dhamma (both the Buddha's teachings and the ultimate Truth towards which they point), and the Sangha (both the unbroken monastic lineage that has preserved the teachings since the Buddha's day, and all those who have achieved at least some degree of Awakening). With one's feet thus planted on solid ground, and with the help of an admirable friend or teacher (kalyanamitta) to guide the way, one is now well-equipped to proceed down the Path, following in the footsteps left by the Buddha himself.

Virtue (sila)

Right view and right resolve continue to mature through the development of the path factors associated with sila, or virtue — namely, right speech, right action, and right livelihood. These are condensed into a very practical form in the five precepts, the basic code of ethical conduct to which every practicing Buddhist subscribes: refraining from killing, stealing, sexual misconduct, lying, and using intoxicants. Even the monks' complex code of 227 rules and the nuns' 311 ultimately have these five basic precepts at their core.

Concentration (samadhi)

Having gained a foothold in the purification of one's outward behavior through the practice of sila, the essential groundwork has been laid for delving into the most subtle and transformative aspect of the path: meditation and the development of samadhi, or concentration. This is spelled out in detail in the final three path factors: right effort, by which one learns how to favor skillful qualities of mind over unskillful ones; right mindfulness, by which one learns to keep one's attention continually grounded in the present moment of experience; and right concentration, by which one learns to immerse the mind so thoroughly and unwaveringly in its meditation object that it enters jhana, a series of progressively deeper states of mental and physical tranquillity.
Right mindfulness and right concentration are developed in tandem through satipatthana ("frames of reference" or "foundations of mindfulness"), a systematic approach to meditation practice that embraces a wide range of skills and techniques. Of these practices, mindfulness of the body (especially mindfulness of breathing) is particularly effective at bringing into balance the twin qualities of tranquillity (samatha) and insight (vipassana), or clear-seeing. Through persistent practice, the meditator becomes more adept at bringing the combined powers of samatha-vipassana to bear in an exploration of the fundamental nature of mind and body.[14] As the meditator masters the ability to frame his immediate experience in terms of anicca (inconstancy), dukkha, and anatta (not-self), even the subtlest manifestations of these three characteristics of experience are brought into exquisitely sharp focus. At the same time, the root cause of dukkha — craving — is relentlessly exposed to the light of awareness. Eventually craving is left with no place to hide, the entire karmic process that fabricates dukkha unravels, the eightfold path reaches its noble climax, and the meditator gains, at long last, his or her first unmistakable glimpse of the Unconditioned — Nibbana.

Awakening

This first enlightenment experience, known as stream-entry (sotapatti), is the first of four progressive stages of Awakening, each of which entails the irreversible shedding or weakening of several fetters (samyojana), the manifestations of ignorance that bind a person to the cycle of birth and death. Stream-entry marks an unprecedented and radical turning point both in the practitioner's current life and in the entirety of his or her long journey in samsara. For it is at this point that any lingering doubts about the truth of the Buddha's teachings disappear; it is at this point that any belief in the purifying efficacy of rites and rituals evaporates; and it is at this point that the long-cherished notion of an abiding personal "self" falls away. The stream-enterer is said to be assured of no more than seven future rebirths (all of them favorable) before eventually attaining full Awakening.
But full Awakening is still a long way off. As the practitioner presses on with renewed diligence, he or she passes through two more significant landmarks: once-returning (sakadagati), which is accompanied by the weakening of the fetters of sensual desire and ill-will, and non-returning (agati), in which these two fetters are uprooted altogether. The final stage of Awakening — arahatta — occurs when even the most refined and subtle levels of craving and conceit are irrevocably extinguished. At this point the practitioner — now an arahant, or "worthy one" — arrives at the end-point of the Buddha's teaching. With ignorance, suffering, stress, and rebirth having all come to their end, the arahant at last can utter the victory cry first proclaimed by the Buddha upon his Awakening:
"Birth is ended, the holy life fulfilled, the task done! There is nothing further for the sake of this world."
MN 36
The arahant lives out the remainder of his or her life inwardly enjoying the bliss of Nibbana, secure at last from the possibility of any future rebirth. When the arahant's aeons-long trail of past kamma eventually unwinds to its end, the arahant dies and he or she enters into parinibbana — total Unbinding. Although language utterly fails at describing this extraordinary event, the Buddha likened it to what happens when a fire finally burns up all its fuel.

"The serious pursuit of happiness"

Buddhism is sometimes naïvely criticized as a "negative" or "pessimistic" religion and philosophy. Surely life is not all misery and disappointment: it offers many kinds of happiness and sublime joy. Why then this dreary Buddhist obsession with unsatisfactoriness and suffering?
The Buddha based his teachings on a frank assessment of our plight as humans: there is unsatisfactoriness and suffering in the world. No one can argue this fact. Dukkha lurks behind even the highest forms of worldly pleasure and joy, for, sooner or later, as surely as night follows day, that happiness must come to an end. Were the Buddha's teachings to stop there, we might indeed regard them as pessimistic and life as utterly hopeless. But, like a doctor who prescribes a remedy for an illness, the Buddha offers both a hope (the third Noble Truth) and a cure (the fourth). The Buddha's teachings thus give cause for unparalleled optimism and joy. The teachings offer as their reward the noblest, truest kind of happiness, and give profound value and meaning to an otherwise grim existence. One modern teacher summed it up well: "Buddhism is the serious pursuit of happiness."

Theravada Comes West

Until the late 19th century, the teachings of Theravada were little known outside of southern Asia, where they had flourished for some two and one-half millennia. In the past century, however, the West has begun to take notice of Theravada's unique spiritual legacy in its teachings of Awakening. In recent decades this interest has swelled, with the monastic Sangha from various schools within Theravada establishing dozens of monasteries across Europe and North America. Increasing numbers of lay meditation centers, founded and operated independently of the monastic Sangha, strain to meet the demands of lay men and women — Buddhist and otherwise — seeking to learn selected aspects of the Buddha's teachings.
The turn of the 21st century presents both opportunities and dangers for Theravada in the West: Will the Buddha's teachings be patiently studied and put into practice, and allowed to establish deep roots in Western soil, for the benefit of many generations to come? Will the current popular Western climate of "openness" and cross-fertilization between spiritual traditions lead to the emergence of a strong new form of Buddhist practice unique to the modern era, or will it simply lead to confusion and the dilution of these priceless teachings? These are open questions; only time will tell.
Spiritual teachings of every description inundate the media and the marketplace today. Many of today's popular spiritual teachings borrow liberally from the Buddha, though only rarely do they place the Buddha's words in their true context. Earnest seekers of truth are therefore often faced with the unsavory task of wading through fragmentary teachings of dubious accuracy. How are we to make sense of it all?
Fortunately the Buddha left us with some simple guidelines to help us navigate through this bewildering flood. Whenever you find yourself questioning the authenticity of a particular teaching, heed well the Buddha's advice to his stepmother:
[The teachings that promote] the qualities of which you may know, 'These qualities lead to passion, not to dispassion; to being fettered, not to being unfettered; to accumulating, not to shedding; to self-aggrandizement, not to modesty; to discontent, not to contentment; to entanglement, not to seclusion; to laziness, not to aroused persistence; to being burdensome, not to being unburdensome': You may categorically hold, 'This is not the Dhamma, this is not the Vinaya, this is not the Teacher's instruction.'
[As for the teachings that promote] the qualities of which you may know, 'These qualities lead to dispassion, not to passion; to being unfettered, not to being fettered; to shedding, not to accumulating; to modesty, not to self-aggrandizement; to contentment, not to discontent; to seclusion, not to entanglement; to aroused persistence, not to laziness; to being unburdensome, not to being burdensome': You may categorically hold, 'This is the Dhamma, this is the Vinaya, this is the Teacher's instruction.'
AN 8.53
The truest test of these teachings, of course, is whether they yield the promised results in the crucible of your own heart. The Buddha presents the challenge; the rest is up to you.END=NAM MO SHAKYAMUNI BUDDHA.( 3 TIMES ).RESEARCH THEREVADA RELIGION BY BACH LIEN HOA.( TAM THANH ).MHDT.30/3/2012.