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Review Article
Tsong-kha-pa: Wisdom for Today By Alan E. Donant Of the many works of the Tibetan master Tsong-kha-pa, few compare in terms of popularity and breadth of influence with his Great Treatise on the Stages of the Path to Enlightenment (Lamrim Chenmo), which has been treasured by practitioners and scholars alike for centuries. What distinguishes it as one of the principal texts of Mahayana Buddhism is its scope and clarity. It expounds the entire path, from the way one should rely on a spiritual teacher, which is the very root, right up to the attainment of Buddhahood, which is the final fruit. The various stages of the path are presented so clearly and systematically that they can be easily understood and are inspiring to put into practice.-- H. H. the Dalai Lama The translation into English of Tsong-kha-pa's The Great Treatise on the Stages of the Path to Enlightenment (Volume 1, trans. by the Lamrim Chenmo Translation Committee, Snow Lion Publications, Ithaca, NY, 2000; 434 pages, ISBN 1559391529, cloth, $29.95) is a significant event. Little known outside of Tibet and Mongolia for most of its 600 years, it is now being published for the first time in its entirety in a Western language. Judging by the first volume, it is no wonder that over the centuries this work has captured the minds of Tibetans from every walk of life. Exceptional and accessible, one can jump into it at any point and enjoy it. Buddhism was imported to Tibet from India, but by the 8th century CE, after nearly a hundred years, it had yet to take hold of the Tibetan mind. The country retained a warlike culture, with an empire stretching across Central Asia, and a widespread and unrestrained taste for developing mystical powers. On the advice of a Buddhist teacher, Emperor Trisong Detsen sent for the great Indian master Padmasambhava, who transformed Tibetan history and civilization by redirecting the people's thinking toward Buddhist wisdom and compassion (The Dalai Lama's Secret Temple, Ian Baker and Thomas Laird, p. 49). As time passed, however, people's interest waned and their thoughts turned once again toward nature spirits and paranormal powers, causing Buddhism to coalesce with the native Bhon religion. Not until the 14th century did the greatest Buddhist teacher known in Tibet begin his lifework: Tsong-kha-pa (1357-1419), founder of the now-dominant Gelugpa (Yellow Cap) sect and the originating focus of the Dalai and Panchen Lama traditions. He is said to have received in visionary experiences many personal instructions from Manjusri (Sanskrit for "the holy, beautiful one"), a name commonly associated with Buddha consciousness and also with the spiritual guardians of the various inner and outer dimensions of the earth. This statement implies that Tsong-kha-pa at times embodied power and consciousness of the highest spiritual order. Consequently, he is greatly revered and his teachings inspire the highest regard. In 1991 the Tibetan Buddhist Learning Center committed itself to making his Great Treatise available in its entirety in English, and brought together a group of qualified translators. This first of three volumes (the concluding two to be published next year) covers the nature of the student, the teachings and the teacher, meditation, mindfulness of death, karma, ethical behavior, suffering, and refuge in the three jewels. In his Foreword, Robert A. F. Thurman calls it "the concentrated quintessence of the entirety of the Buddhist path
from all the ocean of its literature, concentrated by its integration
with the supreme esoteric teachings of the Tantras every single step of
the way. . . . without exposing the uninitiated practitioner to the danger
of formal tantric performance. The way transcendence is taught, the way
compassion and the spirit of enlightenment are taught, and even the way
wisdom is taught as the inexorable indivisibility of voidness and relativity
-- all this makes the power of Tantra accessible in a generous, transformative,
and dynamic, but safe and sound, perhaps we could say fail-safe, way.
This is the genius of the Great Treatise." -- pp. 14-15
Tsong-kha-pa's presentation relies on tradition; he quotes from many Buddhist sources, which the translators name in full. The sections on the teachings and the teacher may even appear sectarian: "Therefore, for something to be a pure personal instruction, it
must bestow certain knowledge of the classic texts. No matter how well
you learn it, a personal instruction is only something to be cast aside
if it cannot bestow certain knowledge of the meaning of the Buddha's words
and the great commentaries on their intent, or if it teaches a path incompatible
with these." -- p. 50 "The path of the perfections is like the center post for the path
that leads to buddhahood. Hence, it is unsuitable to cast it aside. As
this is said many times even in the Vajrayana, the path of the perfections
is the path common to both sutra and tantra. . . . if you cast aside the
paths shared with the perfection vehicle, you make a great mistake."
-- p. 49 "Do not take as your object of meditation the buddhas of a single
direction in the universe or of a single time. Rather, take all the conquerors
who reside in all ten directions as well as those who have already visited
this world previously, will visit here in the future, and are appearing
at present. . . . Imagine all the conquerors abiding in all directions
and times as if you are actually perceiving them as objects of your mind.
Also, as you bow down, imagine duplicate images of your body emanating
from your body in a number equal to the minute particles of the buddhas'
realms. . . ." "is the act of sustaining an object of meditation and specific subjective
aspects by repeatedly focusing your mind upon a virtuous object of meditation.
The purpose of this is as follows. From beginningless time you have been
under the control of your mind; your mind has not been under your control.
Furthermore, your mind tended to be obscured by the afflictions and so
forth. Thus, meditation aims to bring this mind, which gives rise to all
faults and flaws, under control and then it aims to make it serviceable.
Serviceability means that you can direct your mind as you wish toward
a virtuous object of meditation." -- p. 99 "look at teachings that reveal the meaning of your object of meditation,
and recollect it again and again. Accumulate, by many means, the collections,
which are favorable conditions for producing good qualities. Also, clear
away, by many means, the obscurations, which are unfavorable conditions.
By applying what you know, strive at whatever vow you have promised to
observe, as this is the basis of everything." -- p. 101 "first study with someone what you intend to practice, and come
to know it secondhand. Next, use scripture and reasoning to properly reflect
on the meaning of what you have studied, coming to know it firsthand.
Once you determine the meaning of what you originally intended to practice
with this kind of study and reflection and you have no doubts, then familiarize
yourself with it repeatedly. We call this repeated familiarization "meditation."
Thus, you need both repeated analytical meditation and nonanalytical stabilizing
meditation, because meditation involves both nonanalytical stabilization
and the meaning of what you originally intended to practice that was determined
through study and reflection and the use of discerning wisdom to analyze
this meaning." -- pp. 109-10 "in the case of your coarse impermanence, which is your death, the
avenue of injury is the very thought, "I will not die." Everyone
has the idea that death will come later, at the end. However, with each
passing day people think, "I will not die today; I will not die today,"
clinging to this thought until the moment of death. If you are obstructed
by such an attitude and do not bring its remedy to mind, you will continue
to think that you will remain in this life." Throughout the treatise we are constantly reminded that the bodhisattva path and compassion are our goals. It is not what is said, nor how it is said that is so moving, but rather that one feels as though he or she were sitting before a great teacher, where lessons and benefits become as countless as the minute particles of the buddhas' realms. (From Sunrise magazine, October/November 2001; copyright © 2001 Theosophical University Press) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |