Stay present… this is the only moment there is!

Filed under:Dharma talks — posted by Dharmacharya Gurudas Sunyatananda on Tuesday, 22nd June 2010 @ 9:51 pm

*We spend so much of our lives trying be anywhere but in the moment. We occupy our days with planning for the future… with striving for that next promotion… planning that next vacation… deciding which temple or church or dharma centre we’re going to visit next… and in the process, we miss millions-upon-millions of opportunities to grow, to find balance… to awaken.

One of my favourite passages in the Digha Nikaya, the first of the five nikayas, or collections, in the Sutta Pitaka, which is one of the "three baskets" that comprise the Tipitaka or central text for practitioners of Theravadan Buddhism (the Primary Vehicle or Hinayana Path), is the following text:

“ Make an island of yourself, make yourself your refuge;
there is no other refuge. Make truth your island, make truth your refuge; there is no other refuge.”
                                                          -  Digha Nikaya, 16

Recently I had an engaging conversation with a bright and dedicated student, who was completely absorbed by the notion that because she has had many past lives, and is now more aware that she was in previous lives, there is no way she could ever take a "lower birth". Of course, her very attachment to the egocentric idea that she is so advanced now will very likely result in her creating a lower rebirth, because she is clinging to her perceptions, not reality, and self-absorbed, not mindful. So I challenged her to let go of these ideas, and of the new age fluff that often surrounds such things as past life regression.

So you think you can remember your past lives, so what? Many people have, and it doesn’t mean that they are guaranteed any kind of future merit. What matters is what you do with NOW… with this moment… not what you did in the past.

Here’s a newsflash… If you were anywhere near as wonderful as your ego-mind would like you to believe in your past incarnations, you wouldn’t be here. The simple fact is that you have never been more ready for awakening than you are right now, so let go of what you did in the past… whether it was your last lifetime or last week… or last night.

The great Theravadan teacher, Ajhan Chah once taught:

"Do not try to become anything. Do not make yourself into anything.
Do not be a meditator. Do not become enlightened. When you sit, let it be. What you walk, let it be. Grasp at nothing. Resist nothing. If you haven’t wept deeply, you haven’t begun to meditate."

The only reason we fail to open our hearts and minds to the potential of this moment is attachment. If we fear the possibility of one particular outcome or another, we will either find ourselves clinging to something or someone, or resisting and running away from something or someone or some idea. In either case, the fear is irrational. The only moment that matters is the present moment. Bring your awareness to that moment, and you begin to transform everything. Only to the degree we begin to look compassionately at ourselves, we can begin to look compassionately at the world around us. Only to the degree that we let go of the need to tell anyone else how wonderful we were in the past can we begin to see how wonderful the present moment is.

The ancient wisdom of the Dharma offers sage advice, "Speak quietly and kindly, and don’t force your opinions or advice upon anyone. Be near when help is needed, but far when praise and thanks are being offered. You, no less than all beings, have the Enlightened Nature within you. Your essential Mind is pure."

I don’t find it useful to become obsessed with worrying about what kind of rebirth I will take. What matters to me is what I can do right now, to alleviate and end self-cherishing, attachment, grasping and resistance. If I do that, I progress on the path. If I am faithful to my spiritual practice, if I cultivate a strong and healthy relationship with my teachers, then my spiritual practice will accumulate merit, and negative karma will not ripen, but will begin to whither, as the positive merit ripens and inspires me to do whatever I can to alleviate the suffering of others. Short of doing that, I would have no interest in spirituality at all.

Our spiritual practice, when rooted in mindfulness and the constant practice of staying in the moment, can be like an oil lamp, with compassion being the oil, and wisdom serving as the flame itself. We need only choose to carry that lamp with us always, and in time, as the flame begins to burn more brightly, the darkness will yield to our innate Light.

Namasté

khenpo gurudas sunyatananda

*image courtesy of hylah on flickr

_____________________________________________

“Chenrezig, Treasure of Objectless Compassion;
Manjushri, Lord of Stainless Wisdom;
Vajrapani, Destroyer of all adversarial forces;
O Je Tsong Khapa – Losang Drakpa —
Crown Prince of the Sages of the Land of Snows,
Humbly at Your Lotus Feet I ask your blessing.”

_____________________________________________

Drawing on the essential teachings of the great spiritual teachers, philosophers and freethinkers throughout time, Khenpo Gurudas Śunyatananda (retired Archbishop Francis-Maria Salvato, O.C.) has been regarded as a provocative, revolutionary “voice of reason” within the field of religion and spirituality, since 1983. Having the distinction of being one of the few openly non-theistic, openly-gay and post-denominational thinkers ever to serve as Bishop-Exarch and spiritual leader of the autocephalic Eastern Catholic Franciscans in North America, Gurudas is the author of more than 600 articles, eight books and currently serves as the spiritual advisor for a non-theistic, intentional spiritual community, The Spiritus Project. He can be reached at: http://dharmadudeunplugged.com

Copyright ©2010, Khenpo Gurudas Sunyatananda (The Most Reverend Dr. F. Francis-Maria G. Salvato, M.Sc., O.C.). All rights reserved. This material may be reproduced, blogged, quoted or distributed, provided the entire copyright including contact information remain intact. It may NOT be altered in any way, without express written permission.

Why Compassion?

Filed under:Dharma talks — posted by Dharmacharya Gurudas Sunyatananda on Sunday, 20th June 2010 @ 9:36 pm

motherteresa1 Generating genuine compassion is a simple practice, which benefits the practitioner as well as the recipient of that compassion, the community in which they each reside, the world, and indeed, the entire universe.

This is because compassion is not just something we "ought to develop", but is, I would suggest, who we are. His Holiness, the Fourteenth Dalai Lama notes, "At the time of our birth, we have neither religion nor ideology nor culture. We acquire or learn about these later in our lives. But I believe no one is born free from the need for love. No material object, however beautiful or valuable, can make us feel loved, because our deeper identity and true character lie in the subjective nature of the mind." (from Disarmament, Peace and Compassion)

This is why we strive toward becoming compassion for those who might be perceived as our adversaries, our enemies or our "biggest pains in the ass".
You see, when we show what we think is compassion toward someone we love, it’s not pure loving-kindness… because our emotion investment in that person is a type of attachment. But those who have done nothing but attempt to harm us, discredit us, anger us… those are the ones who teach us to dig deeper, and find the source of who we are. They push us to become living dharma, not just mouthpieces for some lofty ideas. They are the grains of sand, which enter the depths of who we are, without whom, we could never generate the true pearl of Compassion.

Namasté

khenpo gurudas sunyatananda

_____________________________________________

“Chenrezig, Treasure of Objectless Compassion;
Manjushri, Lord of Stainless Wisdom;
Vajrapani, Destroyer of all adversarial forces;
O Je Tsong Khapa – Losang Drakpa —
Crown Prince of the Sages of the Land of Snows,
Humbly at Your Lotus Feet I ask your blessing.”

_____________________________________________

Drawing on the essential teachings of the great spiritual teachers, philosophers and freethinkers throughout time, Khenpo Gurudas Śunyatananda (retired Archbishop Francis-Maria Salvato, O.C.) has been regarded as a provocative, revolutionary “voice of reason” within the field of religion and spirituality, since 1983. Having the distinction of being one of the few openly non-theistic, openly-gay and post-denominational thinkers ever to serve as Bishop-Exarch and spiritual leader of the autocephalic Eastern Catholic Franciscans in North America, Gurudas is the author of more than 600 articles, eight books and currently serves as the spiritual advisor for a non-theistic, intentional spiritual community, The Spiritus Project. He can be reached at: http://dharmadudeunplugged.com

Copyright ©2010, Khenpo Gurudas Sunyatananda (The Most Reverend Dr. F. Francis-Maria G. Salvato, M.Sc., O.C.). All rights reserved. This material may be reproduced, blogged, quoted or distributed, provided the entire copyright including contact information remain intact. It may NOT be altered in any way, without express written permission.

Understanding the Lam Rim Chenmo – Week two lecture

Filed under:Dharma talks — posted by Dharmacharya Gurudas Sunyatananda on Monday, 14th June 2010 @ 6:57 pm

Below, you can listen to the current week’s lecture on the Lam Rim Chenmo. (You an also access all of our archived programs by visiting: http://blogtalkradio.com/punkmonk )

talkingdharma.jpg

Listen to internet radio with Talking Dharma on Blog Talk Radio

If your work is true

Filed under:Dharma talks — posted by Dharmacharya Gurudas Sunyatananda on Thursday, 10th June 2010 @ 3:55 pm

An essential part of our teaching lineage is based upon a commitment to an essential philosophy, which Master Morehei Ueshiba describes as masakatsu agatsu katsu hayabi – literally “true victory is victory over the self”. The word masakatsu is a compound word combining  “true/correct” (masa) with “triumph, or success” (katsu) – in other words, “true victory” or “lasting success”.

There is, in the Japanese traditions of Buddhism, Shinto, and Omotokyo esotericism, an interpretation of masakatsu, which defines it as meaning, “If your work is true, it will emerge victorious and endure.”

This is a principle upon which I draw inspiration to maintain the uncompromised sense of perseverance and determination necessary to continue in the face of seeming adversity. It is a determination in which we don’t try to run from attackers, but move toward them, without resistance. Again the Japanese term for this is muteiko, or as it is called in Sanskrit, ahimsa  (अहिंसा). It recognises that, as is stated in the Tao, “The best way to conquer an enemy is not to engage him.”

This is why Dr. Martin Luther King understood the importance of non-violence, and could note, “(All of) humanity is involved in a single process, and to the degree I harm my brother, to that extent I am harming myself.”

Rav Yeshua (Rabbi Jesus) would teach this same principle, according the the Christian mythos, saying:

You have heard it said, “An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth.” But I say to you, “Do not resist the adversary. If the enemy strikes you on the right cheek, turn and give him your left also.”

(cf: Matthew 6: 38-39)

And of course, in the Dhammapada, Buddha Shakyamuni is said to have taught, “Hatred never ceases by hatred. Hatred ceases by love alone. This is the eternal principle.” (Dhammapada 5)

Master Morehei Ueshiba once defined the principle of masakatsu  as “accomplishing your purpose on this earth.” He taught his students how to use the energy of the attacker to create balance and thereby stop the attack without inflicting further violence. Drawing on the Buddhist wisdom, which understands that suffering always results from trying to avoid that which we perceive as bringing pain, dissatisfaction or discomfort, he taught students to “turn the other cheek” literally, in what are called kaitenagi – techniques in which one gracefully turns into the attack, opening the path so that the aggression and energy (momentum) of the attack.

Each of us faces adversity every day. Some will try to fight it. Others will try to avoid it. But there are some, committed to the principle of non-violence and determined to find a way to eliminate suffering in their own lives, so that they can do the same for others – and as such, these individuals have formed something of an organic, loosely structured and intentional spiritual community. We call this community “The Living Dharma Community.” 

We are made up of people from many spiritual traditions – Buddhist, Franciscan and Benedictine contemplatives, New Thought practitioners, alchemists, Episcopalians, Quakers, Unitarians, Vaisnavas, Shaivites, Jains, Pagan, and Metaphysical Jews.

Within the Living Dharma Community is a second group, more focused and committed to their spiritual growth than some of the others might be at this time, and those individuals are participating in a 26-week eCourse, studying the teaching of Je Rinpoche, Lama Tsongkhapa’s Lam Rim Chenmo.

Although there are initially only 15 students enrolled in the program, we are allowing those who are interested in the course to register at the LOTUS Institute this week, and “catch up”, before Monday’s next class. This is a two-step process, which first requires one to register at the Institute (there is no charge for this), and then, after doing so, email us and let us know that you are interested in the course. We will approve your request, and you can log-in, listen to the first seminar, complete this past week’s brief “assignment” and then begin studying with the rest of the group. This course will allow students to study at their own pace, return to previous lectures and listen again, and is designed to provide a 26-week intensive study of the Dharma.

It is a required course for all members of the Contemplative Order of Compassion, and is optional for members of the Living Dharma Community, although strongly recommended.

I consider it an honour to bring together people from such diverse spiritual traditions, and to offer them the wisdom and understanding of the Dharma, as taught by Lama Tsongkhapa, and passed down through our lineage, to Pabongka Rinpoche, Kyabje Trijang (Dorje Chang) Rinpoche, Lama Thubten Yeshe, as well as the Dharma transmitted through His Holiness the Dalai Lama to my Root Guru Tenzin Yangchen Ma (Ma Jaya Sati Bhagavati). The path we have taken, however, is distinctly different, and as the reincarnation of the Venerable Lama Thubten Yeshe, whom I considered to be my Root Guru in the Tibetan tradition, has confirmed, is post-modern, post-denominational and transcends the cultural and religious limitations of traditional Tibetan Buddhism. This willingness to celebrate diversity and syncretism, while drawing the criticism, threats and attacks from those within traditional Buddhist circles, is also endorsed by my Root Guru in the non-sectarian path, who was given the name Tenzin Yangchen Ma, by His Holiness the Fourteenth Dalai Lama, and is something I’ve expressed commitment to in many previous blog entries, dharma talks and lectures.

I am committed to make the teaching of Je Rinpoche (Tsongkhapa) accessible, relevant and embraceable by all people, regardless of religious, spiritual or cultural tradition. If that means drawing criticism from traditional Buddhists, and their refusal to accept my right to continue to function as a lama and monk, then I am willing to pay that price. It won’t change the message. My vows are to realise enlightenment for the sake of all sentient beings. The monastic tradition is nothing more than a means of achieving that. It is not more important than the vows themselves.

In the past, for the sake of my students, I have fought against those who have condemned us, and rallied against claims that the Contemplative Order of Compassion was a cult… that we were heretics, and that I ought to be stripped of my role as a semi-retired archbishop and Successor to the Apostles (because I refuse to engage in superstitious, irrelevant and non-useful discussions about imaginary personal gods and other primitive, sociologically pointless notions), and that my robes should be demanded to be returned by some of the great lamas and teachers, including the guru who initiated me in the Kalachakra empowerment, with whom many feel I have broken samaya, over my refusal to condemn and endorse the treatment of those who continue to honour the traditional sadhana and devotion to Dorje Shugden.

For many years, I allowed the pressure that has been put upon me to make no waves and listen to the advice of His Holiness the Dalai Lama, to prevent me from returning to the Lotus Feet of my Root Guru’s Teacher, now reincarnated as His Holiness Trijang Chocktrul Rinpoche. However, because I could not find peace with the marginalisation I was seeing, and because my teaching was causing such a stir among traditionalists, who insisted that I was a heretic for not enforcing some of the cultural, religious aspects of the monastic vinaya, and was devoted to making the Dharma accessible to people who did not subscribe to the entire Buddhism-as-religion path, I stopped using my Tibetan name (Jampal Shinje Shesneyen), and simply returned to the Dharma name given by my Refuge Guru and Tenzin Yangchen Ma.

Gradually, because my heart was heavy, and new understanding and awareness of a misleading agenda began to come to light, would not wear the traditional Tibetan robes, because I found the intolerance, hatred and lack of compassion that the Tibetans-in-exile were showing toward the Shugdenpa.

The time has come for that resistance to end. I will continue to speak out against intolerance and the social justice issues that plague those marginalised by hatred and other horrible agendas, even if those perpetrating such injustices are respected leaders and beloved teachers. I realise that this is considered unsavoury behaviour for a Buddhist monk, who is encouraged to remain uninvolved in politics. However, as the wisdom tradition teaches, “First beg for your rights, failing that, seize them!”

lamatsongkhapa_hdrAnd I will now rededicate every action of this Dharma Centre and of the Contemplative Order of Compassion to cultivating the causes for the manifestation of enabling the powerful work of Tsongkhapa to continue to spread through the Trijang Rinpoche, and through the Tsongkhapa’s Throne Holder, His Holiness Gaden Trisur Rinpoche Jetsun Lungrik Namgyal, in the four directions and countless realms, until all sentient beings are free of suffering.

In your own way, I offer the encouragement to stop fighting whatever it is that tries to prevent you from moving forward. Join me in learning the art of kaiten, and the Way of the Peaceful Warrior. Consider becoming involved in the Lam Rim course, at LOTUS Institute and join me in making our plans to build a post-denominational contemplative community in South Florida.

We’ve entered into an amazing, powerful and transformative time and space, which began on May 27th, and which will bring about global transformation, healing and peace. The time of the Peaceful Warrior is now. The era sectarianism have now passed and will gradually bring about a global shift in consciousness.

Compassion is the Way… Service to others is the Path.

Namasté

khenpo gurudas sunyatananda
(khenpo jampal shinje shesneyen)
Wisdom of the Desert Hermitage – Lojong Ladrang

_____________________________________________

“Chenrezig, Treasure of Objectless Compassion;
Manjushri, Lord of Stainless Wisdom;
Vajrapani, Destroyer of all adversarial forces;
O Je Tsong Khapa – Losang Drakpa —
Crown Prince of the Sages of the Land of Snows,
Humbly at Your Lotus Feet I ask your blessing.”

_____________________________________________

Drawing on the essential teachings of the great spiritual teachers, philosophers and freethinkers throughout time, Khenpo Gurudas Śunyatananda (retired Archbishop Francis-Maria Salvato, O.C.) has been regarded as a provocative, revolutionary “voice of reason” within the field of religion and spirituality, since 1983. Having the distinction of being one of the few openly non-theistic, openly-gay and post-denominational thinkers ever to serve as Bishop-Exarch and spiritual leader of the autocephalic Eastern Catholic Franciscans in North America, Gurudas is the author of more than 600 articles, eight books and currently serves as the spiritual advisor for a non-theistic, intentional spiritual community, The Spiritus Project. He can be reached at: http://dharmadudeunplugged.com

Copyright ©2010, Khenpo Gurudas Sunyatananda (The Most Reverend Dr. F. Francis-Maria G. Salvato, M.Sc., O.C.). All rights reserved. This material may be reproduced, blogged, quoted or distributed, provided the entire copyright including contact information remain intact. It may NOT be altered in any way, without express written permission.

If it’s in your head, it’s in your life

Filed under:Dharma talks,new thought,non-duality — posted by Dharmacharya Gurudas Sunyatananda on Saturday, 29th May 2010 @ 12:40 pm

One of the great challenges of living in a postmodern society comes when our established thinking comes into conflict with a new way of thinking. In every age, people have struggled and rallied against those who taught this New Thought, or Dharma of Compassion.

The Buddha Sakyamuni taught that what we are is the result of our thoughts, and that everything we experience is a manifestation of thought. Yet being asked to think about spiritual truths that we have never fully realised often disturbs us.

Yesterday, I posted a simple and loving comment on another lama’s Facebook wall, in which I made a recommendation to a young man whose pet would eat "inedible objects", thereby causing health problems for the little dog. I suggested that while he was lovingly holding the dog, making him feel safe and secure, and then gently whisper the Green Tara mantra, or (better yet), soothingly chanting the mantra. I told him to watch the transformation in his dog’s life.

Well, almost immediately, an angry, vitriolic and irrational man began launching an assault against what I wrote, illiterately trying to convey that this was heretical thinking, and contrary to the "true Dharma" and "true lineage of Buddha Guatama". And while I find that kind of mentality disgusting and hateful — the kind of bullshit that causes sectarian violence in every segment of spirituality — I was also deeply saddened to see someone so deeply steeped in ignorance as to not even understand the most simple premises of the Four Noble Truths.

Somehow this delusional fellow imagines that the dog was spared from the Four Noble Truths, and that his suffering could only be alleviated by a veterinarian. Now, understand this… I recognise that often, our pets and other animals do not have the tools to heal with thought, and as such, it is wise to bring them to a qualified medical practitioner at that point. But I will always recommend that at the first signs of dis-ease, if not immediately, while they are well, we chant mantras to them.

Let me share a story…

In 1993, I was living at the hermitage in Lake Worth, Florida, when we were asked to care for a bird with a defective claw, whose owner was beginning the process of actively dying. We took Garuda — a beautiful Amazon parrot — into our home, and began constructing a small enclosed gazebo in the yard, so that he could have some outside time, without harm. His inside home was in the temple. And so every day, three times each day, he heard the pujas, the aarti and the chanting of mantras and bhajans.

Soon, we came across a pair of Eclectus — a breathtakingly beautiful species of parrot, which pair for life. But the female was very protective of the male, and attacked a young child in the home of the "owners". And so we agreed to become surrogate caretakers. We would not view ourselves as "owners" of these sentient beings. They became part of the family. Within six months, to make a long story short, we had 38 birds in our bird sanctuary, and relocated the temple area to another adjacent area in the hermitage, so that the birds had year-round comfort and space. One of the residents was a blue and gold Macaw, named Jellybean, who sat with me every day during every puja and sadhana, and who would greet us with "Namaste" when we entered the sanctuary and "mumbled" along with us, as we chanted. I saw amazing changes in the lives of these birds when they were no longer captive and exposed to Dharma truth every day… not any different than the changes in our own lives from the same principles.

Rav Yeshua be Yusef (Rabbi Jesus) exposed his students to ideas that were new to the Jewish world… ideas that their legendary "G-D" was not a mean-spirited tyrant and jealous, violent Super-being, but instead that "god is love". Rave Yeshua declared that people must not only accept this new thinking, but they also must place their full trust in this new thought process. More than a simple clash of perspectives, Rav Yeshua’s radical Dharma was met with much hostility and opposition among the religious leaders, because these teachings required new ways to think and they refused to abandon their old ways. This is called "self-cherishing attitudes". It is the cause of much suffering.

yeshua Rav Yeshua, like Buddha Sakyamuni taught that a teacher’s influence should be based on the way he or she lives. They also taught people not to simply accept a teaching because it is claimed to be "pure", or because a certain teacher said so. They said not to accept things, simply because they are written in so-called "scriptures. What both of these spiritual masters taught was that we must examine the teaching, and discern what is truth by applying it to our inner wisdom, logic and scientific reasoning.

Earlier in the week, a casual student of mine insisted that expressing my anger over the lack of responsibility some of our monks and students are showing in certain areas was "wrong". This came from a student whose entire life is wrought with the pain of unresolved anger, fear and woundedness over a series of horrific experiences in her life, long ago. And because she represses her emotions, she lives in a delusional world in which she imagines expressing emotions is "bad". This kind of dualistic worldview is common, and even more so among those who suffer from what modern psychology recognises as Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).

Expressing one’s anger is neither good nor bad. It’s simply human. Being attached to that emotion (like any emotion) is the cause of suffering. What’s more, it’s absurd to pretend that we don’t experience these emotions, because they always reflect something going on inside of us, and unless we are willing to get our hands dirty, we’ll never quite manage to dig in deeply enough to determine what that’s all about!

Of course, this woman suggested that if what we experience in the external world is a reflection of something going on inside of us, then no one else was wrong, and could not be held accountable for their irresponsible, uncompassionate and apathetic behaviours. This is likewise inaccurate. Each of us is responsible, and when we are in a student-teacher relationship, the teacher’s responsibility is to illuminate the areas in which we need to focus immediately for improvement. My teachers do this to the current day. And I will continue to do that for my students.

Finally, this woman’s delusional perspective was somewhat the opposite of the fundamentalist mentioned earlier, in the Facebook exchange… She suggested that it was wrong, for example, to offer opportunities for students and Sangha to financially support the work of the Order and the operation of the ladrang, even when we are facing possible eviction, due to someone’s unethical failure to make good on a cheque they sent us. In her perspective, we just need to adopt an airy-fairy approach, and not mention the financial difficulty and it will all magically go away. This approach is as irrational as imagining that if you hold a stone or piece of wood, you’re going to become enlightened and achieve a state of Zen. We use tools to accomplish things. They are useful only insofar as they are recognised as nothing more than tools. When financial difficulty arises, I have no problem expressing it, and offering the opportunity for others to do their parts. Simultaneously, I am doing the spiritual work and practical work, behind the scenes, often putting in as much as 18 hours a day of physical work to try to create the causes and conditions for such abundance to manifest.

This weekend, a universal shift occurred, placing us at the leading edge of a Time of Great Awakening. During this incredible period of our human history, we will share with all sentient beings, the truth of the infinite possibility that all minds have the potential to recognise the joy, the compassion, the happiness and the healing that is our natural inheritance.

We will continue to move forward in our mission and vision for a non-sectarian Sangha, a spiritual centre that encompasses the globe, and the rebuilding of our Dharma centre and monastery in South Florida and Costa Rica.

khenpo_at_ashram Some will surely continue to express their resistance and anger at these new ideas. And that is alright. They will all us "heretics", "demons" and spout their superstitious and ignorant ramblings about "pure lineage" and "orthodoxy", ad nauseum. It is self-revealing that these same people are always the very same ones who have done NOTHING to stop the violence against the Shugdenpa, over inane intolerance to diverse spiritual traditions… they are the same ones who do NOTHING about the violence in Darfur, Afghanistan, Israel and Iraq. They do NOTHING to end the suffering in Haiti, Indonesia, the Philippines and other areas struck by natural disasters. In fact, quite often, they do NOTHING about the homeless, hungry, marginalised or dis-eased in their own backyards!

They play the victim with vigour and style, and put on Academy Award-worthy performances, illustrating the depth of their ignorance and the impact of their apathy. They shirk off responsibility, by saying they "don’t get involved in politics" (a cowardly approach) or that "they bow to the wisdom of the Dalai Lama" and therefore cannot show compassion to those whose spiritual traditions are different from ours.

And so the members of the Living Dharma Community and the Contemplative Order of Compassion will continue to blaze a trail, where the old Way has been obscured. And we will do so with mindfulness, compassion, gentleness and patience… recognising that in our own frailty of practice, we have to daily come back to the breath, and get back on course… By staying in the moment, we will find our way.

That’s what’s in my head… and that’s what’s in my life!

Namasté

khenpo gurudas sunyatananda

_____________________________________________

“Chenrezig, Treasure of Objectless Compassion;
Manjushri, Lord of Stainless Wisdom;
Vajrapani, Destroyer of all adversarial forces;
O Je Tsong Khapa – Losang Drakpa —
Crown Jewel of the Sages of the Land of Snows,
Humbly at Your Lotus Feet I ask your blessing.”

_____________________________________________

Drawing on the essential teachings of the great spiritual teachers, philosophers and freethinkers throughout time, Khenpo Gurudas Śunyatananda (retired Archbishop Francis-Maria Salvato, O.C.) has been regarded as a provocative, revolutionary “voice of reason” within the field of religion and spirituality, since 1983. Having the distinction of being one of the few openly non-theistic, openly-gay and post-denominational thinkers ever to serve as Bishop-Exarch and spiritual leader of the autocephalic Eastern Catholic Franciscans in North America, Gurudas is the author of more than 600 articles, eight books and currently serves as the spiritual advisor for a non-theistic, intentional spiritual community, The Spiritus Project. He can be reached at: http://dharmadudeunplugged.com

Copyright ©2010, Khenpo Gurudas Sunyatananda (The Most Reverend Dr. F. Francis-Maria G. Salvato, M.Sc., O.C.). All rights reserved. This material may be reproduced, blogged, quoted or distributed, provided the entire copyright including contact information remain intact. It may NOT be altered in any way, without express written permission.

Saga Dawa Düchen

Filed under:Buddhism,Dharma talks,non-duality — posted by Dharmacharya Gurudas Sunyatananda on Thursday, 27th May 2010 @ 2:02 pm

buddha_meru

Today is the 15th day of the fourth month (Saga Dawa – which literally means million moons) in the Tibetan calendar. Known as the “Festival of Vaisaka” (or as it is called in the Japanese tradition, Hanamatsuri)– one of the four principal holidays in the Buddhist tradition — Saga Dawa Düchen celebrates the enlightenment and passing into parivirvana of Buddha Sakyamuni. Therefore, it is of particular import in Bodhgaya, where Sakyamuni awakened at the age of 35, and in Kusinagara, where he left this mortal coil to enter his Nirvikalpa samādhi,, when he was 80.

The Sanskrit word “parinirvana” is used to describe the final passing from the samasaric cycle of death and rebirth, ending the experience of suffering. Mahasamadhi is another expression for the state in which the realised person reaches the highest attainment, as ego-consciousness, the concept of a soul, dualistic perceptions and all other concepts are released into full and complete Realisation/Enlightenment/Oneness. This state of “no turning back” awareness is called Nirvikalpa samādhi.

According to the tradition and mythos, as Buddha Sakyamuni was about to pass from the samsaric experience, he is said to have told his disciples, “It is in the nature of all things that take form to dissolve again. Strive with your whole being to attain perfection.”

The landscape around Mt. Kailash, where legend tells us Lord Siva Mahadev resides and takes repose, explodes in colourful prayer flags during the festival of Saga Dawa Düchen. Around the world, practitioners take time to observe the day in ways that are meaningful to them, and which reinforce the importance in their lives of the Triple Gem – The Buddha, his Teachings (the Dharma) and the fellowship of practitioners (the Sangha). Our monks bring offerings of incense, flowers and other contributions from the community and lay them at the feet of their Teacher. These offerings of flowers, candles, joss sticks and money are representative of the impermanence of all phenomena, since the flowers will die, the candles and incense burn up, and the money will be spent.

It is a day on which birds, insects and animals are released by the thousands in what is known as a ‘symbolic act to liberation’; of giving freedom to those who are in captivity, imprisoned, or tortured against their will.

Symbolically, an image of the Buddha is placed in a small bowl, filled with water, and each member of the ladrang and temple come up, and pour water over the image, representing the cleansing of our karma, and our commitment to the Noble Eightfold Path and Five Precepts of Mindfulness (monks also renew their vow to live according to the Fourteen Monastic Precepts of the Contemplative Order of Compassion.

Alleviating the Suffering of Others

On Saga Dawa Düchen, it is auspicious to do whatever you can to alleviate the suffering of someone who is ill, hungry or poor. Many devout practitioners will make offerings to someone they know is facing a difficult time, and will use this opportunity to bring joy into someone’s life.

A Time to Remember the Oppressed

This is also a time of remembrance of those who suffered, because they refused to deny the Dharma path. In 1963, the wicked South Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh Diem, a Catholic and younger brother of the vitriolic Archbishop Ngo Dinh Thuc, banned the flying of the Buddhist flag. When Buddhists refused to comply and responded with flag-waving and demonstrations, Diem’s forces opened fire on the crowd, killing nine, sparking a six month-long Buddhist crisis, a period of civil disobedience against religious discrimination. Sadly, the conflict resulted in much violence, including the arrest and assassination of Diem, following a coup by the Army of the Republic of Vietnam on November 1, 1963 – a month that would also end in the assassination of arguably one of the most beloved of American presidents, John Fitzgerald Kennedy.

On Saga Dawa Düchen, whatever activities we undertake are said to be multiplied by the millions. Therefore we encourage everyone to be kind and do what you can to alleviate suffering, strengthen your path, and enhance your awareness and spiritual practice.

OM AMI DEVA HRIH

Namasté

khenpo gurudas sunyatananda

_____________________________________________

“Chenrezig, Treasure of Objectless Compassion;
Manjushri, Lord of Stainless Wisdom;
Vajrapani, Destroyer of all adversarial forces;
O Je Tsong Khapa – Losang Drakpa —
Crown Jewel of the Sages of the Land of Snows,
Humbly at Your Lotus Feet I ask your blessing.”

_____________________________________________

Drawing on the essential teachings of the great spiritual teachers, philosophers and freethinkers throughout time, Khenpo Gurudas Śunyatananda (retired Archbishop Francis-Maria Salvato, O.C.) has been regarded as a provocative, revolutionary “voice of reason” within the field of religion and spirituality, since 1983. Having the distinction of being one of the few openly non-theistic, openly-gay and post-denominational thinkers ever to serve as Bishop-Exarch and spiritual leader of the autocephalic Eastern Catholic Franciscans in North America, Gurudas is the author of more than 600 articles, eight books and currently serves as the spiritual advisor for a non-theistic, intentional spiritual community, The Spiritus Project. He can be reached at: http://dharmadudeunplugged.com

Copyright ©2010, Khenpo Gurudas Sunyatananda (The Most Reverend Dr. F. Francis-Maria G. Salvato, M.Sc., O.C.). All rights reserved. This material may be reproduced, blogged, quoted or distributed, provided the entire copyright including contact information remain intact. It may NOT be altered in any way, without express written permission.

The Living Dharma Community… a Look Inside

Filed under:Dharma talks — posted by Dharmacharya Gurudas Sunyatananda on Saturday, 22nd May 2010 @ 9:28 pm

In his book, God and State, author Mikhail Bakunin observes:

“All religions, with their gods, their demi-gods, and their prophets, their messiahs and their saints, were created by the prejudiced fancy of men who had not attained the full development and full possession of their faculties.”

I found that observation to particularly resonate with me, and did not see anything derogatory in it at all. But then, because my doctorate is in theological anthropology, I recognise my tendency toward interpreting what I experience, read, hear and see through the lens of an anthropologist. For me, therefore, this was a simple, straightforward and extremely accurate observation.

A good and respected colleague of mine – himself a bishop in the autocephalous sacramental movement – was put-off by the post, calling it a “cheap shot”, and adding, “For me, most of the new atheist movement is little more than ego run amok and a need to establish (falsely) that nothing transcends me. It’s easy to take a cheap shot at good people who happen to believe differently than we do, or to characterize them as somehow defective or uninformed.”

Whenever I see such a strong response, I generally recognise that is a sign that something struck a “nerve” for the other person, triggering an emotional response, rather than rational dialogue. And that is an important opportunity to learn more about that person, and for them, if they are receptive to it, to possibly challenge their own perspective.

My position is clear… or is it?

It occurred to me that while I perceived the non-theistic framework from which I engage in spiritual practice, and which serves as the basis of my teaching, as being readily apparent and understood, it might not be. Perhaps my perception was way off-base, and people really didn’t quite understand from where I was coming.

So let me begin by sharing a little about that framework, which serves as the foundational framework for all of my teaching. Here are the ideas, beliefs and guiding principles from which I strive to operate:

  • I believe that primitive humanity, whose intelligence was limited, whose understanding was guided by myths and superstitions, and whose faculties were not yet full developed, often created these mythical gods, demi-gods, messiahs and saints as a means of explaining what they otherwise could not.

    It is one thing, to regard a “saint” as a good and wise person, whose life we hold up as an example, such as the life of Buddha Sakyamuni, Rav Yeshua ben Yusef (Jesus), his Mother Miriam, Teresa of Avila, Francis of Assisi, Je Tsongkhapa, Neem Karoli Baba, Sri A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, Mother Teresa of Calcutta, and Mychal Judge, OFM. But this is not what Bakunin is talking about. He’s talking about the mythical and superstitious “cult of the saints”, and the way in which the institutional church hijacked the legends and mythos of the pagan cultures, turning Ireland’s beloved Brighid (Fraid, in Wales) into “St. Bridget of Kildare”, and Constantine’s Sol Invictus into the legendary Son of God.

    There is nothing in Mikhail Bakunin’s quotation that is inaccurate. These legends and myths were created by ignorant, fearful, superstitious and spiritually immature persons. And from the time that they were created, those whose spirituality and philosophy has lacked that certain level of maturity – those who feel compelled to turn toward imaginary external beings, rather than celebrating these archetypes as aspects of our own incredible Inner Nature – have clung to and vehemently defended their beliefs as “truth”.

    He did not, as my friend accused him, call those people “stupid”. Each of us is functioning with a certain level of ignorance in one regard or another, and so some of our beliefs, or practices, and our perceptions are borne out of ignorance. And the belief in an imaginary external being, be that a god(dess), demi-urge, saviour or spirit, is an example of that kind of unhealthy and unwhole thinking.

  • I personally believe that the Universe is spiritual and numenal. [I differentiate between the material universe, in which our Milky Way exists, with a lower-case “u”, while the Universe – the limitless and eternal principle – I refer to with an upper-case “U”.] I believe this Universe is Love or what I often call Creative Intelligence and has beauty, purpose and order. And I believe that all phenomena, including all sentient beings, all places, and all things emanate from this Creative Intelligence/Love.
  • While I may not consider the particular ideologies of all spiritual traditions to be healthy, wholesome or particularly true or useful, I choose mindfully to honour all spiritual paths, because they are part of the tapestry of the human heart.

    When a five year-old child says that they believe in Santa Claus, we don’t become indignant, because we, in our maturity, know Santa Claus is a legend. Our response should be no different, I believe, toward those whose spiritual and personal maturity still needs to believe that there is a “God”, and that the stories and legends about Rav Yeshua in the New Testament of their Bible are “historical and true”. Why not simply regard them with the same loving care that we would that small child, recognising that it is their brokenness, their fear and their delusional/dualistic mindset, which guides their spiritual path?

  • I am not an atheist, because I don’t choose to identify my spiritual path by a set of descriptors that tell you what I am “not”. I am non-theistic… that is to say that I don’t concern myself with the god-concept at all, and don’t find contemplating such things to be useful, helpful or purposeful.
  • My spiritual path is purposeful. I pursue, study and engage my spiritual practice for one reason – to realise Enlightenment for the purpose of alleviating suffering in all sentient beings. Nothing else. Nothing less. I don’t practice because I want to please my guru. I don’t practice to achieve or attain anything I don’t already possess (Enlightenment is already our True Nature, we have only to awaken and realise it). I don’t do it for “salvation” or some other fear-based superstition.
  • My religion is Compassion. My “god” is Love. My path, while it has been called Buddhist, Contemplative, New Thought, Progressive Catholic, Universalist, Metaphysical, Hindu, Wiccan or Jain, is actually the path of service, loving-kindness, forgiveness and healing. I celebrate and acknowledge those traditions as part of the diverse tapestry of my personal spiritual heritage. I honour my role as a “successor to the apostles” with the same reverence and respect that I give the lineage of my Buddhist teachers from the Tibetan and Japanese Zen traditions. Technically, I teach what could best be called a syncretic, Western synthesis of Buddhism, influenced by the Tibetan Rime Movement, Eastern Catholic Mysticism (without the theistic trappings), and New Thought.

    This approach pisses off many respected and popular teachers in the Buddhist and Catholic sects. And it always will, I suspect. The reason seems to be that these teachers lack a certain security in their tradition and path, and need to attack, ridicule and denigrate the teachings of anyone they (delusionally) perceive as a threat to their “authority” or credibility. It’s really quite sad.

    And so they will insist that only those dharma teachers who teach a “pure dharma”, and come from this lineage or that are “safe” to listen to. The technical term for this is sectarian bullshit and drama. It’s baseless, superstitious and without merit.

    I would never encourage someone to abandon their primary spiritual teacher or path, if that teacher or path are serving them well. Neither would I ever consider attacking another person’s teacher, for doing so would dishonour my own teachers.

After reading my response about spiritual and personal maturity, my friend went on to ask:

Are we to extrapolate that the Dalai Lama isn’t spiritually mature because of his confessed belief in hell realms that we might see as psychological states? Maturity is dependent on cultural factors. What is mature behavior in one place would be found odd in another. I prefer not to go there and to focus on our commonality in hopes of generating dialogue. Labeling others gets in the way of that, in my experience. Once we have labeled the other as other, why in the world would they want to sit with us?

My response to his question is, “Yes, I would view a literal belief in hell realms as spiritually immature and superstitious, whether it was a belief espoused by the Dalai Lama, Rav Yeshua, Buddha Sakyamuni or the Amazing Kreskin. Period.” However, having had the privilege of his audience, in a smaller group setting at the monastery in Atlanta, I question whether His Holiness actually believes in these things from a literal perspective, or if he understands them as metaphors, and like many progressive spiritual teachers (my friend the bishop included) uses the common language of the people to express ideas in a culturally relevant context. (I apologise for being vague here, because I am unsure how much of a personal conversation I had with His Holiness would be considered privileged dialogue. So I will simply leave it at that.)

 

Implications for the Living Dharma Community

lotus-seal So what are the implications of this path for students of the Living Dharma Community?

The foundation of our spiritual path is undeniably the essential teaching of the Buddha Sakyamuni – particularly, the Four Noble Truths and the Noble Eightfold Path.  We also draw deeply from the contemplative practices of the Desert Fathers and Desert Mothers, living in the rich solitude of the African sketes.

We interpret those essential teachings through a non-theistic lens, paying attention to opportunities to make that teaching more accessible and relevant in a postmodern world.

Our path is certainly informed by the New Thought tradition of the nineteenth century, whose legacy includes such luminaries as Ralph Waldo Emerson, Judge Thomas Troward, Walt Whitman, Phineas Quimby, Emma Curtis Hopkins, Eckhart Tolle, Louise L. Hay and Dr. Kennedy Shultz.

Our traditions… now that is something altogether different, and somewhat unique.

We are a post-denominational, non-sectarian, intentional spiritual community. We celebrate, honour and incorporate the ancient wisdom of all the spiritual traditions through the ages. Individuals are free to participate in and practice any of these traditions, or none at all, recognising that it is our actual spiritual practice, not the traditions we use to celebrate them, which makes the difference and matters.

We choose to be a visionary community — knowing and affirming that everything we experience in the seemingly external world has its origins in Thought.

We encourage personal initiative, investigation and growth. Our sole purpose as teachers and as community are to serve as catalysts for spiritual growth and personal transformation.

We are acutely aware of the problems of the whole planet (global warming, destruction of rainforests, overpopulation, lack of ecological sustainability, exploitation of people in poorer countries) and want to see more action taken to heal these situations.

And finally, as our brother pointed out, we recognise our dualistic and delusional tendency to imagine and label those with whom we interact as "other". We affirm that only by learning to be more mindful, and by our commitment to the Five Precepts of Mindfulness, can we begin to reawaken that awareness of our essential unity.

Other Teachers are entitled to their opinions of me…

vajra2 Traditionally, Tibetan Buddhist practitioners have placed a strong emphasis on the view and instructions passed on through their own lineages, which are crucial to maintaining the authenticity of the teachings. However, many practitioners would spend their entire lives in one monastery and devote much time and effort to a thorough training in one tradition (receiving transmissions, empowerments and instructions), that they would not have time to explore other traditions and approaches. Because of these circumstances, there is a danger that some practitioners are less open to the views and good qualities of other traditions. We see this manifesting in those teachers who condemn what I do as "dressing up in religious costumes", because they are insecure about their own limited spiritual training. What they forget, however, is that our traditions are not of primary importance… only the Truth matters.

At the end of the day, I may be found unworthy to wear the robes of Buddhist, because I refuse to play the sectarian bullshit game. I may be found unworthy of the staff that symbolises my lineage as a successor to the apostles of the Great Rabbi Jesus, because I won’t pretend to believe in an imaginary, vengeful, hatemongering and jealous Divine Imbecile, who’s so freaking insecure that he has to demand that only he be worshipped… or because the Sacred Zombie Tales of the Easter mythos are merely metaphors for me… stories lifted from older traditions for the purpose of illustrating a particular teaching.

And none of that will matter to me.

The Living Dharma Community exists because two or more people choose to interact as an intentional spiritual community of friends. Our focus is on realisation of the Truth that is our "Hidden Nature" — Enlightenment — for the sake of alleviating the suffering of all sentient beings, in countless realms, planes, and aeons.

If what I do pisses off those who are in the religion game… tough shit. I’m far too old to be interested in winning popularity contests on Twitter or Facebook. All I am concerned with is doing whatever I can to alleviate suffering — in myself and others — and inspiring those I touch to do the same.

Nothing more. Nothing less.

If you are in search of a spiritual community where you are respected and accepted for who you are and want the inspiration and support to grow to your highest potential, then the Living Dharma Community may be for you. If you haven’t already done so, come on over to http://livingdharma.spruz.com and check us out. Visit the website for the Contemplative Order of Compassion (http://orderofcompassion.com) for more information on the essential teachings, traditions, projects and path.

But most of all… find peace in every step… stay rooted in the moment… and realise that whatever is not love is fear… and fear will always dissolve the moment we remember the truth of our Being.

You are Love! And you are loved!

Namasté

khenpo gurudas sunyatananda

_____________________________________________

“Chenrezig, Treasure of Objectless Compassion;
Manjushri, Lord of Stainless Wisdom;
Vajrapani, Destroyer of all adversarial forces;
O Je Tsong Khapa – Losang Drakpa —
Crown Jewel of the Sages of the Land of Snows,
Humbly at Your Lotus Feet I ask your blessing.”

_____________________________________________

Drawing on the essential teachings of the great spiritual teachers, philosophers and freethinkers throughout time, Khenpo Gurudas Śunyatananda (retired Archbishop Francis-Maria Salvato, O.C.) has been regarded as a provocative, revolutionary “voice of reason” within the field of religion and spirituality, since 1983. Having the distinction of being one of the few openly non-theistic, openly-gay and post-denominational thinkers ever to serve as Bishop-Exarch and spiritual leader of the autocephalic Eastern Catholic Franciscans in North America, Gurudas is the author of more than 600 articles, eight books and currently serves as the spiritual advisor for a non-theistic, intentional spiritual community, The Spiritus Project. He can be reached at: http://dharmadudeunplugged.com

Copyright ©2010, Khenpo Gurudas Sunyatananda (The Most Reverend Dr. F. Francis-Maria G. Salvato, M.Sc., O.C.). All rights reserved. This material may be reproduced, blogged, quoted or distributed, provided the entire copyright including contact information remain intact. It may NOT be altered in any way, without express written permission.

Not of this world…

Filed under:Dharma talks — posted by Dharmacharya Gurudas Sunyatananda on Tuesday, 18th May 2010 @ 8:09 am

“For you are not of this world,” Rabbi Jesus reminded his disciples. The great Master understood the essential Dharma truth that any experience, object, situation, person or passion we could entertain could never make up for, eliminate or otherwise fill the void within us. He understood that what we perceive as this Void is actually our True Nature… Sunyata… the Inexpressible Groundlessness.

When we expect the world to fill that inner void, we are demanding more than the world could ever give. For this reason, we set ourselves up for dissatisfaction, disappointment and create the cause for suffering. This is Buddha Sakyamuni’s First Noble Truth.

People, passions, objects and circumstances can never make you or me “happy”. Happiness is not a result, but rather a determined state of mind we can only generate from within ourselves. It is our natural state of mind. Any time we find ourselves un-happy, that is when we are out of the ordinary. When we recognise that happiness is our natural state of mind… that peace, calm and ease are our natural expressions of life… then healing can truly begin.

Henry David Thoreau noted, "Happiness is like a butterfly; the more you chase it, the more it will elude you, but if you turn your attention to other things, it will come and sit softly on your shoulder…"

Namasté

khenpo gurudas sunyatananda

_____________________________________________

“Chenrezig, Treasure of Objectless Compassion;
Manjushri, Lord of Stainless Wisdom;
Vajrapani, Destroyer of all adversarial forces;
O Je Tsong Khapa – Losang Drakpa —
Crown Jewel of the Sages of the Land of Snows,
Humbly at Your Lotus Feet I ask your blessing.”

_____________________________________________

Drawing on the essential teachings of the great spiritual teachers, philosophers and freethinkers throughout time, Khenpo Gurudas Śunyatananda (retired Archbishop Francis-Maria Salvato, O.C.) has been regarded as a provocative, revolutionary “voice of reason” within the field of religion and spirituality, since 1983. Having the distinction of being one of the few openly non-theistic, openly-gay and post-denominational thinkers ever to serve as Bishop-Exarch and spiritual leader of the autocephalic Eastern Catholic Franciscans in North America, Gurudas is the author of more than 600 articles, eight books and currently serves as the spiritual advisor for a non-theistic, intentional spiritual community, The Spiritus Project. He can be reached at: http://dharmadudeunplugged.com

Copyright ©2010, Khenpo Gurudas Sunyatananda (The Most Reverend Dr. F. Francis-Maria G. Salvato, M.Sc., O.C.). All rights reserved. This material may be reproduced, blogged, quoted or distributed, provided the entire copyright including contact information remain intact. It may NOT be altered in any way, without express written permission.

The qualities of a Bodhisattva

Filed under:Compassion,Dharma talks — posted by Dharmacharya Gurudas Sunyatananda on Saturday, 15th May 2010 @ 3:06 pm

The great bodhisattva Ksitigarbha vowed that as long as there was still one suffering soul alive, he would not attain buddhahood. In addition to suffering souls, the bodhisattva also helps living beings in other realms: humans, celestial beings, asuras, hungry ghosts, and animals and insects. He hopes that by teaching all these creatures, he will be able to stop them from committing more crimes, and thus help them to end their constant suffering. While it is technically impossible for one to put off attaining Enlightenment, Tsongkhapa noted that the desires and motivations of such beloved bodhisattvas is still sublime.

I was recently asked to speak about the qualities and attainments of a bodhisattva. A bodhisattva (Tibetan: byang chub sems dpa) is one who, motivated by great compassion, has generated the spontaneous desire to attain Enlightenment for the benefit of all sentient beings. This desire to awaken for the sake of all sentient beings is called bodhicitta.

The Bodhisattva progresses through ten paths, or “bhumis”, which take them from the grounds of insight, into the grounds of meditation, and which culminate in the paths or grounds of “no more learning” (realisation).

While each tradition has certain texts and cultural expresssions that may be used to illustrate the qualities of a Bodhisattva, we can move beyond the sectarian differences to recognise that a Bodhisattva first lives according to and manifests the Six Paramitas (Perfections): generosity, ethics, patience, effort, concentration and wisdom.

To become a Bodhisattva is to be fearless. There is no aversion for those who are hostile and there is no obsessive clinging to those who are closest to us. There is no possessiveness, only love, compassion and discernment into the nature of reality.

In the Buddha Sakyamuni’s ‘Perfection of Wisdom Sutra’ it states: “I will become a saviour to all those beings, I will release them from all their sufferings.” Some of the examples of true bodhisattvas would include such individuals as Rev Yeshua ben Yusef (Jesus the Christed One), Je Tsongkhapa, Francis of Assisi, Mother Teresa of Calcutta, the great Dr. Martin Luther King Jr and Maximillian Kolbe.

Rather than focus on the qualities, marks or signs of a bodhisattva, I believe it would be more useful to focus on the qualities we should cultivate, so that we might become bodhisattvas ourselves, for the sake of all sentient beings:

Generosity – The generous heart gives without expectation of anything in return. Volunteering your time to a worthwhile charity, taking time to financially support your teachers or spiritual community, looking out for those who are marginalised, hurting, depressed… these are all examples of generosity. A generous heart never gives with anger, resentment or with the expectation of repayment. It simply has the desire to help someone in need.

Ethics – Cultivating the right view – knowing the difference between what is right and what is not right – is imperative to cultivating the Six Paramitas, and becoming a Bodhisattva. One who has cultivated a clear set of ethics lives in accordance with the Five Precepts of Mindfulness, choosing to do no harm to oneself or to others. From the Buddhist perspective, all harmful actions are caused by an imbalanced mind that harbours or creates them, therefore, by learning the foundational techniques of mindfulness and practicing Lojong is an important means of cultivating a stronger ethical quality of mind.

Patience – The lack of patience that marks today’s “on-demand” world is unhealthy. In Candrakirti’s book, Supplement to the Middle Way, impatience is described perfectly: “It makes us ugly, leads to the profane, and robs us of discernment to know right from wrong.” The practice of patience is the antidote to anger and frustrations. It creates calm and allows us to enjoy stillness.

Concentration – When we cultivate concentration, through the proper practice of meditation and contemplation, we develop a keen ability to focus with laser intensity, with a non-waivering mind. This brings about a quality we call “calm abiding”, which intensifies the higher senses, allows us to gain supernatural insight and increases our healing capacity. Je Tsongkhapa teaches, “Concentration is a Sovereign, with dominion over the mind, once placed, immovable, like the Ruler of the Mountains.” Concentration, mindfulness, and insight give rise to the final paramita – Wisdom.

Wisdom – Arising out of the calm abiding mind, wisdom reveals itself to be the root of all the other paramitas. From the Buddhist perspective, we call Wisdom the sum total of the other five perfections. In order to generate true bodhicitta, wisdom merges with compassion, and the pure desire to benefit all sentient beings organically manifests.

An example of a the Bodhisattva vows are found in Santideva’s Guide to the Bodhisattva’s Way of Life, the Bodhisattva vow is taken with the following famous two verses from the end of the Avatamsaka Sutra:

“Just as all the previous Sugatas, the Buddhas/Generated the mind of enlightenment, and accomplished all the stages of the Bodhisattva training, so will I too, for the sake of all beings, generate the mind of enlightenment and accomplish all the stages of the Bodhisattva training.”

Namasté

khenpo gurudas sunyatananda

_____________________________________________

“Chenrezig, Treasure of Objectless Compassion;
Manjushri, Lord of Stainless Wisdom;
Vajrapani, Destroyer of all adversarial forces;
O Je Tsong Khapa – Losang Drakpa –
Crown Jewel of the Sages of the Land of Snows,
Humbly at Your Lotus Feet I ask your blessing.”

_____________________________________________

Drawing on the essential teachings of the great spiritual teachers, philosophers and freethinkers throughout time, Khenpo Gurudas Śunyatananda (retired Archbishop Francis-Maria Salvato, O.C.) has been regarded as a provocative, revolutionary “voice of reason” within the field of religion and spirituality, since 1983. Having the distinction of being one of the few openly non-theistic, openly-gay and post-denominational thinkers ever to serve as Bishop-Exarch and spiritual leader of the autocephalic Eastern Catholic Franciscans in North America, Gurudas is the author of more than 600 articles, eight books and currently serves as the spiritual advisor for a non-theistic, intentional spiritual community, The Spiritus Project. He can be reached at: http://dharmadudeunplugged.com

Copyright ©2008, His Eminence Dharmacharya Gurudas Sunyatananda (The Most Reverend Dr. F. Francis-Maria G. Salvato, M.Sc., O.C.). All rights reserved. This material may be reproduced, blogged, quoted or distributed, provided the entire copyright including contact information remain intact. It may NOT be altered in any way, without express written permission.

The Lesson of Letting Go

Filed under:Dharma talks — posted by Dharmacharya Gurudas Sunyatananda on @ 11:25 am

dharmachakra-200 Recently, I was approached by someone familiar with the remarkable success I’ve had as a consultant specialising in teaching direct sales, insurance, investment, real estate and network marketing companies how to increase their sales and profit levels, using Dharma principles and integrity-based selling strategies. He asked us to provide limited consulting services to his small web conferencing business. And he asked us to accept payment at the end of the period in which we provided those services (paying at the end of the month for services rendered). We accepted, and received a cheque from him, for $1000.00 at the end of April. This would have gone far to cover back-rent and a past-due utilities bill.

Unfortunately, the same day the cheque arrived, we were told by the owner of that company that there were no funds to cover the cheque. So we waited a few days, thinking that he would clear up any mismanaged funds issues, and cover his debts. However, it has now been seventeen days, and he has not yet covered the funds he owes us, let alone the $374 in bounced cheque and overdraft charges he caused by issuing a fraudulent cheque.

We will, in the end, lose everything because of him. And that kind of stress, while having impact on our health organically, could cause even greater health issues, if we allowed ourselves to cycle into a fear-based “frenzy”. We’ve chosen not to allow that to happen.

The lesson my friend is in the process of learning is one that each of us has to learn – sometimes repeatedly – until we become mindful of it organically…

Learning the Lesson of Letting Go

lettinggo1 In the Buddhism and the Dharma of the Christ, we refer to this as “non-attachment”. And while we often think of it in terms of being attached to material possessions, it also includes attachment to emotions… including fear.

Our fear of change keeps us from moving into further stages of living.

Without a doubt, life takes courage to live fully. True satisfaction… true happiness does not depend on our ability to deny pain. Pain exists and is part of life. Suffering is optional. We participate in making the obstacles what they are in our lives, and we must participate equally in letting them go, when it’s time to move on.

Whatever is not love is fear.

This process of letting go of fear is a process that empowers us to live with real mindfulness of the present. It’s not about some magical formula for asceticism, but about creating the “magic” that comes from being present in the moment, and allowing ourselves to embrace the challenges as they come, using them as fuel. “Consume life,” Tenzin Yangchen used to tell me, “or life will consume you!”

Master Thich Nhat Hanh reflects on the wonder of living in the moment and letting go this way:

    “People usually consider walking on water or in thin air a miracle. But I think the real miracle is not to walk either on water or in thin air, but to walk on earth. Every day we are engaged in a miracle, which we don’t even recognise.”

This world in which we live is filled with mystery and wonder. I sincerely hope my friend finds his way toward doing the right thing, because I know that it continues to gnaw at him, that he is continuing to allow folks to take a terrible chance with their financial futures, by staying with a company that is built upon quicksand.

When we quiet the mind and relax the senses, we can begin to see beyond the “perceptions” that are coloured by fear, and hear beyond the chatter of the mindless-ego (servant of fear), and at once, pain no longer frightens us, but compels us to move toward and through it, as a teacher encourages the student to move through the difficult equation, so that wisdom and mastery can be gained.

Even the Desert Fathers of Egypt understood the necessity of destroying the ego-self. Abba Alonius wrote: “By utterly destroying myself I was able to reconstruct and reshape myself into a new creation.” As the Jewish prophet wrote, “…the sycamores have been cut down, but we will put cedars in their place.” (Isaiah 9.10)

Be bold! Move forward! Recognise the fear that’s holding you back from doing the right thing and seize the moment! You don’t need a safety net… just move toward the pain, toward the fear… and watch what happens!

Namasté!

khenpo gurudas sunyatananda

YOUR GENEROUS SUPPORT FOR
WISDOM OF THE DESERT HERMITAGE
(LOJONG LADRANG)
IS ALWAYS APPRECIATED

_____________________________________________

“Chenrezig, Treasure of Objectless Compassion;
Manjushri, Lord of Stainless Wisdom;
Vajrapani, Destroyer of all adversarial forces;
O Je Tsong Khapa – Losang Drakpa —
Crown Jewel of the Sages of the Land of Snows,
Humbly at Your Lotus Feet I ask your blessing.”

_____________________________________________

Drawing on the essential teachings of the great spiritual teachers, philosophers and freethinkers throughout time, Khenpo Gurudas Śunyatananda (retired Archbishop Francis-Maria Salvato, O.C.) has been regarded as a provocative, revolutionary “voice of reason” within the field of religion and spirituality, since 1983. Having the distinction of being one of the few openly non-theistic, openly-gay and post-denominational thinkers ever to serve as Bishop-Exarch and spiritual leader of the autocephalic Eastern Catholic Franciscans in North America, Gurudas is the author of more than 600 articles, eight books and currently serves as the spiritual advisor for a non-theistic, intentional spiritual community, The Spiritus Project. He can be reached at: http://dharmadudeunplugged.com

Copyright ©2010, Khenpo Gurudas Sunyatananda (The Most Reverend Dr. F. Francis-Maria G. Salvato, M.Sc., O.C.). All rights reserved. This material may be reproduced, blogged, quoted or distributed, provided the entire copyright including contact information remain intact. It may NOT be altered in any way, without express written permission.


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image: detail of installation by Bronwyn Lace