Recent posts
Page 9 of 78 · 928 posts
Posted Jun 17
“The Buddha said: If a person commits many transgressions, but does not repent and immediately stop the will to commit them, then the consequences of the transgressions will return to him, like the sea broadening and deepening when water returns to it. If one with evil knows it is wrong, rectifies one's faults and thereby attains goodness, then day by day the offences diminish, and eventually one attains the Way.” The Sutra in Forty-two Chapters
Posted Jun 11
“There are no phenomena, whether compounded or uncompounded (the ten directions, the three times, the three worlds, and so on), that exist separately from one’s own mind.” Padmasambhava
Posted Jun 5
It seems that the situation in all these worlds is unbearable. I need to find a source of Refuge that can protect me from being reborn there. Who can protect me? Not even Brahma, Indra, or the ruler of the universe, let alone all the others. Only the Three Jewels can. Therefore, I will turn to the Buddha as my teacher, put his teachings into practice, and consider the spiritual community as my companions on the path. As for refuge, although I take refuge in the Buddha, it is the Teaching that protects me. Even the Buddha cannot pluck me out of cyclic existence like a hair from a river. To gain protection, I must receive the Dharma teachings and then put them into practice. Taranatha
Posted May 28
“I have preached that ultimate meaning is realized internally by each saint, while reasoning is attained in the give and take [of joint discussion] among common worldlings. Dharmodgata, from this principle you should understand that ultimate meaning transcends the descriptions of reasoned meaning. Furthermore, Dharmodgata, I have preached that ultimate meaning does not function through images, but the functioning of reason does move within the realm of images. From this principle, Dharmodgata, you should understand that ultimate meaning transcends the descriptions of reasoned meaning. Furthermore, Dharmodgata, I preach that ultimate meaning is ineffable, but the functioning of reason moves within the realm of language. From this principle, Dharmodgata, you should understand that ultimate meaning transcends the descriptions of reasoned meaning. Furthermore, Dharmodgata, I teach that ultimate meaning severs all expression, but the functioning of reason moves within the realm of expression. From this principle, Dharmodgata, you should understand that ultimate meaning transcends the descriptions of reasoned meaning. In like fashion, Dharmodgata, reason is entirely unable to comprehend, evaluate, or appreciate the descriptive marks of ultimate meaning, which transcend the functioning of any reasoning.” Ārya-saṃdhi-nirmocana-sūtra
Posted May 27
”Other sentient beings, not foolish, who have gained insight into the holy truth, who have attained the transcendent insight of the saints, do truly understand that in all things reality is apart from language. After they have seen and heard about conditioned and unconditioned things, they think that what they have learned are most certainly not really existing conditioned and unconditioned things. Rather they are descriptions engendered from imagination and are magical, confused understandings in which one produces concepts about the conditioned and the unconditioned, concepts about whether they exist or not. They do not tenaciously cling to verbal expressions that are engendered from what they have seen and heard or think that only [those expressions] are true and everything else false. [But,] in order to express the meanings they know, they follow the accepted language. Afterwards they are not forced to reconsider. Thus, good son, the saints, being freed from language through their holy wisdom and insight in this regard, realize the perfect awakening that reality is truly apart from language. It is because they desire to lead others to realize perfect awakening that they provisionally establish names and concepts and call things conditioned or unconditioned.” Ārya-saṃdhi-nirmocana-sūtra
Posted May 26
“In the Mahayana, the three worlds are established to be only consciousness, according to the sutra that affirms: "O sons of the Victorious, the three worlds are only mind (citta) ... [The word] "only" is [used] with the purpose of denying (the existence of external) things.” Vasubandhu
Posted May 25
Primera traducción al español del Brahmajala Sutra, o Discurso sobre la Red de Brahma.
Posted May 24
The god said, “How is it then, Mañjuśrī, that the Dharma taught by the Thus-gone One is not false?” Mañjuśrī said, “Divine son, on the ultimate level, the Thus-gone One does not speak falsely. Nor does he speak truly. And why is that? Ultimately, divine son, the Thus-gone One has not arisen. And so, ultimately he speaks neither falsely nor truly. Divine son, what do you think? Are explanations given by magical creations of the Thus-gone One true or false?” The god said, “Mañjuśrī, explanations given by magical creations of the Thus-gone One are not true, nor are they false. Why is that? Mañjuśrī, ultimately there is nothing truly established in that which is emanated by the Thus-gone One.” Mañjuśrī said, “So it is, divine son, so it is. The Thus-gone One knows that all phenomena are unestablished in the ultimate sense. Whatever is unestablished in the ultimate sense should not be called true nor should it be called false in the context of the ultimate. Why is that? Because ultimately all phenomena are unborn.” —Saṃvṛtiparamārthasatyanirdeśa Sutra
Posted May 2
TheAnimal Realm: “Their classification is fourfold: those who have many legs, four legs, two legs, and those who are without legs. Where are they located? Ocean, plain, or forest. For most of them, the ocean is the place they abide. What type of suffering do they experience? The suffering of being used, the suffering of slaughter, and the suffering of being eaten by one another. The first is accorded to the domestic animals under the power of humans. As is stated: «Powerless, they are tortured. Hands, feet, whips, and iron hooks enslave them.» The second suffering is accorded to wild animals. As is stated: «Some die for pearls, wool, bone, blood, meat, and skin.» The third suffering is accorded to the majority, who abide in the big oceans. As is said: «They eat whatever falls into their mouths.» What is the life span of the animals? This is indefinite. The longest is one-quarter kalpa. As is said: «Among the animals, the longest life span is one antahkalpa at the most.»” Gampopa, The Jewel Ornament of Liberation, Kagyu Lamrim
Posted Apr 28
“One of little awareness is tangled in the web of the Impurities; like an insect in a [spider’s] web, he plays & struggles in the cage of the body. But one of developed awareness is discerning . . . like a dancer, he reels with the various powers [of Consciousness], free of the mental-emotional states of the judgmental mind (buddhi), manifesting both [what he] wills and sublime peace.” ~ Triśirobhairava-tantra
Posted Apr 27
“First of all, mentally separate the layers of skin [from the flesh] and then with the scalpel of discrimination separate the flesh from the skeletal frame. And having split open even the bones look right down into the marrow. While examining this ask yourself, «Where is the essence?»” Bodhisattvacaryāvatāra
Posted Apr 24