The Mahayana Model of Awakening
(Image: The Avalokiteśvara Bodhisattva)
About 400 years after the passing away of Shakyamuni Buddha, i.e. around
1 century BCE, the school of Mahayana Buddhism developed with a
different emphasis and focus of practice as compared to the
practitioners of Early Buddhism (Also see: Early Buddhism's Model of Awakening).
Examples of forms of Mahayana Buddhism practiced today include Zen,
Pure Land, Tantric/Vajrayana (including Tibetan, Japanese Shingon),
Tendai, and a number of others schools that no longer exist today or are
absorbed into Zen (e.g. Huayan). Today, the number adherents of the
Mahayana forms of Buddhism in the world have exceeded the number of
adherents of the Theravada/Early form of Buddhism due to the extent in
which Mahayana forms of Buddhism have spread into China, Japan and
Tibet.
The practitioners of Early Buddhism (of which Theravada is modeled
after), or what Loppon Malcolm calls "Mainstream Buddhism" (because it
was a much more commonly practiced form of Buddhism in the past in
India), aimed to attain their own liberation or Nirvana by removing the
afflictions (passion, aggression and delusion) that causes rebirth.
Thousands of Buddha's students attained that goal called Arahantship.
However, Mahayana Buddhism has a higher aim. Not only do they want to
remove the causes for samsaric birth, they also want to remove all
knowledge obscurations preventing the attainment of omniscience and
Buddhahood, for the sake of liberating all sentient beings. Mahayana
Buddhists feel that the scope of attaining liberation for oneself is too
limited, so out of great compassion and for the benefit of all sentient
beings, they want to attain the same Buddhahood as Shakyamuni. The
practitioner walking the path to Buddhahood is called a Bodhisattva.
This post attempts to share the model of awakening in classical Mahayana
Buddhism. There are 10 stages of an awakened Bodhisattva, beginning
with the direct realization of twofold emptiness. (The Tibetan/Vajrayana
traditions may also add a few more stages, making it 13 or 16)
From a writing I wrote:
...The
reason I said Bernie is a 'real bodhisattva' is not because of
impressive sounding words he spoke but rather that he clearly actualizes
and expresses his wisdom in compassionate activities. He is
tremendously involved in compassionate and selfless activities empty of
self and in total exertion. He is able to apply his wisdom of anatta and
D.O. to dissolve I/mine making in the practice of paramitas in his
encounters with sentient beings, which as Thusness said is the 'great
anatta' (Thusness two weeks ago: "...anatta in the 6 paramitas...it is
great actualization of anatta."). For most of us, although we may have
this and that Bodhisattva vows or believe ourselves to be practicing the
Bodhisattva way, it is as Thusness said, "In my opinion many of our
great aspirations and high views turn empty talks easily...." - http://awakeningtoreality.blogspot.com.au/.../the-path-of... - or like my Mahayana teacher said, even the greatest vow becomes merely a discursive/fanciful thought when not actualized....
...The practice and engagement of the 10 paramitas (or 6)
in the
daily life becomes of utmost importance in Mahayana Buddhism, allowing
the twofold
cultivation of merits and wisdom so necessary for the attainment of
full Buddhahood. It is in fact in the very mundane activities of
daily life and interactions that allows us the opportunity to
attain the ten perfections (paramitas) that allows us to attain
full Buddhahood. The paramitas are not just 'mundane qualities',
but the actualization of awakened wisdom - for example, the
perfection of generosity is not just the ability to give lots of
money to other people, but rather, the selfless giving freed from
any confusion of a giver-giving-gift. The wisdom of the emptiness
of self and phenomena allows our act of generosity to be perfected.
When our giving transcends giver-giving-gift, without attachments
we relinquish and give and sacrifice for other beings out of
genuine compassion, that is true generosity. The cultivation of the
ten paramitas in conjunction of the wisdom of emptiness is itself a
method for the liberation of our mental afflictions, clinging, I and
mine-making, as well as the cultivation of immense merits required for
Buddhahood.
It is said that at each of the ten bhumi stages, one
of the perfections have been perfected. For example, the first
bhumi perfects the perfection of generosity, second bhumi the
perfection of precepts, so on and so forth.
In short, in the Mahayana path, as Huayan
Patriarch Cheng'guan explained ( http://awakeningtoreality.blogspot.com.au/.../httpssites... ), the essential wisdom that allows for the twofold
liberation of afflictive obscurations and knowledge obscurations is
the wisdom of twofold emptiness. Then there is the emphasis on cultivating the
paramitas.
I translated an excerpt from 法è¯ç¼¤çº·ï¼ˆ2) by Venerable Shen Kai (my refuge
Master) on the Mahayana Ten Bhumi Model of Awakening. Bhumi means
'Ground'.
1. The Joyous Ground: The Bodhisattva's initial entrance into
sainthood, breaking through the confusion of views, realizing the
principle of twofold emptiness of person and dharma. (The Bodhisattva)
gives rise to great joy, therefore it is called The Joyous Ground. At
this ground, (one) accomplishes the Paramita of Dana (generosity) among
the Bodhisattva Ten Paramitas.