Some Thoughts on the Future of Buddhism
by Lama Zopa Rinpoche |
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| Lama
Zopa Rinpoche wrote this article at the request of Renuka
Singh for her book The
Path of the Buddha. Edited from the Lama Yeshe
Wisdom Archive by Nicholas Ribush. |
In order to hazard a guess at the future of Buddhism in the
world, we need to look at how it has survived and spread since
our precious founder, Guru Shakyamuni Buddha, first turned
the wheel of Dharma 2,500 years ago.
How and why Guru Shakyamuni Buddha taught
Guru Shakyamuni Buddha revealed the path to enlightenment
so that all sentient beings would be happy and free from suffering.
Having experienced the bliss of liberation and enlightenment
himself, he realized that all beings had the seed of enlightenment
within their minds and could attain that ultimate goal by
following the same path that he had. Therefore, starting with
the four noble truths, he began to give teachings according
to the various levels of mind of those who came to him for
instruction.
Under his guidance, his disciples began to practice, and
many were able to gain the same realizations that he had,
proving that others could attain the enlightenment he himself
had attained. As his students became teachers, their own disciples
gained realizations of the path, showing that Guru Shakyamuni
Buddha’s teachings were indeed transmissible and thus
beginning the oral tradition that survives to this day.
For fifteen hundred years, Buddhism flourished in India and
spread from there in all directions, to South-East Asia; Sri
Lanka; China, Japan and Korea; countries to the west; and
Nepal and Tibet.
Around 650 CE, the king of Tibet, Songtsen Gampo, married
Buddhist women from Nepal and China and under their influence,
began to introduce Buddhism to Tibet. One hundred years later,
the king Trisong Detsen, invited the great Indian monk-scholar
Shantarakshita and the tantric yogi Padmasambhava to firmly
establish Buddhism in Tibet. Shantarakshita, the “Great
Abbot Bodhisattva,” introduced the monastic tradition
to Tibet, ordained the first five Tibetan monks and inspired
the construction of Tibet’s first monastery, Samyé.
Padmasambhava, “Guru Rinpoche,” pacified hindrances
to the establishment of Buddhism and introduced the practice
of Vajrayana to Tibet.
Over the next century, the practice of Buddhism spread gradually
throughout Tibet, until the anti-Buddhist king Langdarma ascended
to the throne and began a violent campaign to destroy Buddhism
in Tibet. Within a few years, the Dharma had all but disappeared
from Central Tibet, but survived to a certain extent far to
the east and west.
Thus fragmented, the practice of Dharma began to degenerate,
and many corrupt practices and ideas were introduced to Tibet.
Despairing at the situation, the king of Gugé, in Western
Tibet, invited the renowned Indian pandit Atisha to Tibet,
to re-introduce the pure practice of Dharma.
I can’t talk much about Atisha’s life here, but
a detailed description is given in Pabongka Rinpoche’s
book, Liberation
in the Palm of Your Hand. Here we see how, like Guru
Shakyamuni Buddha, Atisha was born into a royal family but
abandoned his inheritance in favor of Dharma practice. He
studied with many teachers and realized the central importance
of the loving, compassionate bodhicitta in the practice of
Dharma. In order to further his study and practice of bodhicitta,
Atisha undertook a long and dangerous sea voyage to Indonesia,
to meet Serlingpa, the pre-eminent teacher of bodhicitta of
the time.
When he went to Tibet in 1042, Atisha carried with him the
two crucial Dharma lineages of method and wisdom, and when
we talk even now about the survival of Buddhism in the world,
we have to talk in terms of these two lineages.
The wisdom lineage passed from Guru Shakyamuni
Buddha to Manjushri and then down on through great masters
such as Nagarjuna and Chandrakirti to Atisha. The method lineage
passed from the Buddha to Maitreya and then down on through
Asanga, Vasubandhu, Haribhadra and, of course, Lama Serlingpa,
also to Atisha. Thus, combined in the holy mind of the great
Atisha, the two lineages of method and wisdom arrived in Tibet.
In Tibet, Lama Atisha wrote a very short text entitled A
Lamp for the Path to Enlightenment,
which for the first time presented all the teachings of the
Buddha in an organized, step-like path, making it very easy
for the individual practitioner to get an overview of the
entire path and to understand what practice might be relevant
to her or him. Of course, the benefits of Atisha’s coming
to Tibet are infinite, beyond measure, but even if the only
thing he’d done was to write this text, that would have
made it worthwhile.
Atisha’s work was the original lam-rim (steps
of the path) text, and over the subsequent centuries, many
lamas from all Tibetan traditions wrote commentaries on Atisha’s
Lamp, and the lam-rim genre is one of the hallmarks
of Tibetan Buddhism. Perhaps the most famous of all lam-rim
commentaries is Lama Tsong Khapa’s Lam-rim
Chen-mo (The Great Treatise on the Steps of the Path
to Enlightenment). Lama Tsong Khapa was a great yogi
and scholar who wrote many profound texts on all aspects of
sutra and tantra, including several lam-rim commentaries of
varying length, but his Great Treatise is a work
of unparalleled genius.
Lama Tsong Khapa also founded the Gelug tradition, one of
the four great schools of Tibetan Buddhism. He and his disciples
also founded some of the greatest monasteries in Tibet, including
the three near Lhasa—Ganden, which he founded himself,
and Drepung, Sera—and Tashilhunpo, Kumbum and Labrang,
in other parts of the country—which were founded by
various of his disciples and were like small towns, housing
tens of thousands of monks.
In the Gelug monasteries, the monks followed a rigorous schedule
of memorization, study, debate and practice. Often they would
forego sleep in order to debate all night. One of my teachers,
Geshe Rabten, has written in detail about life in the monasteries
(Life of a Tibetan Monk), and his book is well worth
reading to find out what an impressive and intensive schedule
the monks followed.
By some estimates, more than twenty percent of Tibetan men
were monks. This is an important fact to note when thinking
about the future of Buddhism, because the viability of the
Dharma in a certain country or place is determined by whether
or not the lineage of the monastic ordination exists there.
These days there seems to be a tendency, especially in the
West, to downplay the importance of the ordination of monks
and nuns in the survival of Buddhism. Suffice it to say that
wherever one cannot be ordained, Buddhism is dead.
Many Tibetan practitioners, however, were not monks but laypeople,
and some of these led amazing ascetic lives high in the snow
mountains of Tibet. Perhaps the most famous of all is Tibet’s
great yogi, Milarepa, who reached enlightenment under the
guidance of his guru, Marpa the Translator.
In his early years, Milarepa studied black magic, and at
the insistence of his mother, in order to avenge harm done
to his family after his father had passed away, he caused
a building to collapse, trapping and killing many of his mother’s
enemies inside. Later on, realizing the terrible mistake he
had made, he sought out a Dharma teacher, and eventually found
Marpa. However, instead of receiving teachings from his guru,
Milarepa received what today people would call abuse. Marpa
never missed an opportunity to publicly humiliate Milarepa,
openly kicking him out of any teachings that he might manage
to sneak into, and forced him to do unbelievably backbreaking
work, building and tearing down a stone tower. Marpa instructed
Milarepa to build a nine-story tower out of rocks, and when,
after a great deal of effort carting the rocks from the remote
location where he found them to the building site, Milarepa
finally finished and proudly showed Marpa his handiwork, the
guru shouted angrily, “Who told you to build this tower?
Put every rock back exactly where you found it.” When
Milarepa had done this, Marpa then angrily demanded to know
why he had taken down the tower he’d been told to build.
This happened three or four times. Each time, Milarepa humbly
accepted his guru’s criticism, and with unshakable faith
and devotion did exactly as he was told.
Eventually, Marpa sealed Milarepa into a cave and told him
to meditate on impermanence and death and other important
Dharma subjects until he had realized these topics. In this
way, having essentially abandoned sleep, Milarepa’s
wisdom grew. After a few years, he had a dream that he should
return home, which he did, to find his mother dead and the
family home in ruins. Generating great renunciation, Milarepa
then fled to the snow mountains, where he meditated in icy
caves, wearing nothing but a simple cotton cloth. There he
realized the nature of mind and attained enlightenment. He
had spent so much time sitting in meditation that his buttocks
were thick with calluses.
Why am I telling this story? It’s simply to show how
hard one has to practice in order to make serious spiritual
progress. In Tibet there were many practitioners like Milarepa,
which is why Buddhism flourished in Tibet. If it is to survive,
let alone flourish, in the world today, this is the type of
practice that must be done in order for the as yet unbroken
lineages to continue.
When we talk about the propagation of Buddhism, we have to
remember that there are two types of teaching—the words
and the realizations. Of these, it is the latter that makes
the difference. It is easy for the words to continue for centuries—all
we need is a few good libraries. But without the living experience
of the meaning of the words that comes through purification,
creation of merit and effective meditation, the words are
dry and tasteless and cannot be a vehicle for Buddhism to
continue into the distant future. For this to happen, we need
serious meditators spending years, if not their entire lives,
in retreat under the supervision of experienced masters. Is
this happening today?
Jan Willis’s book, Enlightened Beings, tells
the inspiring sacred biographies of six prominent tantric
meditators from the Gelug School of Tibetan Buddhism, including
that of the great Gyälwa Ensapa. Reading his story, we
can understand the kind of practice required to ensure the
survival of the lineage of the teachings. From an early age,
he took teachings from many great masters; he studied the
vast treatises of sutra and tantra; he became a monk; he undertook
prolonged retreats in isolated places. As a result, he attained
enlightenment in his lifetime. And of course, he was not the
only one. Countless other practitioners in Tibet also followed
similar courses of action and gained realization. How common
is this in the world today? Even in Tibet, it no longer happens.
All this, then, is the answer to the future of Buddhism on
Earth. Even though there may have be an upsurge of interest
in Tibetan Buddhism over the past decades, mainly due to China’s
brutal occupation of Tibet and the resulting exile of His
Holiness the Dalai Lama and more than one hundred thousand
other Tibetans, which has brought Tibetan Buddhism to the
attention of others in the world, my impression is that it
is almost totally devoid of the depth that characterized the
Buddhism of Tibet and other Asian countries in the early centuries
of its introduction to them, and therefore, it may not last
that long.
The future of Buddhism notwithstanding, what is the reason
for this heightened interest in Buddhism, especially in the
West? One would have to say, people turn to Buddhism because
they want to be happy. Why Buddhism? Because they find through
experience that ordinary methods, such as family, friends,
money, material possessions, work, art and so forth are not
inherently satisfying.
The great secret, if you want to call it that, is that happiness,
which we all want, and suffering, which none of us wants,
come primarily from the mind, and if Buddhism is about anything,
it’s about the mind. As Lama Yeshe said,
When we study Buddhism, we are studying ourselves, the
nature of our own minds. Instead of focusing on some supreme
being, Buddhism emphasizes more practical matters, such
as how to lead our lives, how to integrate our minds and
how to keep our everyday lives peaceful and healthy. In
other words, Buddhism always accentuates experiential knowledge-wisdom
rather than some dogmatic view. In fact, we don’t
even consider Buddhism to be a religion in the usual sense
of the term. From the lamas’ point of view, Buddhist
teachings are more in the realm of philosophy, science or
psychology.
He also pointed out that,
In Buddhism, we’re not that interested in talking
about the Buddha himself. Nor was he. Lord Buddha wasn’t
interested in people believing in him, so to this day Buddhism
has never encouraged its followers simply to believe in
the Buddha. We have always been more interested in understanding
human psychology, the nature of the mind. Thus, Buddhist
practitioners always try to understand their own mental
attitudes, concepts, perceptions and consciousness. Those
are the things that really matter.
In other words, Buddhism is not about blind faith, scriptural
reference or blaming others. It’s about mind as the
principal source of happiness and suffering, personal responsibility
and compassion for all sentient beings.
When Guru Shakyamuni Buddha taught the four noble truths—the
truths of suffering, its cause, its cessation and the path—he
made it clear that anybody can totally eradicate suffering
and, as I mentioned before, countless practitioners since
then have accomplished this great feat. These days, many people
understand just from hearing or reading teachings that Buddhism
offers a better path to happiness that anything they’ve
yet tried, so they start to put the teachings into practice.
As the gain experience, they find it works the way it’s
supposed to, so they have confidence to proceed further along
the path.
*****
I think it’s wonderful that people are prepared to
try something radically different when they discover that
everything they’re doing doesn’t lead to satisfaction
and, recognizing that there might be something else that will
bring them the happiness they seek, open the door to their
own, inner wisdom. This is, of course, the door to the ultimate
happiness and cessation of suffering that Guru Shakyamuni
Buddha explained when he spoke about the cessation of suffering;
the door to the practice of Dharma; the door out of the prison
of wrong conceptions.
What is Dharma? In general, it means holding, or protecting,
like the fence or rail that stops people from falling over
a cliff. However, Dharma is an inner method that requires
the practice of meditation. And since we have thousands of
different problems in our mind, there are thousands of meditation
techniques for solving them. One method cannot solve all problems.
We study Dharma in order to understand which meditation technique
should be applied to solve which problem.
The modern world also has inner methods for helping people
solve problems—psychiatry, psychology and so forth,
but even if people spend their entire lives applying these,
they can never solve all their problems. Only the Dharma can
do that. There is not a single method missing from the Dharma
that cannot solve sentient beings’ problems.
Therefore, Dharma is a complete method for protecting ourselves
from problems and their cause and making our lives meaningful.
When we know how to practice Dharma, we can protect ourselves
from suffering. That is Dharma. Even from this brief statement,
you can see that the Dharma is not a limited method, like
simply going to a temple or church. Dharma is something that
we can practice day in and day out, no matter what else we
are doing in our everyday life—working, eating, talking
to people, sleeping and so forth—something that constantly
guides us away from our delusions, the cause of suffering.
However, even though it is easy to practice Dharma, to transform
all our actions into Dharma, to escape from suffering and
create the cause of ultimate happiness, we have to know how.
If we don’t, then of course, Dharma is very difficult
to practice. And again, the first thing to understand is that
happiness and suffering do not arise mainly from external
factors but from the mind. We may not be able to see this
upon hearing about it for the first time, but it is simply
a matter of being aware. Although we experience suffering
all the time, we’re not aware of how or why we’re
experiencing it. We always think happiness and suffering arise
from external factors, which is opposite to our own experience;
they come mainly from the mind.
For example, say a person has enough material possessions—a
place to live, enough food and clothing and so forth—but
with attachment, starts thinking, “This is not enough;
I want better; I want more,” making his mind worried,
unhappy and dissatisfied. If, then, he changes his mind and
decides, “Actually, this is enough. I’m content
with what I have,” that determination can be enough
to counteract the previous unhappiness, dissatisfaction and
suffering of attachment and bring peace into his mind. At
the very moment he makes the decision, happiness enters his
mind; that is Dharma happiness, and shows how Dharma can bring
happiness the moment we start to practice. Anger can be stopped
in the same way, by recalling, for example, the previous kindness
of the person who has upset you. If we do this effectively,
our mind relaxes and the anger subsides. This again is Dharma
happiness, and protecting ourselves from the consequences
of anger in this way is practicing Dharma.
The main point of these examples is that suffering comes
from the mind and can be stopped by the mind; happiness can
arise simply from a change of mind. Other life problems can
also be stopped like this, by changing the mind, not the object.
If, for example, we’re in a foreign country and are
suffering because we miss the food that we’re used to,
if instead of obsessing over what we’re missing we think
of those who are starving in various parts of the world, we
can feel lucky that we have anything at all to eat, and in
this way overcome the suffering we were experiencing from
missing the food we like. Similarly, whenever we are experiencing
any kind of suffering, all we need to is think about those
whose problems are far, far worse and our own suffering can
simply fade away. Again, this shows how happiness arises from
the mind.
However, it is not enough to just focus on solving the problems
and suffering of this life, because after death, the mind
continues, and we need to ensure the happiness of our future
lives as well.
We can also appreciate how happiness does not come from external
phenomena by stepping back and observing the way in which
our world has developed. Since human beings have been living
on Earth, they’ve been steadily, even frantically, developing
externally and the world has been getting more and more busy,
both physically and mentally. However, despite all this, people’s
problems have not stopped; ultimate peace has not been attained.
The only effect of all this has been to make people busier
and busier, less and less peaceful, especially over the past
century.
At the very beginning, human beings were very relaxed and
not fixated on external development, machinery and so forth
like we are today. However, rather than decreasing, world
problems are increasing, getting worse. The world is becoming
a more dangerous place. That means that there’s something
missing in the method that people have been using from previous
times until now.
What’s missing? It’s a method that decreases
problems, that brings peace to the mind. That’s the
method that’s missing. The method that increases peace
and happiness in the mind; the inner method, the method that
has to be developed within the mind. Why is it missing? Because
of ignorance, not knowing or recognizing the method. People
cling strongly to the wrong conception that only external
development can bring happiness. That’s what has been
keeping us constantly in problems, preventing our minds from
becoming more and more peaceful.
Also, the person who has everything, every material thing,
whatever he wants, is still not satisfied, still wants better
and more, still gets bored with what he has. Things to which
he was attached become objects of aversion, things he liked
now bring discontent. All these things, these problems and
sufferings arise from the mind; suffering arises from the
mind.
We can see how things are by looking at kings and beggars.
If happiness depended on material conditions alone, a beggar
who didn’t have even enough food for even a day should
have incredibly more problems and difficulties than those
who have everything, all material comforts, whatever they
want. Such people’s minds should much more peaceful
and happy than those of beggars; more satisfied. If it were
up to external conditions alone, the richer you were, the
more satisfied you should be.
However, when we look into it, even if one is the most famous
or wealthiest person in the world, even if the person has
a title such as president or king, he still has so many troubles,
so much to worry about, so much fear of losing his power,
reputation or possessions. He is very worried that he will
not get more; worried that others will become richer than
him and gain control over him; worried that his guards will
be unable to protect him and his family, possessions and power.
He can’t relax his mind at night; can’t get a
comfortable sleep. People are always criticizing and complaining
about him. When the whole country doesn’t like you,
it’s very difficult to relax. It doesn’t matter
how rich you are, how beautiful, how wonderful the food you
eat and the clothes you wear, that your feet never touch the
ground. When your mind is filled with worry, you can’t
enjoy what you have; you can’t even taste the food you
eat.
The beggar, on the other hand, doesn’t have any responsibilities,
has no wealth, no material possessions. Others don’t
criticize him. As long as he gets lunch and dinner, he’s
satisfied. He can sleep with comfortable mind. Of course,
it may not always work like this, but this example, too, makes
it clear that happiness and suffering come from the mind,
not external circumstances.
While one thing about Buddhism that appeals to the well educated
seekers of the present day is its rational approach to psychology
and the nature of the mind, another is the clear structure
of the path of Tibetan Buddhism, which serves as a kind of
road map to enlightenment. Looking at the outline of the entire
path a practitioner can see clearly the entire range of practices
that must be undertaken and accomplished in order to reach
the final goal of all sentient beings’ enlightenment.
The path taught by Guru Shakyamuni Buddha and presented by
the great Atisha in his Lamp for the Path is a complete
path that allows any sentient being to attain the full enlightenment
that the Buddha himself attained. It’s a Mahayana teaching
that was clearly expounded by the great propagators Nagarjuna
and Asanga, a profound teaching whose essence was explained
by the great Atisha and Lama Tsong Khapa. It contains the
essential points of the 84,000 teachings of Guru Shakyamuni
Buddha, with nothing missing, and is set up in such a way
that any individual can follow it gradually to enlightenment.
The root of the path is devotion to the guru; without a guru,
there’s no way to progress efficiently along the spiritual
path or to attain enlightenment. Once we’ve found the
right guru, we need to persuade ourselves to extract the essence
from our perfect human rebirth, the human life that affords
us every opportunity to practice Dharma in the best possible
way. Once we have decided to make good use of our life, we
have to train our mind in the paths of the three types of
being—those of least, middling and greatest capability.
The lower scope path teaches us to focus more on the happiness
of future lives than that of this, and to train ourselves
to do this we meditate on impermanence and death and on the
suffering of the three lower realms of existence—the
hell, hungry ghost and animal realms. Then, having become
persuaded that future lives are more important than this one,
we need to practice the methods for benefiting our future
lives—we go for refuge to the Three Jewels and dedicate
ourselves to following karma by avoiding actions that lead
to suffering and engaging in those that bring happiness.
The intermediate scope path leads to complete liberation
from cyclic existence. On it, we meditate on the sufferings
of samsara in general and of each realm in particular and
practicing the three higher trainings of morality, concentration
and wisdom.
The highest scope path explains the benefits of bodhicitta,
how to generate it, and how to engage in the deeds of a bodhisattva.
This is the Mahayana path, which leads to enlightenment, but
success in attaining this goal totally depends on the two
lower levels.
Bodhicitta, the principal cause of enlightenment, can be
developed through the seven-point cause-and-effect technique,
the technique of exchanging self for others or a combination
of the two, which was developed by Lama Tsong Khapa. Whichever
technique we use, its foundation is the equilibrium meditation,
in which we equalize our view all sentient beings by abandoning
discrimination of friend, enemy and stranger.
The six causes are seeing all sentient beings as mother,
remembering the mother’s kindness, the thought of repaying
her kindness, love, compassion and the special intention,
where we take personal responsibility for the enlightenment
of all sentient beings. The effect that these causes lead
up to is the development of bodhicitta. The meditation on
exchanging self for other has four sections: reflecting on
the disadvantages of cherishing oneself and the advantages
of cherishing others, actual exchange of self for others and
the technique of giving and taking (tong-len).
While bodhicitta is the principal cause of enlightenment,
it has to be developed along with the two other principal
aspects of the path to enlightenment, renunciation and the
right view of emptiness. The well-educated seekers of today
appreciate the clear, scientific approach that the lam-rim
path offers. They are not asked to accept anything they don’t
understand and, having gained a clear intellectual understanding
of the path, are happy to put it into practice. Once they
do so, they achieve the results predicted, which gives them
the confidence they need to proceed further and undertake
more advanced practices. I think this is one reason why Buddhism
has become so popular today.
Note
1. You can find a copy of this text, along with His Holiness
the Dalai Lama's commentary, in the LYWA publication Illuminating
the Path to Enlightenment.
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