Lama Tsong Khapa Guru Yoga
(Ganden Lha Gyäma)
Commentary
by Lama Thubten Zopa Rinpoche
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MANDALA OFFERING
Mandala offering is a powerful method for accumulating extensive
merit in a short time. The Tibetan word for mandala is kyil.kor:
kyil is essence, kor is taking—taking the essence. The
term means taking the essence on the base of offering a mandala,
and what you get from this is merit—the cause. Therefore
the essence you take is the generation of the whole path,
from guru devotion up to enlightenment, as well as the result,
the unification of the dharmakaya and rupakaya. The cause
is merit, the path; and the result is enlightenment. In other
words, from this practice inconceivable temporal and ultimate
happiness results. One is making unbelievable business with
the merit field!
It is mentioned that the better the quality of the offerings
that one can imagine, the more details and clarity, the more
merit one accumulates. The offerings are explained in the
commentaries on the mandala, but it is very good to recite
the verse from Lama Choepa when you offer the mandala alone,
because you then have the leisure to visualize clearly. Doing
it this way you dedicate the merit from each offering for
the sentient beings as it is performed. It is very effective
for the mind.
There are different types of mandala offerings. The mandala
offering practice was taught by Guru Shakyamuni Buddha, and
is referred to in the Guhyasamaja Root Tantra, I think in
the verses on offerings. That is the reference for mandala
offering. It is not just a Tibetan tradition. There is the
thirty-seven heap mandala offering according to Drogoen Choegyael
Phagpa, the great Tibetan Sakya yogi. Then there are the
twenty-five and the twenty-three heap mandalas. According
to Lama Tsongkhapa's tradition the twenty-three heap mandala
is offered. The twenty-five heap mandala is derived from
the one of thirty-seven heaps by leaving out the eight offering
goddesses and the specific enjoyments of each continent.
These are the jewel mountain, the wish-granting tree, the
cow which gives milk unceasingly, and the uncultivated crops.
These are visualized, but not mentioned in the recitation
because each is the particular enjoyment of one of the four
continents and the visualization of the continents includes
these enjoyments. No heaps are placed for the eight offering
goddesses nor the four enjoyments. One is supposed to visualize
them but they are not mentioned separately. If the fence
around the base and Mount Meru are not included it becomes
the twenty-three heap mandala of Lama Tsongkhapa's tradition.
It is said that once a year, or every month, the mandala
plate should be purified. There is a pill called the pachung,
which I think the tantric college monks have as they need
them for consecrations and other purposes such as fire-pujas.
The dung from cows which eat one special grass is used to
make these pills. I think there are some other ingredients,
not only that! One dissolves the pill into saffron-water
and dips one's index finger into that and spreads it around
the mandala base. The main purpose is to purify the base
with a scented smell in order to accumulate merit.
When performing the offering do not hold the base in an
empty hand, but put some grains, or whatever, in your hand
first. Then do the action of purifying all of your obscurations
and negative karma created by your body, speech and mind;
and you can also think of all sentient beings. Put some grains
on the base and wipe them off by circling the base three
times in a clockwise direction with the outside of your wrist.
It is said that there is a nerve in the outside of the wrist
which has the function of clairvoyance and the idea is that
because of this the purification is a cause for clairvoyance
and a clear mind. Then put some grain on the base again and
wipe it off three times in a counter-clockwise direction.
Think that all the blessings—"blessing" means
quality—of the entire merit field's holy body, holy speech
and holy mind enters yourself and all the sentient beings.
Then put some grain on the base. I think the reason is similar
to what I mentioned elsewhere about Milarepa offering an
empty pot. In the teachings it says that due to the dependent
arising from offering something empty one gets born in places
where there is no buddha.
When you offer the mandala just as an offering you begin
with the eastern side towards the merit field; when you are
requesting for realizations—before the requesting prayer
to the lineage lamas—you have east facing yourself and
start with that heap. For requesting, in front of yourself;
for offering, in front of the merit field. Geshe Sengye said
that when you request the guru to have a long life you start
from the side facing the guru.
OM VAJRA BHUMI AH HUM—bhumi means base; OM AH HUM is a
blessing.
WANG CHEN SERGYI SAZHI—the golden ground.
OM VAJRA REKHE AH HUM
CHI CHAG RIKOR YUG GYI KOR WA—the iron fence.
U SU RI GYAELPO RI RAB—Mount Meru. It is good to visualize Mount Meru as
you are offering it. It is silver on the eastern side, very
white and
radiant
like the rising sun; the western side is ruby-red and very
radiant. That is why here in our continent we have a white
sunrise and red sunset. In the south it is radiantly blue
like
lapis lazuli; the northern side is a golden-yellow radiance,
very
bright. This is so for all the four levels. Visualize this
and offer it mentally.
The main point in regard to the mandala is that the higher
the quality of one's visualization, the more merit. In past
in regard to Mount Meru I used to say that if were able to
see Mount Meru we should also be able to see the Realm of
Thirty-three and all the asura and sura realms; we should
be able to go there on tours! There would be crowds of airplanes
landing there bringing tours! Anyway, if things did not depend
on karma and the way things appear to us did not depending
on our individual minds we would be able to see these different
realms—if the appearance did not depend on the pure and
impure mind, the virtuous and non-virtuous thought. For the
same reason some people find precious treasures such as gold
under the ground although there are many people living in
that same area who do not find anything. Even in the same
house some people find precious materials easily but some
people do not, even though they are trying to, because somehow
they cannot see them. Many people may be trying to find something
valuable that you have lost, but somehow one person finds
it easily. So even these small things are to do with karma.
If there is some treasure under the ground, or in water,
some people who try cannot find it, while some people find
it easily. It all depends on who has accumulated the merit
to find it. That people can find treasures or receive enjoyments
and wealth is due to their virtuous thoughts.
So we can apply these commonplace occurrences to the question
of whether we should be able to see Mount Meru or not. Some
people have much difficulty in obtaining wealth, and some
people receive it but somehow do not get time to use it,
or cannot use it for long. Even if they receive it it is
lost or other people steal it or confiscate it or the object
gets broken or something. Somehow the person does not find
the opportunity to use it for long. We have these different
experiences in life. These are to do with not having created
the merit, the cause, and having created non-virtue which
brings about the hindrances. Even if one does get a job,
suddenly something happens and one loses it. Even if one
does get money, does earn thousands of dollars, suddenly
it is lost or something happens to prevent its enjoyment
or use. There are many occurrences like this. Some people
cannot get even one hundred rupees during their life. Similarly,
some people never see dollars in their lives. We can apply
this to Mount Meru: dollars exist—we see them—but those
persons never see them in their lives. They may not believe
that there is such a thing as a dollar, or a rocket, or TV!
That makes other people who do see and have these things
laugh. All these things are to do with karma. It is similar
with Mount Meru.
A person who does not have even ten rupees, a beggar, may
become extremely rich the next day. For example, let us say
a beggar buys a lottery ticket for one rupee. Other more
wealthy people do not win, but this beggar does. In one hour
he becomes very rich and owns many thousands of rupees. The
question is this: so many other people have bought tickets,
so why is it this particular person who wins? Of course,
somebody has to win. I'm not sure whether in lotteries someone
has to win or not! However, this person has not chosen the
numbers by clairvoyance. Likewise the thousands of other
people do not have clairvoyance. But somehow, by luck, it
worked and he chose the numbers which were drawn which made
it possible to receive the money. He did not know the numbers
which will be drawn. There were thousands of people who also
chose some numbers. But the organizers drew those particular
numbers and this winning person had chosen the same numbers.
Actually, when people say it is by luck, that actually means
karma—they do not know what they are talking about! They
do not know the meaning of what they are saying. Luck means
good karma. But common people who do not understand karma,
who do not accept that happiness and suffering depend on
a cause, generally talk of luck as having success without
having created the cause. Something like that. They are saying
something about karma, but it is not clear nor complete.
Luck is right, but what they think in their mind is that
it happened by chance, without the cause having been created.
Why did the beggar choose the same numbers that were drawn?
Why this person? One reply could be, due to time. The beggar
chose the numbers that they drew because of it being that
precise time. But then, who determined the time for this
beggar to choose exactly those numbers which the organizers
drew? Who determined this time? Then there is no better explanation
than because this person is more lucky. Because there is
no understanding karma there is no explanation.
Similarly, one set of parents have some children, but while
some have perfect organs another has imperfect organs. The
reason could be given that the egg was imperfect. Why did
this sentient being's consciousness take a fertilized egg
which was imperfect? The reply could be because it was the
wrong time? But who created, who determined the time? Why
did it have to take conception in that particular fertilized
egg at that time?
In Darjeeling each year they have horse races and lotteries.
I also went once with my manager when I had TB in Buxa. I
went on vacation to Darjeeling for many months. My manager
took some monks from Tomo Geshe's monastery. That was the
first time I saw a lottery. I think my manager bought some
tickets, I think one time. A woman from a very poor family
won the lottery. She received a big pile of money in her
lap which she wrapped in her saris. But the next day she
died. She did not have time to use and enjoy the money. I
think she may have been too excited! The thing is, she did
not have enough karma to be able use the money. She received
it, but after she got it she left!
In past courses I used to discuss the question, Why in this
continent do we have a blue sky? Why not a yellow or red
sky? Why is it blue? That question is to do with Mount Meru.
I am sure those of you who attended those courses remember
with pains in your ears! We are in the southern continent,
and in the teachings it explains that the reason the sky
is blue is because of the color of this side of Mount Meru
which is lapis-lazuli. Also the blue sky reflects in water,
so we see water as blue. In a similar way when a sun-beam
hits the water we see white. There has to be some explanation
of why the sky is blue. In the teachings it is explained
like this. In the eastern continent the sky is white because
that side of Mount Meru is silver; red in the northern continent.
Some people see spirits gathering, and other things, when
they go to certain places at night or even in the day-time.
Other people who go to those places see nothing. That is
the appearance of karma, so it is similar. Some bodhisattvas
see numberless buddhas and bodhisattvas, but people of an
ordinary level such as myself cannot see even one buddha.
What we see is just pictures. At Buxa there were some monks
who saw spirits in the day-time and night-time in the monasteries
and in other places. When they went into a restaurant they
saw spirits sitting with the people! And also when the monks
were being offered food spirits would sit there and also
put out a bowl, but because the other people could not see
them they never got food! These things were seen by those
with the eye to see.
All these things are to do with karma. Some people went
to a place called Urgyen Khadroling, "the Land of Dakinis",
but they saw only some sheep and a shepherd, and thorn-bushes.
That is all—just barren land. But that location is where
the land of dakinis of Urgyen, a pure realm, is supposed
to be. But even though one arrives at the same location,
one does pot see it; one sees something else. All these examples
are similar. What we see is just pictures of buddhas, and
the teachings in the form of writing in scriptures. Whilst
at the same time many other beings see Lama Tsongkhapa, now,
these days. We do not see Lama Tsongkhapa, we do not see
the merit field and the deities, but at the same time there
are bodhisattvas, great yogis, and even ordinary beings who
have thinner obscurations who see Buddha, Tara, Lama Tsongkhapa,
or Manjushri. So we just see the blue sky, that is all, and
we know the way Guru Shakyamuni Buddha looks just from pictures
and statues, and the teachings that the Buddha taught just
from writings. According to our present level of mind that
is all we see. It is similar with Mount Meru. All these examples
are to do with karma.
SHAR LU PAG PA PO
LHO DZAM BU LING
NU BA LANG CHO
CHANG DRA MI NYEN These are the names of the four continents.
The southern continent is yellow, the eastern white, western
red, the
northern green.
The shapes
are given in The
Wish-fulfilling Golden Sun—the eastern, a half
circle; the southern is like the shape of a rickshaw, which
you may
remember from Bodhgaya!; the western is round; the northern,
square.
LU DANG LU PAG
NGA YAB DANG NGA YAB ZHAN etc.
RINPOCHE RIWO—many precious mountains.
PAG SAMGYE SHING—many wish-granting trees.
DOJOBA—the cow that unceasingly gives milk.
MAMO PA YI LOTOG—unceasing crops. KORLO RINPOCHE—the precious
wheel. The golden wheel is made from water, dzam-bu,
the name of our continent. It has one thousand spokes five
hundred
paktse long. It is
high in the sky, and very radiant, like a second sun. It
can carry four "multitudes" of people, which is
to give an idea of how large it is. It can go through space
to the four continents and to the realms of the devas very
quickly. You can visualize numberless wheels, not just one,
in space on the eastern side and offer them. Then dedicate: "By
my offering this precious wheel may all sentient beings achieve
control of the dharma activity." That means sentient
beings receiving all the teachings, understanding the meanings
of the words and having the realizations. It could also mean
that through having an understanding of the meanings of the
words and having the realizations being able to do dharma
activities to benefit other sentient beings. Saying "all
sentient beings" also includes yourself. If you are
a sentient being!
NORBU RINPOCHE—the wish-granting jewel, on the southern
side. It is of lapis lazuli. It is described as having eight
sides, and the beams which radiate from it reach hundreds
of paktse. Even the night-time appears as day to the sentient
beings. It gives coolness when the sentient beings are tormented
by heat. It eliminates untimely death and disease. Its main
quality is that whatever the sentient beings wish for they
can receive immediately. I do not know whether there is such
a wish-granting jewel in the treasure store-houses—I have
not heard. However, there are many stories that in the past
the bodhisattvas went to the oceans to get these wish-granting
jewels. They had to be cleaned three times as they were completely
covered by mud. After cleaning off the mud they were then
cleaned another time, and the last cleaning was done with
cotton. Then on special days they were placed on banners
on the roof. By praying, whatever enjoyment the person wished
for he received due to the power of the jewel. They are regarded
as the most precious among materials. That is why they are
used as a simile for sentient beings—to give an idea of
how precious sentient beings are, because each is so kind.
Actually there is no material which can compare with how
precious the sentient beings are. Even if entire space were
filled with wish-granting jewels, and all the jewels which
people consider most precious, it still cannot compare with
the value of each sentient being to oneself. Because each
one is so kind to oneself. But in order to give some idea,
the kadam lamas used the wish-granting jewel as a simile
because it is the most precious. Then dedicate: "Due
to my offering the precious jewel may all the sentient beings
accomplish the dharma exactly as they wish."
TSUNMO RINPOCHE—the princess, in the west. She is beautiful,
extremely enchanting, with pleasant scents coming from her
body and from her mouth. Any sentient being who touches her
experiences bliss in the body and mind. She stops the sorrows
and the hunger and thirst of the sentient beings who are
in that continent. These are the benefits she gives others.
She has abandoned the five mistakes of a woman—I think
such as anger, jealousy and attachment. They are described
in the Lama Choepa commentary and in the mandala commentaries.
I think one is dissatisfaction. She has the eight qualities
which are opposite to the five mistakes, such as satisfaction
or contentment—I do not remember each one. Think of the
qualities, then offer, and dedicate: "Due to my offering
this princess may all sentient beings enjoy the happiness
without fall." Happiness without fall means the happiness
that is uncontaminated by delusion.
LOENPO RINPOCHE—the precious minister, in the north. He
does not harm other sentient beings; has abandoned anything
that is not dharma; is not upset about doing virtuous activities
to benefit others; expertly accomplishes whatever work the
king has in mind without needing to be told; is expert in
leading the armies. Offer, then dedicate: "Due to my
offering this precious minister may all sentient beings be
able to fulfill exactly the wishes of the buddhas."
These are in space above each continent.
LANGPO RINPOCHE—the precious elephant, in the south-east.
It is white and as huge, like a snow-mountain, and has jeweled
decorations on its forehead, as you see in India. It has
seven limbs—I think it includes the trunk and so on. It
has more power than thousands of elephants and can circumambulate
the continents three times in one day. The elephant can be
easily led, even with a tiny thread and without needing to
hit it, because it is so intelligent. It does not harm others
and moves in a very subdued way without disturbing the person
riding on it. It can defeat enemies. Offer the elephant to
the merit field and then dedicate: "Due to my offering
this precious elephant may all the sentient beings ride the
great vehicle and go to enlightenment."
TACHOG RINPOCHE—the precious horse, in the south-west.
Like the flower kumoeta, it is extremely white, and is decorated
in a similar way to the elephant. Its color and size are
perfect. If one wishes, it can circumambulate all the continents
three times in one day. It has a very healthy body, free
of disease. It is very glorious and never tires. "Due
to my offering this precious horse may all sentient beings
have the power of the four limbs of magical emanation." The
power of the four zutruel, a quality of the buddhas.
MAGPON RINPOCHE—the precious general, in the north-west.
You can think his qualities are similar to those of the minister.
TERCHEN POI BUMPA—the wish-granting vase in the north-east.
As I mentioned above, when you have the time, think of the
quality of the offering, then offer numberless of them, then
dedicate. Whatever sentient beings wish for the wish-granting
vase can grant.
GEG MA—the dancing goddess, in the east. Her body is in
the aspect of a dancing movement, in an S-like shape.
All these goddesses can be visualized as explained in the
Heruka Lama Choepa, where it describes the beauties of their
bodies. However, as one is the deity when doing the Lama
Choepa or other maha-anuttara yoga tantra practice, their
nature is the transcendental wisdom of non-dual bliss and
voidness. Each of these eight offering goddesses has the
same nature as the sixteen offering goddesses. Each offering
goddess is of a beautiful shape so is an offering to the
eye-senses of the merit field; has scents coming from her
mouth and body, so is an offering to the nose-sense; sings
extremely sweet songs, so is an offering to their ear-sense;
has a nature of bliss and voidness so is an offering to the
mental-sense. Thus each goddess is an object of all the six
senses. So there are numberless of each one in space.
TRENGWAMA—the goddess offering a rosary, in the south.
LUMA—scent offering goddess, singing in space in the west.
GARMA—the dancing goddess, dancing with her limbs, in the
north. You can think in terms of Western dancing—it does
not have to be Tibetan dancing!
Gegma through to Garma are in the cardinal directions. Metogma
through to Drichabma are in the corners, the sub-directions.
METOGMA—flower offering goddess, in the south-east.
DUGPOMA—incense offering goddess, in the south-west.
NANGSAELMA—light offering goddess, in the north-west.
DRICHABMA—scented water offering goddess, in the north-east.
These eight goddesses are higher up Mount Meru than the
seven possession of a king [wheel, jewel, etc].
Offering goddesses could have similar merit to offering
a wisdom mother having sixty qualities in the mandala when
we take the secret initiation and the wisdom initiation.
It is a preparation for oneself to sooner or later have the
experience of bliss and voidness, and then with a wisdom
mother be able to cut off the dual view and achieve the unified
state of no-more-learning.
NYIMA—the sun, for which you put a heap in the south.
DAWA—the moon, a heap in the north.
I think in some teachings it is explained that nyima and
dawa are placed in the south-east and north-west respectively,
but Phabongkha Dechen Nyingpo said they should be placed
in the south and north. The sun, you should think, represents
the wisdoms of all the paths: the wisdom of the lesser vehicle
path, the wisdom of the paramitayana path, the wisdom of
tantra. The wisdom of tantra means the subtle mind directly
realizing shunyata—the simultaneously-born bliss. So that
is all wisdoms. There are numberless suns. The moon represents
the methods of the lesser vehicle path, the paramitayana
path and of the tantra path. The moons are also numberless.
Visualizing the sun and moon, the method and the wisdom of
the whole path, creates the cause within one's mind to generate
the whole path of method and wisdom and achieve the rupakaya
and dharmakaya.
RINPOCHE DUG—the precious umbrella, in the west. It has
one thousand golden radiant spokes. It has eight corners,
on which are lapis-lazuli. On the top is a sapphire and around
the edges are various jewels with hanging garlands of pearl,
as Vajrayogini has on her crown and her holy body. This decoration
is called tawa dhargyey. From the pearls and
jewels nectars flow which liberate sentient beings from suffering.
This umbrella protects sentient beings from the heat and
other true sufferings, and it also protects them from the
true cause of suffering by these purifying nectars. You should
think that the essence of the umbrella is all the qualities
of the cessations. The right-seeing uninterrupted path is
the remedy to the delusions; the right-seeing path of abandonment
liberates one from the delusions. That is one cessation.
Then, the path of meditation ceases the obscurations of the
lesser vehicle path, paramita path and tantra path, which
is the second cessation. So, the essence of the umbrella
is the qualities of the cessation of both the obscurations.
CHOGLE NAM PAR GYAEL WA GYAELTSEN—the banner which is
victorious over all the directions, in the east. On the top
of the handle is a jewel. The essence of the banner is the
qualities of all the realizations. This is offered for auspicious
reasons, maybe so one becomes a holder of the teachings and
is able to do dharma activities in the manner of Vajradhara.
USU LHA DANG MI...—this is for all the perfect enjoyments
of the devas and human beings. According to Geshe Sengye
one should put three heaps in the center representing the
realizations of the holy body, holy speech and the holy mind
of the merit field. It is a preparation for receiving these
three realizations.
After you finish setting up the mandala there are two ways
to hold it: in order to eliminate obstacles you face the
mandala towards the merit field, but in order to receive
realizations you face it towards yourself. My mandala has
one more ring than they usually do, so I have to fill it.
When I was offering mandalas during His
Holiness Song Rinpoche's teachings I was using this mandala,
and His Holiness used to watch me! His Holiness was very
concerned when I left some space empty in this ring. So His
Holiness asked me to fill it up. I think it might be for
the same reason as not offering empty water-bowls. The same
stories!
Then you can think that on each atom of the mandala there
are numberless of you making a mandala offering to the merit
field. If that is difficult, then think that beams are emitted
from each atom of the mandala, and on the tip of each beam
there is a mandala; and from those mandalas also beams are
emitted according to the number of atoms in each. So in this
way there become more and more mandalas and the entire space
is completely filled with mandalas. Then you offer these.
The whole point of why we do such elaborate visualization
is so that even if you have not done a hundred thousand
mandala offerings, if your visualization is clear and you
can visualize
that many, then you will accumulate the same merit as by
having offered a hundred thousand mandalas! So, within
two or three days you can actually finish accumulating as
much
merit as from having separately offered a hundred thousand
mandalas—only the number of times that the mandala has
been set up and offered is not as great. Even within one
minute you can accumulate that much merit. So the whole
thing is dependent on the skill of the practitioner. Now the whole point is, just talking about the mandala might
be helpful, but actually visualizing the continents and so
on and offering the mandala in this way is a skillful means
of buddhas and the lineage lamas of the lamrim, those who
have completed the lamrim realizations and reached the state
of omniscient mind. It is a skillful means to quickly finish
the work of accumulating merit in order to generate the realizations
from guru devotion up to enlightenment. The main endorsement
of the extensive merit accumulated by the mandala offering
practice is the story of King Ashoka—how as a child
in a previous life he offered sand into Guru Shakyamuni's
begging
bowl while visualizing it as gold. There was not the slightest
amount of gold, but by visualizing gold he received the merit
equal to having actually offered gold. As a result in his
next life he was reborn as the dharma king Ashoka and built
many monasteries and made many offerings to the monks, and
built one million stupas. In Phabongkha Dechen Nyingpo's
lamrim he says the king was able to build one million stupas
in just one night and so accumulate inconceivable merit.
That life-story establishes the benefits of offering the
mandala. If you visualize one mandala, in those few seconds
you will receive the merit equal to having offered the entire
Mount Meru and the continents and all the other things. And
if you visualize a hundred thousand or however many, in that
minute you receive merit equivalent to having actually offered
that many universes, even though you do not own those things.
So on this small base you can make an incredible profit!
The base should not be smaller than your own mug or cup.
It is said that it should be one cubit wide, but at least
it should not be smaller than your tea-cup. The best ones
are made of silver or gold and so on, but you can use even
a low quality material like a wooden board or a flat stone—like
the ascetic lamas do. They use those purposely, to protect
their gelong vows, and because valuable possessions
can give rise to attachment. They use those things to which
clinging does not arise. The materials you place on the base
should be the best you can manage: the best is jewels, the
middling is conch-shells and grains, and the basest is sand.
You can offer any of these. By making many mandala offerings Gelongma Palmo was able
to see and receive teachings from Chenrezig. Likewise for
so many great yogis and pundits, including Lama Tsongkhapa.
Lama Tsongkhapa did many hundreds of thousands of mandala
offerings and realized the unmistaken view—shunyata—and
then achieved enlightenment.
When you are counting thousands of mandala offerings you
offer the short mandala. It is Lama Tsongkhapa's tradition
to begin each mandala offering by reciting sangye choe
dang...—the refuge and bodhicitta prayer. You
put some grains on the base and wipe them off three times
clockwise
to purify and then put some more grains and wipe them off
counter-clockwise three times to bring realizations; and
then you place heaps for Mount Meru, the four continents,
and the sun and moon—seven heaps. In general the short
mandala is done with seven heaps, but that does not mean
you cannot visualize the umbrella and banner. Even though
there are only seven heaps, the visualization should be as
extensive as you are capable of and include the features
of the long offering. Also you should visualize as many mandalas
as possible.
Then recite: sazhi poekyi...
Saying ...sangye shingla migte ulwa... is not proper
because it means "offering to the merit field..." What
you have just visualized is ordinary continents, an ordinary
place, and you should not offer an impure place to the merit
field. But sangye shingtu migte... means "by
visualizing this as a field of buddha I'm offering..." So
this is correct. If you are making the offering in conjunction
with Lama Tsongkhapa guru yoga, then you can visualize the
continents as the Tushita pure realm, with Lama Tsongkhapa
and Maitreya buddha giving teachings and many sentient beings
already enlightened, some are about to be enlightened, and
some are half enlightened! I'm joking! If you are offering
to Vajrayogini you can think of Vajrayogini's pure realm.
You can relate it to the deity to whom you are offering the
mandala; that creates the karma for you to be born in that
pure realm.
I think sazhi poekyi..." is the stanza the
bodhisattva "Always
Crying" used when making mandala offerings to his guru
Choepa. And sangye choe dang... is a prayer Lama
Atisha composed.
The most important aspects of the mandala offering are how
clearly you can visualize a mandala, and how many. If these
two points are done well you can finished accumulating inconceivably
extensive merit in a very short time. That is why in Lama
Tsongkhapa's Great Commentary on the Lamrim he does not explain
the details of how to offer a mandala—wipe off this way
three times, and three this way, and then put this and that.
There are only a few words on the mandala: "Offer a
mandala to the merit field by visualizing very clearly." That
is all it says. That is how Lama Tsongkhapa's teachings are—a
few words. But the most skillful way of practicing mandala
offering is mentioned. It is the same for the other preliminary
practices. The most important parts, the most subtle and
difficult subjects which even the learned ones could not
realize correctly or even have a correct intellectual understanding
of, Lama Tsongkhapa made very clear and extensive. The nature
of Lama Tsongkhapa's teachings is very deep and they contain
all the important points. Each word has so much taste, and
much power. It gives one deep understanding of deep meanings.
As I mentioned before, if you just say the words and do not
do the visualization, you will not feel comfortable because
that does not fulfill the meaning of the mandala offering
practice.
I mentioned Phabongkha Dechen Nyingpo's advice: "If
possible, many done perfectly, if not, fewer, but done perfectly." How
much merit one accumulates does not depend simply on how
many one does. One could perform all the actions of heaping
the grains and saying the recitations, but if one does not
do the meditation then even if one finishes one hundred thousand
it does not mean that one has gained the merits of having
offered the whole universe one hundred thousand times. Receiving
that merit does not depend on prayers, it depends on the
visualization.
Once I saw somebody inside the temple at Bodhgaya offering
the mandala. He was Tibetan, maybe a monk, or maybe a lay
person. He was holding a mala and the base, and was placing
the grains and counting the sazhi poekyi....
He was looking around at the people but counting very
quickly. I am just talking about the external appearance,
I cannot judge what he really is. But if that is what was
happening mentally then maybe it was not so skillful! Of
course, I do it in a similar way, so I cannot criticize.
I cannot judge that person's mind, but that was just how
it appeared. I am sure he does much more and better mandala
offerings than I do! I just mentioned this episode as a joke.
As I mentioned, the important thing is clarity and a large
number. If you can imagine a hundred thousand universal mandalas,
either by transforming them from the first mandala, or visualized
on that mandala, by doing the physical action of offering
once you can accumulate merits equal to having actually offered
one hundred thousand universes. That is so even though the
universe that you are offering is visualized and among the
grains there may not be the slightest amount of gold or diamond,
not even a small part of the umbrella, the banner or the
offering goddesses. If you can imagine more than a hundred
thousand mandalas, of course, no question!
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