Lama Tsong Khapa Guru Yoga
(Ganden Lha Gyäma)
Commentary
by Lama Thubten Zopa Rinpoche
|
|
WATER OFFERINGS
His Holiness Serkong Tsenshab Rinpoche explained to us during
the Jorchoe commentary that when you clean the bowls you
should use a clean towel. The significance of offering seven
water bowls is to create the cause to achieve the seven limbs,
or aspects, or qualities of the Vajradhara state — enlightenment.
But that does not mean that you cannot offer more, that offering
more is some kind of interference!
If you do not have many water bowls it does not matter.
The ascetic meditators used their own wooden food bowl. I
think it was Je Drukhangpa, a lineage lama of lamrim, the
guru of Phurchog Jamgoen Rinpoche, and who is regarded as
an embodiment of Maitreya Buddha, lived an ascetic life practicing
in a cave. He did not own texts and the necessary robes —
the choegu and dingwa — nor keep many material possessions.
When he ate he took his bowl from the altar and ate his food
from that. Then he cleaned it well and filled it with water
and offered it at the altar. For those living ascetic lives
not keeping many possessions has a great purpose. If one
is not living a strictly ascetic life one should use one's
possessions to accumulate as much merit as possible; then
one is taking the essence from that which is essenceless.
When cleaning the bowls what you should think is the same
as when cleaning the room. I do not remember word for word
what Rinpoche explained, however when one cleans the room
one should think that the broom represents method and wisdom,
the whole path to enlightenment. So think the same in regard
to the towel, and you can think that you are purifying the
two obscurations of yourself as well as all sentient beings.
If you have incense, light it and hold the bowls over it
as a purification. Then stack the bowls.
Before putting the bowls on the altar you should put some
water in them. There is a reason for this. You may have read
Milarepa's life-story. When Milarepa made an offering to
Marpa of, I think, a big copper pot, he offered it empty.
It is said that he had to live on only nettles and bear great
hardships in regard to food and the necessities of life because
of the dependent arising due to that inauspicious offering.
Marpa, knowing that it was a little inauspicious used a skillful
method and asked Mila to fill the pot with butter and wax
and make a light offering. That auspicious offering was the
cause for Milarepa to be able to realize shunyata and generate
the clear light and illusory body in that life. One can understand
the purpose from stories like that; otherwise it looks like
nothing more than just a rule saying one has to do this and
this. So, you should not put empty containers in front of
the altar; similarly, when you make offerings to the virtuous
teachers put something in the container.
Fill one bowl with water, then pour most of it from that
one into the next bowl, keeping a little in the first. Then
again from the second one pour most into the third, keeping
a little in the second. After you have put some water in
the last bowl recite OM AH HUNG three times to bless the
water, the same as with the inner offering.
If you are a gelong and offering incense you should immediately
remember: I'm doing this for dharma practice; I'm doing it
for other sentient beings. The reason for remembering at
the time is to get permission. Saying the relevant prayers
in the morning is a tradition from Panchen Losang Choegyen;
it is a method for somebody who forgets to seek permission
at the actual time of the action to somehow receive fewer
vices. In this way one gets permission in the morning to
do actions during the day such as sing or touch and keep
things in one's house, to keep more food than is needed that
day, to make fire and cook, to eat foods which have been
gathered. I am not sure that if one has done the prayers
in the morning but at the time of actually doing these things
it is alright to have worldly concern and not think it is
for the sake of other sentient beings, for dharma reasons.
I think that to remember at the actual time is the main thing:
that is why it is called du ten — remembering
at the time. So when a monk lights incense he should remember
the gelong vow immediately — and think that it is for the
sake of sentient beings, for dharma practice. Then one will
not degenerate the vows or receive vices.
When you light incense or a butter-lamp or some light, just
before you offer it recite OM AH HUNG each time, then offer
it. There are various interferers, three hundred and sixty
or something different dooens, who take the essence.
Maybe that is sort-of their enjoyments. If one offers without
blessing one does receive the merit, but there is some interference
in regard to the offering — it affects the mind, making it
kind-of unclear or unstable. In order for these things to
not happen one recites the mantra OM AH HUNG and blesses
the offerings.
You should cover your mouth in order to not pollute the
offerings with a smelly breath. His Holiness Serkong Rinpoche
said the scarf should be white. We see the servants of the
high lamas such as His Holiness the Dalai Lama cover their
mouths with a white cloth or scarf when serving tea and so
on. Also the offerings are carried high.
So when you make
offerings in front of an altar you should not think, I
am just putting water in front of clay statues or pictures.
You should act as if you are in front of a king or high
lama
and serving him. Due to our karmic obscurations we do not
see the images as real, but Chakrasamvara is there, Tara
is there, all the buddhas are there. The whole merit field
is there, but due to karmic obscurations we do not see
them. The karma that one has at the moment is to see merely
pictures
and statues of the deities. This is explained in the lamrim
teachings, as well as by Phabongkha Dechen Nyingpo, I think,
and His Holiness Trijang Rinpoche, His Holiness Ling Rinpoche,
as well as Serkong Rinpoche.
The bowls should be placed not touching nor too far apart.
If too far apart then due to that inauspiciousness or dependent
arising one will be distant from the virtuous teacher in
the future. So do not place them far apart, but also not
touching. I think due to the dependent arising from placing
them too close one will have a dull mind, without sharp intelligence.
You should place them the distance of one rice grain apart.
In regard to pouring the water His Holiness Song Rinpoche
used to advise to first pour slowly, then faster, and then
again slowly. Doing it that way does not make a loud splashing
noise. If one puts too much water into the bowl and it overflows,
one will have intelligence, but it will not be stable. One
will easily forget or will not have a clear mind, things
will get mixed up. One will not remember words or the meanings
of things, or the meanings will get mixed up. Also it may
affect one's moral conduct so that it degenerates. Some bowls
made in Nepal have lines to indicate how much water to offer
in the bowl. About one grain-size of space should be left
at the top, rather than filling it completely. That also
makes it easier to not make a mess when you remove the bowls
from the altar.
You can recite the mantra OM AH HUNG again while you are
offering, or the long mantra for blessing and multiplying
the offerings:
OM NAMO BHAGAVATE BENDZA SARWA PRAMADANAYE TATHAGATAYA
ARHATE SAMYAKSAM BUDDHAYA...
The benefit of reciting this is that not only are the offerings
blessed, but clouds of offerings are received in front
of each of the beings in the merit field. You can think
in this
way even at the very beginning of the offering. Whether
you have Chakrasamvara or Guru Shakyamuni or Vajrasattva,
or
whatever, as your field of merit, think that what they
see is nectar. To you it is water, but what the buddhas
see is
nectar. For a preta it is blood and pus, for us it is
water; even the devas see it as nectar, so without question
it
is nectar for the buddhas who have completed the merit
of transcendental
wisdom and method. Think, I'm offering them the nectar
which appears to them. While you are offering think that
whatever
pictures or statues of guru-deities you have are the
embodiment of all buddhas of the ten directions, the
embodiment of
the guru, of all three refuges, and that you are offering
to
all of them and that it generates infinite bliss in their
minds. As explained in the section on making offerings,
offer the water bowls to every single holy object and
actual living
buddha and bodhisattva in the ten directions. You can
concentrate on this while you are offering. As you are
filling the
bowls, with your mouth recite the mantra for blessing,
with your
mind offer to all of them.
After you have finished a set of offerings you can do the
same meditation of offering over again.
His Holiness Serkong Tsenshab Rinpoche used to advise that
at the end you should dedicate the merit in this way: May
this merit from making offerings (and all the
merit accumulated by me and all other sentient beings) not
be experienced by me but rather only by other sentient beings.
Rinpoche's specific advice is to pray that the merit and
whatever resultant
happiness will come from that be received and experienced
by other sentient beings, and that oneself not experience
it. You should think like that. Each time dedicate for the
generation of bodhicitta with the prayer jang chub
sem chog rinpoche... even if you do other dedications;
then it becomes a practice of the five powers of thought-training.
Accumulating merit in order to generate bodhicitta is the
practice of the power of the white seed. You should dedicate
the merit to achieve enlightenment quickly and quicker for
the sake of all sentient beings in whatever way you know.
When you do a hundred thousand water bowl offerings offer
them inside if it is easier, if not then at the beach! Fill
the whole beach with bowls! Then maybe the next day you will
be taken to an institution or a psychologist! If it is difficult
to bring water repeatedly from some distance then go to a
place having water such as a river and set up the bowls on
a big board. That may be easier. When it rains it may be
even easier as you will not have to pour water! You just
put the bowls out! When you clean the bowls each day you
should clean them well, not just patting them with the towel.
You must clean them well, not leaving them damp. Not doing
it just like giving them a sort-of blessing! If there are
any stains you should try to clean them with sand or other
cleaning materials.
You can begin with the refuge and bodhicitta prayer sangye
choe dang.... Then on the basis of the Lama Choepa or
the elaborate Ganden Lha Gyäma, make the offerings
by setting out the fifty or one hundred or more bowls at
the offering
section of the seven limb practice. Then there is a dedication
at the end. Then you pour out the water and rinse the bowls
with water. Then you begin again with sangye choe dang...
and then do the offering section of the seven limb practice
and
again do the meditation of offering. Then again the dedication,
and then pour out the water. And perform the offering again. "Beautifully
performed, without being crooked" could mean performing
the external offering in a symmetrical way; but the main
thing is to do it without having a crooked mind, which means
make the offering without being stained by worldly concern.
Continue to Next
Section |