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The
Three Main Approaches in Buddhism - An Introduction
The Kunzig Shamar Rimpoche
Published in
Knowledge in Action, Volume 3, 1994.
(A journal of the Karmapa International Buddhist Institute
(KIBI) in New Delhi, India).
In
Buddhism it is pointed out that our present state of mind
is conditioned by previous actions. This is always true,
regardless of which realm of existence one is born into.
Different kinds of existence come about as a result of the
infallible law of cause and effect.
The
mind is the origin of all actions. The way individuals behave
is based on what they think and believe. Samsara, which
is a state of perpetual suffering, will continue to manifest,
as long as the mind is conditioned by ignorance. This is
the actual state of affairs; it is not true just because
the Buddha, Shakyamuni, said so.
The
Buddhist teachings are methods that remove ignorance from
the mind. Since ignorance is merely a state of mind, Buddhist
practice is always a mental process which attempts to bring
about an enlightened state. There are two stages: to study
and contemplate the way things truly are and to cultivate
the resulting understanding, so that one's perception of
reality becomes accurate.
The
Tibetan name for Buddha, 'Sang-gye', illustrates
this approach. 'Sang' means to awaken, that is, to awaken
from the sleep of ignorance. This awakening is like the
sun dispelling darkness. 'Gye' refers to the enlightened
qualities that are revealed and free to manifest once ignorance
is gone. This is like when a flower blossoms displaying
all its beauty.
The
Buddha presented three levels of teachings, which are called
the Three Vehicles or the Three Yanas. The appropriate level
for each individual depends upon one's understanding. These
three main approaches have different goals and ways of presenting
reality.
In
the first approach, the Shravakayana, the two major schools
of thought are the Vaibashika and the Sautrantika systems.
The Vaibashika and the Sautrantika teach that the cause
of conditioned existence is the ignorant belief that the
individual is a permanent, lasting entity.
In
order to overcome this mistaken notion, one studies the
teachings which explain that the 'self' is, in fact, without
essence, insubstantial, and unreal. Having arrived at a
definitive understanding, one familiarizes oneself with
this new way of regarding reality to the point where it
becomes an integral part of one's being. This realization
is called the state of an Arhat of the Shravakayana, and
it is the highest point of this approach.
The
second approach, the PratyekaBuddhayana, goes further. It
points out that all other phenomena also, just like the
individual, are not truly existent entities, that all things
are illusory like the images in a dream. As in the Shravakayana,
there are two stages of development: intellectual analysis
which is followed by cultivating a new way of perceiving
reality, so that full realization of this approach is achieved.
Practitioners contemplate the twelve phases of the process
of dependent occurrence in their order of arising, that
is, basic unawareness, actions and the karma they accrue,
habitual patterns that colour consciousness, and so on.
They also contemplate these phases in the reversed succession,
starting with death, going on to aging, birth, and so on.
The goal of this approach is the state of an Arhat of the
PratyekaBuddhayana. This state involves full realization
of the emptiness of the individual as well as a partial
realization of the emptiness of external phenomena.
The
third approach, the Mahayana, speaks of compassion for all
living beings and the emptiness of both the individual and
all other phenomena. It teaches that the practice of the
ten paramitas must be based on awareness which fully perceives
the essencelessness of phenomena. The inseparability of
compassion and emptiness is a main teaching in this tradition.
The point is that compassion compels one to work for the
welfare of others and that perception of emptiness allows
one to do so in an enlightened way. Such perception of emptiness
brings one to the realization of mind's true nature which,
according to the Mahayana, is the union of awareness and
emptiness free from the limitations of conceptual mind.
In
this approach, as in the two previous approaches, practice
begins with a learning process, so that an accurate understanding
becomes the ground for one's development. One makes effort
to benefit others with the understanding that whatever occurs
is empty of reality and thus illusory. When practice is
based on this understanding, the individual will not have
expectations or hopes of reward. The knowledge of the Mahayana
viewpoint in all its aspects is the foundation for cultivating
states of mind that will gradually result in attaining Buddha,
the enlightened state, which is insight into the way things
truly are - the fact that any phenomenon is empty of real
essence or substance. Such emptiness is not a mere nothingness;
it is what allows the enlightened qualities of the three
kayas to manifest.
This
is a brief overview of the Three Vehicles, which include
all the teachings of the Buddha. Anyone who wishes to follow
the Buddhist path needs to study the teachings in detail
and then put them into practice. The Buddha said that he
can show the way, but it is through personal efforts alone
that enlightenment is attained.
The
14th Kunzig Shamar Rinpoche
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