
gregkavarnos wrote:Nope. Only you can intervene in your karma(actions) and the manner in which your actions will ripen.
tomamundsen wrote:gregkavarnos wrote:Nope. Only you can intervene in your karma(actions) and the manner in which your actions will ripen.
From what I understand, yes they can. This is why we have Vajrasattva practice and the 4th empowerment, for example.
Pero wrote:tomamundsen wrote:gregkavarnos wrote:Nope. Only you can intervene in your karma(actions) and the manner in which your actions will ripen.
From what I understand, yes they can. This is why we have Vajrasattva practice and the 4th empowerment, for example.
It's really a kind of a two way street. I don't see at all what the 4th empowerment has to do with it though?
tomamundsen wrote:Pero wrote:tomamundsen wrote:From what I understand, yes they can. This is why we have Vajrasattva practice and the 4th empowerment, for example.
It's really a kind of a two way street. I don't see at all what the 4th empowerment has to do with it though?
The recitation I use says "the karma of the underlying all-ground and obscurations to wisdom are purified" during the 4th empowerment section.
tomamundsen wrote:The recitation I use says "the karma of the underlying all-ground and obscurations to wisdom are purified" during the 4th empowerment section.
I confess all impairments of the root and branch samayas of enlightened body, speech and mind
I pray that all of my negative, actions, obscurations, wrong-doing, and downfalls, all my flaws, be completely cleansed and purified
By praying thus, Vajrasattva is pleased and smiling says "Noble child, all of your negative actions, obscurations, wrong-doing, and downfalls are purified."
Astus wrote:In order to be purified by Vajrasattva there is a quite elaborate practice that includes visualisation, recitation and repentance. So it is not that buddhas just intervene in any being's karma. It is exactly because doing the proper practices (i.e. generating karma) that one can negate other karmic effects.
tomamundsen wrote:gregkavarnos wrote:Nope. Only you can intervene in your karma(actions) and the manner in which your actions will ripen.
From what I understand, yes they can. This is why we have Vajrasattva practice and the 4th empowerment, for example. There are likely other practices as well that I am not familiar with.
Let me put it to you this way: Who is purifying what?tomamundsen wrote:tomamundsen wrote:The recitation I use says "the karma of the underlying all-ground and obscurations to wisdom are purified" during the 4th empowerment section.
To be thorough, I'll post the relevant section from Vajrasattva practice. Another translation is available online at Lotsawa House, so I don't think there's any harm in sharing it.
After repeating the 100-syllable mantra many times, there are some prayers which include:I confess all impairments of the root and branch samayas of enlightened body, speech and mind
I pray that all of my negative, actions, obscurations, wrong-doing, and downfalls, all my flaws, be completely cleansed and purified
By praying thus, Vajrasattva is pleased and smiling says "Noble child, all of your negative actions, obscurations, wrong-doing, and downfalls are purified."
I agree, the help though is to provide a stadard of comparison, an example of possibility, a goal to strive towards... Not the help that I can provide by bandaging your finger if you cut it.Devotionary wrote:From the empowerment practices, various repentances both in Tibetan and Chinese traditions, etc... It seems like the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas, through dedicating their merits and wisdom to those who call upon them, help practitioners.
This!!!In the same way, "purification"/"elimination" of karma for normal practitioners may just be a metaphor for the removal of suffering and ignorance, through an increase of wisdom and detachment, which is an effect of different practices.

tomamundsen wrote:Pero wrote:tomamundsen wrote:From what I understand, yes they can. This is why we have Vajrasattva practice and the 4th empowerment, for example.
It's really a kind of a two way street. I don't see at all what the 4th empowerment has to do with it though?
The recitation I use says "the karma of the underlying all-ground and obscurations to wisdom are purified" during the 4th empowerment section.
lucidaromulus wrote:Can a Buddha intervene with our karma?
If yes, at what stage of the karma?
when the karma is not ripe?
-eg. created the karma to be harmed but I'm still unharmed because it hasn't ripened.
when the karma is ripening?
-eg. I'm going to be harmed in a few moment due to the karma ripening.
if yes, how?
gregkavarnos wrote:Let me put it to you this way: Who is purifying what?
If you can say: "Here is Vajrasattva, he dwells here and he purifies this (the alaya vijnana) with this (shows me some nectar), like this, by doing this..." then I will agree with you. Until then I will just have to say that Vajrasattva is nowhere and nothing else but my mind and that it is the practice I am engaging in which causes the purification.
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