Sugatagarbha : Gelugpa & Nyingma

Malcolm
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Re: Sugatagarbha : Gelugpa & Nyingma

Post by Malcolm »

Will wrote:
Namdrol wrote:
Mariusz wrote:Is it possible to progress through...
without necessity of sutra methods or not?
From the point of view of Nyingma, Sakya and so on, definitely.
N. - you mean that the sutric ethical, dialectical & meditative foundation are never used as a preliminary practice? Surely in every lifetime those basic methods & practices must be recapitulated by everyone? For the very advanced that revisiting of such basic practices may take only a few years (or less?), but all must have that foundation.
I never engaged in them. I entered Vajrayāna from the beginning without engaging in lam rim teachings.
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Tsongkhapafan
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Re: Sugatagarbha : Gelugpa & Nyingma

Post by Tsongkhapafan »

Namdrol wrote:I never engaged in them. I entered Vajrayāna from the beginning without engaging in lam rim teachings.
Entering the Vajrayana means generating actual Tantric bodhichitta which depends upon refuge, renunciation, universal love, universal compassion and conventional bodhichitta, all of which depend on Sutra teachings. Simply learning about the Vajrayana is not entering it. It's impossible to actually enter the Vajrayana without these actual minds that are generated by meditation on Sutra, and all the necessary methods are contained within Lamrim, according to the lineage of Atisha and Je Tsongkhapa.

Both Atisha and Je Tsongkhapa are very clear on the necessity to build the foundation for Tantric practices by training in renunciation, bodhichitta and the correct view of emptiness, otherwise it's like trying to put the roof on a house that has no foundations and no walls.
Malcolm
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Re: Sugatagarbha : Gelugpa & Nyingma

Post by Malcolm »

Tsongkhapafan wrote:according to the lineage of Atisha and Je Tsongkhapa.
According to the Sakya lineage, there are two kinds of persons, those who require the gradual training you mention (rim gyis pas), and those who are able to enter Vajrayāna teachings immediately without prior training (cig car bas). These two types of persons are clearly demonstrated in Aryadeva's commentary on the Pañcakrama.

Thus, it is best to understand that there are different approaches for different people.

N
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Tom
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Re: Sugatagarbha : Gelugpa & Nyingma

Post by Tom »

Mariusz wrote:
Tom wrote:Obviously from his writings it appears Tsongkhapa thought otherwise :-)!
It is not so obvious. Here you have a quote on the analysis (sutra methods) which is not performed during HYTantra:

(Tsongkhapa's Final Exposition of Wisdom; page.158) Our own system is as follows: Even in the context of Highest Yoga [Mantra] the system (Vajrayana) of generating understanding of the view must be done in accordance with what occurs in the Middle Way texts. With respect to how it is sustained, on some occasions during states subsequent to meditative equipoise on the stages of generation and completion,
one takes suchness to mind within analyzing it, but when those on the stage of completion who have attained the capacity to put penetrative focus on essential points in the body sustain suchness in meditative
equipoise, although they definitely must meditate within setting [the mind] in the context of the view, they do not perform the analytical meditation of special insight as it occurs in other texts. Therefore, with respect to that occasion, do not posit analytical meditation as one-pointed meditation on suchness from within the context of the view ancillary to stabilizing [meditation].
I am not sure of your point - what you have quoted is standard Gelugpa vajrayana instruction and would not surprise anyone familiar with these practices. Tsongkhapa's position on the need for sutra practice, specifically renunciation, bodhichitta and correct view in relation to tantric practice is obvious and clear in his text "A Book of Three Inspirations." I am not sure if Mullins translated the whole text but if he did you can read it for yourself there.
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Tom
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Re: Sugatagarbha : Gelugpa & Nyingma

Post by Tom »

Namdrol wrote:
Will wrote:
N. - you mean that the sutric ethical, dialectical & meditative foundation are never used as a preliminary practice? Surely in every lifetime those basic methods & practices must be recapitulated by everyone? For the very advanced that revisiting of such basic practices may take only a few years (or less?), but all must have that foundation.
I never engaged in them. I entered Vajrayāna from the beginning without engaging in lam rim teachings.
Still, even if introduced later aren't sutra topics such as Abhidharma foundational for Tantric practice in Sakya? Actually, I have found Sakya lamas to be more concerned about their Vajrayana students understanding of basic Abhidharma topics even more than Gelugpa lamas.
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Sherab
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Re: Sugatagarbha : Gelugpa & Nyingma

Post by Sherab »

Mariusz wrote: It is the potential to become a buddha for every sentient being.
As I see it, the word "potential" still implies change, but buddhanature does not change when a sentient being becomes a Buddha.
Malcolm
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Re: Sugatagarbha : Gelugpa & Nyingma

Post by Malcolm »

Tom wrote:
Namdrol wrote:
Will wrote:
N. - you mean that the sutric ethical, dialectical & meditative foundation are never used as a preliminary practice? Surely in every lifetime those basic methods & practices must be recapitulated by everyone? For the very advanced that revisiting of such basic practices may take only a few years (or less?), but all must have that foundation.
I never engaged in them. I entered Vajrayāna from the beginning without engaging in lam rim teachings.
Still, even if introduced later aren't sutra topics such as Abhidharma foundational for Tantric practice in Sakya? Actually, I have found Sakya lamas to be more concerned about their Vajrayana students understanding of basic Abhidharma topics even more than Gelugpa lamas.
Generally in Sakya, they backfill. In other words, people are given abhisheka right away, and then instructed to learn whatever they need to contextualize their Vajrayāna practice.
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Totoro
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Re: Sugatagarbha : Gelugpa & Nyingma

Post by Totoro »

According to the Sakya lineage, there are two kinds of persons, those who require the gradual training you mention (rim gyis pas), and those who are able to enter Vajrayāna teachings immediately without prior training (cig car bas). These two types of persons are clearly demonstrated in Aryadeva's commentary on the Pañcakrama.

Thus, it is best to understand that there are different approaches for different people.

N
 རིམ་གྱིས་པ་ (rim gyis pa)
 <noun> "That which proceeds gradually" or "gradual type". One of a pair of terms. The opp. is cig car ba, that which proceeds without any stages, that which goes at once.
In the language of the buddhist tantras, two types of practitioner are identified: the rim gyis pa is the gradual type, the person who goes to liberation by stages; the cig car ba is the sudden type, the one who goes to it immediately. Acc. Tenga Rinpoche, the general distinction is as follows. The gradual type person is someone who has not developed a connection to the practice previously or who has only developed a small connection to it. Because of this, they have to work at the practice again and again before it comes to fruit. A sudden type is someone who has developed a great connection to or realization of the practice previously and therefore, when they meet the teaching again, they are capable of realizing it all at once.
Malcolm
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Re: Sugatagarbha : Gelugpa & Nyingma

Post by Malcolm »

Totoro wrote:
According to the Sakya lineage, there are two kinds of persons, those who require the gradual training you mention (rim gyis pas), and those who are able to enter Vajrayāna teachings immediately without prior training (cig car bas). These two types of persons are clearly demonstrated in Aryadeva's commentary on the Pañcakrama.

Thus, it is best to understand that there are different approaches for different people.

N
 རིམ་གྱིས་པ་ (rim gyis pa)
 <noun> "That which proceeds gradually" or "gradual type". One of a pair of terms. The opp. is cig car ba, that which proceeds without any stages, that which goes at once.
In the language of the buddhist tantras, two types of practitioner are identified: the rim gyis pa is the gradual type, the person who goes to liberation by stages; the cig car ba is the sudden type, the one who goes to it immediately. Acc. Tenga Rinpoche, the general distinction is as follows. The gradual type person is someone who has not developed a connection to the practice previously or who has only developed a small connection to it. Because of this, they have to work at the practice again and again before it comes to fruit. A sudden type is someone who has developed a great connection to or realization of the practice previously and therefore, when they meet the teaching again, they are capable of realizing it all at once.
This is a little different than the standard disctintion between these two.
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Totoro
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Re: Sugatagarbha : Gelugpa & Nyingma

Post by Totoro »

Namdrol wrote:
Totoro wrote:
According to the Sakya lineage, there are two kinds of persons, those who require the gradual training you mention (rim gyis pas), and those who are able to enter Vajrayāna teachings immediately without prior training (cig car bas). These two types of persons are clearly demonstrated in Aryadeva's commentary on the Pañcakrama.

Thus, it is best to understand that there are different approaches for different people.

N
 རིམ་གྱིས་པ་ (rim gyis pa)
 <noun> "That which proceeds gradually" or "gradual type". One of a pair of terms. The opp. is cig car ba, that which proceeds without any stages, that which goes at once.
In the language of the buddhist tantras, two types of practitioner are identified: the rim gyis pa is the gradual type, the person who goes to liberation by stages; the cig car ba is the sudden type, the one who goes to it immediately. Acc. Tenga Rinpoche, the general distinction is as follows. The gradual type person is someone who has not developed a connection to the practice previously or who has only developed a small connection to it. Because of this, they have to work at the practice again and again before it comes to fruit. A sudden type is someone who has developed a great connection to or realization of the practice previously and therefore, when they meet the teaching again, they are capable of realizing it all at once.
This is a little different than the standard disctintion between these two.
I got that from the Illuminator dictionary. Please could you elaborate on the difference or what the standard disctiontion? How does one identify which kind of these two practitioners one is? Does the Guru decide? Thanks.
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heart
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Re: Sugatagarbha : Gelugpa & Nyingma

Post by heart »

Tsongkhapafan wrote:Both Atisha and Je Tsongkhapa are very clear on the necessity to build the foundation for Tantric practices by training in renunciation, bodhichitta and the correct view of emptiness, otherwise it's like trying to put the roof on a house that has no foundations and no walls.
Within the direct introduction in Dzogchen it is completely possible to have a direct experience of the true meaning of renunciation, bodhicitta and emptiness. The meaning of these three words are actually very closely connected with the natural state. Intellectual studies are helpful but they don't actually help that much with the direct experience.

/magnus
"We are all here to help each other go through this thing, whatever it is."
~Kurt Vonnegut

"The principal practice is Guruyoga. But we need to understand that any secondary practice combined with Guruyoga becomes a principal practice." ChNNR (Teachings on Thun and Ganapuja)
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Re: Sugatagarbha : Gelugpa & Nyingma

Post by Mariusz »

Sherab wrote:
Mariusz wrote: It is the potential to become a buddha for every sentient being.
As I see it, the word "potential" still implies change, but buddhanature does not change when a sentient being becomes a Buddha.
Yes, sometimes it is necessary to use this word, as other reference points as weel, for a sentient being to be trained until the final collapse of all reference points. There will be 5 faults of not studying teachings on Buddha nature: (1) faintheartedness because not be aware that everybody has the same potential as Buddha for attainment of Perfect Enlightenment which is called the Buddha Nature (2) denigrating inferior sentient beings because not be aware of Buddha Nature in every sentient beings (3) clinging to what is not actual because of not be aware of infinitive qualities which comes from the Buddha Nature such 5 wisdoms of Buddha (4) denying the actual dharma which should be studied from the highest perspective of Buddha Nature without extremes from the Middle Path (madhyamaka), conceptuality and dualistic mind (5) excessive attachment to oneself because not be aware of equanimity of oneself and others in having the same Buddha Nature as the potential for their future Buddhahood
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Re: Sugatagarbha : Gelugpa & Nyingma

Post by Mariusz »

Totoro wrote:
 རིམ་གྱིས་པ་ (rim gyis pa)
 <noun> "That which proceeds gradually" or "gradual type". One of a pair of terms. The opp. is cig car ba, that which proceeds without any stages, that which goes at once.
In the language of the buddhist tantras, two types of practitioner are identified: the rim gyis pa is the gradual type, the person who goes to liberation by stages; the cig car ba is the sudden type, the one who goes to it immediately. Acc. Tenga Rinpoche, the general distinction is as follows. The gradual type person is someone who has not developed a connection to the practice previously or who has only developed a small connection to it. Because of this, they have to work at the practice again and again before it comes to fruit. A sudden type is someone who has developed a great connection to or realization of the practice previously and therefore, when they meet the teaching again, they are capable of realizing it all at once.
For this sudden type the mixing with sutra is unnecessary after the initiation was given. The connection can be because Mahayana sutra practice from previous lifetimes as I wrote.
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Re: Sugatagarbha : Gelugpa & Nyingma

Post by Mariusz »

heart wrote:
Tsongkhapafan wrote:Both Atisha and Je Tsongkhapa are very clear on the necessity to build the foundation for Tantric practices by training in renunciation, bodhichitta and the correct view of emptiness, otherwise it's like trying to put the roof on a house that has no foundations and no walls.
Within the direct introduction in Dzogchen it is completely possible to have a direct experience of the true meaning of renunciation, bodhicitta and emptiness. The meaning of these three words are actually very closely connected with the natural state. Intellectual studies are helpful but they don't actually help that much with the direct experience.

/magnus
Dzogchen according to Innermost Essence does not need gradual methods of 4 empties of humans according to HYT as you know.
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Re: Sugatagarbha : Gelugpa & Nyingma

Post by Caz »

Mariusz wrote:
Namdrol wrote: Well, what Tsongkhapa is saying here is that first you generate the view in accordance with Madhyamaka texts. Then, outside of the context of creation and completion one still engages in Madhyamaka analysis.

However, advanced meditators in the completion stage have no further need to engage in such analysis and so they don't.

N
Yes. For me it is also. So in this case the HYT methods are sufficient alone without any need for the sutra adding even according to Tsongkhapa . No necessity for mixing the both.
Je Rinpoche Taught the Union of Sutra and Tantra to try and dispel the mistaken Idea that the two are contradictory. :reading:
Abandoning Dharma is, in the final analysis, disparaging the Hinayana because of the Mahayana; favoring the Hinayana on account of the Mahayana; playing off sutra against tantra; playing off the four classes of the tantras against each other; favoring one of the Tibetan schools—the Sakya, Gelug, Kagyu, or Nyingma—and disparaging the rest; and so on. In other words, we abandon Dharma any time we favor our own tenets and disparage the rest.

Liberation in the Palm of your hand~Kyabje Pabongkha Rinpoche.
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Tsongkhapafan
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Re: Sugatagarbha : Gelugpa & Nyingma

Post by Tsongkhapafan »

heart wrote:
Tsongkhapafan wrote:Both Atisha and Je Tsongkhapa are very clear on the necessity to build the foundation for Tantric practices by training in renunciation, bodhichitta and the correct view of emptiness, otherwise it's like trying to put the roof on a house that has no foundations and no walls.
Within the direct introduction in Dzogchen it is completely possible to have a direct experience of the true meaning of renunciation, bodhicitta and emptiness. The meaning of these three words are actually very closely connected with the natural state. Intellectual studies are helpful but they don't actually help that much with the direct experience.

/magnus
I think we'll have to agree to disagree on the subject of direct introduction ;) as you know, Gelugpas (and Sakya Pandita) don't accept it. Thanks for your reply, though :smile: I agree that intellectual study doesn't help if you don't apply it. That's why it's important to be both a scholar and a yogi.
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Totoro
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Re: Sugatagarbha : Gelugpa & Nyingma

Post by Totoro »

Tsongkhapafan wrote:
I think we'll have to agree to disagree on the subject of direct introduction ;) as you know, Gelugpas (and Sakya Pandita) don't accept it. Thanks for your reply, though :smile: I agree that intellectual study doesn't help if you don't apply it. That's why it's important to be both a scholar and a yogi.
From what you said, Je Tsongkhapa and Sakya Pandita doesn't accept 'direct introduction' for reasons of their own. The different traditions each have their own theory and practice and techniques, and clearly they all work since they all produce highly realized if not enlightened beings. So it puzzles me when they refute each other with valid reasons. If it works, it must be right, right? Or am I too simple?
Malcolm
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Re: Sugatagarbha : Gelugpa & Nyingma

Post by Malcolm »

Tsongkhapafan wrote:... (and Sakya Pandita) don't accept it.

This is not true. Sakya Pandita accepted direct introduction, but only subsequent to having received empowerments. The fourth empowerment is in fact a direct introduction.
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Tsongkhapafan
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Re: Sugatagarbha : Gelugpa & Nyingma

Post by Tsongkhapafan »

Namdrol wrote:
Tsongkhapafan wrote:... (and Sakya Pandita) don't accept it.

This is not true. Sakya Pandita accepted direct introduction, but only subsequent to having received empowerments. The fourth empowerment is in fact a direct introduction.
The fourth empowerment is not a direct introduction, it's a description of the Spiritual Master's experience as a pointing out instruction that gives powerful blessings, but not a mystical transfer of his complete experience. We can receive strong blessings that ignite spiritual experiences if we keep pure view of our Guru, but he or she cannot directly transfer all their experience of enlightened wisdom into our minds in an 'instant enlightenment'.

Regarding Sakya Pandita, didn't he say that Dzogchen was not Buddhism?
Malcolm
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Re: Sugatagarbha : Gelugpa & Nyingma

Post by Malcolm »

Tsongkhapafan wrote:
The fourth empowerment is not a direct introduction, it's a description of the Spiritual Master's experience as a pointing out instruction that gives powerful blessings, but not a mystical transfer of his complete experience.
A direct introduction is not a mystical transfer of a master's complete experience. It is a pointing out instruction. It does not transfer the master's realization (that is impossible), it communicates the student's own state.

Actually the word translated as "introduction" and "pointing out" is the same word i.e. ngo phrad.
Regarding Sakya Pandita, didn't he say that Dzogchen was not Buddhism?
Sakya Pandita criticized certain trends he saw in the Nyingma (much in the same way that Gorampa and Shakya Chogden criticized certain trends in Gelug), but he never stated that Dzogchen was not Buddhism, quite the opposite. He stated in fact that he had received Dzogchen teachings and respected them, as is stated plainly in his Analysis of the Three Vows. In fact, Sapan reserved most of his criticisms for the Kagyu school, spending very little time on the Nyingma school. After all, Sapan is a very important master for Vakjrakilaya teachings. Dzogchen is the ancestral teaching of the Khon family.
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