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A Lamp for the Enlightenment Path - Composed by Atisa

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 #1.
    I bow in great reverence to all past, present and
    Future Victors, to their Doctrine and Communities.
    I shall light a Lamp for the Path to Enlightenment,
    At the request of my good disciple Byang-chub-'od.


[The three levels of motivation]


    #2.
    In that they are Inferior or Mediocre or Superior,
    Persons should be understood as three:
    The characteristics of each are very clear,
    and I shall note how they differ from one another.
.
    #3.
    One who by every means he finds,
    Seeks by the pleasure of samsara,
    And cares but for himself alone, that one
    Is known as the Inferior Person.
.
    #4.
    One who puts life's pleasures behind
    And turns himself from deeds of sin,
    Yet cares only about his own peace,
    That person should be called Mediocre.
.
    #5.
    One who wholly seeks a complete end
    To the entire suffering of others because
    Their suffering belongs to his own [[[conscious]]] stream,
    That person is a Superior.
.
[The following teaching is for those with the "superior motivation"]
.
    #6.
    For those pure beings whose desire
    Is the highest of Enlightenments,
    I shall explain the right means
    Which were taught me by my Gurus.
.
    #7.
    Facing a painted image of the Perfect Buddha,
    Or in front of holy reliquaries and the like,
    Give worship with flowers and incense
    And whatever objects may be at hand.
.
    #8.
    Then with the Sevenfold Worship expressed
    In the Deeds of Samantabhadra,
    And a mind that does not turn back until
    The Heart of Enlightenment is reached,
.
    #9.
    With great faith in the Three Jewels,
    Bending knee to the ground,
    And folding the hands
    First take the Three Refuges thrice.
.
    #10.
    Then, because the Thought of Love for
    All creatures is the prerequisite,
    One looks out on all the world,
    Suffering in death, transmigration,
    And rebirth in the three bad destinies:
.
[[[Generating Bodhicitta]]]
.
    #11.
    At sight of that suffering, one suffers;
    And he who wants to free the world
    From the very cause of such suffering,
    Must beget this Thought of Enlightenment
    That is pledged never to turn back.
.
    #12.
    Every quality that belongs to
    Begetting thoughts of such Resolution
    Has been well explained by Maitreya
    In his sutra, the Stalks in Array.
.
    #13.
    Read that sutra or hear it from a Guru, and when
    The infinite benefits of Perfect Enlightenment Thought
    Are seen, then for that very reason you
    Will beget the Thought again and again.
    #14.
    The merit of this is shown extremely well
    In the sutra called the Questions of Viradatta;
    And to give the essence of it,
    I quote three of its verses here:
.
    #15.
    "If a form could be had for the full
    Merit of the Enlightenment Thought,
    It would surpass even one
    That filled the whole realm of space."
.
    #16.
    "Or take a man who owns jewels, and with them
    Fills every one of the Buddha-fields
    Reckoned as more than the grains of Ganga's sands –
    Then offers all this to the Lord of the World;"
.
    #17.
    "Yet another who merely folds his hands,
    And inclines his thought to Enlightenment.
    The latter's worship is higher by far,
    Because in it there is found no limit."
.
    #18.
    When you get the thoughts of aspiring to Enlightenment,
    Then with great effort strive to expand them fully;
    And to recall your resolve in your other births,
    Observe fully the Training I explained to you.
.
[Taking vows]
.
    #19.
    A right resolve will not be furthered
    Without vows that have progress in mind;
    Therefore he who seeks growth
    in the resolve for Perfect Enlightenment,
    earnestly takes them.
.
    #20.
    Only he who has lasting vows in
    One of Pratimoksa's seven ranks
    Is fit for the Vow of the Bodhisattva;
    There is no other way for it to be.
.
    #21.
    The Tathagata has said that of
    The seven ranks of Pratimoksa,
    The glorious Pure Life is highest;
    By which he meant the vows of a Monk.
.
    #22.
    According to the ritual given in the
    Conduct Chapter of the Bodhisattva Levels,
    One takes the Vow from any good Guru
    Who has the proper characteristics.
.
    #23.
    One who is learned in the ritual of the Vow,
    And himself lives the Vow he has taken,
    And has the compassionate forbearance
    To impart it -- know him to be the good Guru.
.
    #24.
    But if, after trying, one cannot
    Find just such a Guru as this,
    I will explain another ritual
    For taking the vow in a correct way.
.
[The method to take the Bodhisattva Vows by yourself]
.
    #25.
    In this latter way, Manjusri in a former life
    As Ambaraja begat the Enlightenment Thought;
    And as told in the sutra called The Ornament of Manjustri's Buddha-field,
    I write it down clearly here now:
.
    #26.
    "In the presence of the Lords,
    I beget The Thought of Perfect Enlightenment,
    And issuing invitation to all creatures,
    I will save them all from the cycle of rebirth."
.
    #27.
    "Beginning from this moment and henceforth,
    Until I obtain the Highest Enlightenment,
    I shall not permit ill-will or anger,
    Avarice or envy, to occupy my mind."
.
    #28.
    "I shall practice the Pure Life,
    And renounce sin and base desire;
    I shall imitate the Buddha
    By rejoicing in the vow of Conduct."
.
    #29.
    "Myself, I am not keen to reach
    Enlightenment in some swift way;
    I shall remain until the final end
    For the sake of but a single creature."
.
    #30.
    "I shall purify the innumerable
    Inconceivable fields of the universe,
    And from the taking of this [new] name,
    [henceforth] I shall live in the ten directions."
.
    #31.
    "Purifying the actions of
    My body and speech entirely,
    I shall cleanse my mind's activity as well;
    No unvirtuous deed will ever be mine."
.
[The Three Higher Trainings]
.
    #32.
    In essence, one's purity of body, speech and mind
    Means keeping vows with a mind for progress;
    For by practicing well the Three Conduct Trainings,
    Appreciation of those same Three becomes greater.
.
[[[Morality]]]
.
    #33.
    Hence, when one has striven in the vows which make up
    The pure and perfect Bodhisattva Vow,
    He will bring to complete perfection
    The very Equipment for Perfect Enlightenment.
.
[[[Superknowledges]]]
.
    #34.
    All the Buddhas have held that
    Perfecting this Equipment,
    The nature of which is Merit and Knowledge,
    Lies essentially in the superknowledges.
.
    #35.
    Just as a bird with unfledged wings
    Cannot fly up into the sky,
    So without the superknowledges' power,
    One cannot work for the good of others.
.
    #36.
    The merits which a man with the
    Superknowledges gains in a single day
    Could not be had in a hundred lives
    By one who lacked those knowledges.
.
    #37.
    He who seeks to bring to perfection swiftly
    The Equipment for Perfect Enlightenment
    Strives hard for the superknowledges,
    For they are not accomplished by sloth.
.
[[[Concentration]]]
.
    #38.
    As long as Calmness is not attained,
    The superknowledges will not occur;
    Therefore, in order to achieve Calmness,
    One must keep striving over and over.
.
    #39.
    One who neglects the Limbs of Calmness,
    Even though he strive to meditate
    For thousands of years, never
    Will achieve Concentration.
.
    #40.
    Therefore, when well established in the Limbs
    That are stated in the Chapter on Concentration Equipment,
    One can then set the mind in virtue,
    Fixed on any Topic he chooses.
.
[[[Wisdom]]]
.
    #41.
    When yogic Calmness is achieved,
    So too are the superknowledges;
    But obscuration is not destroyed
    Without the Perfection of Insight.
.
[We need both, method and wisdom, to stay away from the two extremes]
.
    #42.
    Hence, to remove all obscuration
    Of his affliction and his knowledge,
    The yogin must continually cultivate
    the Perfection of Insight together with Means.
.
    #43.
    Scripture says that bondage is from
    Insight being divorced from Means,
    And the Means from Insight as well.
    Therefore, neglect not this union.
.
    #44.
    To remove any doubts about
    What Insight is, and what are Means,
    I make clear the difference
    Between the Means and Insight.
.
[Method is the first five paramitas]
.
    #45.
    The Victors have explained that
    the Means Are all the Equipments of virtue,
    Starting with the Perfection of Giving,
    Up to, but excluding, that of Insight.
.
    #46.
    One who combines the mastery of the Means
    With a true cultivation of Insight
    Will swiftly attain Enlightenment, but
    Not by cultivating merely Non-self.
.
[[[Wisdom]] is realizing that everything is empty of inherent existence; not existent, not non-existent, not both, not neither]
.
    #47.
    "Insight" is fully explained as knowing
    The Emptiness of intrinsic nature,
    In comprehending that Aggregates
    and Sense bases and Elements do not arise.
.
    #48.
    An existent's arising is impossible;
    A non-existent's is like flowers in the sky;
    For a thing to be both is absurd fallacy;
    So neither do they originate together.
.
    #49.
    Since an entity does not arise from itself,
    And is not from another, or even from both,
    Nor is it yet without cause; therefore it has
    No intrinsic nature by way of own-existence.
.
[First, a conceptual refutation of inherent existence through various adapted skillful reasonings; which all come down to the dependence of everything on conceptual imputation and its expectation (or more generally on primitive associations – this-that – karma formation and karma conditioning)]
.
    #50.
    Furthermore, if one analyses all things
    As identities or multiplicities,
    Own-existence is not perceived; hence one is
    Certain that intrinsic natures do not exist.
.
    #51.
    The reasoning of the Seventy Stanzas on Emptiness,
    And of texts like the Basic Stanzas on the Middle Way,
    Explains the proof that all entities
    Are empty of intrinsic nature.
.
    #52.
    Wherefore, lest my text become too long,
    I do not elaborate it here,
    But will explain only proven tenets
    In order to further contemplation.
.
    #53.
    Thus, not to perceive intrinsic nature
    In any phenomenon whatever
    Is to contemplate its Non-Self; which
    Is the same as contemplating with Insight.
.
[Second, a direct realization of emptiness]
.
    #54.
    And this Insight which does not see
    Intrinsic nature in any phenomena
    Is that same Insight explained as Wisdom.
    Cultivate it without conceptual thought.
.
[The root cause of all samsara is grasping at conventional truths (which are mostly conceptual) and thinking they are absolute, representing objects that are inherently existing (independently of imputation / association by our mind)]
.
    #55.
    The world of change springs from conceptual
    Thought, which is its very nature;
    The complete removal of such
    Thought is the Highest Nirvana.
.
[[[Enlightenment]] is seeing through this process, seeing the real nature of our own mind, how it operates and creates those associations, concepts, and thinks they are real; being always conscious of this, not accepting anything as absolute, without rejecting anything.]
.
    #56.
    Moreover, the Blessed One declared:
    "Conceptual thinking is the great ignorance,
    And casts one into samsara's ocean; but
    Clear as the sky is his contemplation who
    Remains in Concentration without concepts."
.
    #57.
    And he also says in the Non-Conceptual Progress Formula:
    "When a son of the Victor meditates on
    This holy Doctrine without conceptual thought,
    He gradually attains the non-conceptual."
.
    #58.
    When through scripture and reason one has
    Penetrated the non-intrinsic
    Nature of all non-arising phenomena,
    Then contemplate without conceptual thought.
.
    #59.
    And when he has thus contemplated Thatness,
    And by stages has attained "Warmth" and the rest,
    Then he will gain the "Joyous" [Level] and on up:
    Buddha-Enlightenment is not far off.
.
[[[Tantrayana]]]
.
    #60.
    Through the rites of "Appeasement" and "Prosperity"
    And the rest, effected by the force of Mantra,
    And also by the strength of the Eight Great Powers,
    Starting with that "Good Flask", and others,
.
    #61.
    It is maintained that the Equipment for
    Enlightenment is perfected with ease;
    And if one wants to practice Mantra as prescribed
    In the Tantras: Action, Practice, and on,
.
    #62.
    Then, to gain the Preceptor-Initiation,
    One must first win a holy Guru
    By giving him attendance and precious things
    And by obedience to his word.
.
    #63.
    And when the Preceptor-Initiation has been
    Conferred by the Guru who was won over,
    Then one is purified of all sin, and
    Becomes fit to exercise the Powers.
.
    #64.
    The Secret and Insight Initiations
    Should not be taken by religious celibates,
    Because it is emphatically forbidden
    In the Great Tantra of Primal Buddha.
.
    #65.
    If those Initiations were taken by one who stays
    In the austerity of a religious celibate,
    It would violate his vow of austerity
    Since he would be practicing what is forbidden.
.
    #66.
    Transgressions would occur which defeat
    The man of religious observance;
    And by his certain fall to bad destinies,
    He would not even succeed [in Mantra practice].
.
    #67.
    Having acquired the Preceptor-Initiation,
    He may listen to all Tantras and explain them;
    Perform Fire-offering, Gift-worship, and the like:
    There is no wrong in wisdom about reality.

[Conclusion]

    #68.
    I, the Elder, Dipamkarasri,
    Having seen this explanation in texts
    Such as the sutras; and Byang-chub-'od's request
    Have explained concisely the Path to Enlightenment.
.
[Colophon]
.
    This completes the Lamp for the Enlightenment Path
    Composed by the great Acarya, glorious Dipamkarajnana.
    Translated and edited by the great Upadhyaya of India himself,
    and by the revisor-translator Dge-ba'i blo-gros.
    This text was composed at the Tho-ling temple of Zhang-zhung.

[End]
    





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