How to Generate Bodhicitta
Venerable Ribur Rinpoche
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| The essence
of Buddha's 84,000 teachings is bodhicitta: the awakening
mind that aspires towards enlightenment so as to have
the perfect ability to free all beings from suffering
and lead them to peerless happiness.
On his two visits to Singapore in 1997, Venerable Lama
Ribur Rinpoche taught extensively on how to generate
that precious bodhimind. Using scriptural understanding
and his personal experience, Rinpoche also gave insightful
teachings on lo-jong (thought transformation),
the practice of which enables one to transform the inevitable
problems of life into the causes for enlightenment.
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Contents
PREFACE
In 1997 the students of Amitabha
Buddhist Centre were blessed to receive teachings from
the great master Ribur Rinpoche. Rinpoche visited us twice
and stayed for a total of three and a half months, during
which time he taught lam-rim and lo-jong (thought
transformation). This small booklet is extracted from Rinpoche's
teachings.
A Brief Biography
Ribur Rinpoche was born in Kham, Eastern Tibet, in 1923.
He was recognized
at the age of five as the sixth incarnation of Lama Kunga
Osel, a great
scholar and teacher who spent the last twelve years of his
life in strict
solitary retreat. All five of the previous incarnations were
principal
teachers at Ribur Monastery in Kham.
When Ribur Rinpoche was fourteen he entered Sera monastery,
one of the
great Gelug monastic-universities in Lhasa, to begin intensive
studies in
Buddhist philosophy, which culminated in his receiving the
Geshe degree at
the age of 25. During his stay at Sera Monastery Rinpoche
also attended
many teachings and initiations given by his root guru, Pabonka
Rinpoche,
the greatest Gelug lama of the time. After receiving his geshe
degree,
Rinpoche returned to Kham where he spent many years doing
retreat in a
small hut he had built in the forest. But after the Chinese
Communist
invasion in 1950, the situation in Kham became increasingly
dangerous, and
in 1955 he was advised by one of his gurus, Trijang Rinpoche,
to return to
Lhasa, where he continued to take teachings and do retreats.
But Lhasa itself soon became unsafe. From 1959 (the year
of the Tibetan people's uprising) to 1976, Rinpoche experienced
numerous hardships and difficulties such as imprisonment and
physical abuse, and being a helpless observer of the terrible
destruction of the Cultural Revolution. However, during this
time he was able to keep his mind peaceful and even happy
by practising the teachings he had learned. As Rinpoche described
his experiences, "I didn't really experience the slightest
difficulty during those adverse conditions. This was due to
the kindness of Lama Dorje Chang [Pabongka Rinpoche]. From
him I had somehow learned some mental training, and in those
difficult times, my mind was immediately able to recognise
the nature of cyclic existence, the nature of afflictive emotions,
and the nature of karma and so forth. So my mind was really
at ease."
Following the Cultural Revolution Rinpoche worked with the
Panchen Lama to
restore many of the lost spiritual treasures of Tibet as they
could. His
main accomplishment was recovering the two most precious statues
of
Shakyamuni Buddha: the Jowo Chenpo and the Ramo Chenpo. These
two statues,
originally brought to Tibet by the Chinese and Nepalese wives
of King
Songsten Gampo (ca 617-698), were taken to Beijing during
the Cultural
Revolution and kept in various warehouses along with thousands
of other
statues for 17 years, until Rinpoche found them and returned
them to their
respective temples in Lhasa.
In 1987 Rinpoche left Tibet and travelled to Dharamsala,
India, to see His
Holiness the Dalai Lama. Since then he has lived at Namgyal
Monastery in
Dharamsala, where, at the request of His Holiness, he wrote
a number of
biographies of great lamas and an extensive religious history
of Tibet.
Rinpoche has also visted and taught in several foreign countries
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Australia, New Zealand. America, and around Europe. His warmth,
humour,
profound wisdom and practical, down-to-earth teachings have
endeared him to
many students around the world.
Background of the Teachings
More that 2,500 years ago, Shakyamuni Buddha attained enlightenment
and
then proceeded to teach the path to enlightenment so that
others could
follow. His teachings have been kept alive to the present
day through the
great kindness and efforts of an unbroken lineage of practitioners
who
learned them from their masters, put them into practice, then
passed them
onto followers. In Tibet, the essential points of Buddha's
teachings were
formulated into a system known as the lam-rim, or stages on
the path to
enlightenment, which explaiins all the steps or practices
one needs to
follow in order to attain enlightenment.
The lam-rim consists of three main stages or levels, according
to three
different reasons or motivations for practising Dharma. The
first level,
known as the "small scope," starts from taking an
interest in one's future
lives. This comes about when we realise that this present
life could end at
any time, and that after death, we will be reborn in an unfortunate
state
(as an animal, hungry ghost or hell being), and to achieve
a fortunate
state (as a deva, titan or human being), by taking refuge
in the Buddha,
Dharma and Sangha, and by living our lives in accordance with
karma, the
law of evolutionary actions and their results.
The second or "intermediate scope" involves developing
the aspiration to
become free once and for all from the cycle of death and rebirth.
Within
this scope, one focuses on the Four Noble Truths: the sufferings
of cyclic
existence, the causes of suffering (delusions and karma),
the state of
freedom from all suffering (nirvana), and the means to achieve
it by
practising the three higher trainings of ethics, concentration
and wisdom.
The third level, the "great scope," involves opening
one's heart to
consider the situation of all beings. Realising that all beings
experience
suffering that they don't want and they fail to find the peace
and
happiness that they wish for, one develops the aspiration
to attain full
enlightenment in order to help everyone reach that perfect
state as well.
That altruistic aspiration is bodhicitta.
This booklet contains extracts of ribur Rinpoche's precious
teachings on
how to develop bodhicitta, and how to practise thought transformation
through which we become less self-centred and more concerned
for others.
Numerous people contributed to this work. Rinpoche's teachings
were
beautifully translated into English by Fabrizio Pallotti.
Several ABC
students kindly transcribed the tapes, and I edited the transcript
with
assistance from Doris Low and Rise Koben.
Any errors in the text are entirely the fault of the editor.
Sangye Khadro
Oct. 1998
Continue to The
Seven Point Cause-and-Effect Instruction
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