Buddhist Meditation
Systematic and Practical
      CW35
        Chapter VI
        WHY EMPHASIZE THE WHOLE SYSTEM OF MEDITATION IN THE THREE-YANAS-IN-ONE?
      A Talk by the Buddhist Yogi
        C. M. CHEN
      Written Down by
        REVEREND B. KANTIPALO
      First Published in 1967
      
      
        
        
        HOMAGE TO THE PRECIOUS DHARMA IN THE
          
        
      
         
      
      HINAYANA, MAHAYANA AND VAJRAYANA
              
      
      
         
      
      Chapter VI
              
      
      
         
      
      WHY EMPHASIZE THE WHOLE SYSTEM OF MEDITATION
              
      
      
         
      
      IN THE
        THREE-YANAS-IN-ONE?
  
      
         
      
      A day of sunshine and
        warmth after most of the rains had finished, seemed to promise well for this
        important subject. With our host, who was greatly pleased to speak upon the
        unity of the Dharma, we quickly cleared up some matters outstanding from
        previous talks. This finished, Bhante sat rosary in
        hand to listen, while the writer's pen was posed to try to catch Mr. Chen's
        meaning and secure it captive on paper, so far as can be done with such elusive
        and exalted matters...
  
      
      
         
      
      Today's talk
        is to answer the question in our title but before doing so, we should explain
        the meaning of our homage and its bearing upon our subject.
            
      
      
         
      
      A. The Dedication
              
      
      
         
      
      The Buddha
        himself has said that the Dharma existed before him (as previous Buddhas had also preached this
  
    Ancient Way
  
        ), and in this sense the
        Buddha is produced by the Dharma. The Dharma is the central Jewel of the Triratna and according to Tibetan tradition, it is more precious than the Buddha. Some examples to emphasize the primacy of
        the Dharmaratna are seen in the Tibetan practice of
        never placing an image on a Dharma-book: the Buddha is never placed over the
        Dharma. The arrangement of shrines follows this, and the sacred Tripitaka is never stored below the figures of Buddhas and Bodhisattvas, but is placed above or to one
        side. Again, in Tibetan books, images are not usually printed in the center of
        the page, the words of the Dharma occupy the middle and pictures are placed at
        both ends.
  
      
      
         
      
      Therefore, in
        the doctrine of all the three yanas, the first
        importance is given to the timeless Jewel of the Dharma.
  
      
      
         
      
      1. What does "Dharma"
        mean?
      
      
      
         
      
      Five
        definitions have been made and to each one we should give our earnest obeisance.
            
      
      
         
      
      a. Every
        phenomenon, interior or exterior, psychological and physical, all are called "dharmas." Besides these dharmas,
        we can find nothing else, for no "thing" or event lies outside this
        system. The subject of meditation, its objects, and conditions for meditation
        all are included. Without understanding the Dharma, Buddhist meditations cannot
        be practiced. Among the five definitions, this is not the main one, but its meaning
        is very vast in extent.
  
      
      
         
      
      b. Both
        worldly laws and mundane Buddhist rules are called "Dharma." The law
        is thus the many regulations and precepts of the Vinaya and the different sila taught by the Buddha, which
        are the preparation and true foundation of meditation. Mostly these are Hinayana doctrine; we should deeply respect it and be
        grateful to our teacher for having made so firm a foundation for his Dharma.
        However, the meaning here is still not the main definition.
  
      
      
         
      
      c. The
        doctrines taught in the three yanas is the principal meaning. Here are included all the
        teachings of the Buddha found in the Tripitakas of
        the Hinayana and Mahayana. We shall talk about the
        meditations practiced in all three yanas, these being
        the subjects for several succeeding chapters. These various doctrines should
        receive our humble and sincere reverence.
  
      
      
         
      
      d.
        The Truth, or Bhutatathata. This is
          where Dharma has been recognized with profound insight as Dharmata,
          the true nature of everything. This is a narrow definition of the term, but all
          our meditations aim at this realization, and here also we should offer our deep
          veneration.
  
      
         
      
      e. The Wisdom
        of the Buddhas, or the Dharma considered as Perfect
        Enlightenment. This is our goal to which we make profound worship and towards
        which we earnestly strive.
  
      
      
         
      
      Mr. Chen paused a moment
        and then said:
              
      
      
         
      
      Now we come
        to the second great division where a general explanation is given of the
        Three-ways-in-one and its relation to meditation.
            
      
      
         
      
      B. The Why and Wherefore of Three-in-one (Triyana)
              
      
      
         
      
      "I was requested by
        you," the yogi said to the writer, "and by Bhadanta Sangharakshita about a month ago to talk upon this
        subject of Triyana meditation. The Buddha's custom
        was to ask disciples questions although he was already all-knowing (Sarvajna), in order to teach them and benefit others in the
        future, so although you know the subject of Triyana well enough already, I could only obey your request. Already Bhante here has his temple named Triyana and knowing this, I guessed that his conception might be the same as that
        presented here: of the Three-vehicles-in-one."
  
      
      
         
      
      We have to
        consider the whole system of the three yanas, not
        each one separately. The three yanas are certainly
        mentioned in the Lotus Sutra (Saddharma Pundarika Sutra) but the three-yanas-in-one
        as found in this book is rather different. The Buddha wanted the three not
        separate but united. He said that no three yanas can
        be found, only one. Thus to make our meaning quite clear, we usually avoid the
        term "Triyana" and use the terms
  "Three-yanas-in-one." This stresses that
        the three are continuous from one to the other; they are three stages of one
        path. In truth, there are neither three yanas separately, nor is there only one. To think of each as complete in itself is to
        fragment the unity of the Dharma, and to talk of only one might imply the
        claimed superiority of one particular school's doctrine over others. We shall
        discuss this in detail later.
  
      
      
         
      
      In our case,
        we have three-in-one, which seem separate. Why are they separate? Because of the different stages of meditators and the degrees of practice suitable for them. Thus some are skilled, some
        unskilled, some neophytes and some experts; this the Buddha knew and arranged his teachings accordingly, saying: first take this (Hinayana) and after that comes Mahayana, and from that go
        on to the Vajrayana.
  
      
      
         
      
      Why are the
        three united? They are so because the Buddha taught many teachings over a long
        period, and these collectively are called "the Triyana."
        Without seeing truly how they are related, people will be confounded. These yanas are not two ways or three, but follow from one
        another in a certain sequence forming different levels of the same path. And
        so, for these reasons, we should try to see the unity of the three, and unite
        these three-in-one in our practice.
  
      
      
         
      
      Someone might
        at this point object, saying, "Why not talk about the five yanas?" In answer we should say that to begin with the
        five ways have already been mentioned (See
  
    Ch.
  
        V, C. 4) and then give a
        detailed explanation.
  
      
      
         
      
      The first two
        of the five are the preparation, the skin and flesh and not the main part or
        heart of meditation.
            
      
      
         
      
      The second
        two are both Hinayana. These yanas should be considered as one.
  
      
      The last one
        concerns the Bodhisattva career, but teaches only the exoteric doctrines. The Vajrayana must still be added.
  
      
      
         
      
      Therefore,
        the system of the three yanas is less in number than
        five, but more comprehensive in range.
  
      
      
         
      
      Now we come
        to the point-by-point answer to the talk's opening question, "What is the
        reason why we propound the whole system of Three-yanas-in-one?"
  
      
      
         
      
      1. Arguments
        between Yanas and Schools
  
      
      
         
      
      The first
        purpose is to get rid of nonsensical arguments between the various yanas and schools. We should consider a number of examples
        of this.
  
      
      
         
      
      a. Hinayana versus Mahayana
            
      
      
         
      
      The Hinayana generally, (though now only the Theravadins of the Southern Buddhist tradition remain as an
        independent school), do not admit the Mahayana Sutras to be the sayings of the
        Buddha. Let us examine a number of points in this connection.
            
      
      
         
      
      i. Some Hinayanists say that the canonical literature of the
        
          Great Way
        
        is not
        Buddha-word but the invention of Nagarjuna or Asvaghosa. But those believing this should know that even
        if the Mahayana teachings were revealed by these sages, there is still good
        reason to have faith in them. The Buddha has many bodies, one of which is
        called the "Nisyandakaya" (from Chinese we
        get the meaning, "Equal throughout"). This body is an impartial outflowing; a flowing everywhere of the preaching Buddha,
        even into the heavens and descending to hells. The Buddha, creating human
        appearances, causes them to do whatever he wishes, and so is unlimited by
        conditioned circumstances and has appeared in other realms; for example, in the
        world of dragons (Nagaloka).
  
      
      
         
      
      It is
        recorded that at first, Nagarjuna, who was very
        intelligent but proud, wanted to establish his own religion as he was not
        satisfied with the Hinayana teachings of the Buddha.
        It was his conceit which caused him to think of establishing a religion
        superior to Buddhadharma.
  
      
      
         
      
      Then the
        Naga-king invited him to come to his palace and read the extensive teaching
        left there by the Buddha. Nagarjuna read the Avatamsaka Sutra and by this was converted to the Mahayana.
        This great sutra he brought back with him to the human world.
  
      
      
         
      
      If all the
        sutras of the
        
          Great Way
        
        were composed without the grace of the Buddha, why then did Nagarjuna not establish his own religion as he first intended?
  
      
      
         
      
      Not only have
        the great teachers of the past discovered the Buddha's Teachings, I myself was
        asked by a divine voice during my meditation, "You should repeat the Sutra
        of the Dragon-king Buddha." This discourse I had never seen separately
        printed and had not taken any care to study, although I had read the Tripitaka four times. I took out this sutra and studied it,
        finding therein many excellent doctrines and holy instructions. In this work,
        the Venerable Sariputra, the first in wisdom among
        the disciples and present at the deep teachings of sunyata in the Heart Sutra, followed the Buddha to his preaching in the naga palace. Listening, he realized that he had never heard
        such an excellent discourse in the human world. Then he asked the Buddha why he
        had not preached this highest truth among human beings. The Buddha then warned
        him not to look down upon or dislike the state of dragons. He said that there
        were many Bodhisattvas, bhiksus, and upasakas there who, through the commission of a little
        evil, fell into this watery realm. The nagas being to
        some extent prepared, the Buddha was able to leave with them many more
        doctrines than could be taught in the world of men.
  
      
      
         
      
      Furthermore,
        we should not forget that the Buddha foretold the coming of Nagarjuna in the Lankavatara Sutra, saying that after eight
        hundred years have passed, such a sage will arise. The Buddha sent him so that
        he might cause the Dharma to flourish. It is also written in Vajracchedika Prajnaparamita Sutra that Nagarjuna was a Buddha in the past named
  "Buddha of Mysterious Clouds." Asvaghosa was once a Buddha as well, and in a past aeon bore
        the name of "Great Light."
  
      
      
         
      
      ii. As the
        followers of Hinayana may doubt that Nagarjuna himself wrote these scriptures, therefore we
        cannot give these teachings as proof that he did not do so. Now, Buddhism is
        simply a religion of Truth and certainly not one of blind faith and
        superstition. The Buddhist is always encouraged by his teacher to find out
        where the highest truth has been taught most clearly; he may compare the Hinayana and Mahayana teachings and a thorough examination
        may determine that he prefers the latter to the former, thinking that in the
        latter the truth preached is complete, whereas the truths of the former are not
        ultimate. It is the exoteric Buddhist tradition to believe the truth but not
        who said it: truth (but not the person) is the most important. Supposing Nagarjuna had established a religion with a teaching going
        further than the Buddha's preaching in the Hinayana,
        then we should believe Nagarjuna and not Buddha,
        since the former would then have taught a more complete truth.
  
      
      
         
      
      In the Mahaparinirvana Sutra, a list of Four Reliances are given: First, our faith relies on truth and not on persons; second, we
        believe in the truth itself but not in letters and words of scriptures; third,
        we believe in the ultimate but not in the incomplete truth; and finally, we lay
        stress on wisdom (prajna) and not on mere
        consciousness (vijnana).
  
      
      
         
      
      Wise readers
        should prove for themselves that the Mahayana canonical discourses are
        Buddha-word by making a thorough and unbiased comparison.
            
      
      
         
      
      iii. In the
        Mahayana, it is never said that Hinayana is not
        Buddha-word. It is said that the Buddha preached the Lesser as foundation for the Great Vehicle, and this despite the fact that the
        Mahayana is already so complete. The latter does not at all mind admitting and
        indeed respecting the Hinayana, so why in their turn
        should the Theravadins be so narrow in their outlook?
  
      
      
         
      
      iv. If the
        four Agamas are carefully read, then in some places we do find references to
        Bodhisattvas, the three yanas (of disciples, solitary Buddhas, and Fully Enlightened Ones), past Buddhas, and other subjects often thought of as treated
        only by the Mahayana. The Agamas are not only the teaching of the Sravakas, though principally concerned with them.
  
      
      
         
      
      In the
        well-known invocation to the Buddha Sakyamuni widely
        used in Theravada lands (in Pali: Namo Tassa Bhagavato Arahato Samma Sambuddhassa),
        there are significant meanings to the three epithets of the Buddha. The first
        is Bhagavat (the Excellent One among men): this title
        belongs to the position of cause, representing the human body appearing among
        mankind but exalted above them. Second is Arhat (the
        Worthy One): this is in the position of course, since the Buddha practiced as
        an arhat and bhiksu himself, by his own life showing the way to enlightenment. The third is samyaksambuddha (the Fully Enlightened One): this is the
        aim of the Bodhisattva, which is in the position of consequence.
  
      
      
         
      
      Although the
        teachings of the Agamas do not mention clearly the six paramitas,
        still the elements can be discovered. For instance, in the Dharmapada,
        a Hinayana work, are found the following verses on
        Dana:
  
      
      
         
      
      "In this
        world it is good to serve mother
            
      
      And good to
        serve father as well,
            
      
      Good it is to
        serve the monks
            
      
      And
        good to give to the Noble Ones."
  
      
         
      
      "Truly,
        the miserly fare not to heaven worlds
            
      
      Nor indeed do
        fools praise liberality,
            
      
      But the wise
        man rejoices in giving
            
      
      And by such
        acts alone, he becomes happy hereafter."
  
      
      
         
      
      Great
        importance is also given to sila as may be seen from
        the many stanzas on this subject in the Dharmapada:
  
      
      
         
      
      "Hasten
        to do good, restrain your mind from evil.
  
      
      Whoever is
        slow to do good, his mind delights in evil."
  
      
      
         
      
      "Let
        none find out the faults of others
            
      
      Nor what is
        done or left undone by them.
            
      
      But one
        should only see
            
      
      What is done
        and not done by oneself."
  
      
      
         
      
      "Do not
        speak harshly to anyone,
            
      
      Those
        spoken to thus will retort.
  
      Indeed, angry
        speech is hurtful;
            
      
      Beware lest
        others retaliate."
  
      
      
         
      
      "Whoever
        in this world
            
      
      Destroys life,
            
      
      Utters lies,
            
      
      Takes what is
        not given,
            
      
      Consorts with
        others' wives,
            
      
      Or is
        addicted to taking strong drinks—
  
      
      Such a man
        digs up his own root (of goodness) in this very world."
  
      
      
         
      
      "The
        wise are controlled in body,
            
      
      Controlled in
        speech are they,
            
      
      And
        controlled in mind (as well).
  
      Truly, they
        are well controlled in every way."
  
      
      
         
      
      Ksanti (patience)
        is also praised in this book:
            
      
      "If,
        like a broken gong, you utter nothing,
            
      
      Then you have
        reached Nirvana, for anger is unknown to you."
  
      
      
         
      
      "Forbearance
        and patience are the highest penance,
            
      
      'Nirvana is
        supreme,' proclaim the Buddhas,
  
      
      Hurting
        others bodily, one is not a monk.
            
      
      One is not a
        recluse oppressing others."
  
      
      
         
      
      The last
        three paramitas (virya,
        energy; dhyana, meditation; and prajna,
        wisdom) are to be found mentioned often in Hinayana texts as desirable spiritual qualities, if not as perfections. Though we may
        trace these qualities going by the same names in both yanas,
        yet there is a difference in their underlying philosophy.
  
      
      
         
      
      These
        qualities are not paramitas since they lack the
        teaching of nonegoism (of both persons and dharmas). The Hinayana philosophy
        of an atomic theory of indivisible particles and the idea of similarly
        indivisible instants of time in which "minds" arise, abide, and
        decline, make this teaching incomplete. Why should these little ideas of
        permanence be clung to?
  
      
      
         
      
      (Mr. Chen here refers
        particularly to the Sarvastivada Abhidharma theories of matter and time with which Theravada Abhidharma has something in common.)
  
      
      
         
      
      However, the
        Buddha first preached to those of undeveloped faith and therefore encouraged
        his hearers to prove his doctrines of sunyata by
        analysis until there remained only particles regarded as unbreakable. Only
        later was he able to teach the full voidness teachings to those who could understand them in their own nature and without
        recourse to analysis.
  
      
      
         
      
      In his lifetime
        among men, comparatively long though it was, the Buddha could not complete the
        preaching of the Dharma. It was necessary for others, by the power of the Tathagata, to reveal to the world the more advanced
        teachings when the time was ripe. Such teachers were, for instance, Asvaghosa, Nagarjuna, and all the
        other great sages upon whom he has in the past and may in the future bestow his
        Dharma as he wishes.
  
      
      
         
      
      Though so
        poor in Enlightenment, I myself have received many doctrines bestowed by the Dharmakaya in the holy light of meditation. Among all of my
        Dharma-treasures seen in the holy light, there were only a few mudras (sacred hand gestures) that have been proved by my
        Chinese guru. He imparted to me some mudras from the
        Japanese Tantra by correspondence after I had seen
        them among my Dharma-treasures in the holy light and most of them have never
        yet been proved by my gums from
  
    Tibet
  
        ,
        as some had died while others were not with me in my hermitage. These mudras were not uncaused, nor were they made by myself, If
        I should claim they were self-made or made by me, it would be a great lie
        against the Dharma, for all of them are treasures from the Buddha's grace. A
        lie of such magnitude should bear the punishment of falling into the hells.
  
      
      
         
      
      Mr. Chen assured us:
              
      
      
         
      
      I never tell
        a lie about Dharma, and if indeed my statements about the Dharma revealed to me
        in meditation are such, may I at once fall into hell!
            
      
      
         
      
      v. In
        history, only 450 years passed between the Buddha's Parinirvana and the birth of Asvaghosa. In the meanwhile, Manjusri, who had so often heard the Lord preach, remained
        purposely on this earth so that the works of Asvaghosa were undoubtedly blessed by the inspiration of this Bodhisattva's presence and
        by the Dharmakaya. The knowledge of an intelligent
        Brahmin was turned towards the Buddha's teachings and, blessed in this way, he
        wrote the Mahayana-sraddhotpada Sastra.
        The Buddha indeed intended this for the development of the Mahayana.
  
      
      
         
      
      The four
        great Councils of the Hinayana (according to Sarvastivada tradition) at Rajagriha, Vaishali, Kusumapura, and Kubha (or Kasmir), we do believe
        to be true. In the Mahayana also there have been councils held by Manjusri. It is recorded in the last chapter of the Prajna-paramita Sastra that he
        was commanded by the Buddha shortly before his Parinirvana to collect together all the Mahayana teachings. For the faithful there can be
        no doubt about this as this sastra was written by the
        famous teacher Nagarjuna himself would be dare to
        tell a lie? To convince the sceptical is more
        difficult, as they may point out that this work was composed by a champion of
        the
  
    Great Way
  
        .
  
      
      
         
      
      b. Exoteric
        versus esoteric
            
      
      
         
      
      In
        
          China
        
        ,
        Mahayanists have sometimes said that the Vajrayana is
        not the Word of the Buddha. They have been called "heretics," or "outsiders,"
        like followers of Brahmanism. Such statements are the work of the ignorant.
        Unfortunately, very few understood well the old Vajrayana tradition in
  
    China
  
        ,
        since knowledge of it was confined to a few only—to the Emperor and his
        court—and did not influence society in general. The three sages from
  
    India
  
        who
        taught it in the Tang dynasty, Vajrabodhi, Amoghavajra, and Subhakarasinha,
        knew the Vajrayana very well, but as it was
        restricted to a few people, the unlearned say that it is not Buddhism: they do
        not know properly. This must be emphasized because we want to make very clear
        the whole and complete system of the yanas,
        Three-in-one.
  
      
      
         
      
      The Sutras on
        which the old Chinese Vajrayana school was based
        (which is the foundation for the present Shingon-shu in
  Japan
        ), are also
        translated into Tibetan, so Chinese Mahayanists should not think that they were
        produced in
  
    China
  
        .
        Why do they not read the Chinese Tripitaka? There are
        good translations of both the Vajrasekhara and Mahavairocana Sutras, the canonical bases of the Vajrayana of China and
  
    Japan
  
        . If Mahayanists suspect the
        authenticity of the Vajrayana, why do they not read
        these?
  
      
      
         
      
      c
        . The Japanese Tantra versus the Tibetan Anuttarayoga
  
      
         
      
      Teachers and
        writers on Shingon have said that the highest yoga of
        the Tibetan Tantras is not the Buddha's teaching. It
        has also been said that Padmasambhava was not a true
        Buddhist but rather a follower of Brahmanism! (Even some Gelugpas of great learning have said this.)
  
      
      
         
      
      Japanese
        authorities have rebuked the fourth yoga because of its secret Third Initiation
        yogic practices, saying that these are very bad, immoral, and so forth. They
        also hold that the fourth yoga is included in the third (the Yoga-tantra, with its teachings of Vajradhatu and Garbhadhatu), and that this third yoga is not
        found in
  
    Tibet
  
        .
        But on both counts they are not correct: firstly, the subjects dealt with in Anuttarayoga are only touched upon in the third tantra-group; secondly, Tsong-khapa in his sNgag-rim deals fully with the Yoga-tantra teaching, though admittedly it is not as stressed as
        in
  
    Japan
  
        .
        The fourth yoga was not, they must recognize, taken to
  
    China
  
        or taught
        there by the three tantrika sages. Kumarajiva, the great translator, certainly knew
        these most secret teachings and practiced them but he did not teach them to
        others.
  
      
      
         
      
      A story told
        about this teacher runs like this: he was envied by some monks who practiced
        exoteric Mahayana doctrines, since he carried out the Third Initiation with
        many beautiful companions. Once he invited all these monks to tea. He arranged
        a cup and a needle before each visitor and asked them to take the needles with
        their tea. Nobody had the courage to do so, at which he collected all the
        needles, swallowed them, and again sent them out from the pores of his skin by
        his power attained through the Third Initiation. Afterward, no one dared speak
        against him or to feel envy toward him.
            
      
      
         
      
      Then Mr. Chen advised:
              
      
      
         
      
      First, one
        must practice the lower three parts of the Tantras and then the Tantra especially taught in
  
    Tibet
  
        . I have
        written a long essay on this subject, entitled "The Japanese Yogi for His
        Advancement Should Learn Anuttarayoga." There I
        have advised the Japanese tantrikas to study the Anuttarayoga with the first three yogas since the Tibetans' emphasis on the fourth tends to lead to a neglect of these
        necessary preparations.
  
      
      
         
      
      Forty years
        ago, a famous Chinese monk, Da Yong, took ten of his
        disciples to
  
    Japan
  
        ,
        thus exemplifying the way. At first he studied and practiced in
  
    Japan
  
        the three yogas taught in Shingon.
        Not feeling satisfied with the results of this meditation, he then went to
  
    Tibet
  
        and
        learned the Anuttarayoga. His knowledge in the Tantras complete, he was able to help many monks and lay people
        understand the Vajrayana.
  
      
      
         
      
      Only when one
        has studied everything one may criticize, but not before.
            
      
      
         
      
      d. Conflicts
        in
        
          Tibet
        
        
      
      
         
      
      In Tibet,
        they surely all believe in the three yanas but there
        is a little conflict from differences in doctrine between the New Sect (Gelugpa) formed upon the teachings of Tsong-khapa,
        and the Old Sects (Nyingmapa, Kargyupa, Sakyapa, etc.). We should examine these conflicting
        points and see whether or not they can be "harmonized."
  
      
      
         
      
      Tsong-khapa does admit
        that the Great Perfection of the Nyingmapa or any
        other Mahamudra realization cannot be attained unless
        one has first practiced the third initiation which empowers one to meditate
        using the divine yogic union. He did not want to separate these and said one
        may only attain the fourth initiation (for instance, Mahamudra)
        after practicing the third. The Nyingmapas, however,
        teach two ways: one of liberation and the other of vajra-love
        practice. Both, claim the teachers of the Red Sect, can lead their
        practitioners to Full Enlightenment in this life.
  
      
      
         
      
      Another point controverted by Tsong-khapa related to the teaching of a Chan Master named "Mahayana Monk", who,
        hundreds of years before, had taught in
        
          Tibet
        
        . During his stay great
        numbers of tantrikas followed him, causing some
        Tibetan and Indian monks' concern. They therefore invited the Indian pandit-bhiksu Kamalasila to come
        to
  
    Tibet
  
        and debate with the Chan teacher. This resulted in the Council of Lhasa, after
        which, due to the king's instructions, Mahayana Monk had to flee, leaving only
        one shoe behind in
  
    Tibet
  
        .
  
      
      
         
      
      He taught
        that Chan emphasizes nondiscrimination; indeed, it teaches that if one clings
        to discrimination there is no possibility of enlightenment. He brought
        quotations from a hundred sutras and sastras to
        support his assertion.
  
      
      
         
      
      Tsong-khapa on this
        point reasons: if there is no discrimination, how can one investigate the
        truth? Without investigation, how will there be any practice of samapatti?
  
      
      
         
      
      In the
        highest truth there is no discrimination; all is ultimately sunyata.
        However, the great Geshe's mistake was to regard Chan
        as a yana of cause, which it
        is not, being truly a vehicle of consequence. I have written "An Essay on Tsong-khapa's Lam-rim," in which both sides are
  "harmonized."
  
      
      
         
      
      Further, the Chan
        Master said, "If one meets an Enlightened Master, then immediately one
        realizes Chan (which belongs to the final Truth and not to immature samapatti).'' Tsong-khapa said,
        though, that this applies only to sages and not to neophytes. The Chan, however
        of one who has attained in this way is just like that of a sage and never again
        resembles the neophyte's samapatti. If it is admitted
        that theirs is the same Chan as that of sages, then one should agree that the
        nondiscrimination of the Chan practitioners is quite right. Chan has never used
        a common meditative way such as samatha or samapatti. If it did, then discriminations to investigate
        the truth would certainly be necessary, as Tsong-khapa emphasized.
  
      
      
         
      
      I have often
        had the thought that if Tsong-khapa was an emanation
        (nirmanakaya) of Manjusri,
        why did he emphasize something different from the Old Sect? Once I was in Lu Huo, Xi Kang hermitage and in my meditative light I saw
        upon my head the light body of Manjusri, which was
        transmuted into the light body of Tsong-khapa. Since
        then, I do believe that he is the emanation of that Bodhisattva. Then I tried
        to find out what were his reasons for refuting the views of the Old Sect.
  
      
      
         
      
      In Tsong-khapa's time, the conditions were bad among the old
        schools, with married teachers living a life of eating and drinking, having
        married just for pleasure (as contrasted with taking a dakini for Tantric practice); bhiksus, too, were not
        adhering to their rules. Evil men, saying that they were Tantric teachers, took
        advantage of the Doctrine for worldly gain and pleasure. Tsong-khapa was determined to change the situation. Without him, to whom we should all be
        very, very grateful, there would be no Buddhadharma in
  
    Tibet
  
        .
        He emphasized practice, just as the old schools had, but also urged that the
        preparations necessary for it were numerous and take long to perform. He taught
        that one should complete these before actual practice, so that one is truly
        ready. In this way, he taught the importance of first acquiring merits, and
        laid less emphasis on wisdom, which was stressed in the older schools.
  
      
      
         
      
      Tsong-khapa also said
        that the difference between an Arhat and a Buddha is
        that the Buddha has more merits than the Arhat, who
        is also deficient in sunyata realization. As to sunyata itself, he taught that it is the same in Hinayana and Mahayana.
  
      
      
         
      
      Certainly, we
        should not directly practice Mahamudra. First collect
        merits, and after that practice the first, second, and third yogas, coming finally to the fourth. Tsong-khapa shows so clearly in his teachings, as in his Stages of the Path, that we should
        go step by step, each level the foundation for the one following. Without this
        teaching, it is doubtful whether there would now be any Buddhism now in
  
    Tibet
  
        ; so we must
        again express our gratitude.
  
      
      
         
      
      However, I do
        not agree with him that Hinayana and Mahayana teachings
        on sunyata are the same. In the two yanas, the purport of sunyata is
        the same but its power to penetrate good and evil differs. The sunyata of the Hinayana is like a
        shallow river upon which only small boats can sail; but rivers lead down to the
        sea, which is like the voidness taught in the
        Mahayana. It may be compared to a great ocean upon which even the largest
        vessels may float without obstruction.
  
      
      
         
      
      All these
        conflicts are settled by our practice of the Three-ways-in-one system of meditation
        outlined here. Before we finish this section, one more nonsensical dispute
        should be mentioned.
            
      
      
         
      
      e. Conflicts
        in
        
          China
        
        
      
      
         
      
      In
        
          China
        
        there
        have been many schools, and each one has tried to make a division of the
        Buddha's teaching to account for the numerous and apparently diverse methods
        found within it. In southern
  
    China
  
        ,
        three schools tried to do this, and in the north were seven; all these arose
        before Tian Tai. Only one monk, Fa Min of the Tang dynasty, made a division into two: the exoteric or Nirmanakaya teachings; and the esoteric, originating from
        the Sambhogakaya. In general, however, nobody heeded
        the Vajrayana and, instead of incorporating it, left
        it to form a separate sect. All the teachers made their divisions with only one
        object: to raise it above the other schools. This, we can say, is just
        sectarianism. Thus, we find each school proclaiming one or two scriptures as
        the highest teaching of the Buddha: the Tian Tai say
        it is the Lotus Sutra, but the Hua Yan claim it is the Avatamsaka, and so
        on.
  
      
      
         
      
      We can settle
        all these disputes in a very nice way by our practice of the Three-in-one.
            
      
      
         
      
      2. Development
        of the Buddha's Doctrine
            
      
      
         
      
      The second
        reason why we should propound the system of Three-ways-in-one is that we
        emphasize to the utmost the development of the Buddha's doctrine itself. If we
        wish to make any division of teachings, it should be according to known
        historical facts—an objective division, not a subjective one based on our own
        preference of school. We should not follow ideas such as those of the Hua Yan, who say that only a day or two after the Sambodhi of Gautama, he preached the Avatamsaka Sutra and then, since no one understood, gave a "beginner's" course
        in the Agama Sutras. Who can prove this? Does not this classification rather glorify
        the school which made it? We should not like to do this.
  
      
      
         
      
      a. Historical
        Sequence
            
      
      
         
      
      The Buddha
        first preached to the five bhiksus in the
  Deer Park
        near
  Benares
        .
        This is according to all historical accounts, which state that the Sutra called
  "The Turning of the Wheel of the Law" (Dharmachakra pravartana) was the first taught by the Buddha.
  
      
      
         
      
      After the
        Buddha's parinirvana, history again definitely
        records that 450 years passed before Bhadanta Asvaghosa revealed and established the Mahayana.
  
      
      
         
      
      Still later,
        when the Mahayana was flourishing, the Siddha Nagarjuna obtained the Vajrayana teachings from the Iron Pagoda in South India, according to the Chinese and
        Japanese tradition (see also App. I, Part Two, B, 1). However, the Tibetans say that the heavens opened and the Vajrayana scriptures then descended. Even among them we find the old and new, with the Kalachakra (Wheel of Time) teachings admittedly the latest.
  
      
      
         
      
      The sequence
        of teachings is shown in history and there is no good reason for us to turn
        these matters to our own advantage, this way or that. Our classification should
        only show the unity of the whole tradition, making it clear that the three yanas are aspects of the One Way. Certainly, as a believer
        and practitioner of the Three-in-one, I believe the Buddha preached the Hinayana personally in his Nirmanakaya;
        the Vajrayana in his Sambhogakaya;
        and some of the Mahayana personally while alive on earth, while other Mahayana
        scriptures were derived from his Dharmakaya through
        his outflowing bodies (Nisyandakaya)
        as Asvaghosa and Nagarjuna.
  
      
      
         
      
      b. Inherent
        Nature of the Teachings
            
      
      
         
      
      The second
        point to emphasize here is the inherent nature of the various teachings.
            
      
      
         
      
      The Buddha
        knew well that people love worldly things; therefore, he first gave teachings
        on such subjects as the four fundamental mindfulnesses,
        the need for renunciation, the stress on morality, the fact that pain and
        pleasure are inextricably bound together, the reason for this, and the Way out
        of this tangle taught in the Four Noble Truths and the Eightfold Noble Path.
        All these factors were not merely taught by him, but lived and realized in his
        life. Especially is this true of renunciation, of which he gave a wonderful
        example to all by leading the life of a bhiksu.
  
      
      
         
      
      When
        renunciation is well-developed and one knows the pain associated with the
        world, then only lacking are the aspiration to save others (bodhicitta)
        and the thorough comprehension of sunyata. Hence,
        establishment in the Mahayana is necessary.
  
      
      
         
      
      Those
        following the
        
          Great Way
        
        must spend much time to help all sentient beings; and, though it is said in the
        Bodhisattva precepts that wisdom-beings should meditate three times a day,
        Bodhisattvas are mostly concerned with universal salvation.
  
      
      
         
      
      Next comes
        the preaching of the third yana.
        Regarding the most important principle of sunyata, in
        the Hinayana it is not complete, and in the Mahayana
        it is only realized psychologically; thus, the Vajrayana must be developed, where sunyata is understood in the
        complete psychophysical sense.
  
      
      
         
      
      We must have
        such a sequence of teachings as this, and then we can receive Full
        Enlightenment.
        
      
      
         
      
      c. The
        Sequence of Meditations
            
      
      
         
      
      We are now
        concerned with the third reason that supports our Dharma of Three-in-one. For
        in meditation itself, we should follow the order of these vehicles and unite
        within our realization all three of them.
            
      
      
         
      
      i. Hinayana
            
      
      
         
      
      First
        meditate on the Truth of Duhkha, then will follow a
        thorough renunciation. Some desire is conquered in this stage. However, of the
        two inner obstacles, the veil of sorrows (klesavarana)
        is destroyed, while the veil of knowledge (jneyavarana)
        remains.
  
      
      
         
      
      ii. Mahayana
            
      
      
         
      
      From this,
        one should go on to practice the complementary Mahayana teachings of the paramitas and realization of sunyata with regard to both the person and events. After such practice, both inner and
        outer obstacles are easily destroyed: the klesa-veil
        and most of the jneyaveil are torn down.
  
      
      
         
      
      iii. Vajrayana
            
      
      
         
      
      Defilements—both jneya and klesa—are of two
        kinds, acquired (already destroyed in Mahayana meditations) and innate, and the
        latter are very hard to meditate away. While the former are psychical, the
        latter pertain to the body, and it is very difficult to still the subtle
        movements they cause in the mind with their ultra-fine energies. By the
        Mahayana teachings it will indeed take a long time to do this; it is possible
        however, by the methods of practice given in the Third Initiation of Anuttarayoga, to rid oneself completely of these very
        subtle obstacles. This is done by the discovery of the innate wisdom, only
        possible in the Vajrayana.
  
      
       
       
        
      
      
      [Home][Back to main list][Back to Table of Contest list][Chinese versions][Next Chapter][Go to Dr. Lin's works]