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Lama Surya Das

Choosing Universal Love

THE BODHISATTVA VOW

from: Awakening the Buddha Within, Lama Surya Das

Traditional teachings about rebirth say that most of us are unwitting prisoners on the wheel of samsara; we keep returning because we have no choice. According to this way of thinking, there are also men and women walking among us who are here of their own conscious volition. These men and women are known as Bodhisattvas. Bodhi means awakening; sattva means being. This is a being who is ready for nirvana but whose compassion is so great that he or she remains on this earth solely in order to reduce suffering and help free others. A Bodhisattva is someone with pure, impeccable intentions - a gentle yet fearless spiritual warrior who strives unceasingly to help everyone reach nirvanic peace and enlightenment.

A transcendent Bodhisattva has seen beyond delusion and selfishness; he or she has felt and experienced the intolerable despair, alienation, misery, and suffering in the world: Because such a person is able to understand that we are all caught in the same existential plight, he or she seeks to alleviate the suffering of all.

In Mahayana Buddhism, one is encouraged to take what we call the Bodhisattva Vow. Taking this vow means you understand the world's pain, and you commit to work for the enlightenment of all. That means all the people, all the creatures, including all the inhabitants of the air and sea - insects, birds, shellfish, dolphins, whales and sharks, all the shiny little eyes in the dark forests, as well as all the creepy crawly, buzzing things trying to get in and chew on your house or on you.

The first time I heard the Bodhisattva Vow was in I971, and I was at Lama Thubten Yeshe's monastery in Nepal. I felt overwhelmed by the magnitude of it all. And I'm still somewhat intimidated by it. Lama Yeshe explained the vow very simply. He said, 'Think of what you want, and realize that all beings want and need the same things. They are just seeking it through different ways.'

If you were to take the Bodhisattva Vow, you would commit yourself in this way:

    Sentient beings are numberless: I vow to liberate them.
    Delusions are inexhaustible: I vow to transcend them.
    Dharma teachings are boundless: I vow to master them.
    The Buddha's enlightened way is unsurpassable: I vow to
    embody it.

This is a four-line affirmation sangha members chant and avow every day. To take the Bodhisattva Vow means that at least for a moment, one can see past one's own problems and preoccupations and elevate the spiritual gaze toward universal fulfillment. The moment you affirm that great intention - to work for the good of all living creatures - whether or not you are always able to follow it as perfectly as you might wish - you are called a Bodhisattva, a child of the Buddhas. When this epiphany occurs, all the Buddhas rejoice. The scriptures say that as soon as you make this Bodhisattva Vow to realize enlightenment and relieve universal suffering; all the Buddhas, Bodhisattvas, devas, angels, and guardians of the Dharma clap their hands and rain down celestial flowers and divine nectar. It's like you scored a touchdown or hit a home run. As poetic as that seems, I really feel that this is true in a spiritual sense. You can feel it yourself as you open a little more to the joy of spiritual awakening.

from: Awakening the Buddha Within, Lama Surya Das

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