Rainbow Jewels

Rainbow Jewels

During June-July, 2006 a holy state appeared at the  mandala of H.H. Dorje Chang Buddha III Wan Ko Yisinubu. This was the site of many inner-tantric initiations for rinpoches, dharma teachers, and lamas as well as many Buddha-dharma ceremonies, such as the Buddhas Bestowing Nectar Dharma Assembly and the Highest Form of Bathing the Buddha Dharma Assembly. A jacaranda tree that rained nectar for seven straight days in order to offer congratulations to H.H. Great Dharma King on his holy birthday is also located at this  site. After the Highest Form of Bathing the Buddha Dharma Assembly, the area under the lotus tub used to bathe a statue of the Buddha grew Auspicious Grass of the Four Jewels. This was the same site where Zhaxi Zhuoma Rinpoche received the Dharma Wheel initiation.

Detail of the "Rainbow Jewels" on the Auspicious Grass of the Four Jewels

Detail of the “Rainbow Jewels” on the Auspicious Grass of the Four Jewels. Their colors were more vivid like glittering rubies, emeralds, diamonds, sapphires, and other gems.

The ascension of a rainbow that manifested from the "Rainbow Jewels."

The ascension of a rainbow that manifested from the “Rainbow Jewels.”

Beginning in late June and on several other occasions through mid-July, that same area suddenly emitted a few thousand glittering and colorful lights. These sparkling lights not only manifested a variety of different colors, they also continually changed as they glittered. Some of them were on the tips of grass, some of them were near the roots of grass, some of them were on the middle of grass, and some of them were suspended in the empty space between blades of grass. Different colors could be seen depending on the distance and angle from which one viewed that area. Moreover, each person saw different things when viewing that area from the same place. Some saw multicolored lights, some saw white lights, some saw blue lights, some saw red lights, and some saw green lights. Some even saw rainbows that quickly ascended into the heavens. What is even more amazing is that those lights constantly changed colors. Some of those lights even suddenly disappeared, only to reappear suddenly a moment later. All of these things can be clearly seen in the video shot at that time. On one occasion a fragrant perfume was emitted from the area and the roar of Vajra Thunder could be heard in the heavens. Zhaxi Zhuoma Rinpoche reports that although she did not see these lights the first day as she was in San Francisco and only saw a very few the next time they appeared due to her karmic hindrances, she was able to see many, many of these brilliant and holy “jewels” on subsequent occasions. What was amazing was the fact that they were indestructible “vajra jewels.” The disciples tried to hose them down with water, but they were not moved. They also tried to spray another nearby area with water to see if the sunlight would create something similar, but to no avail. These were indescribable holy blessings from another realm and not of any worldly source.

This holy scene thoroughly demonstrates that the Buddhas constantly bless this mandala with wonderful auspicious signs.

Link: https://wisdomtea.org/2023/06/29/rainbow-jewels/

The Law of Cause and Effect

The Law of Cause and Effect

H.H. Dorje Chang Buddha III tells us that “within the truth of Buddhism, there is the doctrine that the law of cause and effect can never be denied. Cause and effect cannot be eliminated. To say that it can is to take a nihilistic point of view. Hence, we can only build a wall of good karma, which is like building a retaining wall. This wall of good karma has the effect of blocking us from our evil karma.”

Dorje Pa Mu has also told us that all Buddha-dharma can be condensed into the words cause and effect. All conditioned phenomena are subject to the processes of cause and effect and the four stages of arising, subsisting, changing and passing away. Those who realize the unconditioned obtain enlightenment as a result of certain causes. Yet, they are not attached to the thought of obtaining enlightenment. All Buddhist disciples must understand cause and effect, but merely understanding this principle is not enough. One must clearly believe in the principle and live accordingly. One must use this principle in one’s actual practice to solve one’s worldly problems. One ends causes and effects through cultivation.

Dorje Pa Mu also warned us that we would not exist without other beings. Our cultivation and any accomplishment we achieve are dependent upon and made possible by other living beings. We must repay the kindness of the countless living beings in the six realms of existence. Otherwise, we will violate the law of cause and effect. It is as Shakyamuni Buddha said, we should never fail to repay the kindness granted us.

Dorje Pa Mu reminds us that everything in this world comes into being through the occurrence of certain causes and conditions and passes away with the cessation of such causes and conditions. Nothing can be held on to and nothing can be kept forever. In fact, there is nothing to obtain, seek, lose, or take.

All karma created in the present life and previous lives is stored in the alaya-vijnana or the eighth consciousness. The alaya consciousness is regarded as that which undergoes the cycle of birth and death.

Link: https://wisdomtea.org/2023/06/22/the-law-of-cause-and-effect/

Phases of Transmission

Phases of Transmission

Buddhism began in the in 6th century BCE in northeast India with the historic Shakyamuni Buddha teaching for around 45 years in that area. Buddhism lasted in India as a major movement for over a thousand years, starting a gradual decline in influence in the seventh century CE, although the great Buddhist universities and monastic centers continued to flourish for many centuries. The Muslim invasion of India began in the 11th century, destroying vast Buddhist libraries and universities in the process. By the 13th century Buddhism had disappeared from Northern India where it had originated, not returning until the 19th century.

First Phase: In the 3rd century BCE, King Ashoka, who ruled India from 272 to 231 BCE, sent missionaries throughout India and South-east Asia to transmit what became known as the Theravada teachings. These teachings were transmitted first to Sri Lanka and Myanmar (Burma) and later to Thailand, Cambodia, Laos, and southern Vietnam where Buddhism still holds a dominant influence on the culture, although recent political events have curtailed the role of the sangha in the governments of the communist and military dominated regimes. Over the years, the Mahayana was also transmitted and there is even some evidence of the tantric practices of the Vajrayana in some of these countries, but the monastic dominated Theravada prevailed.

Second Phase: The flowering of the mahayana tradition began around the 1st century of the Current Era (CE). The great university at Nalanda was founded in the 2nd century CE. However, the evolution of mahayana Buddhist thinking and study was already well established before the start of the current era. The great Dharma King and Mahasiddha Nagarjuna (150-250) founded the Madhyamaka School in the 2nd century. In the 4th century Dharma King Asanga, founded the Yogachara School. These two lineages were the basis for the mahayana teachings which then spread into Pakistan, Afghanistan, Indonesia, and along the Silk Road into China and Northern Viet Nam and on into Korea (4th century) and Japan (6th century). Bodhidharma went to China in 526 and began what became the Ch’an or Zen School. The Pure Land, T’ian T’ai, Hua-Yen and Fa-Hsiang schools all evolved in China by the late seventh century. Many of these schools took root and flourished in Korea and Japan as Buddhism waned in China. Buddhist influence in China peaked during the 10th century, but remained an essential component of Chinese culture, although the Communists have tried systematically to repress its influence. Afghanistan and Indonesia became Muslim dominated countries and completely eradicated the practice of Buddhism. Some of the great monuments of mahayana Buddhism from this phase still remain in these countries, howbeit mainly as tourist attractions. The gigantic Buddha statues destroyed by the Taliban regime in Afghanistan in 2001 and by other Islamic groups in Pakistan in 2007 were from this phase.

Third Phase: The esoteric mahayana or tantra practice was well established in India by the 7th century. The esoteric or vajrayana teachings were transmitted to Tibet, Bhutan, and China in the 8th century and went on to Japan (early 9th century), Mongolia (13th century), and with the Tibetan diaspora back into India and Nepal (20th century). There is also some evidence of transmission of these teachings into southeast Asia, especially Myanmar and Sri Lanka. The Indian Dharma King and Mahasiddha Padmasambhava went to Tibet in the 8th century. Vikramasila University was founded around the same time in India.

Dharma King Atisha, a leading teacher from Vikramasila, went to Tibet in 1042. Marpa and Drokmi went to India from Tibet to seek the Dharma in the 11th century. Much of the Buddha-dharma of India from this phase was transmitted to Tibet before it was destroyed by Muslim invasions during the 11th and 12th centuries. The conquering Muslims sacked the great Nalanda Monastic University in 1197 and Vikramasila in 1203.

For about 500 years after the arrival of Padmasambhava, many obtained liberation in Tibet. The highest Dharmas were freely taught, but sometimes to those who were not qualified to receive them. In the fourteenth century, Dharma King Tsongkhapa (1357-1419), an emanation of Manjushri, restored monastic discipline in Tibet and corrected the false teachings that had evolved through the many false rinpoches in Tibet and from those fleeing India. The Buddha-dharma that evolved in Tibet represented the highest and most powerful of all the Buddha-dharmas to date. In 1950 the Chinese communists invaded Tibet suppressing Buddhism, destroying monasteries and temples, and persecuting monks and nuns whom they considered to be parasites of the working people. Many of the surviving rinpoches and lamas fled to India, Bhutan, Nepal, and the West, while most of those remaining in what had been Tibet were imprisoned or forced to return to other professions, usually hard labor. After the Cultural Revolution some were allowed to return and rebuild their monasteries, but with only a handful of monks, and mostly to maintain them as tourist attractions.

Fourth Phase: 18th-19th century CE. Buddhism began to be transmitted to the West as Buddhists from various Asian countries started migrating to the West in the mid 19th century and as Westerners going to Japan, Korea, China, and south-east Asia to seek the Dharma returned to teach what they had learned. Like in Tibet after the massive out migration from India in the Middle Ages, the West has seen a proliferation of false teachers who primarily teach as a means of livelihood and who do not have an authentic lineage or know the correct Buddha-dharma.

His Holiness Dorje Chang Buddha  came to this world to show living beings that the power and wisdom of the true Buddha-dharma that Shakyamuni Buddha possessed can still be learned in this age. His Holiness also came to correct the mistakes that have appeared in the various transmissions over time; and to teach the highest Dharmas of Shakyamuni Buddha, some of which have not yet been transmitted. His Holiness has said that only 30% of the Buddha-dharma that Shakyamuni had received was taught during His lifetime. The Nagas received and kept around 70% of the dharma of Shakyamuni in their palace beneath the sea. It is important to remember that Shakyamuni Buddha learned this dharma from His master, Dipkankara Buddha, another manifestation of Dorje Chang Buddha.

Dharma King Padmasambhava prophesied in the 8th century that “When the iron eagle flies and horses run on wheels, the Tibetan people will be scattered over the earth, and the Dharma will go to the land of the red man.” Earlier Shakyamuni Buddha stated in The Sutra Requested by the Goddess of Flawless Light that 2,500 years after His passing, the Dharma will spread to the “land of those with red faces.” Native Americans have always been thought of as the “red” race, although some think this refers to the “pinko-grey” color of some Caucasians. Either way it would appear that these prophecies were correct.

One can see from the map shown above and the lineage chart of the various sects and schools how Buddhism has evolved and been transmitted over time.

What isn’t obvious from these graphics are the so called “Golden Ages” that existed in these countries when Buddhism was at its peak of influence. The art and poetic expression from these ages still amaze us, whether it be from the grotto caves of India, Sri Lanka, and China, the amazing ancient stupas of Sri Lanka and Burma, the Angkor Wat of Cambodia, the famous temple ruins in Indonesia, or the magnificent sacred art and architecture throughout China and Japan.

As Buddhism waned in one location, it appeared in another culture, only to evolve into yet another form that was appropriate to teach those living in that time and place. At each point in history, great beings incarnated to make this possible. America now has transmissions from all of these great phases in the evolution of Buddhism transmitted from many different cultures. America also has H. H. Dorje Chang Buddha III.

Link: https://wisdomtea.org/2023/06/15/phases-of-transmission/

Purification

Purification

Even though we are cultivating ourselves, it is hard to overcome many, many lifetimes of evil behavior accumulated over eons of time, both as humans and as non-humans. However, we can stop negative actions from ripening by purifying them. His Holiness Dorje Chang Buddha III said it is like building a wall of good karma to protect us from the bad. Our bad karma cannot be eliminated–only by becoming enlightened can we escape the laws of cause and effect. The sutras say that “there can be no fault so serious that it cannot be purified by the four powers or four opponent forces.” Even Milarepa and Angulimala, who were both mass-murderers, were able to purify their negative karma and become enlightened in a single lifetime, but they both were able to do this by following enlightened masters and using these powers. These four opponent powers that are essential for successful purification are:

1) The power of regret: One begins by reflecting on regret; the awareness that actions we have committed bring suffering to ourselves and others. This is not the same as guilt, which implies a negative and helpless state of mind and is not useful, but a sort of “intelligent regret,” which is a very positive and creative mental state aimed at correcting the mistake so we won’t repeat it.

2) The power of reliance: To correct our mistakes or negative actions directed toward either the Four Jewels or other sentient beings, we take refuge and generate bodhichitta. We rely on the Buddha who is our role model, the dharma that is the teachings of the Buddha, and the sangha.

3) The power of remedy (the antidote): These are positive actions of body, speech, and mind that we do to purify the negativity. This is “building the wall” of good karma. This can include kind deeds, chanting mantras, meditation, etc. and the dedication of the merit of what we have done to help anyone we may have harmed.

4) The power of resolve: This is our ongoing determination to never repeat the negative action and then not doing it again.

Of course there are dharmas that can be learned to help elicit the support of the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas, but they all depend on these four powers.

Link: https://wordpress.com/post/wisdomtea.org/1266

Emptiness

Emptiness

H.H. Dorje Chang Buddha III has told us that there are three levels of true emptiness and wonderful existence. The first is to understand the principle. The second is to realize the wonderful existence. But these two mean that you only understand this. You can’t actually do it. The third is where you actually know the relationship between true emptiness and wonderful existence and not just realize it, but you actually attain that state. You enter that state. That is when “form is emptiness, emptiness is form.” It is hard for us to do this because of our bad karma. The dharma protectors will not bless us.

There is a tendency, especially among Western students, to talk about emptiness and to imitate certain masters who actually had the level of realization to understand that samsara and nirvana are both empty. They think that because “everything is empty” that they need not abide by the precepts, show respect for holy objects, etc. They argue that it is ok to behave in this manner because these things are all empty. This is not correct, but the behavior of demons. Only someone who has truly experienced emptiness can understand emptiness in this manner. Some teachers–especially in Zen and Tibet–engaged in outrageous behavior to wake up their disciples and heighten their state of realization. This is known as “deliberate behavior” but it is not to be practiced by ordinary people. Without correct understanding and motivation such behavior will only result in rebirth in the hells or lower realms and will certainly not enable one to progress on the path. One must be careful to not fall into either of the extremes of “nihilism” where one believes that nothing exists or “eternalism” where one believes that things do have an inherent existence. That is the reason we study the Middle Way (Madhyamaka).

True emptiness or non-being is the same as wonderful existence or being. Form and emptiness are one and the same. Nothingness and somethingness are not different. All worldly phenomena exist in a false manner. They arise due to the convergence of causes and conditions. They vanish when these causes and conditions break up or cease. This is the truth underlying the cycle of birth and death. The ignorant person thinks that there is a self underlying the five aggregates or skandhas or that one or more of the five aggregates are the self. All five aggregates are intrinsically empty.

Link: https://wordpress.com/post/wisdomtea.org/1253