Vajrayana Buddhism
Siddhartha Gautama, the historical buddha, maintained
that he was neither god, deity, or superman, but simply a human being who had
chosen, through his own efforts in meditation and analysis, to awaken. Thus
the title "Buddha", "one who has awakened." He did not claim
to be a god and he has never been regarded as such by Buddhists. In his 45 years
of teaching he codified a system of study and meditation that would enable anyone
with sufficient inspiration and diligence to do as he did. At his death in Kushingar
at the age of 80 he did not appoint a successor. Instead, his final words were,
"Monks, all compounded things are subject to change. Diligently work out
your own salvation."
Over the next twenty-five centuries his followers took him at his word, finding
illumination in the monastic system set up by the Buddha, in solitary retreat,
or in the life of a wandering yogi. His followers spread across the length and
breadth of the Indian subcontinent and to the north, where the tradition took
root and developed at its own pace behind the forbidding wall of the Himalayas.
The Buddha taught non-self, anatman. All objects that can be encountered
or taken up by the mind are, while appearing clearly, devoid of inherent self
or essence. All things arise dependent on causes and conditions, are multiple
in nature, and are impermanent. They are shunya, empty of a permanent,
single, and separate nature. Thus, all phenomena, inner and outer, mental and
physical, have no inherent essence or existence. They merely appear. The true
nature of phenomena places them beyond the extremes of existence or non-existence.
The true nature of phenomena is luminosity, selwa, the unity of appearance
and emptiness.
The cessation of ignorance and suffering becomes manifest in dependence upon
meditating with knowledge of reality's precise nature: interdependence, multiplicity,
and change. The notion of emptiness does not contradict the appearance of phenomena.
Indeed, without the possibility of change nothing could come into existence
to begin with. From within shunyata, the great variety of dependently
arisen appearances manifest.
Vajrayana or Tantric Buddhism takes shunyata and the mind's natural
ability to arise as emotion, thought, or imagery as its base of practice. Seemingly
arcane concepts such as non-self, compassion, or enlightenment can be personified
in the form of a deity. In this way the constantly moving mind can develop and
hold to a formerly elusive object of meditation. "Clarity" or "compassion"
for example, might appear as a peaceful deity, as a wrathful deity, or as a
multi-armed couple in union. The pantheon of deities in the Tibetan Buddhist
tradition does not contradict the fundamental Buddhist tenet of non-theism.
These deities are never seen as anything but the spontaneous expression of one's
basic enlightened nature.
In the end, the manifestations of deities are seen as temporary steps on the
path to awakening. Just as a raft is left in the water once one has crossed
a river successfully, all conceptual invention is left behind once it has served
its purpose.
Each practitioner has had to resolve the seemingly contradictory truths of appearance
and non-self through the hard work of study and meditation. Thus, Buddhism is
not a religion that hews dogmatically to the words of a founder; it is a way
of being that only comes alive as one's insight and meditative stability matures.
Even today, the example of a living teacher is generally considered more apropos
to one's life situation than the words of the historical buddha.
In the dawn of hard-won clarity, practitioners may turn to acknowledge the long
line of teachers, yogis, retreatants, and householders who have gone before
them. This is the bedrock of lineage; a tremendous appreciation for those who
have taken on the great task of awakening themselves. This gratitude is naturally
expressive; it can find form as a deity, a poem, a text, or a song of longing
and devotion.
--Tharpa Melong
Here is the sacred Jumna and here the River Ganges,
Here are Prayaga and Benares, here are Sun and Moon.
I have visited in my wanderings shrines and other places of pilgrimage,
But I have not seen another shrine blissful like my own body.
--Saraha
"Buddhism is the only religion that doesn't promise anything. Only suggests
we work with ourselves fundamentally."
--Chögyam Trungpa, Rinpoche