Today, at the request of
this Dharma Centre I am conducting the ceremony of Refuge, the
transmission of the formal procedure by which individual people confirm
that they are Buddhists. We make this commitment at the beginning of
our life as Buddhists. We also constantly renew the commitment by
taking Refuge again and again, throughout our lives until we truly
become Buddha by reaching enlightenment.
We
begin with Refuge, we live with Refuge and, appropriately, end with
Refuge. Refuge is an on-going commitment for all of us. I believe that
there are a few individuals here today who are taking Refuge for the
first time and the rest of us are renewing our Refuge commitment
Some
of you have been Buddhists for a long time and have said the Refuge
prayer many hundreds of times. But however long we have been Buddhists,
provided that we have true understanding, we shall learn something
about Refuge every time we repeat the Refuge prayer. This way it is
quite wonderful. But if we do not understand Refuge clearly, then just
repeating these words so many times can become nonsense. No matter how
often we say it we must always try to mean every single word of this
prayer.
We only really understand Refuge when we truly realise
what a Buddha is. It is a very deep experience. "Taking Refuge" is not
just some kind of ceremony to "Join the club" where you get some sort
of club card and a club name - it is not like that. We begin each
session of prayer, meditation or practice, with the Refuge prayer. If
the practice has four sessions in a day, we say the Refuge prayer four
times; if the practice has six sessions a day then we say the Refuge
prayer six times, and every time we repeat the prayer, we should try to
do so with deeper meaning than the time before. Sometimes we manage to
achieve this, sometimes we do not. If we have three sessions a day, by
the time we reach the third session we will have said the Refuge prayer
three times that day; whether the quality is better or worse at the
third time, only you can tell.
There is the Hinayana way of
understanding Refuge in Buddha, Dharma and Sangha; there is the
Mahayana way and there is the Vajrayana way. I am speaking here today
as a Vajrayana practitioner and a Vajrayana practitioner of the
Mahamudra lineage. I shall be saying how we define Buddha, Dharma, and
Sangha and how we define taking Refuge in what we call these "Three
Jewels".
Taking Refuge is normally done using the Refuge text
according to the Hinayana aspect of Refuge. As we are Vajrayana
practitioners, we say the words according to the Hinayana tradition but
the meaning we have in our mind is according to the Vajrayana
tradition. Ultimately the meaning is the same; all traditions take
Refuge in Buddha, Dharma and Sangha. But for Vajrayana practitioners a
transformation takes place in the mind. When we say 'I take Refuge as
long as I live..." that makes it Hinayana Refuge as the phrase "...as
long as I live..." means "until I die" which is only this life. The
Mahayana Refuge prayer, which acts as a base for the Vajrayana prayer,
says, "I take Refuge until I become enlightened..."
In the
Refuge ceremony that we perform, where the text says "I take Refuge as
long as I live..." we transform the phrase "...as long as I live..." in
our mind so that it becomes, '...as long as I live as a sentient
being...". This implies "...untill become enlightened, until I become a
Buddha....." which is probably many, many life-times away.
If
we choose to, we can make a great issue out of these differences - some
scholars have endless debates! But scholar or not, the inner
transformation takes place regardless. What is more, if we become too
concerned with what the words really mean, then perhaps the inner
transformation takes a little longer. We have to forget the
intellectual approach and say the words from our heart.
Sometimes
I drift into the intellectual approach myself. It is quite interesting
how you can become tied up in words! You have been saying the same
words over and over again and then suddenly you try to define them,
making a great, complicated issue out of what you really meant! The
intellectual aspect of anything, including Buddhism, works this way. We
can write volumes of books, we can re-define and argue the old belief
systems, we can create new belief systems and so on - but for what
purpose?
We could, if we wished, have endless debates over the
phrases "...until I become Buddha..." or "...as long as I live..." but
as a Vajrayana practitioner it will somehow just happen. Moreover,
sometime in the future you may take the Bodhisattva vow. In this you
will renew your Refuge Commitment and say, "...until I attain
Buddhahood ... I take Refuge in the Buddha, the Dhama and the Sangha...
" The only really important point is that "Taking Refuge" means that we
are like refugees running for shelter, a place of safety, from the
storms of life.
Taking Refuge in Buddha is the first and most
important of the "three refuges". It is why we call ourselves
"Buddhists". "I take Refuge in the Buddha" means that we have complete
trust and total faith in the Buddha. It means that we consider the Lord
Buddha our ultimate master. From the Vajrayana approach we believe that
our essence, our true nature, is Buddha and pray that this seed of
Buddha-nature which is deep inside all of us, will develop and grow
until it takes over completely.
We wish to become a Buddha and
we have trust in the Buddha - that is good but how do we do it? How do
we truly take Refuge in Buddha? We do this by learning and by
practising the Dharma. According to the Vajrayana approach, the Dharma
is an inseparable aspect of the Buddha; a manifestation of the Buddha.
Before Prince Siddhartha became enlightened he was not the Buddha and
whatever he said was not Dharma. But after his enlightenment, his
revelations, his words to the people and to other beings present were
those of the Buddha and this Is what we call Dharma. The Dharma is the
demonstration of the Buddha's limitless realisation, presented as
verbal instruction and passed down the centuries to us today. By taking
Refuge in the Dharma, by learning and practising the Dharma, we are
also confirming our Refuge In the Buddha.
The third form of
Refuge is taking Refuge in the Sangha. There are many levels of Sangha.
The highest, the most sacred level of Sangha is the enlightened
disciples of the Buddha, such as the eight major Bodhisattvas, which
include Manjushri and Avalokiteshvara. Not all these Bodhisattvas were
monks or nuns, but they were all enlightened and we go to them for
Refuge.
We take Refuge with our teacher as part of the Sangha
whether that teacher is ordained or not or already enlightened or not.
We take Refuge in the ordained Sangha and in the lay followers of the
Buddha - everyone who has taken Refuge.
How do we take Refuge in
the Sangha? We do this through the teachings, the revelations of the
Buddha's enlightenment which are contained In the Sangha in several
ways. Firstly, the words, the Dharma. The lineage of the intellectual
explanations of the Buddha's teaching, the scholarly understanding, is
held by the Sangha. Secondly, and more important, the practice of the
instructions. When the Sangha actually put the teachings into practice,
they will acquire a realisation of the meaning that is above an
intellectual understanding.
"I understand" and "I realise" are
two different things. The "understanding" aspect is intellectual; the
"realisation" aspect is the living experience and is superior to the
intellectual understanding. Understanding is necessary, but the
realisation, the putting-into-practice of what you have understood is
the living lineage.
There are many different Practices for
different occasions - too many to discuss here. There are transmissions
of ritual, and transmissions of initiations to be absorbed on the
physical, the mental and the oral level and even contained within the
sound of the ceremony. The lung, is a reading transmission where you
absorb the inner meaning from the sound of the words. These are all
part of the lineage contained by the Sangha.
The most important
transmissions are the Bodhisattva vow, the Tantric vows, the ordination
vows for monks and nuns, and the precepts for lay peopled Ordination or
vinaya vows and precepts are contained on a physical level and should
not be broken. Vows like the Bodhisattva vow are on both the mental and
physical level.
In this way the lineage of the Buddha is
maintained and living not in one member of the Sangha or in one
particular group, but in all members of the Sangha. Some members of the
Sangha may be great monks and nuns but not necessarily enlightened or
realised. Others may not be ordained, but may be great practitioners
and have great realisation, so the lineage is maintained there also.
Others may not be realised but may have a very profound understanding
of the lineage of the intellectual aspect of Lord Buddha's teaching and
thus maintain this aspect of the Dharma. The correct understanding of
Buddhism is also a lineage in itself. In Tibetan we call it She Ju. She
means "talking" and Ju means "lineage" - the lineage of teaching, the
intellectual aspect.
However you must be a little cautious of
listening to someone who has only an intellectual understanding of the
teachings. When someone knows a great deal they may think they
understand everything very clearly, but if they do not have realisation
they can misinterpret the true meaning.
All these aspects are
contained within the Sangha. So when we say, "I take Refuge In the
Sangha" it means, "I learn and receive from these teachers the
transmission of the living lineage's of Lord Buddha's teaching". These
teachings are the Dharma which is an inseparable part of the Buddha.
The Dharma is the manifestation in words of the enlightenment of the
Lord Buddha. This is what we have to understand when we take Refuge.
This is what we wish to receive and this is what we wish to practise.
Soon
after the Buddha attained enlightenment, five disciples took Refuge
with him. These first five were the beginning of the Refuge lineage;
they gave Refuge to their own disciples who in turn gave Refuge to
theirs. So it continued until today, passed down through the centuries
from teacher to disciple in an unbroken transmission. And when we take
Refuge we participate in the same initiation, the same blessing, the
same commitment, that the Lord Buddha gave to his first five disciples.
The
person who gives Refuge must have received Refuge themselves. I first
took Refuge as a young boy, with His Holiness XVI Gyalwa Karmapa, the
head of the Kagyu Lineage. After that, every time I received an
empowerment, every time I received a transmission, I received Refuge
again. So I have received Refuge from many masters but my first one, my
main one, was with my supreme Master, my Tsawe-lama, His Holiness, the
Karmapa.
When you understand the significance of taking Refuge
in the Buddha, Dharma and Sangha then I think you will understand the
importance of the lineage. It is of the greatest importance. Why? For
example, if I had not taken Refuge myself and If I had no awareness of
the importance of the lineage, I might just go to a library and find a
book with the text of the Refuge ceremony. I could then perform a sort
of Refuge ceremony reading the words from the library book and finding
a nice name for you - very easy! No problem! It would look as if you
had received Refuge, but it would be a "stage-show". A true Refuge
ceremony would not have taken place because there was no trace of
lineage. We have only truly taken Refuge if we have received it from an
authorised teacher who holds the transmission of the lineage coming
down from the Buddha.
The lineage and its transmission enter
everything connected with the Dharma. It is important technically and
spiritually. It Is the essential quality that distinguishes the true,
the authentic Dharma. True Buddhism is Buddhism according to the
continuation of the lineage and none other. The lineage has to be
protected. For example, in Tibet one of the main activities of Jamgon
Kongtrul Lodro Thaye, known as Jamgon Kongtrul the Great, was to revive
the dying lineages. He travelled to far corners of the country
sometimes to find a relatively insignificant person with no rank or
position, but who was the lineage holder of a particular transmission.
This way he received transmissions from over two hundred masters to
ensure that the lineages in danger of disappearing, would be revived
through him. Because of his activity all the major lineages of
Vajrayana Buddhism are still with us to learn, to practise and to
implement.
There are a few Tibetan Buddhist texts for which the
lineage has been lost. In these cases the texts cannot be practised but
we keep the texts on the shrine and just read them for study and
academic research. It is absolutely crucial that all practitioners
understand the importance of lineage. The Buddha himself predicted that
Buddhism will eventually become an "imitation" Buddhism. By that he
meant that the texts, forms, names, images and such like will survive
but the real essence contained in the lineage, will vanish. This will
not happen tomorrow, but some time in the. future, the genuine, the
true, Buddhism will have disappeared and an imitation version will be
there in its place. There will be institutions and courses; there will
be books, there could be all kinds of new groups and new activities -
they could be good, but they will not be the true Buddhism because the
lineage will have died out or been ignored. I do not remember the
precise time for this prediction but we have to have a sense of
responsibility and take care that we do not contribute to this
corruption. For all these reasons the lineage is essential. The lineage
is contained by the Sangha. The "Sangha" is all of us - everyone who
has taken Refuge, monks, nuns and lay people

