Treasury of Precious Qualities: Book One (2010)

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*{{i|Excellent aspiration|208}}
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*{{i|The supreme protection of merit|210}}
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CHAPTER 6 The Foundation of the Path: Refuge 213
The reasons for taking refuge 213
Faith as the cause of taking refuge 213
The causes of faith 21 5
The qualities of the Buddha 215
The qualities oj elimination 215
The one hundred and twelve obscurations eliminated on the path of seeing 215
How the obscurations militate against the understanding of the four truths 216
The four hundred and fourteen obscurations eliminated on the path of
meditation 217
The difference between the Hinayana and the Mahayana approaches to the
removal of obscurations 219
The Hinayana and Mahayana ways of removing the obscurations by seeing 219
How the obscurations are eliminated on the path of meditation 222
The qualities oj a Buddha's realization 223
The qualities of the Dharma 225
Dharma posited as the two truths oj path and cessation 225
Dharma difined as the Dharma oj transmission and realization 225
The Dharma of transmission 225
The Dharma of realization 226
The grounds or stages of realization 227
The qualities of the Sangha 229
The Hina)'ana and Mahayana Sangha 230
What is refuge? 231
Causal and resultant refuge 231
The different motives for taking refuge 232
How to take refuge 233
The benefits of taking refuge 234
The btntfits of causal refuge 234
The btntfits of resultant refuge 235
The precepts of the refuge vow 236
The precepts of causal refuge 236
The precepts regarding things to be avoided 236
The precepts regarding things to be accomplished 236
The precepts of resultant refuge 237
~f1hen the refuge vow is broken 237
Attitudes incompatible with refuge 2~8
The benefits oj observing the precepts oj the refuge ww 2~8
CHAPTER 7 Cleansing the Mind by Training in the Four
Boundless Attitudes 239
The Mahayana path 2~9
The four boundless attitudes 240
How to meditate on the four boundless attitudes 242
The benefits of this meditation 242
CHAPTER 8 The Vow of Bodhichitta 247
What is bodhichitta? 247
Classifications of bodhichitta 249
Bodhichitta in aspiration and action 249
Other c/ass!fications oj bodhichitta 249
Bodhichitta classijitd according to twenty-two similes 250
Bodhichitta classijitd according to its benefits 251
Bodhichitta classijitd according to the speed oj progression 25~
How to cultivate bodhichitta 25~
The causes oj bodhichitta 254
Who can generate bodhichitta? 254
The ritual for taking the vow oj bodhichitta 255
I nculcating the correct attitude 255
Accumulating merit 256
Prtparing tht platt 256
Inviting tht fuM of mtrit 256
Offtring cleansing wattrs and clothts 257
Rtqutsting to bt stattd 260
Exprtssions of rtsput 260
Tht praytr of stvtn branchts 261
Offtring ontstlj in strvitt 264
Conclusion 265
The ritual of the bodhisattva vow 266
The conclusion of the ritual: the uplifting of one's own and others' minds 269
CHAPTER 9 The Precepts of Bodhichitta in Aspiration
and Action 271
The Bodhisattva commitment 271
The precepts concerning what is to be avoided 27~
Repairingfaults 274
The precepts to be implemented 275
The four precepts oj aspiration bodhichitta 275
The first precept: taking suffering and giving happiness 275
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Revision as of 16:59, 27 August 2020

Treasury of Precious Qualities: Book One (2010)
Book
Book

This book is a translation of the first part of Jigme Lingpa's Treasury of Precious Qualities, which in a slender volume of elegant verses sets out briefly but comprehensively the Buddhist path according to the Nyingma school. The concision of the root text and its use of elaborate poetic language, rich in metaphor, require extensive explanation, amply supplied here by the commentary of Kangyur Rinpoche.

The present volume lays out the teachings of the sutras in gradual stages according to the traditional three levels, or scopes, of spiritual endeavor. It begins with essential teachings on impermanence, karma, and ethics. Then, from the Hinayana standpoint, it describes the essential Buddhist teachings of the four noble truths and the twelve links of dependent arising. Moving on, finally, to the Mahayana perspective, it expounds fully the teachings on bodhichitta and the path of the six paramitas, and gives an unusually detailed exposition of Buddhist vows. (Source: Shambhala Publications)

Citation Fletcher, Wulstan, and Helena Blankleder (Padmakara Translation Group), trans. Treasury of Precious Qualities: The Rain of Joy; Book One. By Jigme Lingpa ('jigs med gling pa). With The Quintessence of the Three Paths, a commentary by Longchen Yeshe Dorje, Kangyur Rinpoche (klong chen ye shes rdo rje, bka' 'gyur rin po che). Boston: Shambhala Publications, 2010.