I
am going to talk about the generation and
completion stages according to the text “The
Essence of Creation and Completion,”
which was composed by Jamgon Kongtrul the
Great. In particular, from among the two topics
of the creation or generation stage and the
completion stage we are concerned primarily
with the generation stage. Although, in a
sense our main practice is the completion
stage, the practice of the completion stage
depends entirely upon the stability and blessing
of the generation stage, just as for example
the practice of vipashyana depends upon the
attainment of stable shamatha.
This is a very appropriate topic to be studying.
It is very easy to talk about shamatha and
vipashyana and very easy to listen to explanations
of Mahamudra and explanations that are entirely
concerned only with the completion stage.
Although these things sound very good and
are very easily explained in theory, it is
not important to choose the topic that is
the easiest to listen to, but instead to choose
the one that is going to be of the most practical
benefit, that is, the one that will actually
enable students to progress in their practice
of meditation. Therefore, it is appropriate
to address subjects that are more difficult
to understand, because it is these, especially,
that definitely need the most complete explanation.
The function of teaching of course, is to
provide what students need for their ultimate
benefit. Therefore it is important when Dharma
is taught to discuss not only the completion
stage but also the generation stage.
When you examine your mind, the types of impure
motivation you might discover are motivation
for study and practice that is afflicted by
competitiveness, by arrogance, or by selfishness.
In a sense this is not that big a deal but
at the same time, it is an impure motivation
and it is necessary to let go of it and replace
it with a pure motivation. A pure motivation
is the motivation of wishing to study and
practice in order to be able to benefit both
yourself and others. Especially given that
we are normally mostly concerned with benefiting
only ourselves, it is important to emphasize
the wish to benefit others. Normally even
when we wish to benefit others, we restrict
that wish to a few others such as our family
and friends and so on. The wish to benefit
a few others is not an impure motivation,
it is a pure motivation, but among pure motivations
it is a fairly petty one. Here we are trying
to develop the motivation of practicing and
studying in order to benefit all beings who
fill space, since all beings without exception,
equally wish to be happy and wish to be free
from suffering and yet lack the knowledge
necessary to enable them to achieve these
goals. So if you have the motivation for both
study and practice in that you are doing it
in order to establish all beings without exception
in a state of happiness, this motivation is
not only pure but also vast in scope.
© Copyright Khenchen
Thrangu Rinpoche & Zhyisil Chokyi Ghatsal
Publications 2002.
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