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Guidelines for the Practice of Refuge
Having taken refuge, a safe and sound direction,
in the Three Jewels - Buddha, Dharma, and Sangha - it is advantageous
to follow certain guidelines for practice in order to make progress
along the path to enlightenment.
- In analogy to taking refuge in the Buddha,
commit
yourself whole-heartedly to a qualified spiritual master.
- In analogy to taking refuge in the Dharma,
listen to and study the teachings as well as put them into practice
in your daily life.
- In analogy to taking refuge in the Sangha,
respect the Sangha as your spiritual companions and follow the
good examples they set.
- Avoid being rough and arrogant, running
after any desirable object you see and criticizing anything that
meets with your disapproval.
- Be friendly and kind to others and be concerned
more with correcting your own faults than with pointing out those
of others.
- As much as possible avoid the ten
non-virtuous actions, and take and keep precepts.
- Have a compassionate and sympathetic heart
towards all other sentient beings.
- Make special offerings to the Three Jewels
on Buddhist festival days.
Guidelines in terms of each of the Three Jewels
- Having taken refuge in the Buddha, who has
purified all defilements and develop all qualities, do not turn
for refuge to worldly deities, who lack the capacity to guide
you from all problems.
Respect all images of the Buddha: do not put them in low or dirty
places, step over them, point your feet towards them, sell them
to earn a living or use them as collateral. When looking at various
images, do not discriminate, "This Buddha is beautiful, but
this one is not." Do not treat with respect expensive and
impressive statues while neglecting those that are damaged or
less costly.
- Having taken refuge in the Dharma, avoid
harming any living being.
Also, respect the written words which describe the path to enlightenment
by keeping the texts clean and in a high place. Avoid stepping
over them, putting them on the floor, or throwing them in the
rubbish when they are old. It is best to burn or recycle old Dharma
materials.
- Having taken refuge in the Sangha, do not
cultivate the friendship of people who criticize the Buddha, Dharma,
and Sangha or who have unruly behavior or do many harmful actions.
By becoming friendly with such people, you may be influenced in
the wrong way by them. However, that does not mean you should
criticize or not have compassion for them.
Also, respect monks and nuns as they are people who are making
earnest efforts to actualize the teachings. Respecting them helps
your mind, for you appreciate their qualities and are open to
learn from their example. By respecting even the robes of ordained
beings, you will be happy and inspired when seeing them.
Common guidelines
- Mindful of the qualities, skills, and differences
between the Three Jewels and other possible refuges, repeatedly
take refuge in the Buddha, Dharma and Sangha.
- Remembering their kindness, make offerings
to them, especially offering your food before eating. (See
the prayers for this.)
- Mindful of their compassion, encourage others
to take refuge in the Three Jewels.
- Remembering the benefits of taking
refuge, do so three times in the morning and three times in the
evening, by reciting and reflecting upon any of the refuge
prayers.
- Do all actions by entrusting yourself to
the Three Jewels.
- Do not forsake your refuge at the cost of
your life, or even as a joke.
Click below for:
[Q&A
on Refuge & Precepts]
[Lamrim
teachings on Taking Refuge]
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