1. Joyfully I celebrate all the
acts of virtue
That ease the pains of the lower
realms,
And rejoice as well when those
who suffer
Find themselves in states of
happiness.
2. I rejoice in the gathering
of virtue
That is the cause of awakening,
And celebrate the definite liberation
Of beings from samsara’s
pain.
3. I rejoice in the awakening
of the buddhas,
And the bhumis gained by bodhisattvas.
4. Gladly I rejoice in the infinite
sea of virtue,
Which is the noble intention
of bodhichitta,
Wishing to secure the happiness
of beings,
And acting in ways that bring
benefit to all.
5. Now I join my hands and pray
To you, the buddhas of all quarters:
Shine the lamp of Dharma upon
us,
As we suffer in confusion’s
darkness!
6. With my palms clasped at my
heart,
I urge all buddhas longing for
nirvana:
Do not leave us blind and all
alone,
But remain with us for countless
ages!
7. Through whatever virtue I
have gained
By all these actions now performed,
May the pain of every living
being
Be cleared away entirely, never
to return.
8. For all the beings ailing
in the world,
Until their sickness has been
healed,
May I become the doctor and the
cure,
And may I nurse them back to
health.
9. Bringing down a shower of
food and drink,
May I dispel the pains of thirst
and hunger,
And in those times of scarcity
and famine,
May I myself appear as food and
drink.
10. For all beings who are destitute
and poor,
May I be a treasure, unending
in supply,
A source of all that they might
call for,
Accessible always and close by.
11. My own body and all that
I possess,
My past, present and future virtues—
I dedicate them all, withholding
nothing,
To bring about the benefit of
beings.
12. By letting go of all I shall
attain nirvana,
The transcendence of misery I
seek,
Since everything must finally
be abandoned,
It would be best if I gave it
all away.
13. This body of mine I have
now given up,
Entirely for the pleasure of
all who live.
Let them kill it, beat it and
abuse it,
Forever doing with it as they
please.
14. And if they treat it like
a toy,
Or an object of ridicule and
jest,
When I have given it away,
Why should I then become upset?
15. Let them do to me as they
please,
Whatever does not harm them;
And when anyone should think
of me,
May that only serve them well.
16. If the sight of me inspires
in others
Thoughts of anger or devotion,
May such states of mind be causes
For eternally fulfilling their
desires.
17. May those who insult me to
my face,
Or cause me harm in any other
way,
Even those who disparage me in
secret,
Have the good fortune to awaken.
18. May I be a guard for those
without one,
A guide for all who journey on
the road,
May I become a boat, a raft or
bridge,
For all who wish to cross the
water.
19. May I be an isle for those
desiring landfall,
And a lamp for those who wish
for light,
May I be a bed for those who
need to rest,
And a servant for all who live
in need.
20. May I become a wishing jewel,
a magic vase,
A powerful mantra and a medicine
of wonder.
May I be a tree of miracles granting
every wish,
And a cow of plenty sustaining
all the world.
21. Like the earth and other
great elements,
And like space itself, may I
remain forever,
To support the lives of boundless
beings,
By providing all that they might
need.
22. Just so, in all the realms
of beings,
As far as space itself pervades,
May I be a source of all that
life requires,
Until beings pass beyond samsara’s
pain.
23. Just as the sugatas of former
ages,
Aroused bodhichitta and then,
in stages,
Trained themselves in skilful
practice,
On the genuine path of the bodhisattvas,
24. Like them, I take this sacred
vow:
To arouse bodhichitta here and
now,
And train myself for others’
good,
Gradually, as a bodhisattva should.
25. Like this, all those whose
minds are clear,
And who adopt bodhichitta with
inspiration,
Will, to ensure that it grows
thereafter,
Praise it highly in the following
way:
26. Now my life has great significance,
At birth I found this human existence,
And now I’m born into the
buddhas’ line,
As a son or daughter of the noble
kind.
27. From this day on, come what
may,
I’ll act only in an appropriate
way,
And never shall I bring disgrace
Upon this flawless, noble race.
28. For like a beggar, poor and
blind,
Who, by chance, a jewel might
find,
In heaps of filthy dirt and litter,
In my mind is now born bodhichitta.
29. This is the perfect nectar
of immortality,
Through which the Lord of Death
is overcome.
It is an inexhaustible treasury
of wealth,
To dispel the poverty of all
who live.
30. It is the very best of medicines
That heals the sickness of the
world,
And the tree that shelters all
who wander
Wearily along the pathways of
existence.
31. It is the universal bridge
to freedom,
Leading us all from the lower
realms,
And it is a rising moon within
the mind,
To cool the passions of all living
beings.
32. It is the mighty sun whose
light dispels
The darkness of ignorance in
our minds.
And it is the very purest form
of butter
Churned from the milk of sacred
Dharma.
33. For beings travelling life’s
pathways,
And seeking to taste its greatest
joys,
This will satisfy their eternal
wanderings,
By granting them the highest
form of bliss.
34. Now with buddhas as my witness,
I invite all beings to lasting
happiness,
And, before that, to ordinary
joys:
May gods, asuras and others rejoice!
From the Introduction to
the Way of the Bodhisattva, this is the third chapter, Fully Adopting Bodhichitta.
|Translated
by Adam