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Thursday
Jun182009

Four Lands in the Pure Land

In Rebirth in the Pure Land a comment of “quite a caste system” was made. It was a very helpful comment since to those new to Pure Land Buddhism, it might well seem like there is a separation of beings in the Pure Land. With further study, we will better understand the nine levels and four lands.

Think of the levels and lands not as physical places but rather as mental states. This mental state is the land we dwell in.

The awakening beings in the Pure Land all practice and learn together even as they dwell in different lands, different mental states.

In a similar way, we also live in different lands in our world. Some people live in what might be called the "Land of Ceaseless Craving" or the "Land of Recurring Anger." But others standing next to them could be living in the "Land of Compassion" or the "Land of Patience."

The land we live in, our mental state, is entirely up to us for it depends on our thoughts.

One day, a student asked the Buddha about the land he dwelled in. The Buddha touched the ground with his foot. When he did so, the student saw the land the Buddha dwelled in, a land very different from the student's. But although the two lands were different, the Buddha and the student were together in the same place and talking with one another.

It is our practice and subsequent level of meditative concentration that determine the "land" we are reborn into and dwell in, not the determination of someone else or of a societal system. As our meditative concentration becomes higher, our mental state becomes higher. And since our environment is a reflection of our thoughts (why the Buddha saw things differently from the student) as our thoughts attain higher levels, our land will change to reflect our thoughts.

Once we are in the Western Pure Land, regardless of our mental state, our land, we will continue to practice and to interact with and learn from Amitabha Buddha and all the bodhisattvas who also dwell in the Pure Land.

“[O]nce reborn there, living in an auspicious and peaceful environment, always in the company of Buddha Amitabha and the Bodhisattvas, the practitioner will swiftly achieve success in whatever Dharma method he chooses. He is like a log rolling down a high mountain, which just keeps going and never stops, even for a moment.

“In summary, Buddha Recitation is easy for three reasons: easy practice, easy achievement of rebirth in the Pure Land, easy attainment of Buddhahood. Therefore, the results achieved through Buddha Recitation from time immemorial can be compared to the clear and limpid sound of precious stones striking against genuine gold, or the sight of “smiling lotus blossoms with their fresh and fragrant grades of rebirth.” Within these levels and grades, the path from sentient being to Buddhahood contains many ranks, yet is also without rank.

“This is because, once reborn in the Pure Land, the practitioner has transcended Birth and Death—and to recite the Buddha’s name is to become Buddha. This is like the silkworm, the chrysalis and the butterfly, which are inseparable; there is very little difference between saying that a butterfly is originally a worm or that the worm is the butterfly.” (Seeker’s Glossary, p 618)

 

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Reader Comments (3)

Always a timely conincidence...last night at SW we had a demonstration on the "HeartMath" or "EmWave" system. You are attached to a device or computer by an ear monitor which records your heart rate, variance and strength. As you meditate it shows where you are in your resonance. It is a form of biofeedback. As you improve, the system lets you know.

For a seasoned meditator, it may not be essential. For a beginner with a "monkey mind" it helps direct and train you to reach a different mental state. In our high tech lives, it was nice to see technology that aids us in bettering our state of mind and resonance.

The feedback can be visual--watching drops of waters, stars, etc and/or sounds.

I suppose it is in keeping with some meditators who like to use music on an iPod. The difference is you are the one generating the music.

I figures the "Western" path has electronics! ;-)
June 18, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterSue K
definite ah-haa moments in that one!! Thank you
June 18, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterKristine
Excellent post. I too had questions regarding the previous post and what it really meant. This makes complete sense. You explained it very well.

http://toshogu.blogspot.com
June 19, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterJon

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