Dharma - Spirituality
Dharma, a Sanskrit word that literally means Law, is better translated in the context of Buddhism as Spiritual Reality or Spirituality. The Buddha awakened to this Realm of Dharma or Spiritual Reality when He first attained enlightenment seated in meditation under the Bodhi tree in Gaya some 2500 years ago. He spent the rest of his life teaching of the Dharma to his disciples. In fact the teachings of the Buddha are themselves called the Dharma.
The Dharma is not something that is alien to our normal human experience. This Spiritual Realm (Dharma Dhatu) is the reality of one’s very own mind. It is also the mind of the Buddha and the mind of all living beings. It is all three of these, but it is but in fact a single reality.
Chih-I’s The Hidden Meaning of the Lotus Sutra says:
The Lotus Sutra says:
- “Making living beings open up, reveal, awaken and enter into the knowledge and vision of enlightenment.”
How could the Sutra discuss opening up the knowledge and vision of enlightenment if living beings did not already have it in themselves? One must know that this knowledge and vision abides in all living beings.
The Lotus Sutra says:
- “No more, no more, it is not necessary to teach. The Dharma is wonderful and inconceivable.”
This is the wonderful wisdom of enlightenment that is both real and provisional and is only fathomed between the Buddhas.
The Lotus Sutra says:
- “In cultivating their mindsy observed the true spiritual aspect of reality in all things without being shaken and without regressing, accepting and embracing it in each single thought”
Thus it is cultivated in one’s own mind.
The Sutra on the Observation of the Bodhisattva Universal Virtue says: “With the mind empty of self, sin and blessedness are without an owner.”
The Flower Garland Sutra says: “The mind, the Buddha, and all living beings are an inseparable trinity.”
- When we discuss the spirituality (Dharma) of all living beings, it is in reference to cause and effect generally and to all things spiritual (dharmas).
- When we discuss the spirituality of the Buddha, it is in reference to the effect.
- When we discuss the spirituality of one’s own mind, it is in reference to the cause.
This table explains these three aspects of the mind in various terms, ancient and modern:
Aspect of Dharma |
Cause & Effect of Spiritual Cultivation |
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The Buddha |
Effect of Cultivation |
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One's Own Mind |
One's Own Spiritual Journey |
Cause of Cultivation |
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All Living Beings |
Basic Human Nature |
Cause & Effect Generally |
Id |
The Buddha explained this Dharma or spiritual reality in many different ways, through such teachings as the four truths, the twelve-fold wheel of causality and conditions (dependence upon origination), the two truths, the three truths, the one truth, etc. Each teaching was made in accordance with the capacity of those being taught. All of these teachings were different ways of analyzing and explaining the Dharma so that others could grasp its reality and its all-embracing totality.
In The Lotus Sutra the Dharma is explained as being the conditions of the ten spiritual realms (Dharma-dhatu) with their ten aspects of causality, and by extension the three thousand spiritual realms inherent in a single thought. This explanation charts the causality and conditions of the human heart from the depths of hell up to supreme enlightenment.
To explain it, we will first examine the ten spiritual realms (Dharma Dhatu).
The Ten Spiritual Realms:
Vehicles & Path |
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Total Enlightenment |
The Enlightenment of |
The Pure Land Nirvana & The Noble Path | |
Attaining Enlightenment |
The Engagement of | ||
Spiritual Self-Awakening |
The Detachment of | ||
Spiritual Discipleship | |||
The Three Good Paths |
Suffering & Origination | ||
The Human Realm - Personality | |||
The Realm of Hunger |
The Three Evil Roads | ||
The Animal Realm - Brutality | |||
In discussing the ten spiritual realms, we will first explore the six lower realms.