This question is really very specifically for David and Nancy Reigle, our resident Tibetan Buddhism experts, though of course anybody else who wants to chime in is welcome as well.
I've been getting my baptism in TIbetan Buddhism recently (took refuge, followed a two week FPMT course, expect to be active in the Gelugpa movement a LOT from now on).
Of course this leaves me with the issue of how to combine what I learned in theosophy with what I'm now learning from Tibetan Buddhist teachers. There are clear discrepancies.
The main issue, given the importance of the topic, is karma and rebirth.
On the one hand the discrepancy doesn't appear as large as commonly reported, because these teachers insist that while there is no constant, unchanging something that is born again and again, they do insist that there is a stream of consciousness that goes from one life to the next. This is good enough for me, though fitting it on top of our theosophical terminology is perhaps hard. Still, our 'atma-buddhi-higher-manas' is not unchanging either, so perhaps the discrepancy really is only imaginary. Even 'atma-buddhi' isn't unchanging. It's only when we get to atma-proper that the suggestion of something unchanging starts to appear. But if you look at how Blavatsky talks about that, it's definitely at least an option to interpret even atma as changing.
Anyhow - that's not my question for today.
When it comes to the Tibetan Book of the Dead, it's well known that rebirth is thought to take place within 49 days. What's less well known is that this rebirth is thought to usually NOT take place in the human realm. This is stressed as a stimulus for spiritual practice. After all, as theosophy too agrees, a human rebirth is the desirable kind.
This rebirth in Tibetan Buddhism can take place in countless heavens, a few hells, as a human being and as an animal. The only disadvantage to those heavens is, as I understand it, (but I'm no expert just yet) that the stay there isn't endless. What if the stay there is generally a few thousand years? Doesn't that make the term of staying there a lot like our devachan?
In theosophy rebirth (as a human) is said to often taken thousands of years too - because we spend most of our time contemplating the good of our last life (my interpretation of devachan). In short: a sort of self-created heaven.
Blavatsky too stresses that it would be preferable to, as the real practitioners do, skip or shorten devachan and simply be reborn as quickly as possible - to not take a break, to go on working for the benefit of humanity.
I wonder - does putting it like that put too much strain on theosophy or Tibetan Buddhism, or is it really a way to bring together two seemingly conflicting accounts of what happens after death?
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Interesting - brings us in the realm of Pure Land Buddhism, not the kind of Buddhism I would have first associated with esoteric teachings.
I think I have to walk before I can run, but I'll put this on my list of 'look into' topics within Buddhism.
For those who want to dive in straight away, here's more about this Sukhavati:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sukhavati
http://www.lapislazulitexts.com/T12_0366_shorter_sukhavativyuha_sut...
http://www.amazon.com/dp/9834087934
It might be of interest here to refer to pp. 78-79 of the esoteric teachings vol. xi from G. de Purucker.
Dealing with the subject of death and kama-loka, he refers to Dr. Evans-Wentz's book Tibetan Yoga and Secret Doctrines (1935), p. 242, fn 4. There, Evans-Wentz shows that in the particular treatise he is discussing, the Bardo is construed as being divided into three parts: Chikai-Bardo, Chönyid-Bardo and Sidpai-Bardo.
De Purucker further compares these Bardos, or three states of the general Bardo, with theosophical ideas as follows:
"(a). The chikai-Bardo, or first Bardo, is both the time-period and the state of consciousness of the excarnate being from the moment of death until it definitely enters the Devachan;
(b) the Chönyid-Bardo is both the devachanic time-period of such an entity and the various changings and ringings of the different states of consciousness that the devachani experiences while in the Devachan; and
(c) the Sidpai-Bardo is both the time-period and the different adventures or states of consciousness of the entity from the moment it definitely has left the Devachan until the time when it actually finds itself a growing embryo in a human womb - or until reincarnation.
It is thus evident that these three divisions of the Bardo are merely exoteric yet convenient manners of dividing the after-death state, or states, into three periods, ending at rebirth on Earth."
The forty-nine days duration of the Bardo are exoteric embroidery, according to De Purucker. It reminds one of sevenfold cycles, so often mentioned in the SD.
What I would like to know from David is the following:
1. De Purucker says that Bardo means "between two" (between two successive stages of the disembodied entity, or more general, the time period and various states of consciousness of the peregrinating monad between death and its next reincarnation).
Does this square with your knowledge of the translation(s) of Bardo?
2. Kama-Loka is equated with Tibetan Yuh-Kai. Did you encounter this term Yuh-Kai (in whatever form or transliteration) in Tibetan literature?
Yes, that's the standard interpretation - take the number of days as exoteric and follow the Tibetan interpretation as to the rest of it. However, that leaves us with this small problem: the chances of getting a human rebirth. According to Blavatsky the chances of a human rebirth are pretty high, even if you may have to rest up a bit in devachan for a few thousand years in between. According to the Tibetan lamas the chances of reincarnating as a human being are pretty slim.
Curiously, when you look at the higher practitioners there's no difference at all: Blavatsky says they skip devachan and get reincarnated (obviously as a human being) almost immediately. So in that case suddenly 'exoteric' Tibetan Buddhism and Blavatsky agree. Which made me think that the difference might be in the interpretation of what happens to more ordinary human beings in between. Both agree they don't get reincarnated immediately, the time periods between human births are also large in both cases - except that in Tibetan Buddhism the rebirth in a heaven, a hell (or as an animal) are seen as rebirths instead of as a resting places (aka devachan).
Martin Euser said:
What I would like to know from David is the following:
1. De Purucker says that Bardo means "between two" (between two successive stages of the disembodied entity, or more general, the time period and various states of consciousness of the peregrinating monad between death and its next reincarnation).
Does this square with your knowledge of the translation(s) of Bardo?
2. Kama-Loka is equated with Tibetan Yuh-Kai. Did you encounter this term Yuh-Kai (in whatever form or transliteration) in Tibetan literature?
The idea of rebirth as an animal is, as you say, standard in Tibetan Buddhism. The Theosophical teachings are pretty clear on this, as you know. For an entity that has evolved to the human stage to regress to the animal stage would hardly be possible. The logic here is convincing to me. So I must regard this as an exoteric teaching that I cannot accept.
Katinka Hesselink said:
Yes, that's the standard interpretation - take the number of days as exoteric and follow the Tibetan interpretation as to the rest of it. However, that leaves us with this small problem: the chances of getting a human rebirth. According to Blavatsky the chances of a human rebirth are pretty high, even if you may have to rest up a bit in devachan for a few thousand years in between. According to the Tibetan lamas the chances of reincarnating as a human being are pretty slim.
@David - the reason for presenting it this way seems to be mostly didactic: in order to get people to practice the dharma, they want to stress the risks of NOT doing so, one of which is being reborn as an animal. As a teacher I can relate to the reasoning, but since it doesn't work on Westerners (who have a holy dislike of being scared without reason) I suspect the truth is more important than the reality for us at this stage.
That said, I can't pretend to understand the intricacies of the Tibetan version well enough to be able to judge just yet.
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