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The Ten Bodhisattva Grounds: The Avatamsaka Sutra Chapter 26
The Ten Bodhisattva Grounds: The Avatamsaka Sutra Chapter 26
The Ten Bodhisattva Grounds: The Avatamsaka Sutra Chapter 26
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The Ten Bodhisattva Grounds: The Avatamsaka Sutra Chapter 26

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"The Ten Bodhisattva Grounds" is an annotated English Translation by Bhikshu Dharmamitra of Tripitaka Master Śikṣānanda's circa 699 ce Sanskrit-to-Chinese translation of the Avataṃsaka Sūtra, Chapter 26. 

This text describes in great detail the ten highest levels of bodhisattva practice on the path to buddhahood as taught in that

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Release dateAug 10, 2020
ISBN9781935413202
The Ten Bodhisattva Grounds: The Avatamsaka Sutra Chapter 26

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    The Ten Bodhisattva Grounds - Siksananda

    The Ten Bodhisattva Grounds

    The Avataṃsaka Sūtra

    Chapter 26

    To refrain from doing any manner of evil,

    to respectfully perform all varieties of good,

    and to purify of one’s own mind—

    This is the teaching of all buddhas.

    The Ekottara Āgama Sūtra

    (T02 n.125 p.551a 13–14)

    A Note on the Proper Care of Dharma Materials

    Traditional Buddhist cultures treat books on Dharma as sacred. Hence it is considered disrespectful to place them in a low position, to read them when lying down, or to place them where they might be damaged by food or drink.

    The Ten Bodhisattva Grounds

    The Avataṃsaka Sūtra

    Chapter 26

    The Ten Highest Levels of Practice

    On the Bodhisattva’s Path to Buddhahood

    As Translated From Sanskrit by Tripiṭaka Master Śikṣānanda (699 CE)

    An Annotated English Translation by Bhikshu Dharmamitra

    Including the Entire P. L. Vaidya Sanskrit Text

    Kalavinka Press

    Seattle, Washington

    www.kalavinkapress.org

    Kalavinka Press

    8603 39th Ave SW

    Seattle, WA 98136 USA

    (www.kalavinkapress.org)

    Kalavinka Press is associated with the Kalavinka Dharma Association, a non-profit organized exclusively for religious educational purposes as allowed within the meaning of section 501(c)3 of the Internal RevenueCode. Kalavinka Dharma Association was founded in 1990 and gained formal approval in 2004 by the United States Internal Revenue Service as a 501(c)3 non-profit organization to which all donations are tax deductible.

    Donations to KDA are accepted by mail and on the Kalavinka website where numerous free Dharma translations and excerpts from Kalavinka publications are available in digital format.

    Edition: 10GSIK-EO-1019-1.0-English/Sanskrit

    Kalavinka Buddhist Classics Book 12b

    Copyright © 2019 by Bhikshu Dharmamitra / All Rights Resereved

    Paperback ISBN: 978-1-935413-12-7 / E-book ISBN: 978-1-935413-20-2

    Library of Congress Control Number: 2019029483

    Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

    Names: Śikṣānanda, 652-710, translator. | Dharmamitra, Bhikshu, translator.

    Title: The ten Bodhisattva grounds : the Avataṃsaka Sūtra, chapter 26 : the ten highest levels of practice on the Bodhisattva’s path to Buddhahood / as translated from Sanskrit by Tripiṭaka Master Śikṣānanda (699 CE) ; an annotated English translation by Bhikshu Dharmamitra including the entire P. L. Vaidya Sanskrit text.

    Description: 10gsik-eo-1019-1.0-english/sanskrit. | Seattle, Washington : Kalavinka Press, 2019. | Series: Kalavinka buddhist classics; book 12b | Includes bibliographical references. | Summary: The Ten Bodhisattva Grounds is an annotated English Translation by Bhikshu Dharmamitra of Tripitaka Master Śikṣānanda’s circa 699 CE Sanskrit-to-Chinese translation of the Avataṃsaka Sūtra, Chapter 26. This text describes in great detail the ten highest levels of bodhisattva practice on the path to buddhahood as taught in that sutra. This edition of the translation includes the P. L. Vaidya Sanskrit text. The Sanskrit section headings are inset in the English translation to facilitate easy correlation of the English translation with the Sanskrit text-- Provided by publisher.

    Identifiers: LCCN 2019029483 | ISBN 9781935413127 (paperback)

    Subjects: LCSH: Tripiṭaka. Sūtrapiṭaka. Avataṃsakasūtra.--Criticism, interpretation, etc. | Bodhisattva stages (Mahayana Buddhism)

    Classification: LCC BQ1622.A1 D432 2019 | DDC 294.3/55--dc23

    LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2019029483

    Kalavinka Press books are printed on acid-free paper.

    Cover and interior designed by Bhikshu Dharmamitra.

    Printed in the United States of America

    Dedication

    Dedicated to the memory of the selfless and marvelous life of the Venerable Dhyāna Master Hsuan Hua, the Guiyang Ch’an Patriarch and the very personification of the bodhisattva’s six perfections.

    Dhyāna Master Hsuan Hua

    宣 化 禪 師

    1918–1995

    Acknowledgments

    The accuracy and readability of this translation have been greatly improved by many corrections, preview comments, and editorial suggestions generously contributed by Bhikkhu Bodhi, Feng Ling, and Nicholas Weeks.

    Expenses incurred in bringing forth this publication were under- written by generous donations from Craig and Karen Neyman, Madalena Lew, Shuyu Yang, Jiajing Li, Kam Chung Wong, Loritta Chan, David Fox, Upasaka Guo Ke, Yuen-Lin Tan, the BDK English Tripiṭaka Project, and others. Sponsorship of Adobe Indesign book layout was provided by Anagarika Mahendra.

    Use of the digital Sanskrit texts is by the kind permission of Dr. Miroj Shakya, Project Coordinator of the Digital Sanskrit Buddhist Canon Project.

    Were it not for the ongoing material support provided by my late guru’s Dharma Realm Buddhist Association and the serene translation studio provided by Seattle’s Bodhi Dhamma Center, creation of this translation would have been impossible.

    Additionally, it would have been impossible for me to produce this translation without the Dharma teachings and personal inspiration provided to me by my late guru, the awesomely wise and compassionate Dhyāna Master Hsuan Hua, the Guiyang Ch’an patriarch, Dharma teacher, and exegete.

    Finally, I owe an immense debt of gratitude to the members of the liver care and transplant teams at Seattle’s University of Washington Medical Center who cured me of liver cancer in 2010 and gave me a liver transplant several months later. In particular, if it weren’t for over a decade of wonderfully attentive and compassionate care by Dr. Renuka Bhattacharya, medical director of UW’s liver transplant program, the kindness and skill in three major surgeries by my transplant surgeon, Dr. Jorge Reyes, and the marvelous generosity of an anonymous liver donor, I would have died a half dozen years ago and thus never could have completed the scriptural translations I have produced in the last eight years.

    Outlining in This Work

    The ten chapter titles in this work are from the Taisho Chinese text. All other outline headings originate with the translator. Buddhist canonical texts are often so structurally dense that they are best navigated with the aid of at least a simple outline structure such as I have supplied here.

    List of Abbreviations

    General Table of Contents

    Acknowledgements

    Outlining in This Work

    List of Abbreviations

    Directory to Chapter Subsections

    The Translator’s Introduction

    The Translation: The Ten Bodhisattva Grounds

    Part 1 : The Joyfulness Ground

    Part 2 : The Stainlessness Ground

    Part 3 : The Shining Light Ground

    Part 4 : The Blazing Brilliance Ground

    Part 5 : The Difficult-to-Conquer Ground

    Part 6 : The Direct Presence Ground

    Part 7 : The Far-Reaching Ground

    Part 8 : The Immovability Ground

    Part 9 : The Excellent Intelligence Ground

    Part 10: The Dharma Cloud Ground

    Translation Endnotes

    Bibliography

    Appendix: The P.L. Vaidya Sanskrit Text

    About the Translator

    Kalavinka Buddhist Classics: Current Title List

    Directory to Chapter Subsections

    I. The Introductory Section

    A. The Setting and Audience

    B. The Great Bodhisattvas and Their Qualities

    C. The Names of the Bodhisattvas in Attendance

    D. Vajragarbha Enters Samādhi and Countless Buddhas Manifest

    E. The Buddhas Praise Him and Encourage Him To Teach the Ten Grounds

    F. The Buddhas Bestow Qualities and Abilities on Vajragarbha

    G. Vajragarbha Emerges from Samādhi and Speaks of the Ten Grounds

    1. Vajragarbha Sets Forth the Names of the Ten Grounds

    2. Vajragarbha Bodhisattva Falls Silent

    H. The Congregation Is Caused to Wonder Why There Is No Explanation

    I. Liberation Moon Bodhisattva’s First Request for Dharma Teaching

    J. Vajragarbha Explains His Silence

    K. Liberation Moon Bodhisattva’s Second Request for Dharma Teaching

    L. Vajragarbha Further Explains His Reticence to Teach This Dharma

    M. Liberation Moon Bodhisattva’s Third Request for Dharma Teaching

    N. The Bodhisattva Congregation Joins in Requesting This Teaching

    O. {P} The Buddha Emits Brilliant Light From Between His Eyebrows

    P. All Buddhas Emit Light That Utters Verses Requesting Dharma

    Q. Vajragarbha’s Preliminary Verses on the Difficulty of This Explanation

    II. The Main Doctrinal Teaching Section

    A. The First Ground: The Joyfulness Ground

    1. Vajragarbha Lists the First Ground’s Qualifications & Motivations

    2. The Qualities of the Bodhisattva’s Resolve

    3. The Consequences of Generating the Bodhisattva Vow

    4. The Bases For the First Ground Bodhisattva’s Joyfulness

    5. The First Ground Bodhisattva’s Five Kinds of Fearlessness

    6. The Bodhisattva’s Grounds Purifying Practices

    7. The Bodhisattva’s Ten Great Vows

    8. The Mental Qualities & Faith Gained by the 1st Ground Bodhisattva

    9. The Bodhisattva’s Reflective Contemplation on Dharma and Beings

    10. The Bodhisattva’s Resolve, Renunciation, & Grounds Purification

    11. The Bodhisattva’s Seeing and Serving of Countless Buddhas

    12. The Bodhisattva’s Practice of Means of Attraction and Pāramitās

    13. The Bodhisattva’s Grounds Purification Compared to Refining Gold

    14. The Bodhisattva’s Acquisition of Further Knowledge of the Grounds

    15. The Bodhisattva’s Path Knowledge Compared to a Caravan Guide

    16. Vajragarbha’s Final Statements About the First Ground Bodhisattva

    a. The Bodhisattva’s Station and Dharma Practice

    b. The Bodhisattva’s Four Means of Attraction and Mindfulness

    c. The Bodhisattva’s Aspiration to Serve Beings

    d. The Result of the Bodhisattva’s Leaving the Household Life

    17. Vajragarbha Bodhisattva’s Summarizing Verses

    B. The Second Ground: The Stainlessness Ground

    1. The Second Ground’s Introductory Verses and Dharma Request

    2. Vajragarbha Commences the Second Ground’s Explanation

    3. The Ten Resolute Intentions as Bases for Entering the Second Ground

    4. The Bodhisattva’s Observance of 10 Courses of Good Karmic Action

    a. Avoidance of Killing

    b. Avoidance of Taking What Is Not Given

    c. Avoidance of Sexual Misconduct

    d. Avoidance of False Speech

    e. Avoidance of Divisive Speech

    f. Avoidance of Harsh Speech

    g. Avoidance of Frivolous Speech

    h. Avoidance of Covetousness

    i. Avoidance of Ill Will

    j. Avoidance of Wrong Views

    5. The Bodhisattva’s Reflections on 10 Good and Bad Karmic Actions

    a. Reflections on their Generation of the Six Rebirth Destinies

    b. Reflections on Generation of the Fruits of the 3 Vehicles’ Paths

    c. Reflections on the 10 Transgressions’ 10 Karmic Retribution

    d. Renunciation of 10 Bad Actions & Rousing of 10 Altruistic Minds

    6. His Reflections on the Plight of Beings & Resolve To Rescue Them

    7. The Bodhisattva’s Seeing and Serving of Countless Buddhas

    8. The Bodhisattva’s Grounds Purification Compared to Refining Gold

    9. The Bodhisattva’s Practice of Means of Attraction and Pāramitās

    10. Vajragarbha’s Final Statements About the 2nd Ground Bodhisattva

    a. The Bodhisattva’s Station and Dharma Practice

    b. The Bodhisattva’s Mindfulness

    c. The Bodhisattva’s Aspiration to Serve Beings

    d. The Result of the Bodhisattva’s Leaving the Household Life

    11. Vajragarbha Bodhisattva’s Summarizing Verses

    C. The Third Ground: The Shining Light Ground

    1. The Third Ground’s Introductory Verses and Dharma Request

    2. Vajragarbha Commences the Third Ground’s Explanation

    3. The Ten Resolute Intentions as Bases for Entering the Third Ground

    4. The Bodhisattva’s Contemplation of All Conditioned Dharmas

    5. The Bodhisattva’s Renunciation & Quest For Buddha’s Knowledge

    6. The Bodhisattva’s Ten Sympathetic Mental Intentions Toward Beings

    7. The Bodhisattva’s Generation and Practice of Great Vigor

    8. The Bodhisattva’s Conquest of the Meditative Absorptions

    9. The Bodhisattva’s Development of the Four Immeasurables

    10. The Bodhisattva’s Development of the Spiritual superknowledges

    11. The Bodhisattva’s Heavenly Ear

    12. The Bodhisattva’s Knowledge of Others’ Thoughts

    13. The Bodhisattva’s Recall of Past Lives

    14. The Bodhisattva’s Heavenly Eye

    15. The Bodhisattva’s Vow-Determined Rebirth Apart from the Dhyānas

    16. The Bodhisattva’s Seeing and Serving of Countless Buddhas

    17. The Bodhisattva’s Purification and its Comparison to Refining Gold

    18. The Bodhisattva’s Practice of Means of Attraction and Pāramitās

    19. Vajragarbha’s Final Statements About the 3rd Ground Bodhisattva

    a. The Bodhisattva’s Station and Dharma Practice

    b. The Bodhisattva’s Mindfulness

    c. The Bodhisattva’s Aspiration to Serve Beings

    d. The Consequences of the Bodhisattva’s Vigor and Vows

    20. Vajragarbha Bodhisattva’s Summarizing Verses

    D. The Fourth Ground: The Blazing Brilliance Ground

    1. The Fourth Ground’s Introductory Verses and Dharma Request

    2. Vajragarbha Commences the Fourth Ground’s Explanation

    3. 10 Gateways to Dharma Light as Bases for Entering the 4th Ground

    4. Ten Knowledge-Maturing Dharmas for Birth in the Buddhas’ Clan

    5. The Bodhisattva’s Practice of the 37 Enlightenment Factors

    a. The Four Stations of Mindfulness

    b. The Four Right Efforts

    c. The Four Bases of Psychic Power

    d. The Five Roots

    e. The Five Powers

    f. The Seven Limbs of Enlightenment

    g. The Eightfold Path

    h. The Bodhisattva’s Ten Aims in Practicing the 37 Factors

    6. The Bodhisattva’s Leaving of Wrong Views, Attachments, and Actions

    7. Mental and Personal Qualities Gained in Path Cultivation

    8. The Bodhisattva’s Acquisition of Ten Kinds of Vigor

    9. Other Qualities Developed in the Bodhisattva’s 4th Ground Practice

    10. The Bodhisattva’s Seeing and Serving of Countless Buddhas

    11. The Bodhisattva’s Purification & Its Comparison to Refining Gold

    12. The Radiance of This Bodhisattva’s Roots Like That of a Maṇi jewel

    13. The Bodhisattva’s Practice of Means of Attraction and Pāramitās

    14. Vajragarbha’s Statements About the 4th Ground Bodhisattva

    a. The Bodhisattva’s Station and Dharma Practice

    b. The Bodhisattva’s Mindfulness

    c. The Bodhisattva’s Aspiration to Serve Beings

    d. The Consequences of the Bodhisattva’s Vigor and Vows

    15. Vajragarbha Bodhisattva’s Summarizing Verses

    E. The Fifth Ground: The Difficult-to-Conquer Ground

    1. The Fifth Ground’s Introductory Verses and Dharma Request

    2. Vajragarbha Begins the Fifth Ground’s Explanation

    3. Ten Impartial Resolute Intentions Enabling 5th Ground Access

    4. The Bodhisattva’s Bases for the Irreversible Bodhi Resolve

    5. The Bodhisattva’s Knowledge of the Truths

    6. The Bodhisattva’s Resultant Generation of Compassion & Kindness

    7. The Bodhisattva’s Contemplation of Causality in Beings’ Plight

    8. The Bodhisattva’s Compassionate Dedication of Roots of Goodness

    9. The Fifth Ground Bodhisattva’s Qualities and Their Bases

    10. The Methods Used by the Bodhisattva in his Teaching of Beings

    11. The Bodhisattva’s Adoption of an Array of Means to Benefit Beings

    12. The Bodhisattva’s Seeing and Serving of Countless Buddhas

    13. The Bodhisattva’s Purification of His Roots of Goodness

    14. Good Roots Purification Like Refining Gold & Celestial Phenomena

    15. The Bodhisattva’s Practice of the Pāramitās

    16. Vajragarbha’s Final Statements About the 5th Ground Bodhisattva

    a. The Bodhisattva’s Station and Dharma Practice

    b. The Bodhisattva’s Mindfulness

    c. The Bodhisattva’s Aspiration to Serve Beings

    d. The Consequences of the Bodhisattva’s Vigor and Vows

    17. Vajragarbha Bodhisattva’s Summarizing Verses

    F. The Sixth Ground: The Direct Presence Ground

    1. The Sixth Ground’s Introductory Verses and Dharma Request

    2. Vajragarbha Commences the Sixth Ground’s Explanation

    3. The Ten Dharmas of Identity Enabling Access to the Sixth Ground

    4. Sixth Ground Entry, Acquiescent Patience & Primacy of Compassion

    5. The Bodhisattva’s Contemplation of Causality in Cyclic Existence

    a. Contemplation of the Sequential Continuity of the Causal Factors

    b. The Bodhisattva Contemplates the Definitions of Causal Links

    c. The Bodhisattva’s Contemplation of Mind As the Basis of Existence

    d. The Contemplation of 2 Functions of Each Causal Chain Link

    e. The Contemplation of Causal Chain Production and Destruction

    f. Contemplation of The 12 Links’ association with inseparability.

    g. The Twelve Links As Constituents of Three Paths

    h. The Twelve Links’ Correlation With the Three Periods of Time

    i. The Twelve Links’ Correlation With the Three Kinds of Suffering

    j. Contemplation of their arising & ceasing by causes and conditions

    k. Contemplation of their creation and destruction of the Bonds

    l. Contemplation of utter nonexistence and utter cessation

    m. A Summary Listing of 10 Contemplations of the 12 Causal Factors

    6. The Bodhisattva’s Acquisition of the Three Gates to Liberation

    7. The Bodhisattva’s Compassionate Reluctance to Enter Final Nirvāṇa

    8. The Bodhisattva’s Samādhis Related to the 3 Gates to Liberation

    9. The Bodhisattva’s Ten Types of Resolute intentions

    10. 10 Consequences of the Bodhisattva’s 10 Types of Resolute intentions

    11. The Bodhisattva’s Prajñāpāramitā Practice and Patience Acquisition

    12. The Bodhisattva’s Seeing and Serving of Countless Buddhas

    13. Purifying Good Roots Like Polishing Gold & Moonlight’s Coolness

    14. The Bodhisattva’s specialization in the Prajñāpāramitā

    15. Vajragarbha’s final Statements About the 6th Ground Bodhisattva

    a. The Bodhisattva’s Station and Dharma Practice

    b. The Bodhisattva’s Mindfulness

    c. The Bodhisattva’s Aspiration to Serve Beings

    d. The Consequences of the Bodhisattva’s Vigor and Vows

    16. Vajragarbha Bodhisattva’s Summarizing Verses

    G. The Seventh Ground: The Far-Reaching Ground

    1. The Seventh Ground’s Introductory Verses and Dharma Request

    2. Vajragarbha Commences the Seventh Ground’s Explanation

    3. 10 Types of Skillful Means & Wisdom Enabling 7th Ground Access

    4. The Bodhisattva’s Twenty Kinds of Penetrating Comprehension

    5. His Adoption of Effortlessness, Non-Discrimination & Meditation

    6. His Practice of 10 Pāramitās & Other Dharmas Leading to Bodhi

    7. Vimukticandra Asks About Perfection of Bodhyaṅga Dharmas

    8. Vajragarbha on the Perfection of Bodhyaṅgas on All Grounds

    9. Vimukticandra Asks About Transcendence of Afflictions

    10. Vajragarbha Explains the Transcendence of Afflictions

    11. Vajragarbha’s Cakravartin Sage King Analogy

    12. The Conquest of Samādhis and Unproduced-Dharmas Patience

    13. Vimukticandra: Doesn’t the 1st Ground Surpass the Two Vehicles?

    14. Vajragarbha: In Aspiration, Yes. By Virtue of Practice, Not Yet

    15. Vajragarbha’s Analogy of a Prince Not Yet Ascended to Power

    16. This Bodhisattva’s Unique Practice & Restraint From Final Nirvāṇa

    17. Vimukticandra: When Can One Enter The Cessation Samādhi?

    18. Vajragarbha: From the 6th Ground; Now He Enters & Arises at Will

    19. Vajragarbha Likens Practice To Sailing on the Open Ocean

    20. 10 Paradoxical Aspects of the 7th Ground Bodhisattva’s Practice

    21. The Bodhisattva’s Seeing and Serving of Countless Buddhas

    22. Good Roots Purification Likened to Gold Inlay and Sunlight

    23. The 7th Ground Bodhisattva’s Focus on Skillful Means Pāramitā

    24. Vajragarbha’s Final Statements About the 7th Ground Bodhisattva

    a. The Bodhisattva’s Station and Dharma Practice

    b. The Bodhisattva’s Mindfulness

    c. The Bodhisattva’s Aspiration to Serve Beings

    d. The Consequences of the Bodhisattva’s Vigor and Vows

    25. Vajragarbha Bodhisattva’s Summarizing Verses

    H. The Eighth Ground: The Immovability Ground

    1. The Eighth Ground’s Introductory Verses and Dharma Request

    2. Vajragarbha Commences the Eighth Ground’s Explanation

    3. Ten Accomplishments Associated With Entering the Eighth Ground

    4. Ten Types of Comprehension Associated With 8th Ground Access

    5. The Unproduced Dharmas Patience Basis for Profound Practice

    6. Profound Practice Like a Monk With Superknowledges & Dhyānas

    7. 8th Ground Likened to Awakening From a River-Fording Dream

    8. 8th Ground Likened to the Brahma World’s Absence of Afflictions

    9. The Buddhas’ Manifestation Before the 8th Ground Bodhisattva

    10. The Buddhas’ Praise & Instructions for the 8th Ground Bodhisattva

    11. The Importance of Buddhas’ Appearing to 8th Ground Bodhisattvas

    12. Why 8th Ground Bodhisattva’s Practices Are So Measureless

    13. This Bodhisattva’s Practices Likened to Sailing Out onto the Ocean

    14. The Bodhisattva’s Contemplation of Buddha’s All-Knowledge

    15. His Knowledge of the Arising and Destruction of Worlds

    16. His Knowledge of the Four Elemental Phases

    17. His Knowledge of Atoms’ Manifestations in Worlds and Beings

    18. His Knowledge of the Three Realms of Existence

    19. His Application of Knowledge in Adaptive Births To Teach Beings

    20. His Transcendence of Discriminations & Knowledge of 10 Body Types

    a. The Bodhisattva’s Manifestation of Different Bodies for Beings

    b. The Bodhisattva’s Knowledge of Beings’ Bodies

    c. The Bodhisattva’s Knowledge of the Bodies of Lands

    d. His Knowledge of Retribution, 2-Vehicles, and Bodhisattva Bodies

    e. The Bodhisattva’s Knowledge of Tathāgatas’ Bodies

    f. The Bodhisattva’s Knowledge of the Knowledge Body

    g. The Bodhisattva’s Knowledge of the Dharma Body

    h. The Bodhisattva’s Knowledge of the Empty Space Body

    21. The Bodhisattva’s Acquisition of Ten Kinds of Sovereign Mastery

    22. Ten Characteristic Aspects of this Eighth Ground Bodhisattva

    23. Ten Types of Power in Which This Bodhisattva Is Well Established

    24. The Ten Names of this Eighth Bodhisattva Ground

    25. Additional 8th Ground Bodhisattva Qualities and Practice Aspects

    26. The Bodhisattva’s Seeing and Serving of Countless Buddhas

    27. The Bodhisattva’s Further Acquisition of Buddhas’ Dharma Light

    28. The Radiance of Good Roots Likened to a Sage King’s Crown

    29. This Bodhisattva’s Radiance Like That of a Brahma Heaven King

    30. The 8th Ground Bodhisattva’s Focus on the Skillful Means Pāramitā

    31. Vajragarbha’s Final Statements About the 8th Ground Bodhisattva

    a. The Bodhisattva’s Station and Dharma Practice

    b. The Bodhisattva’s Mindfulness

    c. The Bodhisattva’s Aspiration to Serve Beings

    d. The Consequences of the Bodhisattva’s Vigor and Vows

    32. Vajragarbha Bodhisattva’s Summarizing Verses

    I. The Ninth Ground: The Excellent Intelligence Ground

    1. The Ninth Ground’s Introductory Verses and Dharma Request

    2. Vajragarbha Commences the Ninth Ground’s Explanation

    3. Ten Earnestly Pursued Endeavors Enabling Ninth Ground Access

    4. This Bodhisattva’s Ten Types of Reality-Based Knowledge of Karma

    5. His Ten Types of Reality-Based Knowledge of Entangling Thickets

    6. Ten Types of Reality-Based Knowledge of Beings’ Mental Aspects

    7. His Reality-Based Knowledge of the Afflictions’ Characteristics

    8. His Reality-Based Knowledge of Characteristics of Karmic Actions

    9. His Reality-Based Knowledge of Characteristics of Beings’ Faculties

    10. His Knowledge of Beliefs, Sense Realms, and Resolute Intentions

    11. His Knowledge of the Latent Tendencies’ Characteristics

    12. His Knowledge of the Characteristics Associated With Births

    13. His Knowledge of Characteristics of Habitual Karmic Propensities

    14. His Knowledge of Those Fixed in Right, in Wrong, or Unfixed

    15. His Knowledge-Based Adaptive Teaching and Liberation of Beings

    16. The Bodhisattva’s Command of Four Types of Unimpeded Knowledge

    a. Ten Permutations of Expertise in the Four Unimpeded Knowledges

    17. His Acquisition of Dhāraṇīs & Further Receipt of Buddhas’ Dharma

    18. His Expounding on Dharma Throughout a Great Trichiliocosm

    19. This Bodhisattva’s 10 Types of Voice-Like Expression in Teaching

    20. His Independent Command of Countless Simultaneous Voices

    21. The Bodhisattva’s Vigor in Quest of the Light of Knowledge

    22. The Bodhisattva’s Seeing and Serving of Countless Buddhas

    23. His Good Roots’ Purity Like the Gold of a Cakravartin’s Crown

    24. His Good Roots’ Purity Like a Brahma Heaven King’s Radiance

    25. The Ninth Ground Bodhisattva’s Focus on the Powers Pāramitā

    26. Vajragarbha’s Final Statements About the 9th Ground Bodhisattva

    a. The Bodhisattva’s Station and Dharma Practice

    b. The Bodhisattva’s Mindfulness

    c. The Bodhisattva’s Aspiration to Serve Beings

    d. The Consequences of the Bodhisattva’s Vigor and Vows

    27. Vajragarbha Bodhisattva’s Summarizing Verses

    J. The Tenth Ground: The Dharma Cloud Ground

    1. The Tenth Ground’s Introductory Verses and Dharma Request

    2. Vajragarbha Commences the Tenth Ground’s Explanation

    3. The Ten Categories of Practice Before Entering the Tenth Ground

    4. This Bodhisattva’s Subsequent Acquisition of Samādhis

    5. This Final Samādhi’s Manifestation of an Immense Radiant Lotus

    6. This Bodhisattva Sits Atop a Lotus Encircled by Retinue Bodhisattvas

    7. His Body Emanates Light Illuminating Ten Realms of Beings

    8. The Light Rays Form a Canopy That Makes Offerings to All Buddhas

    9. The Light Rays Circle Around All Buddhas and Enter Their Feet

    10. The 10 Regions’ Bodhisattvas Come, Make Offerings & Enter Samādhi

    11. They Emanate Light from Their Chests That Enters His Chest

    12. All Buddhas Send Forth Light That Enters This Bodhisattva’s Crown

    13. This Bodhisattva Acquires Samādhis and All Buddhas’ Consecration

    14. The Simile of the Consecration of the Wheel Turning Sage King’s Son

    15. The Capacities Arising From This Bodhisattva’s Consecration

    16. This Bodhisattva’s Knowledge of Attainments

    17. This Bodhisattva’s Knowledge of Transformation

    18. This Bodhisattva’s Knowledge of Sustaining Bases

    19. This Bodhisattva’s Knowledge of Subtleties of Practice

    20. This Bodhisattva’s Knowledge of the Tathāgatas’ Secrets

    21. This Bodhisattva’s Knowledge of the Interpenetration of Kalpas

    22. This Bodhisattva’s Knowing of the Buddha’s Penetrating Knowledge

    23. This Bodhisattva’s Acquisition of Countless Liberations

    24. This Bodhisattva’s Samādhis, Dhāraṇīs, and Superknowledges

    25. This Bodhisattva’s Limitless Memory Power

    26. His Limitless Memory Compared to the Ocean’s Limitless Capacity

    27. Vimukticandra Asks About the Limits of This Bodhisattva’s Memory

    28. Vajragarbha’s Analogy Describing This Bodhisattva’s Memory Power

    29. The Dharma Cloud Bodhisattva’s Great Dharma Rain

    30. This Bodhisattva’s Use of Spiritual Powers in Transforming Worlds

    31. His Use of Powers in Manifesting Bodies & Supernatural Phenomena

    32. The Congregants Wonder: What More Could Even a Buddha Do?

    33. Liberation Moon Asks Vajragarbha for an Explanation

    34. Vajragarbha Enters The Nature of All Buddha Lands’ Samādhi

    35. Liberation Moon Asks About This Samādhi’s Name and Capacity

    36. He Asks: What More Might a Buddha’s Powers Accomplish?

    37. Vajragarbha Contrasts a Few Clumps of Earth to All Worlds

    38. Vajragarbha Compares Many Bodhisattvas’ Wisdom to One Buddha’s

    39. The Nature of This Bodhisattva’s Practice and Wisdom Light

    40. The Light of His Wisdom Compared to That of Real Gold

    41. This Bodhisattva’s Wisdom Light Compared to Maheśvara’s Light

    42. The Buddhas’ Ongoing Teaching of This Bodhisattva

    43. The Tenth Ground Bodhisattva’s Focus on the Knowledges Pāramitā

    44. Vajragarbha’s Final Statements About the 10th Ground Bodhisattva

    45. The Bodhisattva’s Station and Dharma Practice

    46. The Bodhisattva’s Mindfulness

    47. The Bodhisattva’s Aspiration to Serve Beings

    48. The Consequences of the Bodhisattva’s Vigor and Vows

    III. The Final Summarizing Discussion of the Ten Grounds

    A. His Eventual All-Knowledge Likened to Rivers’ Flow Into the Sea

    B. The 10 Grounds’ Differences Likened to Those of 10 Mountain Kings

    1. The First Ground Compared to the Snow Mountain King

    2. The Second Ground Compared to the Fragrance Mountain King

    3. The Third Ground Compared to the Vaidharī Mountain King

    4. The Fourth Ground Compared to the Rishi Mountain King

    5. The Fifth Ground Compared to the Yugaṃdhara Mountain King

    6. The Sixth Ground Compared to the Horse Ear Mountain King

    7. The Seventh Ground Compared to the Nimindhara Mountain King

    8. The Eighth Ground Compared to the Cakravāda Mountain King

    9. The Ninth Ground Compared to the Ketumat Mountain King

    10. The Tenth Ground Compared to the Sumeru Mountain King

    11. The Ten Grounds in All-Knowledge Likened to Mountains in the Sea

    C. The Ten Grounds Compared to Ten Aspects of the Great Ocean

    D. The Ten Grounds Compared to a Large Maṇi Jewel

    E. The Prerequisite Conditions for Hearing The Ten Grounds Teachings

    F. Liberation Moon Asks: "How Much Merit by Hearing This Teaching?

    G. Vajragarbha Explains Merit and Importance Ten Grounds Teaching

    H. The Auspicious Signs Occurring When This Sutra’s Teaching Ended

    I. The 10 Directions’ Bodhisattvas Attest to the Teaching’s Universality

    J. Vajragarbha’s Summarizing Verses Augmented by the Buddha’s Powers

    Translator’s Introduction

    Continuing my focus on translating bodhisattva path texts important in the history of Classic Indian and Chinese Mahāyana Buddhism, I present here my English translation of The Ten Grounds chapter of the Greatly Expansive Buddha’s Flower Adornment Sutra (Mahāvaipulya-buddha-avataṃsaka-sūtra) as translated by Tripiṭaka Master Śikṣānanda some time between 695 and 699 CE. The subject of this six-fascicle 26th chapter, The Ten Grounds, is the bodhisattva’s ascent through ten grounds, planes, or levels of spiritual path cultivation transited by the bodhisattva as he progresses from the state of a common person toward that of a fully enlightened buddha.

    There have been two relatively complete Chinese translations of the Avataṃsaka Sutra itself from Sanskrit, the first of which was an edition in 34 chapters and 60 fascicles completed by Tripiṭaka Master Buddhabhadra in 421 (T 278) and the second of which was an edition in 39 chapters and 80 fascicles completed by Tripiṭaka Master Śikṣānanda in 699 (T 280). My reasons for drawing this Ten Grounds chapter from the Śikṣānanda edition rather than the Buddhabhadra edition were two-fold. First, the Śikṣānanda edition is more complete and, outside of Japan, it has generally now regarded as the standard edition ever since the middle of the Tang Dynasty. Secondly, I had already been introduced to the Śikṣānanda edition by my guru, the Venerable Hsuan Hua, this in the context of his lectures on it which started in San Francisco in 1970 or ‘71.

    In order to encourage a better understanding of these ten bodhisattva grounds and the bodhisattva path in general, I have also translated three other closely related works:

    Kumārajīva’s 4-fascicle Ten Grounds Sutra (T 286);

    Nāgārjuna’s 17-fascicle Treatise on the Ten Grounds (T 1521);

    Śikṣānanda’s 80-fascicle Flower Adornment Sutra (T 279).

    The first two of these three related works are Kalavinka Press publications. Even though I finished the first draft of my Flower Adornment Sutra translation in early 2014, due to the inevitable delay imposed by editing, revising, and incorporating recommended improvements from colleagues, it could easily be a few more years before I release it to publication.

    Regarding this Ten Grounds text itself, because it also circulated as an independent scripture known as the Ten Grounds Sutra (Daśabhūmika-sūtra), it does not exist only as a chapter of the Avataṃsaka Sutra. There is no real consensus on whether this text was, per the tradition, originally integral to the Avataṃsaka Sutra or was instead an independently circulating scripture later incorporated into the Avataṃsaka Sutra. In any case, in addition to the later Sanskrit, Tibetan, and Mongolian editions of this text, there are six relatively early surviving Chinese editions as follows:

    Dharmarakṣa (c. 297 CE), T 283;

    Kumārajīva assisted by Buddhayaśas (c. 408–412 CE),¹ T 286;

    Buddhabhadra (c. 418–20 CE), as Avataṃsaka Sutra Ch. 22, T 278;

    Bodhiruci (c. 508–511 CE), in Vasubhandu’s commentary, T 1522;

    Śikṣānanda (c. 695–699 CE), as Avataṃsaka Sutra Ch. 26, T 279;

    Śīladharma (c. 790 CE), T 287.

    In English, there have been several translations, as follows:

    Megumu Honda from the Sanskrit of the Daśabhūmika-sūtra;²

    Buddhist Text Translation Society (partial) of the Śikṣānanda edition’s Chapter 26;

    Thomas Cleary, supposedly (but not really) from Śikṣānanda’s edition of the Avataṃsaka Sutra, this in Ch. 26 of his Flower Ornament Scripture.³

    The Megumu Honda translation was done in 1961–62 when he was still a student at Yale, and, although perhaps useful for beginning students of Sanskrit, its utility is diminished by the author’s early difficulties with both Sanskrit and English.

    The BTTS translation is so far only a partial translation consisting of a translation of the first four of the ten grounds. I have been advised by a member of that translation team that, as of July, 2018, the tentative publication date for the remainder of the BTTS translation is still 2 or more years away.

    Regarding this Ten Grounds Chapter itself, Thomas Cleary’s translation is represented as a translation from the Chinese of the Śikṣānanda edition of the Avataṃsaka Sutra. However, it is no such thing. His translation of Chapter 26 which he calls The Ten Stages chapter appears to instead be a loose translation of the P. L. Vaidya Sanskrit edition of the Daśabhūmika Sūtra. Hence his supposed translation of this chapter has little if any relation to Śikṣānanda’s Chinese edition.

    Although there are other schemas describing the levels of cultivation through which one passes in cultivating the bodhisattva path, the ten grounds arrangement described in this text is really quite standard for the Classic Indian Mahāyana tradition. As listed in the introductory section of this chapter, these ten levels of progress along the bodhisattva path are as follows:

    1) The Ground of Joyfulness (pramuditā);

    2) The Ground of Stainlessness (vimalā);

    3) The Ground of Shining Light (prabhākarī);

    4) The Ground of Blazing Brilliance (arciṣmati);

    5) The Difficult-to-Conquer Ground (sudurjayā);

    6) The Ground of Direct Presence (abhimukhī);

    7) The Far-Reaching Ground (dūraṃgamā);

    8) The Ground of Immovability (acalā);

    9) The Ground of Excellent Intelligence (sādhumatī);

    10) The Ground of the Dharma Cloud (dharma-megha).

    Each of these grounds is correlated with the practice of one of these ten perfections:

    The perfection of giving (dāna-pāramitā);

    The perfection of moral virtue (śīla-pāramitā);

    The perfection of patience (kṣānti-pāramitā);

    The perfection of vigor (vīrya-pāramitā);

    The perfection of dhyāna meditation (dhyāna-pāramitā);

    The perfection of wisdom (prajñā-pāramitā);

    The perfection of skillful means (upāya-pāramitā);

    The perfection of vows (praṇidhāna-pāramitā);

    The perfection of powers (bala-pāramitā);

    The perfection of knowledge

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