The Revolution of Tantra
By Ken Holmes
Opinions vary about how and
when tantric Buddhism first appeared. Some believe it was first taught
by Buddha Sakyamuni and then maintained by a few adepts as a secret
teaching for almost a thousand years, until a broader public was ready
and it became popular. Others see it as an aberration of the original
teaching. There are convincing arguments for both cases but no
definitive evidence for either. Here, we shall simply consider tantra
as it is viewed by the proponents of its own living traditions, i.e. as
the highest of the three levels of Buddhist teaching.
The
general foundation for all Buddhism is a balance of ethical living,
mastering the mind through meditation and acquiring the wisdom of
egolessness. This wholesome combination is, in itself, enough to bring
personal liberation from suffering. However, as it helps only the
individual concerned, this foundation is known as the lesser (hinayana)
aspect of the teachings. One can go much further. By enlarging wisdom
into a direct awareness of the illusoriness of all things (not just
ego) and by awakening mind's unlimited potential for compassion, one
can become a Buddha and help multitudes. This is the greater (mahayana)
aspect.
The mahayana journey, however, is sometimes very long.
Certain people can complete it with far greater speed through powerful
techniques which rapidly awaken the mind to the primordial purity and
perfection which is everywhere, but masked by illusion. These practices
are known as tantra, which means a thread or fabric, since they unite
one, in the moment, with the primordial thread which runs through all
things: they integrate one with the wholeness which is the fabric of
the universe. This is the indestructible (vajrayana) aspect. Sometimes
the hinayana foundation is compared to a saucer, the mahayana to a cup
and the vajrayana to the tea held in the cup.
In the life of an
individual, these lesser, greater and indestructible stages of the
teaching must fall into place, one after another in correct order. Some
people apply the same notion to the progressive acceptance of the three
stages in the collective consciousness of the Indian nation. One could,
very broadly, consider the hinayana teachings of the Buddha as
dominating the first five centuries of Indian Buddhism, the mahayana as
coming into its own during the next seven hundred years and vajrayana
taking its rightful place in the remaining five centuries, during which
Buddhism, as a living, growing faith, came to maturity.
According
to the Kalachakra Tantra and the Good Age Sutra, one thousand and two
Buddhas appear, during the lifespan of this world, to teach the
universal truths. But Sakyamuni is the only one of them who teaches
tantra. The others manifest during golden ages when the inhabitants of
the world are virtuous, peaceful people of great merit - easy to teach.
At such times, the outer environment is harmonious, with bountiful
crops which are delicious, satisfying and nourishing. Sakyamuni,
however, the fourth and most intrepid of these Buddhas, comes at a
worse time than any other. The people of his degenerating world are in
emotional turmoil and only the powerful psychological transformations
of tantra can help some of them.
There are four main levels of
tantra: Kriya, Carya, Yoga and Anuttarayoga. Kriya (action) tantra puts
great emphasis on physical activities, such as rituals of purification.
Carya (method) tantra strikes a balance between external activities and
inner meditative stability. Yoga (union) tantra is almost entirely
concerned with inner spiritual union. These first three are sometimes
called, collectively, mantrayana- the way of mantra. Annutara Yoga
(highest union) tantra stands somewhat apart. The most sublime tantra
of all, and the most powerful spiritual alchemy, it can bring total
enlightenment in one lifetime and, unlike the others, train one not
only for this life's experience but also for death and the intermediate
state between lives. It is sometimes called vajrayana.
Sakyamuni
is considered to have attained enlightenment in a celestial realm
before appearing in this world as Prince Gautama, who graced the Earth
for eighty years from around 624 - 544 BCE. This brief emanation or
nirmanakaya was but one small facet of the jewel of his attainment. It
served principally to establish the main body of his teachings,
destined to endure for ten periods of five hundred years, i.e. well
into the fifth millennium. Throughout these five millennia,
bodhisattvas with exceedingly pure minds can be constantly in the
presence of his sambhogakaya, which manifests as pure lands and many
symbolic Buddha forms within their meditations.
Some of the
tantra were given by the nirmanakaya facet of the Buddha during his
time on Earth, to a mixed audience of human followers and celestial
bodhisattvas, in various locations from as far north as Oddiyana and as
far south as Dhanyakataka, where he taught the Wheel of Time
(Kalachakra) tantra. After his passing, these lineages were perpetuated
secretly in this world and more openly in non-Earthly realms. Other
tantras started later, being given through the sambhogakaya, either
directly to human beings or indirectly, via celestial bodhisattvas such
as Ratnabhadra.
As the early mahayana masters appeared, from the
second century BCE to the fourth century CE, the mantrayana aspect of
tantra became better known, but was nevertheless still primarily a
secret, hermetic practice pursued in jungles and wildernesses by lone
meditators. It was a way of devotion and direct spiritual action, as
opposed to the great erudition and intellectuality that had developed
in monasteries. It was not unknown, during this period, for great
scholars, having mastered the Buddhist tenets and ensured their own
disciples' education, to leave their established respectability in
order to finish their days in the pursuit of highest truth through
tantric meditation. Nevertheless, there was a great deal of suspicion
of tantra among many Buddhists, since some of its tenets and practices
seemed to fly directly in the face of the Buddha's teachings. Much of
the confusion came from the fact that tantra used a secret 'twilight
language' (sandhyabhasa) full of double meanings and paradoxes,
designed to scare off the dilettante. This was not a new invention.
Even the universally-accepted dhammapada says, in verse 294, that one
should,
"... having killed mother and father and two Ksattriya kings, destroy a kingdom and all its inhabitants."
This
does not sound very Buddhist, until one understands the symbolism. The
mother is egotism, the father is selfish desire, the two kings are the
prime misconceptions of a lasting identity and its opposite, total
nihilism. The kingdom and its inhabitants are the ways one perceives
subjective consciousness and objective reality, due to these false
notions.
The various levels of tantra provide ways of mobilising
thoughts, imagination, emotions, perception and consciousness so as to
blow away the clouds of illusion and bring one into spiritual
integrity. Through awakened, intelligent use of body, speech and mind
in one's day-to-day dealings with life, anything and everything becomes
a gateway to truth.
Rather than giving the people of ancient
India a whole new religion to learn, their familiar acts and gestures
could be taken and modified by tantra to make Buddhist sense. This
meant that primitive rites, such as animal sacrifices, could be
replaced by similar but imaginary rites, in which selfish delusions are
pinned to the sacrificial altar (rather than some misfortunate goat)
and in which the deity receiving the offering is replaced by a
representation of the primordial and selfless space of wisdom and
compassion.
From the time of Asanga (fourth century), the higher
yoga tantras started finding their way into some centres of learning.
The following two centuries were marked by the rule of the Gupta kings
and a general trend towards devotion rather than erudition throughout
India. Tantra, on all its levels, began to establish itself in some
monasteries, as a normal aspect of the Buddha's teaching.
It
seems fairly clear now that Buddhist tantra preceded Hindu tantra and
probably gave rise to it. There are several factors to be considered in
reviewing the historical development of tantra. Prior to the Buddha,
religion, based on the Vedas and the Upanishads, was the privileged
domain of the three upper castes (the traivarnika or arya). The
Brahmana priests jealously guarded their wisdom, much of which
concerned prolonged, non-theistic reflection upon the nature of the
soul (atman). In contrast to this, the Buddha had made it clear that
his teachings were available to all, regardless of sex, caste or any
other such factors. He severely criticised Vedic animal sacrifice and,
dismissing useless speculation on personal identity, laid great
emphasis on personal ethics as the way to each individual's liberation.
After
his passing, the Mahayanists encouraged the use of prayer as a way of
training the mind and giving spiritual succour to the meditator. This
coincided with the appearance of the Bhagavad-Gita which was to
radically alter Hinduism, by opening religion to non-aryan castes,
giving it a more theistic slant and encouraging prayer and devotion
(bhakti) as the way in which ordinary people could find salvation.
As
we follow the trends in ancient and mediaeval India, the question of
whether it was Buddhism or Hinduism which initiated these widespread
tendencies to prayer, devotion, quasi-theistic rituals etc., becomes
secondary. Much more interesting is the strikingly different way in
which each faith uses them.
By the seventh century, tantra had
become truly widespread, and was openly taught in great monastic
universities such as Nalanda and Oddiyana. The great flowering of
tantra came under the Pala dynasty (eighth - twelfth century), which
actively fostered the development of Buddhism: especially mantrayana.
The famous 'greatly-realised-ones' (mahasiddhas) appear at this time.
Vikramasila monastic university gradually stole the limelight from
Nalanda and both mahayana and vajrayana Buddhism spread widely in Asia.
They took special root in Tibet, where they have persisted healthily
until the Chinese annexation in the middle of the 20th century.
Successive waves of Turko-moslem invasions during the twelfth and
thirteenth centuries destroyed first the great Buddhist centres of
Kashmir, then burned down Nalanda and the monasteries of Bengal. By
1335, Islamic Turko-Afghans ruled all India. That unique land had
fulfilled its destiny, seen by Buddha Sakyamuni when he first left the
Tusita realm to come here. He had seen it to be a cultured land in
which his teaching could be properly established, step by step, and
from which it could spread out, when the time was ripe, to reach all
ends of the world.
It was, without doubt, traumatic for the
early Buddhists to first establish their faith and then see it giving
way to a larger, more profound vision: a process that was to happen
again and again as the fullness of the Buddha's message came to light.
Such winds of change can be refreshing or threatening. In its face, one
either entrenches one's views or accepts the new. Thus, various
'schools' of Buddhism emerged with the passage of history. Each new
chapter was a miniature revolution and the coming of tantra was perhaps
the greatest of all these revolutions.