Cu¿n sách này có t¿a là R¿ng m¿ tâm h¿n và phát tri¿n trí tu¿. Tâm h¿n r¿ng m¿ chính là lòng t¿ bi và v¿ tha chân thành. Lòng t¿ bi ¿¿¿c nâng ¿¿ và hoàn thi¿n b¿i trí tu¿ sáng su¿t - m¿t tâm th¿c thanh t¿nh, trong sáng. S¿ k¿t h¿p gi¿a t¿ bi và trí tu¿ mang l¿i s¿ phát tri¿n tr¿n v¿n ti¿m n¿ng con ng¿¿i, t¿c tr¿ng thái giác ng¿. Tâm h¿n r¿ng m¿ và trí tu¿ sáng su¿t cho ¿¿n ngày nay v¿n là thi¿t y¿u nh¿ cách ¿ây h¿n 2.500 n¿m, khi ¿¿c Ph¿t Thích-ca Mâu-ni l¿n ¿¿u tiên ch¿ d¿y ph¿¿ng pháp tu t¿p các ph¿m tính này. Tôi b¿ cu¿n hút b¿i nh¿ng l¿i Ph¿t d¿y ngay t¿ ban ¿¿u, vì trong ¿ó hàm ch¿a nh¿ng…mehr
Cu¿n sách này có t¿a là R¿ng m¿ tâm h¿n và phát tri¿n trí tu¿. Tâm h¿n r¿ng m¿ chính là lòng t¿ bi và v¿ tha chân thành. Lòng t¿ bi ¿¿¿c nâng ¿¿ và hoàn thi¿n b¿i trí tu¿ sáng su¿t - m¿t tâm th¿c thanh t¿nh, trong sáng. S¿ k¿t h¿p gi¿a t¿ bi và trí tu¿ mang l¿i s¿ phát tri¿n tr¿n v¿n ti¿m n¿ng con ng¿¿i, t¿c tr¿ng thái giác ng¿. Tâm h¿n r¿ng m¿ và trí tu¿ sáng su¿t cho ¿¿n ngày nay v¿n là thi¿t y¿u nh¿ cách ¿ây h¿n 2.500 n¿m, khi ¿¿c Ph¿t Thích-ca Mâu-ni l¿n ¿¿u tiên ch¿ d¿y ph¿¿ng pháp tu t¿p các ph¿m tính này. Tôi b¿ cu¿n hút b¿i nh¿ng l¿i Ph¿t d¿y ngay t¿ ban ¿¿u, vì trong ¿ó hàm ch¿a nh¿ng ph¿¿ng pháp rõ ràng ¿¿ ¿ng phó hi¿u qu¿ v¿i nh¿ng tình hu¿ng trong ¿¿i s¿ng h¿ng ngày. Tôi ¿ã áp d¿ng các ph¿¿ng pháp ch¿ ng¿ tham lam và sân h¿n có k¿t qu¿. T¿t nhiên, vi¿c chuy¿n hóa tâm th¿c c¿n ph¿i có th¿i gian và chúng ta không nên mong ¿¿i nh¿ng ¿i¿u k¿ di¿u t¿c thì. Tuy v¿y, khi chúng ta d¿n quen thu¿c v¿i khuynh h¿¿ng t¿ bi và th¿c ti¿n, thì nh¿ng tình hu¿ng tr¿¿c ¿ây t¿ng làm ta phi¿n mu¿n s¿ ¿¿¿c hóa gi¿i và ta càng t¿ng thêm kh¿ n¿ng làm cho ¿¿i s¿ng c¿a ta có ý ngh¿a ¿¿i v¿i tha nhân. ¿¿c Ph¿t là m¿t nhà tâm lý sâu s¿c, nhà t¿ t¿¿ng uyên áo, v¿i nh¿ng l¿i d¿y có th¿ giúp chúng ta hoàn thi¿n cu¿c s¿ng. Ng¿¿i ta không c¿n ph¿i t¿ xem mình là Ph¿t t¿ m¿i th¿c hành nh¿ng l¿i d¿y c¿a ngài. S¿ th¿c hành tâm linh ¿ích th¿c v¿¿t qua nh¿ng gi¿i h¿n c¿a m¿i ch¿ thuy¿t. Nh¿ ¿¿c ¿¿t-lai L¿t-ma th¿¿ng nói: "Lòng t¿ bi không ph¿i tài s¿n riêng c¿a b¿t k¿ m¿t tôn giáo hay h¿ th¿ng tín ng¿¿ng nào." Trong quá trình gi¿ng d¿y các khía c¿nh tâm lý, t¿ t¿¿ng và thi¿n ¿¿nh c¿a ¿¿o Ph¿t ¿ nhi¿u qu¿c gia, tôi th¿¿ng ¿¿¿c yêu c¿u gi¿i thi¿u m¿t cu¿n sách hay, d¿ hi¿u, trình bày nh¿ng giáo lý c¿n b¿n liên h¿ ¿¿n ¿¿i s¿ng hi¿n ¿¿i c¿a th¿ k¿ 20. Nh¿ng h¿u nh¿ ch¿a có cu¿n sách nào ¿áp ¿ng ¿¿¿c nh¿ng yêu c¿u ¿ó, dù r¿ng ¿ã có nhi¿u tác ph¿m Ph¿t h¿c r¿t tuy¿t v¿i. Quy¿n sách này ¿¿¿c biên sön ¿¿ lHinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Thubten Chodron, born Cheryl Greene, is an American Tibetan Buddhist nun, author, teacher, and the founder and abbess of Sravasti Abbey, the only Tibetan Buddhist training monastery for Western nuns and monks in the United States. Chodron is a central figure in the reinstatement of the Bhikshuni (tib. Gelongma) ordination of women. She is a student of the 14th Dalai Lama, Tsenzhab Serkong Rinpoche, Lama Thubten Yeshe, Thubten Zopa Rinpoche, and other Tibetan masters. She has published many books on Buddhist philosophy and meditation, and is the only nun who has co-authored a book with the Dalai Lama-Buddhism: One Teacher, Many Traditions Born in 1950, Chodron grew up in a "non-religious Jewish" family near Los Angeles, California and earned her B.A. in history from University of California at Los Angeles in 1971. After traveling through Europe, North Africa and Asia for one and a half years, she received a teaching credential and went to the University of Southern California to do post-graduate work in education while working as a teacher in the Los Angeles City School System. In 1975, she attended a meditation course given by Lama Thubten Yeshe and Kyabje Thubten Zopa Rinpoche, and subsequently went to Kopan Monastery in Nepal to continue studying Buddhism. In 1977 she was ordained as a Buddhist nun by Kyabje Ling Rinpoche in Dharamsala, and in 1986 she received bhikshuni (full) ordination in Taiwan. Chodron has studied and practiced Buddhism in the Tibetan tradition extensively in India and Nepal under the guidance of the 14th Dalai Lama, Tsenzhab Serkong Rinpoche, Lama Thubten Yeshe, Thubten Zopa Rinpoche and other Tibetan masters and for three years at Dorje Pamo Monastery in France. She directed the spiritual program at Istituto Lama Tzong Khapa in Italy for nearly two years, was resident teacher at Amitabha Buddhist Centre in Singapore,[1] and for 10 years was spiritual director and resident teacher at Dharma Friendship Foundation in Seattle, US. Emphasizing the practical application of the Buddha's teachings in our daily lives, Chodron tries to explain them in ways easily understood and practised by Westerners. She has worked on re-establishing the Bhikshuni lineage of Buddhist nuns, cultivating interfaith dialogue, and Dharma outreach in prisons. She was a co-organizer of Life as a Western Buddhist Nun, an international conference of Western Buddhist nuns held in 1996. She was a participant in the 1993 and 1994 Western Buddhist teachers conferences with the 14th Dalai Lama, and she was instrumental in the creation of the 2007 International Congress on Buddhist Women's Role in the Sangha. She is a member of the Committee for Bhikshuni Ordination and attends the annual Western Buddhist Monastic Gathering in the USA. Keen on interfaith dialogue, she was present during the Jewish delegation's visit to Dharamsala in 1990, which was the basis for Rodger Kamenetz's The Jew in the Lotus, and she attended the Second Gethsemani Encounter in 2002. She has been present at several Mind and Life Institute conferences in which the 14th Dalai Lama dialogues with Western scientists. Chodron travels worldwide to teach the Dharma: North America, Latin America, Israel, Singapore, Malaysia, India, and the former Soviet countries. Seeing the importance and necessity of a monastery for Westerners training in the Tibetan Buddhist tradition, she founded Sravasti Abbey, a Buddhist monastery in Newport, Washington, USA, in 2003, and became its abbess. In 2016 she was awarded the Global Bhikkhuni Award, presented by the Chinese Buddhist Bhikkhuni Association of Taiwan.
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