Five paths

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Bodhisattva sangha from the Longchen Nyingtik Field of Merit

Five paths (Skt. pañcamārga; Tib. ལམ་ལྔ་, lam nga, Wyl. lam lnga) — a succession of five stages or paths describing the entire spiritual journey towards liberation. They appear with similar names in both the Basic yana (Sarvastivadin and Sautrantika schools) and Mahayana but their interpretation is considerably different.[1]

They are:

  1. the path of accumulation (Skt. sambhāramārga)
  2. the path of joining (also called 'engagement' or 'junction') (Skt. prayogamārga)
  3. the path of seeing (or 'insight') (Skt. darśanamārga)
  4. the path of meditation (or 'cultivation') (Skt. bhāvanāmārga)
  5. the path of no-more-learning (Skt. aśaikṣamārga)

Progression on the Five Paths According to the Mahayana Tradition

In the Mahayana, the five paths describe the entire spiritual journey, from its very beginnings with the taking of the bodhisattva vow and the generation of relative bodhichitta, up until its culmination at the stage of complete enlightenment.

Along the first four of the five paths, the thirty-seven factors of enlightenment are undertaken and perfected, and present thereafter as qualities of enlightenment.

There is also a correspondence between the five paths and the ten bhumis.

The chart below summarizes the details of this progression and its various correspondences.[2]

paths subdivisions eliminations accomplishments factors of enlightenment bhumis
1. accumulation lesser four applications of mindfulness trainee bodhisattva
intermediate four genuine restraints
greater four bases of miraculous powers
2. joining warmth five powers
summit
acceptance five strengths
supreme attribute
3. seeing seven elements for enlightenment First bhumi
4. meditation noble eightfold path Second to tenth bhumis
5. no-more-learning


It is said in the pith instructions that the path of accumulation is the stage of understanding, the path of joining is the stage of experience, and the path of seeing is the stage of realization.[3]

Canonical Literature

Sutras

Shastras

References

  1. Philippe Cornu, Dictionnaire encyclopédique du bouddhisme (Paris: Éditions du Seuil, 2001), page 708.
  2. Sources: Zindri, pages 229-330.
  3. Source needed.

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