A Blog offered by Zhaxi Zhuoma Rinpoche

The Three Groups of Purifying Precepts

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Every morning we chant: I vow to cut off all evil within me. There will be no evil that I will not cut off. I vow to practice all types of goodness. There’ll be no type of goodness I will not practice. I vow to save all living beings. There’ll be no living being that I will not save. These are three vows we take when we take refuge: (1) The governing precept to abide by all the rules of discipline, (2) The governing precept to practice all virtuous deeds, and (3) The governing precept to save all living beings.

The most recent translation of the certificate we receive when we take refuge also states at the end: “Do not do any bad deeds. Do all kinds of good deeds. Purify your mind. These are teachings of all Buddhas.” An earlier translated said the same thing, but a little differently: “Abstain from all that is evil. Perform all that is good. Purify your thoughts. This is the teaching of all Buddhist sects.”

It appears that the Three Groups of Purifying Precepts stated at the end of the Refuge Certificate originated with verse 183 from the Dhammapada. The Dhammapada is a Theravada scripture from their Pali canon and is sometimes called the “Buddhist Book of Proverbs”. The Dhammapada can be found in in the Khuddaka Nikaya as part of the Sutta-pitaka of the Tripitaka. This section was added to the canon about 250 BCE and states: “To avoid all evil, to cultivate good, and to cleanse one’s mind — this is the teaching of the Buddhas.”

In Mahayana Buddhism, the last line was revised, as we chant it, to reflect the bodhisattva’s vow to bring all beings to enlightenment and are derived from the Bodhisattva precepts. They are rooted in the ethical teachings of the Buddha, specifically found in the Brahmajala (Brahma’s Net) Sutra (this is not the Pali text of the same name) and other Mahayana sutras. In the Mahayana tradition the Three Pure Precepts are also stated as: Cease from evil (refraining from harmful actions). Do good (cultivating wholesome actions). Do good for others (working for the benefit of all beings). These precepts encapsulate the essence of Buddhist moral practice, emphasizing both personal ethical conduct and altruistic commitment to the welfare of others.

There are actually three primary canons of Buddhist scripture, called after the languages in which they were preserved — the Pali Canon, the Chinese Canon, and the Tibetan Canon, and many of the same texts are preserved in more than one canon. There is also an extensive Japanese Canon that is based on the Chinese, but also includes Japanese commentaries and esoteric scriptures.

In Expounding the Absolute Truth through the Heart Sutra, the Buddha Master tells us that:

He also told us what we contemplate when we take those three precepts:

In abiding by these precepts He asked:


CLICK for extensive article on “The Three Pure Precepts” for more background from a Zen perspective.

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Zhaxi Zhuoma

Thus Have I Seen (and Heard) on zhaxizhuoma.org is a blog offered by Zhaxi Zhuoma for English-speaking followers and those interested in the teachings and activities of H.H. Dorje Chang Buddha III. Read more about this blog

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Most of the quotes from H.H Dorje Chang Buddha III posted on this blog are from unapproved translations and may contain errors. Likewise the contents of this blog have not been reviewed or approved by the Buddha and should be considered as reference material and not Buddha-dharma.

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