Prayer Without Blind Faith

Article

[…] arise only in the conceptual mind as it tries to put these experiences into different and mutually exclusive boxes. In saying this, I’m not talking about blind faith. Blind faith is a rigid adherence to certain beliefs for which there is little or no evidence. These beliefs cannot be questioned as they form an […]

Silhouette of a person standing in a beam of light between tall, dark walls.

Niguma – The Magic of Faith

Practice Material

[…] there is nothing here at all,And then, my child, everything is gold. “Experience arises like magic.If you practice like magicYou will awaken like magicThrough the power of faith. “Don’t think about your teacher or your practice.Don’t think about what is real or not real.Don’t think about anything at all.Don’t control what you experience.Just rest […]

Thangka-style depiction of Niguma, seated on a lotus, holding a skull cup and teaching implements, with a serene expression.

10. Motivation, Faith, and the Primary Practice

Chapter 10 of “A Trackless Path I

[…] mahamudra and dzogchen. That’s the Essence of Dharma, Tilopa’s Six Words of Advice, Vajra Song [Recognizing Mind as the Guru], Wisdom Experience [of Ever-present Good]. Magic of Faith is basically a guru yoga practice. Then you have a yidam practice which is associated with Avalokiteshvara, Chenrezi. And then two or three texts about how […]

10. Motivation, <mark class="searchwp-highlight">Faith</mark>, and the Primary Practice

3. Faith as Path: Joining the Mind with the Guru

Chapter 3 of “Guru, Deity, Protector

Confidence Ken: If there aren’t any questions, then I’ll tell stories. Yes? Student: Could you go over the faith of confidence again? Ken: Okay. Essentially, confident faith is described as the feeling of solidity that comes from a rational appreciation. That is, you study the stuff, you think about it—it makes sense. So you […]

3. <mark class="searchwp-highlight">Faith</mark> as Path: Joining the Mind with the Guru

8. The Power of Faith on the Spiritual Path

Chapter 8 of “A Trackless Path II

[…] academic to me because if you have willingness to engage something that is painful, even though you don’t know where it’s going to lead, then how does faith enter into that sense that you’re talking about? Ken: Just say the sentence of the question again please, would you? Gary: I’m not sure I can […]

8. The Power of <mark class="searchwp-highlight">Faith</mark> on the Spiritual Path

3. Exploring Attention and Natural Awareness

Chapter 3 of “Buddhahood Without Meditation

[…] to hold this aspect of one’s experience with the degree of reverence, appreciation. And it is also somewhat important that you feel some confidence or trust or faith in it. In the Tibetan tradition, three kinds of faith are described. The usual order is progressing from clear, open appreciation to rational faith. I think […]

3. Exploring Attention and Natural Awareness

3. Falling Without Reference

Chapter 3 of “Pointing Out Instructions

[…] we believe there is a bottom. That’s why we fear falling. We believe there is a bottom. Well, I’m not going to ask you take this on faith. You’ll have to find this out for yourself: there is no bottom. But you have to find that out for yourself. I’m sorry, I can talk […]

3. Falling Without Reference

Opening to Doubt

Chapter 8 of “Stand-Alone Talks

[…] and say, just ask me any question about Buddhism, and they’d say, “Well, what are the three jewels?” I don’t know. Ask me another. Impermanence, compassion and faith are most important Ken: I even went to a Tibetan teacher and said, “I don’t know anything anymore. I don’t know what buddha nature is. I […]

Opening to Doubt

3. Going to the Edge: Deepening Practice

Chapter 3 of “Releasing Emotional Reactions

[…] just for the first time thinking, “Can I really let go?” I mean is this really possible? What you’re saying? And wanting to take this leap of faith to go there. And yet… Ken: Well, the question is not, “Can I really let go of this?” The question is actually, “Can I really experience […]

3. Going to the Edge: Deepening Practice

7. Trusting Nothing Whatsoever

Chapter 7 of “Finding the Way

[…] month, a few times a week. It’s really wonderful when you see a client start to know when they come in and really have this kind of faith in what they’re doing. We had done a session, and she came in for her next session, absolutely furious, completely angry. She had been going on […]

7. Trusting Nothing Whatsoever

6. Groundlessness: Living with Not Knowing

Chapter 6 of “Death: Friend or Foe?

[…] because of my comments, you can connect this with elements of your own experience. This is what’s important here. At first, meditation on impermanence makes you develop faith. p. 57 Student: Makes you develop what? Ken: Faith. And I wanted to say a word here. Faith, for me, is the willingness to open to […]

6. Groundlessness: Living with Not Knowing

Where Thinking Stops

Article

[…] a little space into my confusion, and I found a way to continue. By making prayer a part of my daily practice, I discovered a new possibility: faith, a quiet source of strength that became vitally important to me in the years ahead and helped me many times to keep going in difficult situations. […]

Hands clasped together in a gesture of rest or contemplation, lit with warm light.