Bodhipathapradëpa (A Lamp for the Path to Enlightenment) is a Buddhist text composed in Sanskrit by the 11th-century teacher Atià Âa and widely considered his magnum opus. The text reconciles the doctrines of many various Buddhist schools and philosophies, and is notable for the introduction of the three levels of spiritual aspiration: lesser, middling and superior, which in turn became the foundation for the Lamrim tradition. This text was translated into Tibetan as Byang chub lam gyi sgron ma.
In the text, Atià Âa classifies individuals into three different capacities, and writes for those of the final capacity, which he calls "Supreme".
After taking refuge in the Three Jewels, a feature of all Buddhist traditions, Atià Âa provides specific instructions:
Then, beginning with a mind of love
for all sentient beings,
consider all those, without exception,
who suffer in the three lower realms
from birth, death, and so forth.
With the wish to liberate all beings
from the suffering of suffering,
from suffering and its causes,
generate bodhicitta with irreversible resolve.
Once Atià Âa has described the importance of generating bodhicitta, he provides a prayer used by another Buddhist master to accomplish this:
âÂÂIn the presence of the Protectors,
I generate the mind of perfect enlightenment,
and I invite all beings as my guestsâÂÂ
These I shall liberate from saá¹ÂsÃÂra.
âÂÂFrom this moment until
I achieve supreme enlightenment,
I shall have no thoughts of harm,
no anger, avarice, or jealousy.
âÂÂI shall cultivate pure conduct,
and abandon sin and craving.
With joy for the vows of discipline,
I shall train to emulate the Buddhas.
âÂÂTaking no joy in swiftly
attaining enlightenment for myself,
I will remain until the very end
for the sake of even a single being.
âÂÂI shall prepare immeasurable,
inconceivable realms
and will remain in the ten directions
for any who call out my name.
âÂÂHaving purified all
physical and verbal actions,
I shall also purify my mental activities,
and will avoid all that is non-virtuous.âÂÂ