Someone asked about importance of bodhicitta on realising emptiness.
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Soh Wei Yu
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Bodhicitta
 is important. Bodhicitta is not just mundane compassion, lots of 
non-Buddhists or even non-spiritual, or even total materialists have 
compassion. Compassion is not the monopoly of a specific group of people
 (of a specific religion or whether they are spiritual or not). 
Although, compassion is in fact very important along with the other four
 immeasurables and does help development and maturation of insight, and 
should never be downplayed. Personally, I find that compassion does come
 forth more spontaneously after insights.
However, Bodhicitta is specifically this, not just compassion:
"It
 is true many people mistake compassion, which does not have the force 
to lead to buddhahood, with bodhicitta, the aspiration to become a 
buddha to benefit sentient beings." -- Acarya Malcolm Smith
Bodhicitta is specifically the aspiration for Buddhahood, nothing more and nothing less. 
And
 how does it relate to realising emptiness? Because realising [twofold] 
emptiness and the full actualization of that realisation which directly 
corresponds with the overcoming of the two obscurations which directly 
translates to omniscience or the total knowledge of the nature of all 
phenomena completely or the exhaustion of all phenomena, etc etc.... 
depends first of all on the aspiration that this is what you want to 
attain.
Soh Wei Yu
Author
Admin
And
 personally I have taken the vows and so on ceremoniously and so does 
John Tan and I believe many others in this group. But more important 
than that... the crucial point of it is that both John Tan and I do aim 
to attain Buddhahood as our goal. A true sincere aspiration to awaken 
fully for the benefit of all IMO is better than people who just went 
through the motions and ceremony but their heart is not there.. their 
deep yearning for waking up is not there yet.
Also,
 some may bring up the point... does one need to formally recite the 
bodhicitta vows, the refuge vows and so on... are they important? To me,
 they are important causes for awakening. However the essence of it is 
always more important than the formality or ceremonial aspect of it. It 
is always good to formally undertake these vows in a ceremony under the 
presence of a great master. If you have the opportunity to do so, then 
go for it. That itself is meritorious in many ways and plants a strong 
seed of awakening. 
But
 we do hear of stories like Bahiya and many others who attained 
awakening, in fact liberation from samsara as an Arahant, upon hearing 
Buddha speak of a few verses of dharma, and that was the first time they
 have even met the Buddha. Does this mean they have not taken refuge? 
They certainly haven't got the time to formally recite the refuge verses
 to Buddha before they awakened. But I think they do take refuge in a 
more fundamental way. I wrote in recent months:
"
Soh Wei Yu
Mr. LZG
Kyle Dixon's post from years ago: "The true meaning of refuge is recognizing the nature of mind [cittatā].""
"
Soh Wei Yu
Mr. LZG
The intention is more important than the formality or ceremony.
Bahiya
 had very strong intention to rely on Buddha’s teachings to attain 
liberation. In a sense that is the key of refuge. It is not just a 
formality but a very strong genuine intention to rely on the triple gems
 to attain liberation. That is the kind of “taking refuge” one must 
awaken in oneself. That paves the way to liberation. If one simply 
attends a refuge ceremony half heartedly, like going through the 
motions, it is still a positive act that creates a good karmic 
connection with the triple gems for this life and the next, but may not 
be as effective as the earnest desire of Bahiya to take refuge in Buddha
 and his instructions to attain liberation as soon as possible."

