The bodhisattva
A being who chooses to keep coming back for everyone else, instead of slipping quietly into peace alone.
A bodhisattva (Sanskrit for "a being set toward awakening"; Pāli bodhisatta) is one of the most beloved ideals in Buddhism — a person who is devoted to becoming a fully awakened buddha not for their own release alone, but so that they can help free all living beings from suffering. In Buddhism, "awakening" means seeing reality so clearly that greed, hatred, and delusion lose their grip, ending the suffering they cause.
The word began modestly. In the earliest texts, shared across the older Buddhist traditions, "bodhisattva" simply named the Buddha-to-be during the long stretch before his awakening — including his past lives, told in popular stories of generosity and courage. It was a title for one exceptional being on his way to becoming a buddha.
In the later Mahāyāna movement (the "Great Vehicle," emerging around two thousand years ago) this idea was opened up into a universal calling: any person can take up the bodhisattva path, vowing to walk a vast, many-lifetime journey for the benefit of all. Such a being is pictured as combining two qualities in balance — deep wisdom that sees through illusion, and active compassion that refuses to turn away from anyone's pain. A bodhisattva is famously willing to delay their own final rest in order to keep helping others, and over time some bodhisattvas (like the compassionate Avalokiteśvara or the wisdom-figure Mañjuśrī) came to be revered and called upon for aid, much as people in other traditions turn to saints or angels. It is worth being precise about vocabulary: the bodhisattva is not a god and not a savior who erases consequences — it is a model of a life wholly reoriented toward the welfare of all.
Key passages(20)
The Heart of Compassion: The Thirty-seven Verses on the Practice of a Bodhisattva · Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche
The Perfection of Wisdom in One Hundred Thousand Lines · The Tibetan Kangyur (84000)
The Perfection of Wisdom in Eighteen Thousand Lines · The Tibetan Kangyur (84000)
The Transcendent Perfection of Wisdom in Ten Thousand Lines · The Tibetan Kangyur (84000)
The Collected Teachings on the Bodhisatva · The Tibetan Kangyur (84000)
The Questions of Pūrṇa · The Tibetan Kangyur (84000)
Determining the Vinaya: Upāli’s Questions · The Tibetan Kangyur (84000)
The Question of Maitreya (1) · The Tibetan Kangyur (84000)
The Question of Maitreya (2) on the Eight Qualities · The Tibetan Kangyur (84000)
Upholding the Roots of Virtue · The Tibetan Kangyur (84000)
The Questions of Sāgaramati · The Tibetan Kangyur (84000)