Buddhābhiṣeka Explained

Buddhābhiseka (Pali: buddhābhiseka; Sanskrit: buddhābhiṣeka) refers to a broad range of Buddhist rituals used to consecrate images of the Buddha and other Buddhist figures, such as bodhisattvas.[1]

Terms

Buddhābhiseka is known a number of different terms in various languages.[1] The terms kaiyan, kaiguang, and dianyan and their derivative forms are used in the Chinese, Korean (where is it known as jeom-an or 점안), Japanese (where it is known as kaigen) and Vietnamese languages (where it is known as khai quang điểm nhãn),[1] while buddhābhiseka (Burmese: ဗုဒ္ဓါဘိသေက; Central Khmer: ពុទ្ធាភិសេក; Thai: พุทธาภิเษก) is used in predominantly Theravada Buddhist countries.

Chinese rituals

Kaiguang is the Chinese term for consecration of a statue of a deity. In Chinese, the literal meaning of Kaiguang is "opening of light". While it is often performed in the Chinese Buddhist and Taoist faiths, it is also well known as the ceremony of consecrating new lion costumes used for the traditional lion dance.

A Kaiguang ritual varies among Chinese religious traditions, but it is essentially the act of formal consecration for proper usage by dotting the eyes of a statue of the deity using a calligraphy brush coated with cinnabar powder. The ritual is performed by daoshi (in Taoism), bhikkhus (in Buddhism) or by inviting a specific deity through the appointed spirit medium (folk religion). For a lion costume, a senior secular dignitary may also be invited to perform the task. The general purpose is to invite the divinity to consecrate an "empty" effigy of themselves and to fill it with divine power. The usage of a mirror (to reflect the sunlight) and a dry towel (to symbolically purify the statue from any filth) is also employed.

It is believed that if a statue or lion costume has not been consecrated, it cannot be worshiped or used for performance, as the eyes are still "closed".

Burmese rituals

Burmese Buddhists perform consecration rituals for images of the Buddha used for veneration both at home and at public places of worship, such as monasteries and pagodas. Before a Buddha statue is used for veneration, it must be formally consecrated in the buddhābhiseka maṅgala ritual. The Burmese language verb for consecrating a Buddha image is anegaza tin (Burmese: [[:my:အနေကဇာတင်ခြင်း|အနေကဇာတင်ခြင်း]]).[2] This consecration ritual is led by a Buddhist monk, who recites aneka jāti saṃsāraṃ (translated as 'through the round of many births I roamed'), the 153rd verse of the Dhammapada (found in the 11th chapter),[3] [4] which are believed to be the first words uttered by the Buddha upon attaining Buddhahood.[5] The consecration rite, which can last a few hours, is held in the morning and consists of four primary parts:[6]

  1. Offerings (candles, flowers, incense, flags) made to the Buddha
  2. Chanting of paritta (typically Mangala Sutta, Metta Sutta, Ratana Sutta, Pubbhana Sutta)
  3. Recitation of aneka jāti saṃsāraṃ
  4. Recitation of the Twelve Nidānas

The consecration rituals are believed to imbue the Buddha image with a sacred quality that can protect the home and surroundings from misfortune and symbolically embody the powers of the Buddha.[7]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Buswell, Robert E. Jr.. The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism. Lopez. Donald S. Jr.. 2013-11-24. Princeton University Press. 9781400848058. en.
  2. Web site: Preparation for A Place of Worship At Home. Paw. Maung H.. 4. 28 February 2012. 3 January 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180103011644/http://www.usamyanmar.net/Buddha/Article/Buddha%20Shrine.pdf. dead.
  3. Web site: Words spoken by Lord Buddha on the day of Supreme Enlightenment- . Ashin Kundalabhivamsa . Nibbana.com . 28 February 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20101013231706/http://www.thisismyanmar.com/nibbana/dmpdth2a.htm . 13 October 2010 .
  4. Web site: Jaravagga: Aging. Thanissaro Bhikkhu. 1997. Access to Insight. 28 February 2012.
  5. Web site: CONSECRATION - ဗုဒ္ဓါဘိသေက. 2018-01-02.
  6. Book: Swearer, Donald K.. Becoming the Buddha: the ritual of image consecration in Thailand. Princeton University Press. 2004. 218–219. 978-0-691-11435-4.
  7. Book: Schober, Juliane. Sacred biography in the Buddhist traditions of South and Southeast Asia. Motilal Banarsidass. 2002. 275–276. 978-81-208-1812-5.