Prayer wheel
Tibetan red mantra
Livraison Offerte
- Material: ABS plastic
- Height: 14cm
- Mill: Diameter: 4.8cm | Height: 4cm
- Mantras of the Six Syllables
- Weight: 130g
- FREE delivery
How and for what reason to use a Tibetan prayer wheel Buddhist red mantra?
Buddhist prayer wheels are operated by many Tibetans every day on top of the world, frequently for hours. Practitioners turn prayer wheels to accumulate reverence, to protect all humans, and to purify their karma.
According to the Grand Master Dalai Lama, "For the benefit of sentient beings, Buddhas and Bodhisattvas declare themselves in a Tibetan prayer wheel red mantra to completely cleanse our harmful karmas and our confusions, and to lead us to adapt the concretizations of the path of enlightenment. ”
Spinning a Tibetan red mantra prayer wheel with hundreds of mantras inside is equivalent to communicating those thousands of mantras, but it is done in a fraction of the time. The extension of the blessings is also received by using prayer wheels powered by wind and water. Therefore the wind or water in contact with the prayer wheel will be purified by the prayer wheel and can in this way bless everything it touches of the negative chakra.
Buddhists are frequently observed traveling with prayer wheels in hand, or during their pilgrimage, they spin a Tibetan prayer wheel red mantra in the monasteries and Buddhist centers they explore.
With each movement of the Tibetan red mantra prayer wheel, the deity whose mantra is imprinted on it springs from the wheel in beings as numerous as the mantras. So, if there are one hundred Manjushri mantras coiled in the Tibetan Red Mantra Prayer Wheel, then one hundred Manjushri expressions will come true with each movement of the Tibetan Red Mantra Prayer Wheel and benefit the rest of the world. .
However, the benefits of spinning the wheel of the Tibetan Red Mantra Prayer Wheel with careful thought are said to be a thousand times stronger than spinning it with a scattered mind.
Description of a Tibetan red mantra prayer wheel?
A Tibetan red mantra prayer wheel is a model of Buddhist processes. This tool allowed practitioners to amplify the number of prayers they recited by hundreds.
Indeed, the Tibetan prayer wheel red mantra contains duplicates of mantras like that of Avalokiteshvara the mantra om mani padme hum. The precept is written down on sheets as many times as possible, often hundreds. The document is rolled up on an axis and placed in a safety cylinder.
In recent years, the microfilm process has made it possible to recite countless numbers, even hundreds of thousands of prayers in a fraction of the time.
The size of the prayer wheels fluctuates from the modest hand-held wheel to the gigantic wheel attached to the enclosure of a building, like a circular pole
They are designed to be turned on purpose, by wind, water or a blaze. If they are included in a temple, the faithful walk around the building clockwise and rotate the mills, brushing against them. Therefore, they have the advantage of avoiding the sacred building and receiving the prayers transmitted by the Tibetan prayer wheel red mantra.
The advantages of a Tibetan red mantra prayer wheel
Prayer wheels are built in a number of templates: they can be small and tied to a stake a pole, and turned on purpose; medium in size and tied up in temples or monuments, or very large and constantly flipped using a water mill. But the small Tibetan hand-held red mantra prayer wheel are by far the most visible.
The simple act of touching and turning over a Tibetan red mantra prayer wheel confers astonishing purification and accumulates extraordinary reverence. It is said that the more precepts one offers, the more consecration one gains, which enhances one's opportunities to receive a more transcendent reincarnation and finally reach nirvana.
Touching or spinning the Tibetan red mantra prayer wheel is described as so effective that its influence is compared to that of thousands of monks praying a lifetime.
One of the advantages of the Tibetan Red Mantra Prayer Wheel is that it symbolizes all the walks of the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas of the 10 directions. For the benefit of humans, Buddhas and Bodhisattvas manifest themselves in the prayer wheel to consecrate all of our unfavorable karma and obscurations, and to cause us to actualize the realizations of the path to enlightenment.
Reciting mantras through the Tibetan Red Mantra Prayer Wheel is believed to grant anything a worshiper wishes.
It is strongly believed that rotating the Tibetan Red Mantra Prayer Wheel with remorse and guilt will make it easier for you to eliminate the four evil deeds, the five actions of immediate retribution, the eight evil views and finally the ten non-virtues.
Anyone who rotates the Tibetan Red Mantra Prayer Wheel during their lifetime should never be reborn with irregularities during their lifetime, nor with manifestations such as blindness, deafness, dumbness or infirmity. p>
Types of prayer wheels
Prayer wheel: Mani wheel (a hand-held prayer wheel)
Prayer wheel: Water wheels (turned by flowing water)
Prayer wheel: Fire wheel (turned by the heat of a candle or an electric light)
Prayer wheel: Wind wheel (a kind of prayer wheel turns thanks to the wind)
Prayer wheel: Fixed prayer wheels
Prayer wheel: Electric Dharma Wheels (powered by electric motors)
Spinning this Tibetan red mantra prayer wheel and uttering it is measured as one of the most thoughtful and beneficial actions. Commonly built on the outskirts of stupas and monuments, a number of Buddhist prayer wheels can be calculated by countless so that practitioners can spin them as they pass by or when they circle around temples or stupas. clockwise.
A famous example of many prayer wheels on one site may be the prominent Swayambhunath stupa, where many prayer wheels hang around the enormous Swayambhunath stupa.The precept to evoke when turning the Buddhist prayer wheels is: "OM MANI PADME HUM" or "OM MANI PEME HUNG"