Prayer wheel
Buddhist wooden handle
Livraison Offerte
- Material: Metal and Wood Alloy
- Height: 30cm
- Mill: Diameter: 9cm | Height: 5.5cm
- FREE delivery
How and for what reason to use a Tibetan wood handle Buddhist prayer wheel?
Tibetan prayer wheels are used by countless practitioners every day on top of the world, sometimes for hours. Practitioners turn prayer wheels to concentrate benefits, to protect all men and to cleanse their chakra.
According to the Grand Master Dalai Lama, "To the reward of sentient beings, the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas show themselves in the Buddhist prayer wheel wooden handle to totally cleanse our unfavorable chakras and our confusions, and to arouse us to realize the achievements of the path to enlightenment. ”
Rotating a wooden-handled Buddhist Prayer Wheel with hundreds of mantras within it corresponds to unveiling these millions of mantras, but it is done in a flash. The added benefit is also collected by using prayer wheels manipulated by wind and water. Therefore the wind or water which touches with the prayer wheel will be consecrated by the prayer wheel and will therefore be able to bless whatever it touches of the negative chakra.
We constantly observe the faithful making their journey with prayer wheels in their hands, or on the occasion of their pilgrimage, they spin a Buddhist prayer wheel with a wooden handle in the monasteries and Buddhist centers they visit.
At each turn of the wooden handle Buddhist prayer wheel, the figure whose mantra is inscribed on it flows from the wheel in beings as numerous as the mantras. For example, if there are a thousand Manjushri mantras coiled in the wooden handle Buddhist prayer wheel, then one billion Manjushri manifestation will be performed at each of the movements of the wooden handle Buddhist prayer wheel and benefit Buddhists from the wood handle. world.
However, we imagine that the advantages of turning the wheel of the Buddhist prayer wheel with a wooden handle with a vigilant mind are a hundred times more qualitative than spinning it with a distracted mind.
How to define a Buddhist prayer wheel wooden handle?
A wooden handle Buddhist prayer wheel is an illustration of the Buddhist technique. This method allowed devotees to multiply the number of prayers they offered by millions.
Indeed, the Buddhist prayer wheel wooden handle contains replicas of precepts such as that of Avalokiteshvara the mantra om mani padme hum. The precept is written down on very fine tissue paper as many times as possible, sometimes thousands. The document is wound around an axis and placed in a protective collector.
The microfilm process has long allowed thousands, if not hundreds of thousands, of prayers to be called in one rotation.
The size of the prayer wheels differs from the small hand-held wheel with a monumental wheel attached to the pediment of a monument, like a moving pole
They are designed to be set in motion on purpose, by blast, hydraulics or fire. When they are part of a building, the monks go around the building in a clockwise direction and spin the mills, brushing against them. Therefore, they benefit from the advantage of avoiding the sacred temple and of enjoying the benefits communicated by the Buddhist prayer wheel wooden handle.
The benefits of a Buddhist prayer wheel wooden handle
Prayer wheels are built in a number of templates: they can be small and tied to a handle or pole, and turned by hand; medium in size and hung in monasteries or temples, or monumental and perpetually rotated using a water mill. However, the small Buddhist prayer wheel with wood handle are by far the most popular.
The simple act of touching and twirling a Buddhist prayer wheel with a wooden handle brings a surprising purification and unites a surprising benefit. It is believed that the more prayers one says, the more blessing one gains, which increases one's opportunities to enjoy greater rebirth and to reach nirvana for good.
Owning or spinning the wooden handle Buddhist prayer wheel is described as so intense that we compare it to that of thousands of monks praying for decades.
One of the benefits of the wooden handle Buddhist prayer wheel is that it embodies all the steps of the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas of the 10 directions. As humans return, Buddhas and Bodhisattvas manifest themselves inside the prayer wheel to consecrate all of our harmful karmas and blackenings, and to bring us to actualize the concretizations of the path of enlightenment. p>
It is believed that reciting mantras through the wooden handle Buddhist Prayer Wheel gives everything a worshiper asks for.
It is strongly found that twirling the wooden handle Buddhist Prayer Wheel with remorse and dishonor will encourage you to refuse the four evil deeds, the five actions of immediate retribution, the eight evil views and finally the ten non-virtues.
Anyone who spins the wooden handle Buddhist prayer wheel during their lifetime should never be reborn with deformities during their lifetime, nor with disabilities 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 wooden handle Buddhist prayer wheel and reciting is considered one of the most thoughtful and beneficial activities. Commonly built on the fringes of stupas and monuments, a large number of Buddhist prayer wheels can be counted in the millions for Buddhists to spin as they pass by or around monuments or stupas in the city. clockwise.
A famous example of a large number of prayer wheels in one place may be the famous Swayambhunath stupa, where many prayer wheels are set up around the enormous Swayambhunath stupa. Buddhist prayer wheels is: "OM MANI PADME HUM" or "OM MANI PEME HUNG".