Prayer wheel
Buddhist solar rotation
Livraison Offerte
- Material: Zinc Alloy
- Height: 12.5cm
- Length: 12.5cm
- Width: 7cm
- Mantras of the Six Syllables
- Weight: 800g
- Solar energy or batteries
- Automatic rotation
- FREE delivery
How and why to use a Buddhist prayer wheel Buddhist solar rotation?
Buddhist prayer wheels are operated by countless practitioners every day on top of the world, continuously for hours. Practitioners turn prayer wheels to accumulate blessings, to help all human beings, and to cleanse their chakra.
According to the Grand Master Dalai Lama, "For the benefit of human beings, Buddhas and Bodhisattvas manifest themselves inside a solar rotating Buddhist prayer wheel to cleanse all our negative karmas and blindnesses, and to cause us to adjust the achievements of the road to enlightenment. ”
Spinning a solar rotating Buddhist Prayer Wheel with thousands of mantras in it is equivalent to formulating a large number of mantras, but it is done in one rotation. The multiplication of favors is similarly collected by using prayer wheels driven by wind and water. Therefore the wind or water which touches with the prayer wheel will be blessed by the prayer wheel and can in this way bless all that it touches with harmful karma.
We continuously see Buddhists carrying out their expedition holding prayer wheels in their hands, or during their pilgrimage, they spin a solar-rotating Buddhist prayer wheel in the monasteries and Buddhist centers they roam. p >
With each movement of the Buddhist prayer wheel solar rotation, the divinity whose mantra is noted there springs from the wheel in entities as multiple as the mantras. For example, if there are a thousand Manjushri mantras in the Buddhist solar rotating prayer wheel, then one hundred Manjushri exhalations will occur at each of the movements of the Buddhist solar rotating prayer wheel and benefit the Buddhists around the world. .
Despite this, it is said that the profits of spinning the wheel of the Buddhist solar-rotating prayer wheel with careful thought are a hundred times more qualitative than spinning it with a scattered mind.
Description of a Buddhist solar rotating prayer wheel?
A solar rotating Buddhist prayer wheel is a model of Buddhist processes. This tool enabled Buddhists to increase the number of prayers they offered by countless numbers.
Indeed, the Buddhist solar rotating prayer wheel contains replicas of mantras like that of Avalokiteshvara the mantra om mani padme hum. The mantra is written on sheets of silk as many times as can be imagined, sometimes countless. The document is wound up on a spindle and placed in a protective roll.
Lately, the microfilm process has made it possible to implore hundreds, if not hundreds of billions of prayers in a fraction of the time
The measures of the prayer wheels oscillate from the small wheel held in the hand without forgetting the large wheel sealed in the wall of a building, like a rotary foundation.
They are designed to be set in motion by hand, by a burst, hydraulics or ignition. When built in a monastery, worshipers rotate around the temple clockwise and spin the mills as they scroll. Therefore, they get the benefit of bypassing the sacred temple and receiving the benefits communicated through the Buddhist solar rotating prayer wheel.
The benefits of a Buddhist solar rotating prayer wheel
Prayer wheels come in a number of sizes: they can be small and hung from a handle or pole, and turned over by hand; of medium size and hung in temples or buildings, or gigantic and continuously rotated by a water mill. Nevertheless the small Buddhist hand-operated solar rotating prayer wheel are by far the most popular.
The simple act of touching and turning a solar rotating Buddhist Prayer Wheel gives incredible purification and collects incredible dedication. It is believed that the more mantras one says, the more consecration one gains, which improves one's possibilities of enjoying a more transcendent incarnation and ultimately reaching nirvana.
Touching or spinning the Sun-rotating Buddhist Prayer Wheel is described as so effective that it is compared to that of millions of worshipers praying to their deaths.
One of the benefits of the Sun Rotating Buddhist Prayer Wheel is that it materializes all the actions of the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas of the 10 directions. At the income of Men, Buddhas and Bodhisattvas show themselves in the prayer wheel to consecrate all of our corrupting karmas and blindnesses, and to force us to actualize the executions of the path of enlightenment.
Reciting prayers using the Buddhist Sun Rotating Prayer Wheel is believed to be worth anything a worshiper wants.
It is strongly believed that twirling the Sun Rotating Buddhist Prayer Wheel reproachfully and wrongly will make it easier for you to refuse the four evil deeds, the five actions of immediate retribution, the eight evil views as well as the ten non-virtues.
Anyone who spins the Buddhist solar-rotating prayer wheel during their lifetime should never reincarnate with any deformities during their lifetime, nor with disorders such as blindness, deafness, dumbness or infirmity.
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)
Rotating this solar rotating Buddhist prayer wheel and reciting is measured as one of the wisest and most auspicious activities. Frequently built on the fringes of stupas and apartment buildings, a large number of Buddhist prayer wheels can number in number for people to spin as they pass by or around monuments or stupas. clockwise.
A fine example of a large number of prayer wheels on a single site may be the prominent Swayambhunath stupa, where many prayer wheels are built around the enormous Swayambhunath stupa. rotates the Buddhist prayer wheels is: "OM MANI PADME HUM" or "OM MANI PEME HUNG".