The Religions Book

(ff) #1

70


The symbol adopted by Jainism is a
complex arrangement of elements within
an outline that represents the universe:
earthly concerns in the lower regions
lead up to the abode of celestial beings.


a person is not completely detached
from sexual feelings and false notions
of modesty. Digambara monks may
not even carry alms bowls, but
must receive food in their cupped
hands. Digambaras also believe
that liberation from rebirth is not
possible for women until they have
first been reborn as a man.


Living in the world
Lay Jains do not take the Five
Great Vows, but they do take
lesser vows that are similar:
renouncing violence, vowing not
to lie or to steal, embracing chaste
sexual behavior, and avoiding
attachment to material things. All
Jains are strictly vegetarian, in line
with the vow of nonviolence, and
must not do work that involves the
destruction of life. Some Jains will
only use flowers that have already


fallen from the plant in their
worship, arguing that to cut a living
flower is an act of violence. Lay
Jains may marry, but are expected
to uphold the highest standards
of behavior. In this, as in all things,
Jains follow the path of the Three
Jewels: right faith, right knowledge,
and right conduct.
Sometimes there is said to
be a fourth jewel, right penance:
atonement for sins is important
in Jainism. At the annual festival
of Samvatsari, which follows an
eight-day period of fasting and
abstinence in the monsoon season,
a full confession is made to family
and friends of the sins of the past
year, and vows are taken not to
carry grudges into the new year.
Meditation is important, too, and
Jain daily rituals include 48-minute
sessions of meditation, in which

the aim is to be at one with the
universe, and to forgive and be
forgiven for all transgressions.
(Forty-eight minutes—one-thirtieth
of a day—is a mahurta, a standard
unit of time in India often used
for ritual purposes.)
Other Jain virtues are: service
to others, attention to religious
study, disengagement from passion,
and politeness and humility.
Particular merit is gained by
donating food to monks and nuns.
All of these practices combine with
the self-denial required by even
laypersons’ vows to reduce the
karma (consequences of past
deeds) which, the Jains believe,
accumulates on the soul
as a kind of physical substance. All
karma, both good and bad, must be
removed to achieve liberation. The
idea is to progress gradually along

The word “ahimsa”—
nonviolence—the principle
by which Jains live.

The liberated soul in its
elevated dwelling place.

The open palm,
a reminder to stop and
consider all actions.

The four states the soul
may live in: heaven,
human, animal, hell.

The wheel, the symbol
of the cycle of death
and rebirth.

The Three Jewels:
right faith, right knowledge,
right conduct.

SELF-DENIAL LEADS TO SPIRITUAL LIBERATION

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