Encyclopedia of Buddhism

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supplication). Buddhist prayer can also be done in the
mind. Buddhists pray in private, individually in pub-
lic, or together with others as a joint activity.


Buddhists pray to a variety of beings, both human
and nonhuman. The object of prayer can be the his-
torical Buddha, or one of a seemingly infinite number
of transhistorical BUDDHASor BODHISATTVAS. When
THERAVADABuddhists, for example, prostrate before a
Buddha statue, this might be considered an act of pray-
ing with the body. If, in addition, they chant the most
famous Pali worship formula, “Homage to the worthy
one, the lord, the completely awakened one,” that
might be considered to involve a verbal prayer as well.
If this is further accompanied by thoughts of the Bud-
dha’s greatness, or by feelings of gratitude or devotion,
this might be considered to involve the mind in prayer.
In the Chinese and Japanese Pure Land tradition, the
practice of nenbutsu(nianfo), the recollection of the
Buddha AMITABHAand his pure land, is quintessen-
tially a mental action, but it is usually accompanied by
the repeated recitation of a prayer-formula, “Homage
to the Buddha Amitabha.”


Prayers can also be directed to human beings, both
living and not. For example, Tibetan Buddhists prac-
tice what is popularly called guru devotion.Mentally,
this involves the cultivation of an attitude in which the
teacher comes to be seen as a buddha. Verbally, guru
devotion can be done through the simple repetition of
the guru’s name. In more elaborate rituals, for exam-
ple, in the “worship of the guru” (bla ma mchod pa),
the living or deceased guru, whose presence is ritually
invoked, becomes the object of the adept’s devotions:
Offerings are made, the guru is requested not to for-
sake the world and to continue to teach the doctrine,
and he or she will also be asked to impart blessings on
the adept.


Buddhists also direct their prayers at special things.
For example, the widespread practice of “going for
refuge to the three jewels” can be seen not only as a
prayer to the buddha and the SAN ̇GHA, but also to the
dharma (a holy, but inanimate, object). Sometimes a
specific scripture will become an object of prayer and
devotion, as in the Sino-Japanese cults of the LOTUS
SUTRA(SADDHARMAPUNDARIKA-SUTRA). The worship
of STUPAs or relics might also be said to be forms of
prayer directed at something, rather than at someone.


Besides praying to what we might call “transcen-
dental” objects, however, Buddhists also pray to the
various DIVINITIES(devas) that are believed to inhabit
the world. These can be quite extraordinary beings, like


the great gods of the Hindu pantheon, or the protec-
tors of the dharma. They can also be lesser, though
nonetheless powerful, spirits associated with a partic-
ular region or place. Tantric Buddhists developed elab-
orate prayer rituals to propitiate both dharma
protectors and indigenous spirits. In many of these rit-
uals practitioners visualize themselves in the form of
an enlightened deity, who then demands, rather than
requests, the cooperation of the protector. This is im-
portant, lest it be thought that all forms of Buddhist
prayer requires the adept to assume a position of hu-
mility and submission before the object to whom the
prayer is directed.
Finally, Buddhists pray for a variety of things that
range from worldly goals (e.g., a good harvest, chil-
dren, protection from harm, health, money, erudition,
love) to the most sublime (enlightenment). They pray
for a better REBIRTH(e.g., as a human or god) or, as is
widespread in Mahayana Buddhism, they pray to be
reborn in a pure land. When one engages in prayer for
one’s own sake, this is often conceptualized in terms
of the dual activities of purification and the accumu-
lation of merit. For example, Tibetan Buddhists spin
prayer wheels, metal cylinders that rotate on their axes
and that contain MANTRAs (Tibetans themselves call
these objects mani wheels). The spinning of prayer
wheels is often done during other activities, almost as
a reflex, and would appear not to involve any conscious
goal. However, Tibetans generally believe that the
movement of sacred objects (in this case, printed
mantras) generates merit for the mover, and so the goal
of merit-making is at the very least implied in the spin-
ning of prayer wheels.
Buddhists also believe in the efficacy of prayers for
the sake of others, both living and dead. The Mahayana
in particular stresses the importance of praying for oth-
ers, as in the practice of “dedicating one’s merits” for
the benefit of all sentient beings, which can also be seen
as an act of prayer.

See also:Merit and Merit-Making; Nenbutsu (Chinese,
Nianfo; Korean, Yo ̆ ̆mbul); Refuges; Relics and Relics
Cults

Bibliography
Griffiths, Paul J. “A Hymn of Praise to the Buddha’s Good Qual-
ities.” In Buddhism in Practice,ed. Donald S. Lopez, Jr.
Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1995.
Makransky, John. “Offering (mChod pa) in Tibetan Ritual Lit-
erature.” In Tibetan Literature: Studies in Genre,ed. José I.
Cabezón and Roger R. Jackson. Ithaca, NY: Snow Lion, 1996.

PRAYER

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