logo

Carry Your Beliefs with You in Buddhist Symbolic Jewelry

logo

Jewelry is a popular means for expression. It serves a symbolic purpose. Sure it can be fun and fashionable. However, for many individuals, jewelry is much more than that. This is definitely the case with the Buddhist religion and culture. Individuals who practice Buddhism often express their beliefs with the jewelry they wear. If you practice this religion, you can too.

Buddhist Jewelry has Been Common for Centuries

The wearing of jewelry is actually quite common among Buddhists. Throughout history, these individuals can be found wearing jewelry. Often the jewelry they wore was symbolic of their beliefs. The jewelry they have worn has allowed them to remain strong and true in their faith. And it also has been filled with deep meaning. Today the jewelry represents much of the faith and history of the religion.

Top Jewelry Items for Buddhists

If you are interested in purchasing something that reflects your faith, there are several options to choose from. Many companies design necklaces, rings, and bracelets that are symbolic of the Buddhist faith. One popular necklace many Buddhist wear is the Awakening Necklace. This necklace has a pendant of the Sacred Fig leaf (known as The Buddhi Tree) and it commemorates the Awakening when Prince Siddhartha sat under this sacred tree and obtained full awakening. From this experience he became a Buddha. This piece is one example of the symbolic nature of the Buddhist jewelry. They all have deep meaning and depict great appreciation for the Buddhist faith.

If you are unsure where to find the perfect item of jewelry, ask your Buddhist friends for a referral. They are the best source for information – especially if they own something you like. Also, there are a lot of great online stores that you can shop from to find what you are looking for.

Looking for other types of jewelry look online at georg jensen vice.

Buddhist Beliefs About Death

logo

Buddhist beliefs about death fundamentally explore the concept of reincarnation, or a process in which one’s spirit is continuously “reborn” in another body until a state of ultimate enlightenment is attained. Unlike Christianity, a Buddhist soul can be reincarnated into five different realms rather than just one “heaven”. These realms are the animal kingdom; the hells; the realm of jealous gods; the human realm and the heavens. Determining where your soul resides is based on karma, or the accumulation of all your actions during a lifetime. Correct and compassionate deeds will allow your soul to be reborn in higher, more pure levels of existence, until that desired state of nirvana is reached.

More on the Buddhist Concept of the Afterlife

According to Buddhist thought, hell in not a place where one suffers in eternal torment; rather, it is a temporary abode where you are able to transcend the negative karma you accumulated during your earthly life. Buddhism does not accept the idea of a permanently “bad” soul as in Christianity but instead subscribes to the concept of a soul as an entity which is connected to the dynamic universe. Only an accomplished Buddhist (a non-returner) can be reborn in the higher heavens called Pure Abodes, while “formless realms” are meant for Buddhists who are capable of meditation on the arupajhanas, or the most supreme concept reserved for skilled meditators.

Ending Rebirth

Buddhist philosophy asserts that the process of death and rebirth is instigated because of our desire to want things, to crave excitement and value meaningless baubles above all else. To stop the endless cycle of rebirth and attain eternal freedom means reaching for nirvana, or a state of being where one is free from all desire. Since our physical bodies are considered the origin of suffering, being free from rebirth will free the soul from desire and suffering.

Western society has been hesitant to accept the Buddhist views of the afterlife because it involves literally vanishing into the nothingness of freedom from suffering, a specifically anti-Christian concept.

Interested in getting funeral insurance rates quotes?

Amsterdam: Everyone Is Queen for the Day

logo

In the United States, summer vacations tend to be anchored to the 4th of July. For those who can’t wait that long – or who have grown hungry for something more than burgers and hotdogs – a trip to Amsterdam at Queen’s Day might be just what the Travel Doctor ordered. Queen’s Day Amsterdam travel seems to pick up more and more each year as word of the festivities has spread.

Orange You Glad You Made It?

Amsterdam’s biggest outdoor music festivals are reserved for April 30th. If that isn’t enough for the vacationer, one might want to consider attending one of the many after-parties in some of the city’s hottest bars and clubs. It may be enough to turn your face red, but then again, that could just be the reflecting the abundance of the color orange – the traditional hue of Queen’s Day. Orange hats sit atop orange wigs which frame faces that have been painted orange. It’s not hard to get into the spirit.

Festivities Galore

While Queen’s Day certainly qualifies as one of the planet’s greatest all-day street celebrations, it is also a day in which vendors can conduct sidewalk rummage sales. This is the chance for the tourist to grab up souvenirs that are interesting and unique without being marketed to simply as a visitor from another country. For those who bring the children along, Amsterdam’s Vondelpark offers a place where kids can be kids (no small feat in a place of Amsterdam’s wild repute).

Queen’s Night (obviously the night before Queen’s Day) has also gained notoriety for festive partying in Amsterdam’s club scene, particularly in the Jordaan neighborhood. This rounds out an experience like no other, something that has been celebrated since the year 1889. It’s like the 4th of July, Mardis Gras and New Year’s Eve all rolled up into one gigantic party that the entire city enjoys. For citizens and tourists alike, the charm and flair of Amsterdam is on display every year. It is something that nobody should miss.

Candles in Buddhism

logo

The Buddhist religion and the use of candles go hand in hand. Buddhists believe that the flame on the candles represents the light of Buddha’s teachings. Candles are placed in front of Buddhist shrines as a mark of respect. Buddha says “Thousands of candles can be lit from a single candle, and the life of the candle will not be shortened. Happiness never decreases by being shared.” He also says, “Just as a candle cannot burn without fire, men cannot live without a spiritual life.”

The Candle Festival

Candles play a big part in Buddhist tradition. One of these traditions is Lent Day, in Thailand. It happens once a year on July eighth. Thai people offer a range of basic goods to their monks, including candles. The people bring large and extravagantly decorated candles to the monks, who usually contain themselves within the temple for a period of three months. On they way to the temple the people gather and march with their candles in parade. The art depictions on the candles portray willpower, unity, wisdom, and divine light. Many times the parades also include musicians and dancers who accompany the procession through the city. There is also a beauty contest to select Miss Candle, the most beautiful lady in the area.

Candle Meditation

Aside from the parades and festivals, Buddhists also use candles to further their faith. They isolate themselves in a quiet room and stare into the flame of the candle, focusing all of their attention on it. They believe that as they stare at the flame their minds will become enlightened as the worries of everyday begin to drift away. They hope to receive visions, images, and thoughts to guide them.

Buddhists use candles to show respect both through fun and meditation. These interesting traditions have enriched their lives through the ages and will continue to do so for many more to come.

The insight of Dalai Lama Teachings

logo

The Dalai Lama Teachings proclaims that there is no creation for such thing in the world and there are no reasons for things. He also denies that the need for God is no beginning for things. In his own distorted logic he uses a lot of Buddhist terms and refers to the Primordial Buddha as the final reference of light. He worship Buddha as one of the believers in God, but in his eternal wisdom he forgets to elucidate on how the universe came about, and how man came in the world. Moreover, he also added that there is no origin for the universe and there is no origin for life, but consciousness can explain everything to him. However, the Dalai Lama knows better and he must certainly have been little insect before coming into this life and he could have seen the light that is more humble to acknowledge his creator and worship him, instead prostrating unto the statue of a stupid and blind Buddha as the Dalai Lama and his blind Buddhists do.

Dalai Lama being distorted in the mind and even more in his own soul, he rejects the necessity for God to explain creation. According to his perception, knowledge and enlightened geniuses matter to its own self and of course matter to the eternal life. This of course does not explain anything but there are a lot of important pieces that Dalai Lama Belief such as it would rather be wiser to acknowledge their ignorance and take their place among other human beings in recognizing our ignorance to ultimate questions. It would be more intelligent and more humble to acknowledge their not knowing of anything and acknowledge the mystery of the universe and our microscopic being in it. It would have been more suitable for these two idiots to acknowledge their ignorance facing our living universe and facing the phenomena of life and death, all cannot possibly exist if there were no creator and creation. It would have been more properly knowledgeable to acknowledge one’s limits, but these two incarnations of wisdoms know and others do not.

« Previous Entries Next Entries »

logo
Copyright 2009 - 2012 ©Dalai Lama - Buddhism & Buddhist Beliefs – Isn't it time you were enlightened? | Powered by Wordpress Themes | Online Coupons | High Speed Internet