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Hindu Worship and Rituals. Worship can take place either in the home or the temple. The mandir. Hindu worship. Hindu children learn their faith at home, or with a guru or swami at a temple. The home is where daily worship and prayer takes place. A common daily ritual is puja .
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Hindu Worship and Rituals Worship can take place either in the home or the temple
Hindu worship • Hindu children learn their faith at home, or with a guru or swami at a temple. • The home is where daily worship and prayer takes place. • A common daily ritual is puja. • Puja is an offering to the gods, and may be offered for special occasions in a temple (e.g. Durga Puja). • Temple puja is far more elaborate than home puja, and is performed by priests. • At the temple, puja is offered at sunrise, noon, sunset and midnight
How to perform puja • Puja consists of many steps, performed at a home altar: • Welcoming the deity • Washing the deity statue (murti) • Putting on sacred thread • Ringing a bell • Applying sacred pastes or oils to murti • Offering flowers, incense and garlands • Lighting a lamp and waving it around image (aarti) • Offering food (e.g. ghee, fruit, sugar, rice) – later the food can be offered to followers as prasad • Bowing and circumambulation (walking around the image) • The prayers, mantras and songs are typically led by the head of the household • Applying sacred pastes to the forehead (tilak)
Globalization in Hindu worship • How to perform a Ganesh ChaturthiPooja at home (according to internet kit) • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRxUDL5QXPo • http://www.pureprayer.in/default.aspx • Online e-pooja, order rituals, online darshan • http://www.shrikashivishwanath.org/en/online/epooja.aspx • Order puja, homa online • http://www.saranam.com/
Homa • Homa is a ritual of making offerings to a sacred fire • The fire is first built and consecrated (made holy) • The fire may be built in a pit for the occasion or in a special vessel made of brick, clay or copper • Homa is generally used for more special occasions (e.g. taking renunciation vows, naming of a child)
Murti • A murti is the embodiment of the deity • The murti itself is not a god, but contains its spirit once the name of the deity is invoked • Bhakti practitioners treat their murti with reverence – washing, dressing and offering garlands to it • This is not seen as idol worship by mainstream Hinduism • Some teachers have compared murtis to talking on the telephone; we do not talk to the telephone, we talk to the person on the other end. Without the phone or the murti, communication would not be possible.
Prasad • Literally, a “gracious gift”, sanctified food – offered to a deity and then shared • prasad is considered to have the deity’s blessing • The 2 main reasons Hindus take pilgrimage or visit temples is to receive prasad and to have darshan (see the deities)
Arati/Aarti • Arati is the offering of songs and light are offered to the deities • The lamp or arati plate is lit with wicks soaked in ghee or camphor • This tradition is related to homa and is usually part of puja • When the lamp is waved before the image of a deity, it is believed to get the power of the deity • Followers warm their hands with the lamp and place the heat over the eyes or forehead
Connect stages of life rituals – renunciation and marriage • Columbia University (NYC) • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qym9jn6LU8w • Hindu wedding montage - Hindu Wedding Toronto.mp4 • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TKcPGR24524 • Varanasi (Asian Art Museum) – death and cremation • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JoC_x3Hzkkc&list=PL8A01EF6231F95FA3
Samskaras • Samskaras are rites of passage • Important for twice-born Hindus • Seen as purifying, able to remove sin and give virtue • Read pages 136-140 in Exploring World Religions and “Religious Life and Practices” (UWO) and summarize. Be sure to include at least the following terms/concepts: • Naming • First outing • First haircut • First solid food • Upanayana • Marriage • Forehead marks for different sects • What happens to a corpse after death (mention widows as well as others) • Shraddha • Places other than temples/shrines that Hindus worship at • Pilgrimage (name a few places) • Be sure you fill in terms in your 6-trait model for Hinduism – particularly festivals – you will need more details in your notes than will fit in the chart.
Tilak • Forehead marks are worn in Hinduism to signify the mind’s eye (3rd eye) – a centre point of human energy • In the past, marks were worn only by priests and other holy people – today they are commonly worn • Traditionally, marks denoted caste. Today, it more often denotes sect • Vaishnavites often wear a U shaped tilak • Shaivites wear horizontal lines of ash • Shaktas wear a red line or red dot • Bindhis are worn by women to denote marital status or for decoration