RGM
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to JainsIndia
The following eight items to perform puja of a Tirthankara in the
temple. Symbolically each item represents a specific religious virtue
and one should reflect on it while performing puja.
1) Jala Puja: (Water)-Water symbolizes the ocean. Every living being
continuously travels through life's ocean of birth, death, and misery.
This puja reminds that one should live his life with
honesty,truthfulness, love, and compassion towards all living beings.
This way one will be able to cross life's ocean and attain liberation
(Moksha). This is known as samyak-darshana, samyak-jnana, and samyak-
charitrya in the Jain religion.
2)Chandan Puja: (Sandal-wood) Chandan symbolizes knowledge (jnana). By
doing this puja, one should thrive for right knowledge. Jainism
believes that the path of knowledge is the main path to attain Moksha
or liberation.
Bhakti or devotion helps in the early stages of one's effort for
liberation.
3)Pushpa Puja: (Flower)The flower symbolizes conduct. Our conduct
should be like a flower, which provides fragrance and beauty to all
living beings without discrimination. We should live our life like
flowers full of love and compassion towards all living beings.
4) Dhup Puja: (Incense) Dhup symbolizes monkhood life. While burning
itself, incense provides fragrance to others. Similarly, true monks
and nuns spend their entire life selflessly for the benefit of all
living beings. This puja reminds that one should thrive for a ascetic
life.
5)Dipak Puja: (Candle)The flame of dipak represents a pure
consciousness, i.e. a soul without any bondage of a karma or a
liberated soul. In Jainism, such a soul is called a Siddha or God. The
ultimate goal of every living being is to become liberated. By doing
this puja one should thrive to follow five great vows; non-violence,
truthfulness, non-stealing, chastity, and non-possession. Ultimately
these vows will lead to liberation.
6) Akshat Puja: (Rice) Rice is a kind of grain which is nonfertile.
One cannot grow rice plants by seeding rice. Symbolically, it means
that rice is the last birth. By doing this puja one should thrive to
put all the efforts in life in such a way that this life becomes one's
last life, and after the end of this life one will not be reborn
again.
7) Naivedya Puja: (Sweet food) Naivedya symbolizes tasty food. By
doing this puja, one should thrive to reduce or eliminate attachment
to tasty food. Healthy food is essential for survival, however one
should not live for tasty food. Ultimate aim in one's life is to
attain a life where no food is essential for survival. That is the
life of a liberated soul who lives in Moksha for ever in ultimate
blissful state.
8) Fal Puja: (Fruit) Fruit is a symbol of Moksha or liberation. If we
live our life without any attachment to worldly affairs, continue to
perform our duty without any expectation and reward, be a witness to
all the incidents that occur surrounding us, truly follow monkhood
life,and have a love and compassion to all living beings, we will
attain the fruit of liberation. This is the last puja symbolizing the
ultimate achievement of our life.