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ARTICLES RELATED TO Havan Dictionary |  |  |  | Havan Dictionary:
Indian Hindu Dictionary on Havan Havan: a fire ritual accompanied by the chanting of the sacred Vedic mantras for a communal or common purpose. In the Vedic age, Havans were performed to give offerings of ghee, milk or grain to please the deities. With the later philosophical development of Hinduism, their purpose evolved into a method of practicing renunciation. (See also: Havan, Hinduism, Yoga, Body Mind and Soul)
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Hindu -
Hinduism Dictionary on Homa homa: (Sanskrit) "Fire-offering." A sacred ceremony in which the Gods are offered oblations through the medium of fire in a sanctified fire pit, homakunda, usually made of earthen bricks. Homa rites are enjoined in the Vedas, Agamas and Dharma and Grihya Shastras. Many domestic rites are occasions for homa, including upanayana and vivaha. Major pujas in temples are often preceded by a homa. See: agni, havana, yajna, homa. (See also: Homa, Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)
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Hindu -
Hinduism Dictionary on Lekhaprartha havana lekhaprartha havana: (Sanskrit) "Written-prayer-burning rite." A coined term for the ancient practice of sending written prayers to the Gods by burning them in a sanctified fire in a temple or shrine. Alternately this rite can be performed at other appropriate sites, with four persons sitting around a fire and chanting to create a temporary temple. Prayers can be written in any language, but should be clearly legible, in black ink on white paper. The devas have provided a special script, called Tyaf, especially for this purpose. (See also: Lekhaprartha havana, Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)
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Hindu -
Hinduism Dictionary on Yajna yajna: (Sanskrit) "Worship; sacrifice." One of the most central Hindu concepts - sacrifice and surrender through acts of worship, inner and outer. 1) A form of ritual worship especially prevalent in Vedic times, in which oblations - ghee, grains, spices and exotic woods - are offered into a fire according to scriptural injunctions while special mantras are chanted. - The element fire, Agni, is revered as the divine messenger who carries offerings and prayers to the Gods. - The ancient Veda Brahmanas and the Shrauta Shastras describe various types of yajna rites, some so elaborate as to require hundreds of priests, whose powerful chanting resounds for miles. These major yajnas are performed in large, open-air structures called yagashala. - Domestic yajnas, prescribed in the Grihya Shastras, are performed in the family compound or courtyard. Yajna requires four components, none of which may be omitted: dravya, sacrificial substances; tyaga, the spirit of sacrificing all to God; devata, the celestial beings who receive the sacrifice; and mantra, the empowering word or chant. - While puja (worship in temples with water, lights and flowers) has largely replaced the yajna, this ancient rite still continues, and its specialized priestly training is carried on in schools in India. - Yajnas of a grand scale are performed for special occasions, beseeching the Gods for rain during drought, or for peace during bloody civil war. Even in temples, yajna has its Agamic equivalent in the agnikaraka, the homa or havana ceremony, held in a fire pit (homakunda) in an outer mandapa of a temple as part of elaborate puja rites. - 2) Personal acts of worship or sacrifice. Life itself is a jivayajna. - The Upanishads suggest that one can make "inner yajnas" by offering up bits of the little self into the fires of sadhana and tapas until the greater Self shines forth. The five daily yajnas, pancha mahayajna, of the householder (outlined in the Dharma Shastras) ensure offerings to rishis, ancestors, Gods, creatures and men. They are as follows. - brahma yajna: (also called Veda yajna or rishi yajna) "Homage to the seers." Accomplished through studying and teaching the Vedas. - deva yajna: "Homage to Gods and elementals." Recognizing the debt due to those who guide nature, and the feeding of them by offering ghee and uncooked grains into the fire. This is the homa sacrifice. - pitri yajna: "Homage to ancestors." Offering of cakes (pinda) and water to the family line and the progenitors of mankind. - bhuta yajna: "Homage to beings." Placing food-offerings, bali, on the ground, intended for animals, birds, insects, wandering outcastes and beings of the invisible worlds. ("Let him gently place on the ground [food] for dogs, outcastes, svapachas, those diseased from sins, crows and insects" Manu Dharma Shastras 3.92). - manushya yajna: "Homage to men." Feeding guests and the poor, the homeless and the student. Manushya yajna includes all acts of philanthropy, such as tithing and charity. The Vedic study is performed in the morning. The other four yajnas are performed just before taking one's noon meal. Manu Dharma Shastras (3.80) states, "Let him worship, according to the rule, the rishis with Veda study, the devas with homa, the pitris with shraddha, men with food, and the bhutas with bali." Mystics warn that all offerings must be tempered in the fires of kundalini through the power of inner yajna to be true and valuable, just as the fire of awareness is needed to indelibly imprint ideas and concepts on one's own akashic window. See: dharma, havana, homa, puja, sacrifice. (See also: Yajna, Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)
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Archives and dictionary related to sanskrit - Ha - Hu Popular archives related to Sanskrit Sanskrit, Sanskrit Dictionary, Sanskrit Symbol, Sanskrit Language, Sanskrit Alphabet, Sanskrit Literature, Sanskrit Mantras, Sanskrit Slokas, Sanskrit Om, Sanskrit Mantra Popular archives related to Hinduism Hinduism, Hinduism Dictionary, Hinduism Religion, History of Hinduism, Hinduism Symbols, Hinduism Beliefs, Hinduism and Buddhism, Origin of Hinduism, Hinduism Gods, Woman in Hinduism, Hinduism Karma, Hinduism and Islam, Kalki, Deeksha, Hinduism and Christianity, Hindu Art, Hindu God, Hindu Temple, Hindu Religion, Bhagavan, Kundalini, Diksha Popular archives related to Buddhism Buddhism, Buddhism Dictionary, Zen Buddhism, Buddhism Religion, Buddhism Symbols, History of Buddhism, Theravada Buddhism, Buddhism Beliefs, Mahayana Buddhism, Nichiren Buddhism, Hinduism and Buddhism, Buddhism Meditation, Christianity and Buddhism, Origin of Buddhism, Buddhism God, Buddhism Facts, Buddhist Art, Buddhist Monastery, Buddhist Temple, Buddhist Symbols Links to archives related to sanskrit: Hathayogins, Havan, Havis, Havisya, Haya, Hayagriva, Haya-griva, Hema, Hemachandra, Hemantha, Hethu, Heya, Himalayas, Himavaan, Himsa, Hindu, Hinduism, Hiranyagarbha, Hiranyakashipu, Hiranya-kashipu, Hiranyakasipu, Hiranyaksa, Hiranyaksha, Hita, Hladini, Holi, Homa, Hotha, Hrasva, Hridaya, Hridaya akasha, Hridaya-apahari, Hridaya-grantha, hridaya-grantha, Hridaya-Granthi, Hridayakasa, Hridaya-kshetra, Hridayam, Hridaya-pushpa, Hrim, Hrishika, Hrishikesha, Hriswarupa, Hrsikesa, Hrudaya-vasi, Hum Here are links to all 7 661 archives related to Sanskrit: Sanskrit Dictionary Sanskrit Dictionary - A, Sanskrit Dictionary - B, Sanskrit Dictionary - C, Sanskrit Dictionary - D, Sanskrit Dictionary - E , Sanskrit Dictionary - F, Sanskrit Dictionary - G, Sanskrit Dictionary - H, Sanskrit Dictionary - I, Sanskrit Dictionary - J, Sanskrit Dictionary - K, Sanskrit Dictionary - L, Sanskrit Dictionary - M, Sanskrit Dictionary - N, Sanskrit Dictionary - O, Sanskrit Dictionary - P, Sanskrit Dictionary - Q, Sanskrit Dictionary - R, Sanskrit Dictionary - S, Sanskrit Dictionary - T, Sanskrit Dictionary - U, Sanskrit Dictionary - V, Sanskrit Dictionary - W, Sanskrit Dictionary - X, Sanskrit Dictionary - Y, Sanskrit Dictionary - Z, Sanskrit Dictionary - Numbers More popular related archives: Consciousness, Chakras, Kundalini, Kundalini Yoga, Cosmic Consciousness, Hinduism and Life after death, Prana, Mayan Calendar, 2012, Diksha, Enligtenment, Bhagavan, Alternative Health, Alternative Health Dictionary, Body Mind and Soul
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Hindu Symbols - Sacred
food offering of the Lord - PrasadaPrasada is that which gives peace. Prasada is the sacred food offering of the Lord. During Kirtana, worship, Puja, Havan and Arati, the devotee offers sweet rice, fruits, jaggery, milk, coconut, plantain and such other articles to the Lord, according to his ability. After offering them to the Lord, they are shared between the members of the house or the Bhaktas in a temple. Excerpt from All About Hinduism by Sri Swami Sivananda Read more here: » Prasada:
Hindu Symbols - Sacred
food offering of the Lord - Prasada |
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