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Homa (ritual) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Homa (ritual)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A Japanese homa ritual, practiced mainly in the Shingon Buddhist sects.
A Japanese homa ritual, practiced mainly in the Shingon Buddhist sects.

Homa (also known as homam or havan) is a Sanskrit word which refers to any ritual in which making offerings into a consecrated fire is the primary action. [1] The words homa/homam/havan are interchangeable with the word Yagna. Homas are an important religious practise in Hinduism, Buddhism and Jainism.

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[edit] Procedure

Although a consecrated fire is the central element of every homa ritual, the procedure and items offered to the fire vary by what occasions the ceremony, or by the benefit expected from the ritual. Procedures invaribly involve -

  • the kindling and consecration of the sacrificial fire;
  • the invocation of one or more divinities; and,
  • the making of offerings (whether real or visualized) to them with the fire as via media, amid the recitation of prescribed prayers and mantras.

The consecrated fire forms the focus of devotions; it is often maintained on specific types of wood and other combustibles. The fire-altar (vedi) is generally made of brick or stone, and is almost always built specifically for the occasion, being dismantled immediately afterwards. This fire-altar is invaribly built in square shape. While very large vedis are occasionally built for major public homas, the usual altar may be as small as 1 x 1 foot square and rarely exceeds 3 x 3 feet square. Again, whereas major altars at public events may include a hollowing of the earth to create a relatively deep pit, usual altars involve no such excavation and indeed rise only inches above the ground.

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In all events, the arrangement is centered in the middle of a space, which may be either outdoors or indoors. The principal people performing the ceremony and the priests who instruct them through the rituals seat themselves around the altar, while family, friends and other devotees form a larger ring around that center. The length and procedure of a homa depends on the purpose to which it is performed; many different types of homas exist, and the following list is only illustrative.

[edit] Some common homas

Homa rituals have been performed by Vedic priests for several millennia. The following is an illustrative list of a few such homa rituals:

Ceremony   Purpose
Aayushya homa   for longevity; often held to celebrate an anniversary
Dhanavantri homa   for good health
Durga homa   to cancel negative energies; for self-confidence
Gayatri homa   to facilitate good karma
Kritya Pariharana   to counter the effects of black magic
Ganapathi homa   to overcome obstacles
Lakshmi Kubera homa   for wealth and material prosperity
Mangala Samskarana homa   to celebrate auspicious events; to attain Moksha
Mahadevi homa   for the stimulation of a marriage and for marital felicity among those already married
Navagraha homa   to negate limitations in one's horoscope
Punyahavachana homa   for the naming of a child
Sudarshana homa   for success in an undertaking
Vastu homa   a house-warming; to encourage good Vastu (energy in buildings)
Vidya homa   to benefit students; to facilitate learning
Vishwa Shanthi homa   for universal peace and harmony, as also harmony between the self and the universe
Viraja Homa   purification rites performed as part of the formal ceremonies by which a person takes the vows of renunciation (Sannyas), thereby becoming a Sanyasin (monk)

The purification rites of the Viraja homa ritual also apply to the formal ceremonies by which a Hindu monk takes up the vows of renunciation (Sannyas), thereby becoming a Sanyasin. The procedure is a part of the full Sannyas Diksha monastic initiation ceremony. After the Homa, the monk receives the ochre robes the characteristic dress of Hindu monks, from his teacher (guru).

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Glossary of: Svoboda, Robert (1993). Aghora II: Kundalini. Las Vegas: Brotherhood of Life. ISBN 0-914732-31-5. 

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