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Encyclopedia > Amitabha Buddha
The Big Buddha in , an image of Amitabha
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The Big Buddha in Kamakura, an image of Amitabha

Amitābha (阿彌陀佛 Ch. Āmítuó fó, 阿弥陀 Jp Amida), the Buddha of Limitless Light (無量光佛), also Amitāyus, the Buddha of Limitless Life (無量壽佛), is the primary deity of the Pure Land school of Buddhism which developed and spread in Vietnam, Korea and Japan and has grown to become the largest sect in Buddhism. Amitābha is a Buddha who possesses infinite meritorious qualities; who expounds the dharma in his pure paradise (Sukhāvatī) in the West, hence the name Pure Land.

Contents

Doctrine

According to tradition Amitabha was in ancient times a king who, having come in contact with the Buddhist teaching, renounced his throne and became a monk with the name of Dharmakāra. He resolved to become a Buddha and in this way to come into possession of a paradise in which all who call his name might be born into a life of unbounded joy. This is the result of his forty-eight vows 四十八願, the most important of which are the eighteenth and nineteenth, in which he promises not to achieve supreme perfect enlightenment until he have saved all sentient beings in his paradise. The basic doctrine concerning Amitabha and his vows can be found in the Amitābha_sūtra and the Infinite Life Sutra.


Iconography

Tang Dynasty Amitabha sculpture. Hidden Stream Temple Cave, Longmen Grottoes, China.
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Tang Dynasty Amitabha sculpture. Hidden Stream Temple Cave, Longmen Grottoes, China.

Amitabha can be very difficult to tell apart from Shakyamuni, as both possess all the attributes of a Buddha but have no distinguishing marks. He can, however, often be distinguished by his mudra: Amitabha is often depicted with the meditation mudra (as in the Kamakura statue) or the exposition mudra, while the earth-touching mudra is reserved for Shakyamuni alone.


Amitabha is usually portrayed as having two assistants: Avalokiteśvara (Guan Yin) who appears on his right and Mahāsthāmaprāpta who appears on his left, although the order is reversed in Esoteric Buddhism. He is also one of the five buddhas of the vajradhātu.


Mantras

The Tibetan mantra of Amitabha is 'Om ami dhewa hri'. Various mantras invoking his name are commonly used by modern Amidist schools, particularly 南無阿弥陀佛, read Nàmó Āmítuó fó in Chinese and Namu Amida butsu in Japanese.


See Also


Buddhism
Terms and concepts History People Schools and sects Buddhism by region
List of topics Timeline Temples Texts Culture



  Results from FactBites:
 
Amitabha - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1285 words)
AmitÄbha is a celestial Buddha described in the scriptures of MahÄyÄna Buddhism.
In Tibet, Amitabha is considered one of the Five DhyÄni Buddhas (together with Aká¹£obhya, Amoghasiddhi, Ratnasambhava, and Vairocana), who is associated with the western direction and the skandha of saṃjñÄ.
The statue is dated to "the 28th year of the reign of Huviá¹£ka", that is, sometime in the later half of the 2nd century during the period of the Kuá¹£Äṇa Empire, and dedicated to "AmitÄbha Buddha" by a family of merchants.
Buddha - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1341 words)
A typical misconception tends to link Buddha as the Buddhist counterpart of the entity known as God; however, Buddhism is non-theistic, in the sense of not generally teaching the existence of a supreme Creator God (see God in Buddhism).
However, a Buddha recognizes the unchanging nature of the Dharma, which is an eternal principle and an unconditioned and timeless phenomenon.
Some schools of Mahayana Buddhism believe that the Buddha is no longer essentially a human being but has become a being of a different order altogether and that the Buddha, in his ultimate transcendental "body/mind" mode as Dharmakaya, has an eternal and infinite life (see eternal Buddha) and is possessed of great and immeasurable qualities.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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