{{Buddha Infobox | name = Amitabha | img = Ushiku Daibutsu 2006.jpg | img_size = 200px | img_capt = Amitabha Buddha pictured in the Ushiku Daibutsu in Japan | landscape = | sanskrit_name = अमिताभ Amitābha, Amitāyus | bengali_name = অমিতাভ Amitābho | pali_name = | burmese_name = | chinese_name = 阿彌陀佛(T) / 阿弥陀佛(S)Pinyin: Āmítuó Fó Wade-Giles: A-mi-t’uo Fo | japanese_name = 阿弥陀如来 Amida Nyorai | tibetan_name =འོད་དཔག་མེད་od dpag medÖ-pa-me yoong toog taaa | mongolian_name = ᠴᠠᠭᠯᠠᠰᠢ ᠦᠭᠡᠢ ᠭᠡᠷᠡᠯᠲᠦЦаглашгүй гэрэлтTsaglasi ügei gereltuОдбагмэд OdbagmedАминдаваа AmindavaaАюуш Ayush | korean_name = 아미타불 A-mi-ta Bul | thai_name = | vietnamese_name = A-di-đà Phật | veneration = Mahayana, Vajrayana | attributes = Infinite Light | shakti = Pandara | preceded_by = | succeeded_by = }}
Amitābha (Sanskrit: अमिताभ, Amitābha (wordstem), ) is a celestial buddha described in the scriptures of the Mahāyāna school of Buddhism. Amitābha is the principal buddha in the Pure Land sect, a branch of Buddhism practiced mainly in East Asia, while in Vajrayana Amitābha is known for his longevity attribute and the aggregate of distinguishing (recognition) and the deep awareness of individualities. According to these scriptures, Amitābha possesses infinite merits resulting from good deeds over countless past lives as a bodhisattva named Dharmakāra. "Amitābha" is translatable as "Infinite Light," hence Amitābha is often called "The Buddha of Infinite Light."
In the versions of the sutra widely known in China, Vietnam, Korea and Japan, Dharmakāra's eighteenth vow was that any being in any universe desiring to be born into Amitābha's Pure Land and calling upon his name even as few as ten times will be guaranteed rebirth there. His nineteenth vow promises that he, together with his bodhisattvas and other blessed Buddhists, will appear before those who call upon him at the moment of death. This openness and acceptance of all kinds of people has made the Pure Land belief one of the major influences in Mahāyāna Buddhism. Pure Land Buddhism seems to have first become popular in northwest India/Pakistan and Afghanistan, from where it spread to Central Asia and China.
The sutra goes on to explain that Amitābha, after accumulating great merit over countless lives, finally achieved buddhahood and is still residing in his land of Sukhāvatī, whose many virtues and joys are described.
The basic doctrines concerning Amitābha and his vows are found in three canonical Mahāyāna texts:
Through his efforts, Amitābha created the "Pure Land" (净土, Chinese: jìngtŭ; Japanese: jōdo; Vietnamese: tịnh độ) called Sukhāvatī (Sanskrit: "possessing happiness") . Sukhāvatī is situated in the uttermost west, beyond the bounds of our own world. By the power of his vows, Amitābha has made it possible for all who call upon him to be reborn into this land, there to undergo instruction by him in the dharma and ultimately become bodhisattvas and buddhas in their turn (the ultimate goal of Mahāyāna Buddhism). From there, these same bodhisattvas and buddhas return to our world to help yet more people.
Amitābha is the Buddha of the comprehensive love. He lives in the west (represented as a meditating Buddha) and works for the enlightenment of all beings (represented as a blessing Buddha). His most important enlightenment technique is the visualization of the surrounding world as a paradise. Who sees his world as a paradise, awakens his enlightenment energy. The world can be seen as a paradise by a corresponding positive thought (enlightenment thought) or by sending light to all beings (wish all beings to be happy). After the Amitabha doctrine, man can come to paradise (in the Pure Land of Amitābha), if he visualizes at his death Amitābha in the heaven (sun) over his head (western horizon), thinks his name as a mantra and leaves the body as a soul through the crown chakra.
The Tibetan Panchen Lamas and Shamarpas are considered to be emanations of Amitābha.
He is frequently invoked in Tibet either as Buddha Amitābha – especially in the Phowa practices or as Amitāyus – especially in practices relating to longevity and preventing an untimely death.
In Japanese Vajrayāna, or Shingon Buddhism, Amitābha is seen as one of the thirteen Buddhist deities to whom practitioners can pay homage. Shingon, like Tibetan Buddhism, also uses special devotional mantras for Amitābha, though the mantras used differ. Amitābha is also one of the Buddhas featured in the Womb Realm Mandala used in Shingon practices, and sits to the west, which is where the Pure Land of Amitābha is said to dwell.
In addition to using the mantras listed above, many Buddhist schools invoke Amitābha's name in a practice known as nianfo 念佛 in Chinese and nembutsu in Japanese.
The proper form (wordstem) of Amitābha's name in Sanskrit is , masculine, and the nominative singular is . This is a compound of the Sanskrit words amita ("without bound, infinite") and ābhā ("light, splendor"). Consequently, the name is to be interpreted as "he who possesses light without bound, he whose splendor is infinite".
The name Amitāyus (nominative form ) is also used for the Sambhogakāya aspect of Amitabha, particularly associated with longevity. He is mostly depicted sitting and holding in his hands a vessel containing the nectar of immortality. Amitayus is also one of the three deities of long life (Amitayus, White Tara & Ushnishavijaya) . Amitāyus being a compound of amita ("infinite") and āyus ("life"), and so means "he whose life is boundless".
In Chinese, his name is given as Āmítuó Fó (阿彌陀佛), where Āmítuó is the Chinese representation of the first three syllables of either Amitābha or Amitāyus, and Fó is Chinese for Buddha (a very early borrowing of the first syllable of the Sanskrit word).
The name Amitābha is given in Chinese as Wúliàngguāng (無量光; "Infinite Light "), while the name Amitāyus is given as Wúliàngshòu (無量壽; "Infinite Life"). These names are not, however, very commonly used.
In Vietnamese, Korean, and Japanese, the same Chinese characters used for Amitabha are used to represent his name, though they are pronounced slightly differently:
In Japanese, he is also called Amida Nyorai (阿弥陀如来), meaning " the Tathāgata Amitābha".
In Tibetan, Amitābha is called 'od.dpag.med and, as Amitāyus, tshe.dpag.med.
It can be difficult to distinguish Amitābha from Śākyamuni (and any buddhas in general) as both are portrayed as possessing all the attributes of a buddha but no distinguishing marks. Amitabha can, however, often be distinguished by his mudrā: Amitābha is often depicted, when shown seated, displaying the meditation mudrā (thumbs touching and fingers together (as in the Kamakura statue of Amitābha) or the exposition mudrā, while the earth-touching mudrā (right hand pointed downward over the right leg, palm inward) is reserved for a seated Śākyamuni alone. He can also be seen holding a lotus in his hands while displaying the meditation mudrā.
When standing, Amitābha is often shown with his left arm bare and extended downward with thumb and forefinger touching, with his right hand facing outward also with thumb and forefinger touching. The meaning of this mudra is that wisdom (symbolized by the raised hand) is accessible to even the lowest beings, while the outstretched hand shows that Amitabha's compassion is directed at the lowest beings, who cannot save themselves.
When not depicted alone, Amitābha is often portrayed with two assistants: Avalokiteśvara who appears on his left and Mahāsthāmaprāpta who appears on his right.
In Vajrayana, Amitābha is the most ancient Buddha among the Dhayni Buddhas. He is of red color originating from the red seed syllable hrih. He represents the cosmic element of "Sanjana" (name). His vehicle is the peacock. He exhibits Samadhi Mudra his two palms folded face up, one on top of the other, lying on his lap. The lotus is his sign. When represented on the stupa, he always faces toward west. He is worshiped thinking that one can have salvation. Sometimes he holds a Patra on the same posture.
The first known epigraphic evidence for Amitābha is the bottom part of a statue found in Govindnagar, Pakistan and now located at the Mathura Museum. The statue is dated to "the 28th year of the reign of " (i.e., sometime in the latter half of the 2nd century CE, during the period of the Empire), and was apparently dedicated to "Amitābha Buddha" by a family of merchants.
The first known sutra mentioning Amitābha is the translation into Chinese of the Pratyutpanna Sūtra by the monk around 180 CE. This work is said to be at the origin of Pure Land practice in China.
The appearance of such literature and sculptural remains at the end of the 2nd century suggests that the doctrine of Amitābha probably developed during the 1st and 2nd centuries CE.
Category:Buddhas Category:Pure Land Buddhism
zh-min-nan:O-bí-tô-hu̍t bo:འོད་དཔག་མེད། cs:Amitábha de:Amitabha et:Amitābha es:Amitābha fr:Amitābha ko:아미타불 id:Amitabha it:Amitabha Buddha ka:ამიტაბჰა ml:അമിതാഭൻ ms:Amitabha nl:Amitabha ja:阿弥陀如来 no:Amitabha pl:Amitabha pt:Amitaba ru:Амитабха sh:Amitabha fi:Amitabha sv:Amitabha ta:அமிதாப புத்தர் te:అమితాభ బుద్ధుడు th:พระอมิตาภพุทธะ tr:Amitabha uk:Амітабга vi:A-di-đà zh:阿弥陀佛This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
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