Gohonzon

The Gohonzon (御本尊) is typically used as an object of devotion in Japanese Buddhism. In Japanese, go means worthy of honor and honzon means object of fundamental respect. The Gohonzon may be enshrined in a butsudan meaning home of the Buddha, hung on a wall or placed on a surface. A Gohonzon may be a paper mandala with Chinese characters and two Sanskrit characters inscribed in ink, or the characters could be carved into wood. Gohonzons are used as the primary object of devotion by members of Nichiren Buddhism including Nichiren Shu, Soka Gakkai International, Nichiren Shoshu and various other schools. NOTE: This page is currently in the process of being re-written and will, when finished, include pictures of various gohonzons, instructions on how to use them, and a history of gohonzons. However, you are welcome to contribute if you have information regarding gohonzons.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
omaria massacre
aberdeenshire (traditional)
bruce feirstein
wave knight class tanker
sameera moussa
santa brbara (ribeira grande)
fs forbin
bente
british coin twenty five pence
free fall (album)
billing (film)
juba, sudan
apert syndrome
fs chevalier paul
joseph yablonski
tom morris, jr.
unary function
development fund for iraq
2005 06 nhl season
ugress
dar alages
tom morris
araucarioxylon arizonicum
kate seelye
fred smoot
claret jug
john abi saab
elzbieta szydlowiecka
load balanced switch
slampt
porak
traditional diet
enemies of reality
surrogacy
julius hawley seelye
staatsgalerie stuttgart
meiko kaji
randy "duke" cunningham
code of conduct of the armed forces of the united states
tshouk karckar
nick st. nicholas
mount copaja
brian ritchie
dead heart in a dead world