Buddhism: Worship, Ethics and Festivals
Buddhist Places of Worship
Buddhists have a variety of settings for practice and community life, each with distinctive features:
| Place | Description | Key features |
|---|---|---|
| Temple | Public worship space, often elaborately decorated | Shrine room, Buddha rupa, offerings, incense |
| Shrine | A focused devotional space, inside a home or building | Buddha image, candles, flowers, offerings |
| Vihara | A monastery — residential community for monks and nuns | Meditation hall, dormitories, teaching space |
| Gompa | A Tibetan Buddhist hall for meditation or learning | Thangka paintings, ritual objects, teaching throne |
The Buddha rupa (an image or statue of the Buddha) is the central focus of most shrines and temples. It is not worshipped as a god but used as a focus for reflection and as a reminder of the qualities the practitioner is cultivating. Offerings placed before the rupa — flowers (symbolising impermanence), candles (wisdom dispersing ignorance), incense (purity), water, food — express respect and reinforce ethical intentions rather than seeking supernatural favour.
In the UK, viharas often serve as community and educational centres as well as places for practice, bridging monastic tradition with lay Buddhist life.
Puja — Devotional Ritual
Puja is the practice of devotional ritual, performed both in the home and at the temple. It is not worship of a deity in the theistic sense; rather, puja expresses gratitude, generates positive mental states, and supports concentration.
Typical elements of puja include:
- Chanting — recitation of passages from the Pali Canon or other texts, performed as a devotional practice and as an aid to mental concentration. Communal chanting synchronises the mind and cultivates a sense of shared commitment.
- Mantra recitation — in Mahayana and Vajrayana traditions, mantras (sacred sounds or phrases) are repeated as a means of focusing the mind and connecting with the qualities of Buddhas or Bodhisattvas. The most widely known is Om Mani Padme Hum, associated with Avalokiteshvara, the Bodhisattva of compassion.
- Malas — prayer beads (usually 108 beads) used to count repetitions of mantras or recitations, functioning similarly to a rosary.
Puja in Buddhism is a practice of devotion and mental training, not petition to a deity. Its aim is to cultivate the qualities of the Buddha — wisdom, compassion and clarity.
Home shrines allow daily practice; temple puja on special occasions brings the community together and reinforces the tradition.
Meditation — Three Forms
Meditation (bhavana) is central to Buddhist practice and the means by which wisdom and calm are cultivated directly. The spec requires three distinct forms:
1. Samatha (concentration and tranquillity)
Samatha meditation develops calm, stability and single-pointed concentration. The most common method is mindfulness of breathing (anapanasati): the meditator focuses attention on the sensation of the breath entering and leaving the body, gently returning it each time the mind wanders. This steadies the mind and makes it fit for insight.
2. Vipassana (insight)
Vipassana meditation investigates the nature of experience directly — observing the arising and passing of thoughts, feelings and sensations to perceive impermanence, no-self and suffering clearly. In Zen Buddhism, a form of insight meditation called zazen ("seated meditation") is practised: the meditator sits in a prescribed posture and attends to experience without conceptual elaboration.
3. Visualisation of Buddhas and Bodhisattvas
Particularly in Mahayana and Vajrayana traditions, meditation involves vividly imagining the forms, colours, qualities and presence of Buddhas or Bodhisattvas. This is not fantasy but a disciplined mental training intended to cultivate the qualities represented by the figure — compassion (Avalokiteshvara), wisdom (Manjushri), etc.
| Method | Tradition | Aim |
|---|---|---|
| Mindfulness of breathing | All traditions | Samatha — calm and concentration |
| Zazen | Zen (Mahayana) | Vipassana — direct insight |
| Visualisation | Mahayana / Vajrayana | Cultivating Buddha qualities |
Death Ceremonies — Theravada, Japan, and Tibet
Buddhist attitudes to death reflect the teaching of impermanence and rebirth. Practices vary significantly across traditions:
Theravada communities Monks chant passages from the Pali Canon at the bedside and after death, generating merit for the deceased and comfort for the family. The body is typically cremated. A period of merit-making (donating to the monastery, feeding monks) helps transfer merit to the deceased, supporting their rebirth. Funeral rites may last several days.
Japan (Zen and Pure Land Buddhism) Japanese funerals are predominantly Buddhist. A posthumous Buddhist name (kaimyo) is given to the deceased, and the funeral is conducted by a priest with sutra chanting. The body is cremated. Memorial services are held on set anniversaries (7th, 49th day, etc.), reflecting the belief that the consciousness takes up to 49 days to reach its next rebirth.
Tibet (Vajrayana Buddhism) The Bardo Thodol ("Tibetan Book of the Dead") is read aloud to the dying or recently deceased, guiding consciousness through the intermediate state (bardo) between death and rebirth. Sky burial (jhator) — placing the body on high ground for birds of prey — is common, reflecting the belief that once consciousness has left, the body is simply material to be returned to nature.
These contrasting practices illustrate that while Buddhist beliefs about death are shared (impermanence, rebirth, the importance of mental state at death), ritual expression varies widely by culture.
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Festivals — Wesak and Parinirvana Day
Wesak (Vesak)
Origins: Wesak commemorates three key events in the Buddha's life, all said to have occurred on the full moon of the month of Vaisakha: his birth, his Enlightenment, and his death (parinirvana).
Wesak is the most important Buddhist festival. Celebrations in the UK and globally include temple visits, meditation, acts of generosity and charity (dana), the lighting of lanterns, and communal chanting. The festival reinforces core Buddhist values — mindfulness, compassion, generosity — and deepens community bonds. For Buddhists in Great Britain, Wesak is a significant public expression of Buddhist identity and a time for reflection on the Buddha's teaching.
Parinirvana Day
Origins: Parinirvana Day (celebrated mainly in Mahayana traditions, often in January or February) marks the death of the Buddha — his passing into final nirvana (parinirvana), the complete cessation of the cycle of rebirth.
The festival is a time of reflection on death and impermanence. Practitioners meditate on the Three Marks of Existence and may read from the Mahaparinibbana Sutta, which describes the Buddha's final days and teachings. For British Buddhists, it is an opportunity to reflect on how the Buddha's death exemplified his teaching that all conditioned things pass away.
Retreats are also an important feature of Buddhist practice in Great Britain, providing extended periods away from ordinary life for intensive meditation and study. Buddhist retreat centres are now widespread in the UK and serve both monastic and lay practitioners.
Buddhist Ethics — Kamma, Karuna and Metta
Buddhist ethics rest on three foundational concepts:
Kamma (karma) and rebirth Kamma (Sanskrit: karma) refers to intentional actions and their consequences. Skilful (wholesome) actions — those rooted in wisdom, generosity and compassion — generate positive kamma that supports a favourable rebirth and progress toward liberation. Unskilful actions rooted in greed, hatred or ignorance generate negative kamma. Rebirth (samsara) continues until the cycle is broken by attaining nibbana. Kamma is not fate — it is the ethical weight of intentional choices.
Karuna — compassion Karuna is the aspiration to relieve suffering wherever it is found. In Mahayana Buddhism, karuna is one of the defining qualities of the Bodhisattva: the vow to remain in the cycle of rebirth until all beings are free from suffering expresses karuna at its fullest. In practice, karuna motivates charitable action, non-violence, and attentiveness to the pain of others.
Metta — loving kindness Metta is an unconditional goodwill extended toward all sentient beings without distinction. The Metta Sutta calls on practitioners to develop metta as a mother loves her only child. Metta meditation (metta bhavana) systematically extends goodwill — from oneself, to loved ones, to neutral people, to difficult people, to all beings everywhere. Alongside karuna, metta is one of the four "divine abidings" (brahmaviharas).
The Five Moral Precepts and the Six Perfections
The Five Moral Precepts (pancha sila) are the foundational ethical commitments undertaken by lay Buddhists:
| Precept | Statement |
|---|---|
| 1 | Do not take life |
| 2 | Do not take what is not given |
| 3 | Do not misuse the senses |
| 4 | Do not speak falsehoods |
| 5 | Do not take intoxicants that cloud the mind |
The precepts are undertaken voluntarily, not as divine commandments. They reflect the principle of ahimsa (non-harm) and support the mental clarity needed for meditation. Monks and nuns follow a more extensive code (the Vinaya).
The Six Perfections (Paramitas) — Mahayana tradition
In Mahayana Buddhism, the Bodhisattva path requires developing six perfections (paramitas), each cultivated progressively:
| Perfection | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Generosity (dana) | Giving freely without attachment |
| Morality (sila) | Ethical conduct; the precepts |
| Patience (ksanti) | Endurance; not reacting with anger |
| Energy (virya) | Effort and perseverance on the path |
| Meditation (dhyana) | Mental concentration and calm |
| Wisdom (prajna) | Direct insight into the nature of reality; sunyata |
The Six Perfections are not milestones to tick off but qualities developed throughout countless lifetimes as the Bodhisattva progresses toward Buddhahood.
Common Exam Mistakes
1. Conflating puja with theistic worship
Puja in Buddhism is not prayer to a god asking for help. Describing the Buddha rupa as an "idol being worshipped" misrepresents the tradition. A 6-mark answer should clarify that the rupa is a focus for reflection and inspiration, not a deity being petitioned.
2. Omitting zazen when asked about meditation
Samatha and Vipassana are the two main categories, but zazen is specifically named in the spec as a form of Vipassana/insight meditation. Mentioning only "mindfulness of breathing" on a 4- or 6-mark meditation question misses a required detail.
3. Mixing up Wesak and Parinirvana Day
Wesak commemorates birth, Enlightenment and death together (Theravada tradition). Parinirvana Day marks the Buddha's death specifically and is more central to Mahayana communities. Do not merge them into a single festival.
4. Listing the precepts without explanation
On a 4-mark question asking you to "explain" the precepts, simply listing them is unlikely to earn more than one mark per point. Each precept needs a developed explanation: what it prohibits and why it matters for a Buddhist practitioner.
5. Applying the Six Perfections to all Buddhists
The Six Perfections (paramitas) belong to the Mahayana Bodhisattva path, not Theravada. Attributing them to Theravada Buddhism in a 6-mark or 12-mark answer shows a fundamental misunderstanding of the traditions.
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