The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions (658 page)

BOOK: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions
11.56Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
Dhy
na
(Skt., ‘meditation’, ‘absorption’). In Indian religions, a term denoting both the practice of
meditation
and a higher state of consciousness (generally involving
enstasy
), though the term takes on more precise meanings in different traditions; thus the Buddhist use of the term is distinct from the Hindu—see JH
NA.
In
Tantrism
dhy
na comes to mean
visualization
of one's own deity (
i
adevat
),
ma
ala
, centres (
cakra
) of the subtle body (
li
ga
/
s
k
ma
ar
ra), or
guru
, accompanied by
mantra
repetition (
japa
) and symbolic hand gestures (
mudra
). Dhy
na as visualization is thus the visual equivalent of auditory mantra and corporeal mudra and is an essential part of
s
dhana

Other books

The Memory Box by Eva Lesko Natiello
Hunger's Brides by W. Paul Anderson
Vatican Ambassador by Mike Luoma
Ramona and Her Father by Beverly Cleary
Los viajes de Tuf by George R. R. Martin
A Luring Murder by Stacy Verdick Case
Rise of the Blood by Lucienne Diver
Cowboy Redeemed by Parker Kincade