Jump to content

Sumatinatha: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m Undid revision 1234600615 by Be Jain (talk) corrected mistakes
Tags: Reverted Mobile edit Mobile web edit Advanced mobile edit
Fixed the image in the infobox. Please see Category:Pages using infoboxes with thumbnail images.
Tag: Reverted
Line 2: Line 2:
| type = Jain
| type = Jain
| deity_of = 5th Jain [[Tirthankara]]
| deity_of = 5th Jain [[Tirthankara]]
| image = [[File:Sumatinath prabhu naughara.jpg|thumb|Jain Swetamber Temple Naughara Street Chandni Chowk Delhi]]
| image = File:Sumatinath prabhu naughara.jpg
| caption = Sumatinath Prabhu at Naughara Jain Shwetambar Derasar Chandni Chowk Delhi
| caption = Sumatinath Prabhu at Naughara Jain Shwetambar Derasar Chandni Chowk Delhi
| alt = Sumatinatha
| alt = Sumatinatha

Revision as of 01:36, 18 July 2024

Sumatinatha
5th Jain Tirthankara
Sumatinatha
Sumatinath Prabhu at Naughara Jain Shwetambar Derasar Chandni Chowk Delhi
Venerated inJainism
PredecessorAbhinandananatha
SuccessorPadmaprabha
SymbolGoose
Height300 bows (900 meters)
Age4,000,000 purva (282.24 Quintillion Years Old)
TreePriyangu
ColorGolden
Genealogy
Born
Died
Parents
  • Megharatha (father)
  • Mangalāvatī (mother)

Sumatinatha was the fifth Jain Tirthankara of the present age (Avasarpini). Sumatinatha was born to a Kshatriya King Megha (Megharatha) and Queen Mangalavati (Sumangalavati) at Ayodhya in the Ikshvaku dynasty. His Janma Kalyanak (birthday) was the eighth day of the Vaisakha Sudi month of the Jain calendar.

Tradition

Sumatinatha was the fifth Jain Tirthankara of the present age (Avasarpini).[1] Sumatinatha was born to Kshatriya King Megha (Meghaprabha) and Queen Mangala (Sumangala) at Ayodhya in the Ikshvaku dynasty. His birth date was the eighth day of the Vaisakha Sudi month of the Jain calendar.[1]

He attained Kevala Jnana under sala or priyangu tree.[2] He became a siddha, a liberated soul which has destroyed all of its karma. Lord Sumithanatha is associated with Heron (Krauncha) emblem, Priyangu tree, Tumburu (Purushadatta) Yaksha and Mahakala Yakshi.[3]

In his previous incarnation, Sumatinatha was an Indra in the Jayanta Vimana.[4]

Adoration

Svayambhustotra by Acharya Samantabhadra is the adoration of twenty-four tirthankaras. Its five slokas (aphorisms) are dedicated to Sumatinātha.[5] Last of which is:

The attributes of existence and non-existence in an object are valid from particular standpoints; the validity of the statement is contingent on the speaker's choice, at that particular moment, of the attribute that he wishes to bring to the fore as the other attribute is relegated to the background. O Lord Sumatinātha, you had thus explained the reality of substances; may your adoration augment my intellect![6]

Main temples

See also

Notes

References