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SAMAYASARA
of Saṁsāra and because of this noble task of helping the mankind Jina is also called Tirthankara. The divine personality Jina, who by his act of benevolence is called Tirthankara is therefore called Arhanta which means one worthy of adoration and worship. Arhat Paramesthi is therefore the Lord worshipped by all the Jains. He is represented by a pratibimba or image which is installed in a Caityālaya or a Jain temple built for the purpose. The pratibimba is always of the form of a human being because it represents the Jina or the Tirtharkara who spent the last portion of his life on earth in the noble task of proclaiming to the world Mokşamārga or the path to salvation. The idol will be either in a standing posture or Kāyotsarga or in the posture of Padmāsana-sitting-technically called Palyankāsana. Whether standing or sitting it represents the Divine Lord absorbed in the self-realisation as a result of Tapas or Yoga. Therefore the facial expression would reveal the intrinsic spiritual bliss as a result of selfrealisation. People who worship the Jina in this form installed in Jinālaya or the Jain temple and who follow the religious tenets proclaimed by the Jina are called the Jainas and their religion is Jainism,
The same faith is also designated by the term Ārhatamata, which means religion followed by Arhatas or Jainas, since the term Arhata means one who follows the religion of the Arhat Paramești. The terms Jina, Tirtharikara and Arhat Parameşthi all refer to the divine person or Sarvajña who lived in the world with his body, and it refers to the period after attaining Sarvajña hood or Omniscience and the last period of the parinirvāņa, when the body is cast away and the self resumes its own intrinsic pure spiritual nature and it becomes Paramātmā or Siddha. This is the last stage of spiritual development and is identical with the Self completely liberated or Muktajiva or the Self which attained Mokşa This Siddhaparameşthi is identical with the Vedāntic conception of Parabrahma or Paramātmā which terms are also used by the Jaina thinkers. This Siddhasvarūpa or Paramātmā Svarūpa is without body-Asarira, and without form-Arūpa. Hence its nature can be understood only by yogic contemplation for which the individual must be fit and highly qualified. Ordinary people who are not endowed with the capacity of realising the nature of the pure self Paramātma or Siddha Parameşthi whose pratibimba is installed in Jaina temples for the worship by the ordinary householder, This practice prescribed a mode of worship for the ordinary people who were expected to concentrate their attention on the image of Jina or Arhat Parameşthi corresponds to the Vedāntic attitude, which while recognising that the highest state of spiritual development is represented by the Parabrahma, provides for the ordinary man something lower than this as the object of worship, or what is called the popular or vyāva harika point of view. As a matter of fact, it may be said without contradiction that this distinction between vyāvaharika and paramarthika points of view was adopted by the great commentator Sankara who took the suggestion frou the earlier Jaina thinkers, especially Srí Kunda Kunda. This term Siddha,
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