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Buddha Purnima 2025: 30+ best wishes, quotes, and messages to share

Buddha Purnima 2025: 30+ best wishes, quotes, and messages to share

India Today12-05-2025

Buddha Purnima, which is observed by millions of people all over the world, is of great importance for Buddhists. It is not only a festival but a reminder of the deep messages of Gautama Buddha, who devoted his life to transmitting the message of peace, enlightenment, and compassion.This holy day commemorates the birth, enlightenment (Nirvana), and demise (Parinirvana) of Lord Buddha, who reached enlightenment while sitting under the Bodhi tree at Bodh Gaya, India, more than 2,500 years ago. For Buddhists, Buddha Purnima is a day of remembrance, regeneration, and spirituality, as they commemorate the teachings of love, wisdom, and non-violence by the Buddha.advertisementOn this full moon day in the month of Vaisakha (which is generally between April and May), Buddhists around the globe participate in various deeds, including prayer ceremonies, temple offerings, and philanthropic activities.
These rituals not only help in paying respects to Lord Buddha but also motivate people to tread the path of virtue and enlightenment in their own lives. Buddha Purnima is an occasion to introspect, practice mindfulness, and adopt the virtues of kindness, compassion, and inner peace, values that go beyond religious divisions and bring about universal good. In 2025, Buddha Purnima will fall on May 12, which is a Wednesday.30 Buddha Purnima 2025 wishes, quotes, and messagesMay the teachings of Lord Buddha guide you always. Happy Buddha Purnima!Wishing you peace, happiness, and enlightenment on this holy day.On Buddha Purnima, may your heart be filled with kindness and compassion.Let us follow the path of peace shown by Lord Buddha. Happy Buddha Jayanti!Wishing you and your family a blessed Buddha Purnima 2025."Peace comes from within. Do not seek it without.""Three things cannot be long hidden: the sun, the moon, and the truth.""Health is the greatest gift, contentment the greatest wealth.""No one saves us but ourselves. We must walk the path.""The mind is everything. What you think, you become."On this Buddha Purnima, may you walk the path of truth and wisdom.May Buddha's teachings light up your life today and always. Happy Buddha Jayanti!Let's honor the enlightened one by being kind, calm, and wise. Happy Buddha Purnima!Sending you wishes of peace and joy on this holy day of Buddha PurnimaLet go of anger, spread love, and embrace peace. Happy Buddha Purnima 2025!Let this Buddha Purnima bring new hope and light into your life.Wish you a life full of peace, knowledge, and spiritual growth.May Lord Buddha bless you with strength and serenity.Be kind, be wise, be calm — follow Buddha's path.Sending you warm wishes on Buddha Jayanti. Stay blessed and peaceful.Walking in the Buddha's path is walking toward peace. #BuddhaPurnimaPeace is not a place, it's a choice. Happy Buddha Jayanti!Find peace within — Buddha showed us how. #BuddhaQuotesCompassion is the root of Buddha's wisdom. Let's follow it together.On Buddha Purnima, let us reflect and grow in silence.May you be free from all suffering and walk the noble path.May this Buddha Purnima bring joy to your soul and light to your mind.May you find strength in Buddha's words and peace in his silence.May every step you take today lead you to inner peace.Wishing you enlightenment, happiness, and love on Buddha Purnima 2025.Must Watch

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Religion in flux: Islam surges, Christianity shrinks; Hinduism holds steady
Religion in flux: Islam surges, Christianity shrinks; Hinduism holds steady

Time of India

time10 hours ago

  • Time of India

Religion in flux: Islam surges, Christianity shrinks; Hinduism holds steady

Between 2010 and 2020, the world's population expanded-and so did nearly every major religious group-according to an analysis of over 2,700 censuses and surveys, a Pew Research Center report said. Christians remained the largest religious group, rising from 2.18 billion to 2.30 billion (+122 million), but their share of the global population shrank from roughly 30.6% to 28.8% (‑1.8 points). Muslims, meanwhile, surged ahead: adding 347 million adherents-the fastest increase among all groups-pushing their total to approximately 2 billion and boosting their global share by 1.8 points to 25.6%, the Pew report said. Other faith categories saw varied trends: the religiously unaffiliated grew to comprise 24.2% of the world's population (up from 23.3%), while Hinduism and Judaism held steady relative to global population growth. Buddhists were the only major religious group that had fewer people in 2020 than a decade earlier. Pew Research Center report on religion Why it matters: Shrinking Christian share, expanding Muslim & 'Nones' sizes Chris­tianity's slowing share reflects not demographic stagnation, but religious switching. As Conrad Hackett, the lead author of the report, explains: 'Among young adults, for every person around the world who becomes Christian, there are three people who are raised Christian who leave.' Despite Christians having a demographic edge via fertility, disaffiliation reversed that advantage. Conversely, the surge in the religiously unaffiliated reflects the same switching pattern: many individuals raised Christian have transitioned into non-affiliation, compensating for the group's demographic disadvantage-its older population and lower fertility. As of 2020, Christians were a majority in 120 countries and territories, down from 124 a decade earlier. Christians dropped below 50% of the population in the United Kingdom (49%), Australia (47%), France (46%) and Uruguay (44%). Pew Research Center report on religion Why these changes? Demographics vs switching Islam's growth is fueled primarily by demographics: a youthful age-structure (average Muslim age 24 vs non-Muslim 33), higher fertility rates, and comparatively low levels of religious switching. Demographic drivers Pew outlines critical demographic influences shaping religious group sizes. Age structure: Younger populations naturally grow faster due to more people in childbearing years. Fertility rates: Higher birth rates lead to larger natural population increase. Mortality rates also play a role, though less emphasized. Muslims benefit from both a youthful demographic and high fertility; Hindus hover near the global fertility average; Jews lag due to older age profiles. Buddhists, meanwhile, are shrinking from both demographic disadvantages and religious switching. Religious Switching Switching-either toward or away from religion-has been a game-changer. Christians experienced notable losses due to large numbers disaffiliating. The unaffiliated gained primarily through former Christians leaving religion-a shift powerful enough to overcome biological disadvantages. Conversion rates are low or negligible for Hindus and Jews, so these groups held steady; Buddhists declined partly due to people de-identifying . Between the lines: Regional shifts Sub-Saharan Christianity A dramatic geographic shift: sub‑Saharan Africa now hosts around 31% of the world's Christians-up from 24.8% in 2010-while Europe's share has declined sharply. The region's high fertility and youth boost Christian numbers, even as disaffiliation wanes in Europe. In one notable exception, Mozambique saw its Christian proportion rise by 5 percentage points. Rise of unaffiliated in China, US, Japan The unaffiliated are most numerous in China (1.3 billion of 1.4 billion), followed by the US (101 million of 331 million) and Japan (73 million of 126 million). Despite many holding personal religious beliefs, only about 10% of Chinese residents formally identify with a specific denomination. Buddhism's decline Buddhists were the only major religious group to shrink in absolute numbers-down from 343 million to 324 million-due to low fertility and defections. Stable Judaism & Hinduism As per the Pew report, Hindu and Jewish populations roughly tracked global population changes. Hindus grew in absolute terms by about 126 million to 1.2 billion, maintaining a stable global share of 14.9%. Jews increased from roughly 13.8 million in 2010 to 14.8 million in 2020-just 0.2% of the world population. The combined 'other religions' category (eg, Baha'is, Jains, folk traditions) also mirrored global population growth, holding steady at 2.2%. What's next Shifting global balance Christianity's dominance remains absolute, but its share is eroding due to disaffiliation. Islam continues steady growth and is projected to approach parity with Christianity by mid-21st century. The unaffiliated segment, though biologically disadvantaged, is rising due to cultural shifts and deconversion trends. Cultural and political impact The rise of secularization, particularly in developed nations, may reshape societal norms and policymaking. Conversely, religiosity in regions like sub-Saharan Africa and parts of Asia could mean continued importance of religious identity in daily life and governance.

Headless sculpture of Buddha, three rock cut caves found at Kadri in Mangaluru
Headless sculpture of Buddha, three rock cut caves found at Kadri in Mangaluru

The Hindu

timea day ago

  • The Hindu

Headless sculpture of Buddha, three rock cut caves found at Kadri in Mangaluru

A headless sculpture of the Buddha and a group of three rock cut caves of great importance were found during a recent archaeological exploration conducted at Kadri in Mangaluru, according to T. Murugeshi, retired associate professor in ancient history and archaeology, MSRS College, Shirva, Udupi district. 'The sculpture is stylistically datable to the 4th or 6th century A.D.' he said in a release. The sculpture was found in a water tank near the Kadri Manjunatha temple in a discarded state. The sculpture was lifted from the tank for study with the permission of the temple administrator, he said in a release. The sculpture was highly corroded. 'The head has been chopped off and the right hand is destroyed, but, still it has its serene beauty in its physical appearance. The Buddha is seated in the padmasana pose on the padma peeta in dhyana mudra by placing both palms above the centre of legs. The upper cloth passing over the left shoulder lays flat on the chest is very indistinctly visible,' he said. A pillar in the outer prakara of the temple has Dhyana Buddha sculptures seated on lotus. 'Thus, this sculpture under study is identified as Dhyana Buddha beyond doubt. The sculpture is about 68 cm in height and 48 cm in width including the prop of the image. The sculpture is stylistically datable to 4th - 6th century A.D. It is supposed to be the presiding deity of the temple,' he said. Mr. Murugeshi said a group of three rock cut caves found above the eastern side of Kadri tanks are of curious interest. 'They are cut in laterite above the ground. The first one from the right is about 8 feet in height and has a semi circular entrance like a porthole. It has a single square room with a small provision for a lamp. The entire structure looks like a megalithic dolmen. The middle and third ones have a high plinth and two square entrances with single square rooms. All caves have a sloppy canopy with holes to clear off rainy water. The nature of the caves clearly indicates that they were used for residential purpose,' the historian said in the release. The present discovery under study has a great importance in South Asian Buddhist studies and Tuluva history as well. The sculpture found at Kadri has close similarities with that of the Buddha image found at Mushira Waddo in Colvale of Goa, now displayed in Fr. Heras Institute at St. Xavier's College, Mumbai. The Dhyana Buddha image belongs to Mahayana Buddhism and caves also belong to the Mahayanists. 'By this discovery the decades of controversy over Kadri, whether it was a Buddhist centre or not is very clear. Kadri is a Buddhist centre over the centuries right up to 10th century A.D. as revealed by the inscription of Alupa king Kundavarma found on the Lokeshwara image of Kadri temple. The Mahayana Buddhist was replaced by Vajrayana Buddhist and they were turned out by Natha cult in 11th century,' he said. 'I am hereby requesting the commissioner of State Archaeology to take steps to recover this rare antiquity sculpture and protect it immediately,' he said. The historian said that he is thankful to Arun Kumar, the temple administrator for allowing to lift the sculpture for study. Shreyas Kolpe, a PhD student of Manipal University, Shreyas, an Assistant Professor in Ancient History and Archaeology, MSRS College; Shirva, Karthik, a postgraduate student in archaeology from the University College, Mangaluru, and Ravindra Kushwaha, a graduate student in archaeology, MSRS College helped in field work, the release said.

Ancient headless Buddha idol and rock-cut caves discovered
Ancient headless Buddha idol and rock-cut caves discovered

Hans India

timea day ago

  • Hans India

Ancient headless Buddha idol and rock-cut caves discovered

Mangaluru: A corroded, headless statue of the Buddha, believed to date back to the 4th–6th century CE, has been discovered in a temple tank near the historic Kadri Manjunatha Temple in Mangaluru. Alongside the sculpture, a cluster of ancient rock-cut caves has also been identified, offering fresh evidence of the region's once-flourishing Buddhist heritage. The discovery was made by Prof. T. Murugeshi, a retired archaeologist and former associate professor of Ancient History and Archaeology at MSRS College, Shirva. The Buddha image was found submerged in a water tank and retrieved with permission from the temple authorities. Though partially damaged, the statue remains notable for its meditative grace. The seated Buddha, missing its head and right hand, is shown in Padmasana (lotus position) with both palms resting in the classic Dhyana Mudra (gesture of meditation). Faint traces of a robe across the chest and a lotus pedestal suggest it is a Dhyani Buddha, commonly associated with Mahayana Buddhism. 'The iconography and posture are unmistakably Mahayanist,' said Prof. Murugeshi. 'This figure may well have been the presiding deity of an earlier Buddhist shrine at the site, long before it became a Shaiva-Vaishnava centre.' The adjacent caves, carved into laterite rock above the temple tank, add further depth to the site's historical importance. The three caves feature square rooms, raised plinths, porthole-style and square entrances, and sloped roofs with drainage holes — features pointing to their use as ancient monastic dwellings. The latest findings are expected to reshape scholarly understanding of Mangaluru's religious history. The region, now a major port city, was once home to vibrant Buddhist communities. Inscriptions dating to the 10th century — including one by the Alupa king Kundavarma found at Kadri — had earlier hinted at such a presence, but conclusive archaeological evidence had remained elusive. 'This discovery settles the long-standing debate over whether Kadri was a Buddhist centre. The evidence is now undeniable,' Prof. Murugeshi said. He noted that the Buddha statue bears stylistic similarities to a 6th-century image found in Goa's Colvale region, now displayed at the Heras Institute in Mumbai. The archaeologist credited his fieldwork team — comprising students and research assistants from MSRS College, University College Mangaluru, and Manipal University — and thanked temple administrator Arun Kumar for facilitating the study. Prof. Murugeshi has appealed to the Karnataka Department of Archaeology to recover and preserve the artefacts, describing them as 'priceless markers of our shared cultural past.'

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