First off, Buddhist do not worship The Buddha. We honor and revere him. He was not a god. We come together to practice and honor him in a temple.
== == "If you see the Buddha, Kill the Buddha." Meaning; the teachings are important, not the teacher. The Buddhist honor their teacher but do not worship them as gods.
The Buddhist will kneel in front of a giant statue of Buddha and worship.
In general, Buddhist nowadays pray in Monasteries. But there are 4 sacred places in India where Buddhist are encourage to visit: 1) Lumbini: Place where Buddha (Prince Siddhartha) was born; 2) Bodhigaya: Place where Buddha attain Enlightenment; 3) Deer Park: Place where Buddha gave His 1st Sermon; 4) Kusinara: Place where Buddha entered Parinibbana. (For more details, you are encouraged to check out this Sight: Buddhan
the name of the Buddha place of worship is a Buddha hut.
Siddhārtha Gautama is the Buddha who taught this religion to people.
A follower of The Buddha is called a Buddhist. As a note: Buddhists doe not worship The Buddha. We revere him, we are grateful to him, but he is not a god.
Buddhist statutes are not used for worship. They are used to being to mind the teachings of the Buddha or his and his disciples actions. We bow to the Buddha in reverence to his teachings just as we bow to all beings.
The Buddhist figure is the God of the Buddha religion. His name is Gautama Buddha, who was a spiritual figure who's teachings founded Buddhism, so the Buddha figure is Gautama the original Buddhist
to their god name "buddha"
Buddhists do not worship the Buddha, what we follow is the ideals and teachings put forth by Siddartha Gautama, who became a Buddha. Buddha is a title not a name, anyone can become a Buddha.
Buddhist lmas and monks do not worship Buddha. Worship is an activity generally reserved for gods. Buddhists have no gods. Buddhists revere Buddha as he determined and made available to us a method that we can escape the pain of desire and the cycle of death and re-birth. He is however just a man.
Actually, the point of engaging in Buddhist practices is not to worship the Buddha. So there are no worshipers of the Buddha. The point of engaging in Buddhist practices is to reduce suffering (dissatisfaction, troubles, sorrow). A practitioner who is successful realizes his or her "Buddha-Nature," which each human is believed already to have (but usually without realizing it). In that sense, the point of engaging in Buddhist practices is to become a buddha, which just means someone who is awake. .