The more prayer wheels you spin, the more good karma you accumulate.
Not exact matches
To look upon those
prayer wheels not (as some of us were taught) as instruments of «vain repetition,» but as outward and visible signs of the intention to pray without ceasing, can perhaps lead iconoclasts to
more compassionate reflection on the sacramental impulse and on the place of objects — statues and stained glass and candles and altar cloths, beads, bouquets, and kneeling cushions in needlepoint stitched by some faithful woman as her own act of participation in the
prayers of the church.
When his joke doesn't go over well, he follows it up by trying to take it
more seriously, but so seriously it is also just as funny, as he makes a big to - do of it, holding his arms high in the air and affecting a mocking reverential tone to ask for the knife as he spins the
prayer wheel — then spins it one
more time to add the word, «Please.»
We'll have
more to follow soon, but for now, check out the new
prayer wheel they installed in Brooklyn after the jump...
While painting and printmaking remain central to their approach, over the past decade FAILE has adapted its signature mass culture - driven iconography to an array of materials and techniques, from wooden boxes and window pallets to
more traditional canvas, prints, sculptures, stencils, installation, and
prayer wheels.