Ask Osho!

What is the significance of prana-pratishtha?

Synthesized from Source definition

"Prana-pratishtha is the sacred act of awakening the divine within an image, transforming it into a living presence that cannot be destroyed."

According to Osho, prana-pratishtha is the reawakening of an ancient covenant so an image becomes a living, receiving point of presence. It has two parts: priestly rites (installation) and verified signs of acceptance, known only to a realized adept (fifth body). Like a tuned radio, it must ‘catch’ the signal; without unmistakable signs it remains dead—and a truly living temple cannot be destroyed.
It’s like turning a statue into a working radio: you set it up and then check if it really picks up the station—without clear reception, it’s just a box.
Why this matters practically
- Distinguishes living spirituality from empty ritual by requiring real, verifiable signs.
- Guides seekers to rely on authentic realization, not procedures alone.
- Encourages testing beliefs in life: what is truly alive cannot be shaken or destroyed.
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