The Significance of Transference of Merits to the
Departed
If you really want to honour and help
your departed ones, then do some meritorious deeds in their name and transfer
the merits to them.
According to Buddhism, good deeds or ‘acts of
merit’ bring happiness to the doer both in this world and in the hereafter. Acts
of merit are also believed to lead towards the final goal of everlasting
happiness. The acts of merit can be performed through body, speech or mind.
Every good deed produces ‘merit’ which accumulates to the ‘credit’ of the doer.
Buddhism also teaches that the acquired merit can be transferred to others, it
can be shared vicariously with others. In other words, the merit is ‘reversible’
and so can be shared with other persons. The persons who receive the merit can
be either living or departed ones.
The method for transferring
merits is quite simple. First some good deeds are performed. The doer of the
good deeds has merely to wish that the merit he has gained accrues to someone in
particular, or to all beings. This wish can be purely mental or it can
accompanied by an expression of words.
This wish could be made
with the beneficiary being aware of it. When the beneficiary is aware of the act
or wish, then a mutual ‘rejoicing in’ merit takes place. Here the beneficiary
becomes a participant of the original deed by associating himself with the deed
done. If the beneficiary identifies himself with both the deed and the doer, he
can sometimes acquire even greater merit than the original doer, either because
his elation is greater or because his appreciation of the value of the deed is
based on his understanding of Dhamma and, hence, more meritorious, Buddhist
texts contain several stories of such instances.
The ‘joy of
transference of merits’ can also take place with or without the knowledge of the
doer of the meritorious act. All that is necessary is for the beneficiary to
feel gladness in his heart when he becomes aware of the good deed. If he wishes,
he can express his joy by saying ‘sadhu’ which means ‘well done’. What he is
doing is creating a kind of mental or verbal applause. In order to share the
good deed done by another, what is important is that there must be actual
approval of the deed and joy arising in the beneficiary’s heart.
Even if he so desires, the doer of a good deed cannot prevent another’s
‘rejoicing in the merit’ because he has no power over another’s thoughts.
According to the Buddha, in all actions, thought is what really matters.
Transference is primarily an act of the mind.
To transfer merit
does not mean that a person is deprived of the merit had originally acquired by
his good deed. On the contrary, the very act of ‘transference’ is a good deed in
itself and hence enhances the merit already earned.
Highest Gift to the Departed
The Buddha says that the greatest gift one can confer on one’s dead
ancestors is to perform ‘acts of merit’ and to transfer these merits so
acquired. He also says that those who give also receive the fruits of their
deeds. The Buddha encouraged those who did good deeds such as offering alms to
holy men, to transfer the merits which they received to their departed ones.
Alms should be given in the name of the departed by recalling to mind such
things as, ‘When he was alive, he gave me this wealth; he did this for me; he
was my relative, my companion, etc. (Tirokuddha Sutta T Khuddakapatha). There is
no use weeping, feeling sorry, lamenting and bewailing; such attitudes are of no
consequence to the departed ones.
Transferring merits to the
departed is based on the popular belief that on a person’s death, his ‘merits’
and ‘demerits’ are weighed against one another and his destiny determined, his
actions determined whether he is to be reborn in a sphere of happiness or a
realm of woe. The belief is that the departed one might have gone to the world
of the departed spirits. The beings in these lower forms of existence cannot
generate fresh merits, and have to live on with the merits which are earned from
this world.
Those who did not harm others and who performed many
good deeds during their life time, will certainly have the chance to be reborn
in a happy place. Such persons do not required the help of living relatives.
However, those who have no chance to be reborn in a happy abode are always
waiting to receive merits from their living relatives to offset their deficiency
and to enable them to be born in a happy abode.
Those who are
reborn in an unfortunate spirit form could be released from their suffering
condition through the transferring of merits to them by friends and relatives
who do some meritorious deeds.
The origin and the significance of
transference of merit is open to scholarly debate. Although this ancient custom
still exists today in many Buddhists countries, very few Buddhists who follow
this ancient custom have understood the meaning of transference of merits and
the proper way to do that.
Some people are simply wasting time
and money on meaningless ceremonies and performances in memory of departed ones.
These people do not realise that it is impossible to help the departed ones
simply by building big graveyards, tombs, paper-houses and other paraphernalia.
Neither is it possible to help the departed by burning joss-sticks, joss-paper,
etc.; nor is it possible to help the departed by slaughtering animals and
offering them along with other kinds of food. Also one should not waste by
burning things used by the departed ones on the assumption that the deceased
persons would somehow benefit by the act, when such articles can in fact be
distributed among the needy.
The only way to help the departed
ones is to do some meritorious deeds in a religious way in memory of them. The
meritorious
deeds include such acts as giving alms to others, building schools, temples,
orphanages, libraries, hospitals, printing religious books for free distribution
and similar charitable deeds.
The followers of the Buddha should
act wisely and should not follow anything blindly. While others pray to god for
the departed ones, Buddhists radiate their loving-kindness directly to them. By
doing meritorious deeds, they can transfer the merits to their beloved ones for
their well-being. This is the best way of remembering and giving real honour to
and perpetuating the names of the departed ones. In their state of happiness,
the departed ones will reciprocate their blessings on their living relatives. It
is, therefore, the duty of relatives to remember their departed ones by
transferring merits and by radiating loving-kindness directly to them.
Everlasting Charity (Tharavapunna)
Charity whose merit lasts forever.
(1) Setting up gardens and orchards for public use
(2) Planting shady trees and fruit trees for public use
(3) Building roads and bridges for public use
(4) Providing drinking water at the wayside
(5) Constructing wells, tanks and ditches as means of public water supply
(6) Donation of monastic dwellings, etc.