1. "The Great Compassion Mantra" is a very famous Buddhist song and is widely circulated in the Buddhist community. The Great Compassion Mantra is of extremely important significance in Chinese Buddhism. Since the translation of the "Great Compassion Dharani Sutra" in the Tang Dynasty, the "Great Compassion Mantra" has been widely spread and included in the jungle exercises of the Han Dynasty.
2. "Namo Amitabha" is a Buddhist song sung by Master Chang Sheng (Li Na). Namo Amitabha Buddha is translated as returning to the enlightenment of immeasurable light and the enlightenment of immeasurable life. Destined for the enlightenment of infinite life and the enlightenment of infinite light.
Altar and temple buildings
Altar and temple buildings are Chinese buildings used to worship the heaven, earth, sun, moon, mountains and rivers, the ancestors of the country, including the Temple of Heaven, the Temple of Earth, the Temple of the Sun, the Temple of the Moon, the Confucian Temple (such as the Confucius Temple), and the Wu Temple. (such as Guandi Temple), Taishan Daiyue Temple, Songshan Songyue Temple, Taimiao Temple (ancestral temple of the emperor), and temples offering sacrifices to She (the land) and Ji (the god of agriculture) in various places, all of which fully embody the characteristics of traditional Chinese national culture.
The layout and original structure of the temple building are the same as those of the palace building, but the building system is slightly simplified and golden color cannot be used more.
The architectural principles and layout of Buddhist temples and Taoist temples are also the same as those of palace buildings, but they are smaller in scale and have their own religious colors in decoration and interior furnishings.
There are symmetrical bell towers and drum towers built in the temples and temples; the Buddhist temple also builds a pagoda in front of the Buddhist hall to enshrine the Buddha's relics, which is transliterated as "Buddha". Chinese craftsmen used the framework technology of Han-style pavilion construction to build pagoda styles, called Han-style pagodas, which include wooden pagodas, stone pagodas, brick pagodas, iron pagodas, etc.