House blessings (also known as house healings, house clearings, house cleansings and space clearing) are rites intended to protect the inhabitants of a house or apartment from misfortune, whether before moving into it or to "heal" it after an occurrence. Many religions have house blessings of one form or another.
Christians of various denominations have traced with holy oil the sign of the cross onto lintels, doors or windows of their dwellings in order to invite God's blessing and protection on the home. Christian prayer such as the following are used for the same:
House blessings date back to the early days of Christianity, and in Catholicism, the rite takes the form of a prayer, with intercessions and several ; blessed salt and incense may also be used. The Methodist The Book of Worship for Church and Home (1965) contains "An Office for the Blessing of a Dwelling". Matthew 2:11 says:
"On coming to the house, they saw the child with his mother Mary, and they bowed down and worshiped him. Then they opened their treasures and presented him with gifts of gold and of incense and of myrrh."Consequently, Anglicans, Catholics, Lutherans, Methodists and Orthodox Christians often have their homes blessed at Epiphany, on January 6; this blessing often starts with the Christian custom of chalking the door and Christian prayer at the home altar. The custom of the Epiphanytide house blessing commemorates the visitation of the Biblical Magi to the child Jesus.
House blessings in the Pennsylvania Dutch Country take the form of printed cards, framed and hung on the walls of the sitting room, and trace their origins to similar practices in The Netherlands and Belgium. Blessings, employed by Catholics and Protestants alike, usually incorporate a picture of Christ's crucifixion and a prayer "to the Sweet Name of Jesus and His dear saints". Many of these were printed in Belgium, and Turnhout.
In Alsace, such blessings have origins in the Pestbriefe of the Middle Ages, sold at fairs to those wishing to protect themselves from disease, and the Feuerbriefe brought back by pilgrims from Cologne and containing intercessory prayers to the Biblical Magi (usually with the letters CMB, for Caspar, Melchior, Balthasar, incorporated somewhere into the design) for God protecting their homes from fire and disaster. Other blessings, found in Alsace and brought to Pennsylvania, include blessings of the entranceway to a house, stable blessings invoking Saint Leonard or Saint Blaise, blessings against Feuer und Brand addressed to Saint Agatha, and even blessings for house pets addressed to Saint Florentius.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints also participates in house blessings, referring to them as home dedications.
In Chinese Buddhism—practiced in China, Taiwan, and the rest of the Sinophone world—house blessings involve asperging the new residence with water that is consecrated with the Great Compassion Mantra (); this ritual is known as sajing (灑淨) and may be conducted by lay believers or invited monastics. In addition, before inhabiting the new residence, believers may arrange for a special memorial service (chaojian, 超薦) to be conducted at a temple for the new property's landlord deity; this is done in hopes that the landlord god may convert to Buddhism, become a benevolent spirit if he is not already, and be reborn into Amitabha's Pure Land.
The Kojangi house blessing ceremony requires one fresh whole red fish, rice with (sekihan), a small bottle of sake, an unopened bag of rice, and a new bag of rock salt.`
In the Gurung people culture of Nepal, most families have a house blessing twice a year in March and October performed by a lama priest. At the October blessing, a new set of Prayer flag are hung at the house (typically on a bamboo pole), with a blessing scarf tied at the top of the prayer flags and a mixture of grains in a bag tied at the bottom.
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