冠泰佛 Champ Thai Fu Limited
Luang Phor Chen, BE 2499 (1956 AD) - Chubby-bottomed celestial child with covered face, Kumanthong.
Luang Phor Chen, BE 2499 (1956 AD) - Chubby-bottomed celestial child with covered face, Kumanthong.
Couldn't load pickup availability
Luang Phor Chin is a highly accomplished master with immense popularity in Thailand and China. His amulets are incredibly efficacious, and many masters, celebrities, and high-ranking officials have all studied under him and prayed for his blessings.
This little-butt Kumanthong is one of the master's most famous works. When making it, the master recited and copied scriptures and incantations more than 10,000 times, including incantations that can help the wearer. It is said that he even recited them about 30,000 times. The master personally made it by hand using ancient methods, mixed it with sacred wood, and then blessed it again with chanting 10,000 times until it was ready to be worn.
Materials used in these sacred objects: 108 types of seabed soil from near southern Thailand, soil from a river flowing through the sacred mountain, soil from 108 ancient temples, soil from 108 fertile rice paddies, soil from 108 secluded beaches, soil from 108 natural gardens, soil from 108 burrows where a special type of crab hides, soil from barren places inhabited by spirits, soil from 108 special termite nests, soil from the bottom of 108 ponds where gold has been unearthed multiple times, powder from ancient scriptures, soil from three wealthy families, flower pollen from flowers used in grand Buddhist ceremonies, dried and ground pollen, water from the sacred mountain Chairat, dew collected on a Monday (Buddhist Day), and soil piled up on a pig's tail. One hundred and eight pieces. Powder from the famous "Thaa Reua" amulet storehouse in Nakhon Si Thammarat province. The mixed materials actually number more than seven hundred, each of which possesses its own spirituality. The materials were personally ground by the master and then made into pieces. Then, one hundred and eight talismans were drawn on them, including fifty-six verses of Buddhist merit, thirty-eight verses of Dharma merit, and fourteen verses of Sangha merit. Nine monks recited the verses praising the Three Jewels during the entire blessing ceremony. The master also had to personally recite mantras to bless the ceremony.
The Kumanthong's Sleight of Hand: A true story from Chonburi Province, 2516 BE (Buddhist Era). A criminal broke into a house, having already committed multiple burglaries and assaults in the neighborhood. Upon entering, the criminal ignored the money on the table and saw no one home. After searching, he opened the bedroom door, only to find it led to a ditch in the backyard. The truth was that the family was asleep in the bedroom. On the living room table were a considerable amount of cash, valuable jewelry, and watches. The thief, mistaking the bedroom door for a side door leading to the ditch, discovered the homeowner was enshrining a Kumanthong. From that moment on, everyone was awestruck by the master's miraculous powers.
Wearing this little buttocks Kumanthong can bring the wearer abundant wealth, prosperous business, a constant stream of customers, attract both direct and indirect wealth, maintain harmonious relationships, suppress malicious people, fulfill wishes, protect the wearer from evil spirits, and ward off disasters and dangers.
Dimensions: Approximately 6.2 cm high, 3 cm wide, and 2.1 cm thick.
Share
