Overview
Shodashopachara, often rendered in Indian English as Shodashopachara Puja or the "sixteen services", is a traditional framework of ritual hospitality offered to a deity in Hindu worship. The term is generally understood as a compound of two Sanskrit elements suggesting "sixteen" and "service" or "attendance", and it refers to a sequence of devotional acts performed during formal worship at home shrines, in temples, and during life-cycle and festival observances. The ritual model imagines the deity as an honoured guest who is received, seated, bathed, clothed, fed, and bid farewell with appropriate courtesies.
Background
Hindu ritual worship, broadly termed puja, has historically been codified into structured sequences of upacharas or services offered to a consecrated image, symbol, or other focus of devotion. Several enumerations exist in the tradition, including the panchopachara (five services), dashopachara (ten services), shodashopachara (sixteen services), and longer sequences sometimes mentioned in tantric and agamic literature. The sixteen-service form is among the most widely referenced templates in domestic and temple worship across Vaishnava, Shaiva, Shakta, and Smarta settings, although the specific contents and order are not uniform across these schools.
References
- To be added: standard reference works on Hindu ritual and puja, with full bibliographic details.
- To be added: scholarly studies on agamic and paddhati literature relevant to upachara sequences.
- To be added: regional liturgical manuals representing major traditions, cited with edition and publisher.
- To be added: peer-reviewed articles or encyclopaedia entries discussing Shodashopachara and related frameworks.
- To be added: cross-references to other IndiaWiki entries once they are stabilised.
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