Jain ritual and practice are organized around continuous ethical vigilance, not worship, petition, or divine mediation. Daily devotion is enacted through the disciplined observance of vows—most centrally ahiṃsā (non-violence)—expressed in conduct, restraint, and self-examination rather than prayer to a creator deity. Reverence toward the tīrthaṅkaras functions as exemplary remembrance, reinforcing ethical focus rather than inviting intervention.

Across offerings, sacred time, and rites of passage, Jain practice is marked by systematic minimization of harm. Sacrifice and coercive ritual healing are rejected; offerings are symbolic and non-transactional; festivals intensify restraint rather than celebration. Sacred time is structured around fasting, repentance, and recommitment to vows, while rites of passage formalize ethical responsibility rather than divine sanction or spiritual rebirth.

Discipline and asceticism form the core of Jain practice, with graduated intensity distinguishing lay and monastic life. Pilgrimage, aesthetics, and communal observance are tightly bounded by non-violence and restraint, serving ethical recommitment rather than merit accumulation or spectacle. Social cohesion emerges from shared vows, collective fasting, and mutual moral accountability, making Jain ritual practice a highly regulated system of ethical self-management enacted at both individual and communal levels.

1. Daily Devotion

2. Sacrifice and Offering

3. Festivals and Sacred Time

4. Rites of Passage

5. Healing and Divination

6. Pilgrimage and Sacred Journeys

7. Discipline and Asceticism

8. Performance and Aesthetics

9. Social Cohesion