Faith and Prayers from Taiwan's Temples

Ping An Incense

Faith and Prayers Through Taiwanese Temple Incense Offerings
Your name is inscribed onto Ping An Incense, which is offered daily by the temple in the presence of the deities for 365 days.

About

Name in Incense · Faith and Prayers

Close-up of Ping An Incense sticks

Name in Incense

Temple offerings · Faith and prayers

A centuries-old practice: registering devotees' names at the temple's main censer
with daily offerings throughout the year

Rooted in millennia-old Chinese incense culture and temple offering rites, Ping An Incense inscribes each devotee's name onto the incense. Temples light and offer it throughout the year, carrying faith and prayers reverently to the deities.

1

Name Before the Deities

Your name inscribed on temple incense, presented to the deities

2

Year-Round Offering

Incense lit daily for 365 days of continuous faith and prayers

3

Name in Incense

Your name inscribed on the incense, carrying prayers before the deities

“The temple centrally manages the inaugural lighting ceremony — registering devotees before the deities through name in incense.”
Faith

Inscribed in Incense, Carried by Faith

Rooted in millennia-old Chinese incense culture and temple incense-offering rites, Ping An Incense carries the faith and prayers of generations. With each devotee's name inscribed onto the incense itself, the temple ceremonially offers it throughout the year, allowing prayers to rise with the incense and be reverently carried to the deities.

Ping An name-in-incense ceremonial display

365 days

Daily temple offering

Incense dimensions

Name inscription capacity

Standard inscription

190 people

Gold-foil inscription

24 people

Incense patron

1 people

Total

215 people

Name in Incense & Temple Rites

Name in Incense

The devotee's name is inscribed onto the incense itself, carrying faith and prayers.

Incense-Offering Tradition

Rooted in the devotional incense-offering traditions of Taiwan's temples.

Prayers Carried by Incense

Prayers rise with the curling incense smoke and are reverently conveyed to the deities.

Natural Incense Woods

Carefully selected local incense woods, including Xiao Nan and cypress.

Temple Lighting Rite

The incense is ceremonially lit by the temple and offered in accordance with ritual tradition.

Refined Incense Craft

Crafted with attentive processes for a stable, graceful, and elegant burn.

Year-Round Offering

Offered daily before the deities throughout the year, praying for peace and blessings.

Made for Sacred Halls

A warm and serene fragrance, suited to the solemn atmosphere of temple halls.

Gallery

Temple Gallery

Step into Taiwan's sacred temple spaces and feel devotion rising with the incense smoke

Ping An Incense at Luodong Chenghuang Temple

View

Luodong Chenghuang Temple

Temple interior hall

View

Sacred Hall

Devotees offering incense

View

Devoted Offering

Dragon carving at temple

View

Dragon's Blessing

Close-up of Ping An Incense

View

Merit Fulfilled

Temple panorama with rising incense smoke

View

Rising Incense

Video

Video Gallery

Experience the solemnity and sanctity of the Ping An temple blessing incense ceremony

"Ping An Incense" Introduction

Temple partnership highlights

Process

Partnership Model

Four straightforward stages to help temples launch the Ping An temple blessing incense program

STEP 01

Initial preparation

  • Confirm temple blessing incense dimensions
  • Temple posts announcement and informational signage
STEP 02

Two months before inaugural lighting

  • Ideal timing: temple anniversary, Lunar New Year, Mid-Autumn Festival
STEP 03

Devotee enrollment

  • Submit devotee list one month before inaugural lighting
  • Craft team delivers temple blessing incense to the temple in monthly batches
STEP 04

Ongoing partnership

  • Track enrollment and gather devotee feedback
  • Evaluate renewal in the second year

Even One Devotee Represents a Prayer

Production fees are calculated based on the actual number of devotees participating in the incense offering, with no minimum participant requirement. Whether for the principal incense sponsor, golden name inscription, or standard name inscription, offering fees are independently determined and collected by the temple.

Partners

Partner Temples

Partnering with temples across Taiwan to carry faith and prayers through name-in-incense offerings

Luodong Chenghuang Temple

Luodong, Yilan

Luodong Chenghuang Temple

Incense patronSet by the temple
Gold-foil inscriptionSet by the temple
Standard inscriptionSet by the temple
Beitou Wenquan Village Fude Temple

Beitou, Taipei

Beitou Wenquan Village Fude Temple

Incense patronSet by the temple
Gold-foil inscriptionSet by the temple
Standard inscriptionSet by the temple
Wanli Wenwu Temple

Wanli, New Taipei

Wanli Wenwu Temple

Incense patronSet by the temple
Gold-foil inscriptionSet by the temple
Standard inscriptionSet by the temple
Xiehe Temple

Zhongshan, Keelung

Xiehe Temple

Incense patronSet by the temple
Gold-foil inscriptionSet by the temple
Standard inscriptionSet by the temple
Muzha Jiying Temple

Wenshan, Taipei

Muzha Jiying Temple

Incense patronSet by the temple
Gold-foil inscriptionSet by the temple
Standard inscriptionSet by the temple
Hedong Fenchihu Fude Temple

Baihe

Hedong Fenchihu Fude Temple

Incense patronSet by the temple
Gold-foil inscriptionSet by the temple
Standard inscriptionSet by the temple
Contact

Contact Us

Temples across Taiwan are welcome to inquire about partnership
Let Ping An Incense connect temple offerings with devotees' prayers through name in incense

National Joint Temple Incense Merit Association

We promote faith and prayers through Taiwanese temple incense offerings, helping temples build sustainable name-in-incense programs

Official LINE Account

@974nkcla