Pump Luang Pu Moon Wat Ban Jan Consecrated in BE2556 and released in BE2563( 7 years) by Luang Pu Udomsap Wat Weruwan Tham Viharn Sisaket

Pump Luang Pu Moon (Lp Mun) • Wat Ban Jan

Consecrated BE2556 • Released BE2563 • 7-year blessing by Luang Pu Udomsap (Wat Weruwan Tham Viharn, Sisaket) • Forest tradition devotional statue (Kammatthana lineage)

Pump Luang Pu Moon (Lp Mun) Wat Ban Jan — Gold / Rose Gold / Bronze versions; consecrated BE2556, released BE2563; blessed 7 years by Luang Pu Udomsap (Wat Weruwan Tham Viharn, Sisaket)

A forest-tradition devotional “pump” statue created at Wat Ban Jan, with a rare long-form consecration: begun in BE2556 and released in BE2563 after seven continuous years of blessing under Luang Pu Udomsap—known as a close disciple in Luang Pu Moon’s lineage.

Collector Lens

In Thai Kammatthana (forest) collecting, a “pump” statue is not merely an object to display—it is a daily anchor for practice. The face, posture, and overall serenity of the master are meant to remind the owner of khanti (patience), sati (mindfulness), and the quiet power of disciplined conduct. This batch carries an additional collector weight: a long consecration cycle that stretched across seven years, accumulating chanting, meditation sessions, and holy-day ceremonies over time.

Collector Identity Card
Item: Pump Luang Pu Moon (Lp Mun) — devotional statue (Kammatthana / forest tradition tone)
Temple: Wat Ban Jan, Sisaket Province
Consecration Start: BE2556 (2013)
Release: BE2563 (2020)
Blessed By: Luang Pu Udomsap — Wat Weruwan Tham Viharn, Sisaket (close disciple of Luang Pu Moon)
Blessing Duration: 7 years (continuous consecration across major holy days and practice periods)
SKU: TAC-PUMP-LPMOON-BANJAN-2556-2563

Available Materials & Price
Bronze: SGD 168
Rose Gold: SGD 188
Gold: SGD 208

History of the Making

This statue was created to honor the forest tradition’s spirit of practice—quiet, strict, and direct. The project began its consecration in BE2556 and was only released in BE2563, following a full seven-year period of continued blessing led by Luang Pu Udomsap of Wat Weruwan Tham Viharn (Sisaket), a monk respected for strict discipline and deep Vipassana training.

In collector language, a long blessing period matters because it suggests repeated exposure to chanting, meditation sittings, and ceremonial cycles—particularly when overseen by a master known for forest-style seriousness rather than “festival-style” mass consecration. This batch is therefore often appreciated by practitioners who prefer an item that feels aligned with the kammatthana (meditation) tone: inward strength, steadier mind, and protection through right conduct.

Material Variants & Casting Notes

The provided listing indicates multiple metal variants (gold / rose gold / gold-plated). For clarity in this post, we present the images under three material groupings used in your pricing—Bronze, Rose Gold, and Gold. While the spiritual intent is the same across metals, collectors often choose a variant based on personal preference, display style, or budget.

Consecration Focus (7-Year Blessing)

The consecration is described as a long-form process spanning seven years, overseen by Luang Pu Udomsap. In forest circles, emphasis is often placed on continuous practice: chanting paired with meditation retreats, holy-day observances, and annual temple cycles. Devotees view this as a “slow accumulation” of blessing—stronger in depth rather than spectacle.

Traditional Spiritual Attributes (Belief Framing)

Practitioners often keep a pump statue like this as a reminder to live with restraint, clarity, and kindness. In Thai amulet culture, the traditional benefits are commonly described in these terms (faith-based interpretations, not guarantees):

  • Klaew Klaad (แคล้วคลาด): protection from danger and misfortune.
  • Chit Ning (จิตนิ่ง): calmer mind and steadier focus—especially for meditation and disciplined work.
  • Metta (เมตตา): gentler presence, harmony in relationships, improved temper.
  • Paed Phai (ปัดเป่า): repelling negative influences—often framed as strengthening one’s mental boundary and merit field.

Full Photo Set (Separated by Material)

Bronze • SGD 168

Rose Gold • SGD 188

Gold • SGD 208

Additional Reference Images (Material Not Labeled in File Name)

The following photos are included for completeness. If you confirm which metal variant they belong to, they can be re-grouped under the correct material section.

Thai Amulets Collection • Inquiries

For availability by material (Bronze / Rose Gold / Gold) and ordering details, contact us via WhatsApp.


Disclaimer: This post is for education and collector appreciation. Spiritual benefits are faith-based interpretations and not guarantees. Please verify physical condition, material variant, and any accompanying temple documentation where applicable.