The disciples of Sanqing usually sing "Supreme Buddha" or "Supreme Taiyi Buddha" casually when giving gifts. If many good believers have unfortunate experiences, they will sing "The Supreme Buddha of Taiyi" and "The Supreme Buddha of Taiyi saves the suffering", that is, they will appeal to the Bodhisattva of Taiyi (similar to the Guanyin Bodhisattva in Buddhism) to help the unfortunate people and save their suffering. This singing ceremony has been used until the late Qing Dynasty and the Republic of China.
Infinite Buddha: practitioners should not measure the principle of the road with degrees. Only people in the world will respect practitioners. Buddhists have the titles of "Amitabha Buddha" and "Infinite Life Buddha". "Amitabha Buddha" is a taboo of Buddha, and "Buddha" is a title. "Infinite life" means immortality, and it is called "Infinite Life Buddha" in the name of Buddha, which can be described as the embodiment of longevity. It all makes sense. But the "boundless Buddha" is not. Taoism has such titles as "Infinite Respect for Man", "Infinite Respect for Life" and "Infinite Respect for Merit", all of which are complete titles of Buddha. But if we omit "measuring people", "blessing life" and "merit" and only keep "boundless", that is to say, simplify the original title to "boundless Buddha", is that still the original intention? Obviously, if we look for the meaning according to the text, "boundless Buddha" should be interpreted as "boundless Buddha" or "multi-Buddha". That's more like it? Is there such an abbreviation? In fact, it is not difficult for users to understand that "infinity" is the concept of quantity. How can it be called Buddha?
In the early 1980s, radio stations often broadcast traditional stories told by a famous storyteller. When Taoist figures appeared in the book, they were all titled as "Infinite-Buddha". Later, at a meeting of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, the storyteller happened to be in a group with Qian Shan's Five Immortals, so the master suggested to the painter that Taoism is not called Buddha, so "Infinite Buddha" should not be used in Taoist families. For the sake of storytelling, the artist begged the master to explain a four-word phrase similar to "Amitabha". The master was helpless, but thought that his storytelling was a human skill and had nothing to do with Xuanmen, so he told him that "Taoism respects God and is called Buddha". Storytellers follow this analogy, so the "Infinite Buddha" came into being.