Дурга

From TSL Encyclopedia
Revision as of 22:04, 14 July 2022 by Avepaulina (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Индусы верят, что Дурга появляется снова и снова, чтобы защищать мир и детей Божьих. Вот с каким...")
Other languages:
Durga fighting Mahishasura, the buffalo-demon (early 18th century)

Супруга Шивы Дурга названа Труднодоступной богиней, или Непостижимой. Страшная и грозная для врагов, она едет на спине тигра, олицетворяющего демона низшего «я». Один индусский текст описывает процесс сотворения этой богини в такой форме, наглядно изображающей, как шакти активизирует силу своего божественного супруга.

Однажды в далеком прошлом боги оказались в затруднительном положении: они никак не могли справиться с огромным буйволом-демоном Махишей. Вдохновленный своей победой над богами, Махиша настойчиво требовал себе место на Небесах. Боги собрались вместе, чтобы разрешить эту ситуацию.

Каждый принялся излучать из себя огненные энергии, и совокупное излияние этих энергий приняло форму прекрасной женщины. Этим великим существом света и была Дурга. Ее величие и блеск наполнили собой всю вселенную, и она без труда победила демона.[1]

Индусы верят, что Дурга появляется снова и снова, чтобы защищать мир и детей Божьих. Вот с каким посланием пришла Дурга 31 декабря 1991 года:

How very close to you and this messenger is Padma Sambhava. Therefore, do not neglect his mantra,... Om Ah Hum Vajra Guru Padma Siddhi Hum. It is your key at this level of service for the entering in to the hearts of all those Buddhas and Bodhisattvas whose lineage goes back to the Great Central Sun, back to the heart of the Godhead....

Blessed ones, the eye of Shiva is upon you! And I have come this day that you might no longer fear me. For in the fierceness that I AM and the fearsome qualities that I demonstrate, I can assure you that those who have no fear within them should not fear myself. For I AM the greatest defender of your being ever was and I come with a mighty fury of the power of the Spirit of God.

I come, beloved, more therefore than the image of a Hindu goddess. I AM a goddess in the true sense of the word of the incarnation of the Divine Mother unto the specific role. I AM also Parvati: I AM also the devoted wife. I AM all things, beloved, and the Divine Mother takes many forms, as you know.

But I would tell you that those who fear to invoke me, to call to me, are surely deprived of the greatest possibility of exorcism, which I engage in along with the Mighty Astrea, with the mighty Kali and even Sarasvati, Lakshmi and all those who are manifestations, in some form, of the Divine Mother, including yourselves.

Know this, therefore, beloved—that to embrace me and my fierceness is to be free forever from all demons and discarnates. And that embracing must take place every day of your life, beloved, yes, every day of your life. For there are billions upon billions upon billions of discarnates and demons of all manifestation that torment the youth....

I AM also in the heart of every ascended master and Cosmic Being. I AM there, for the Mother Flame is in every heart and I AM in the heart of the Mother Flame. Shiva is in the heart of every ascended and Cosmic Being and I AM in the heart of Shiva. Therefore, you see, there is nowhere you can run and hide from me; for I AM within you, I AM without you and I AM everywhere!

Therefore, let the whirling of the dance of the mighty legions who have come with me begin, for the whirling of the mighty fire of Shiva and Durga and all hosts of the LORD does commence. And therefore, these false hierarchies are being routed!

And this is the greatest, most joyous battle that I can ever tell you of, beloved ones. Happy are ye that ye do engage in it, beloved.[2]

Durga’s seed syllable, or bija mantra, is Dum (pronounced doom). Another mantra honoring Durga is Om Dum Durgaye Namaha.

See also

Shiva

Parvati

Kali

Sources

Mark L. Prophet and Elizabeth Clare Prophet, The Masters and Their Retreats, s.v. “Shiva, Parvati, Durga and Kali.”

  1. David R. Kinsley, Hindu Goddesses (Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1988), pp. 96–97.
  2. Durga, “The Power of Confrontation,” Pearls of Wisdom, vol. 35, no. 5, February 2, 1992.