Dibutuhkanindra ke-7 dan ke-9. Indra ke-7 adalah kemampuan membaca gerakan masa depan, lima sampai sepuluh tahun yang akan datang. Dengan mengetahui gelagat masa depan, seorang pemimpin akan lebih sigap mengambil sejumlah langkah berani, tegas, teguh. Indra ke-7 ini bisa meraba adanya peluang yang patut dikembangkan.
AhliIndra Ke 6 Menurut Alkitab Depok - Sebagai makhluk Tuhan yang sangat kamil kita adalah pemenang sedari dalam kandungan sebab Anda adalah satu-satunya sel yang berhasil berubah bentuk yang sempurna dari sekian tak terhingga sel. Kendati juga ada yang lahir dalam fisik tak sempurna anggota fisiknya, tetapi jangan sampai pernah melihat mereka dengan sebelah mata karena di dalam ketidak
NOSTALGIA akan firdaus adalah salah satu nostalgia yang sangat berpengaruh yang tampaknya tak dapat dilupakan oleh umat manusia. Dari semua nostalgia, ini mungkin merupakan yang paling berpengaruh dan tak kunjung hilang. Suatu bentuk kerinduan akan firdaus nyata pada setiap lapisan masyarakat dalam kehidupan keagamaan.â
KomikAlkitab : ALLAH MENCIPTAKAN LANGIT DAN BUMI Kejadian 1-2 Pada mulanya Firman adalah Allah. Allah itu adalah Tuhan Yesus. Hari ke-1. Tuhan menciptakan terang dan gelap. Hari ke-2. Tuhan menciptakan cakrawala. Hari ke-3. Tuhan menciptakan darat, laut dan tumbuhan. Hari ke-4. Tuhan menciptakan matahari, bulan dan bintang. Hari ke-5. Tuhan menciptakan
Vay Tiáťn Nhanh Cháť Cáş§n Cmnd Nᝣ XẼu. INDRAINDRA . In India the worship of the god Indra, king of the gods, warrior of the gods, god of rain, begins properly in the ášgveda, circa 1200 bce, but his broader nature can be traced farther back into the proto-Indo-European world through his connections with Zeus and Wotan. For although the ášgveda knows a sky father called Dyaus-pitáš, who is literally cognate with Zeus-patÄr and Jupiter, it is Indra who truly fills the shoes of the Indo-European celestial sovereign He wields the thunderbolt, drinks the ambrosial soma to excess, bestows fertility upon human women often by sleeping with them himself, and leads his band of Maruts, martial storm gods, to win victory for the conquering the ášgveda, Indra's family life is troubled in ways that remain unclear. His birth, like that of many great warriors and heroes, is unnatural Kept against his will inside his mother's womb for many years, he bursts forth out of her side and kills his own father ášgveda He too is in turn challenged by his own son, whom he apparently overcomes ášgveda But the hymns to Indra, who is after all the chief god of the ášgveda more than a quarter of the hymns in the collection are addressed to him, emphasize his heroic deeds. He is said to have created the universe by propping apart heaven and earth as other gods, notably Viᚣášu and Varuáša, are also said to have done and finding the sun, and to have freed the cows that had been penned up in a cave ášgveda This last myth, which is perhaps the central myth of the ášgveda, has meaning on several levels It means what it says that Indra helps the worshiper to obtain cattle, as he is so often implored to do, and also that Indra found the sun and the world of life and light and fertility in general, for all of which cows often serve as a Vedic was Indra who, in the shape of a falcon or riding on a falcon, brought down the soma plant from heaven, where it had been guarded by demons, to earth, where it became accessible to humans ášgveda Indra himself is the soma drinker par excellence; when he gets drunk, as he is wont to do, he brags ášgveda and the worshiper who invites Indra to share his soma also shares in the euphoria that soma induces in both the human and the divine drinker ášgveda But Indra is a jealous godâjealous, that is, of the soma, both for lofty reasons like other great gods, he does not wish to allow mortals to taste the fruit that will make them like unto gods and for petty reasons he wants to keep all the soma for himself. His attempts to exclude the AĹvins from drinking the soma fail when they enlist the aid of the priest DadhyaĂąc, who disguises himself with a horse's head and teaches them the secret of the soma ášgveda Indra's principal function is to kill enemiesânon-Aryan humans and demons, who are often conflated. As the supreme god of the kᚣatriyas or class of royal warriors, Indra is invoked as a destroyer of cities and destroyer of armies, as the staunch ally of his generous worshipers, to whom Indra is in turn equally generous Maghavan, "the generous," is one of his most popular epithets. These enemies of whom the most famous is Váštra are often called DÄsas or Dasyus, "slaves," and probably represent the indigenous populations of the subcontinent that the Indo-Aryans subjugated and whose twin cities, Mohenjo Daro and Harappa, in the Indus Valley, may have been the citadels that Indra claims to have devastated. But the DÄsas are also frequently identified with the asuras, or demonic enemies of the gods themselves. The battles thus take place simultaneously on the human and the divine levels, and are both political and reputation begins to decline in the BrÄhmaášas, about 900 bce, where his supremacy is preempted by PrajÄpati, the primordial creator. Indra still drinks the soma, but now he becomes badly hungover and has to be restored to health by the worshiper. Similarly, the killing of Váštra leaves Indra weakened and in need of purification. In the epics, Indra is mocked for weaknesses associated with the phallic powers that are his great glory in the ášgveda. His notorious womanizing leads, on one occasion when the sage Gautama catches Indra in bed with AhalyÄ, the sage's wife, to Indra's castration, though his testicles are later replaced by those of a ram RÄmÄyaáša in another version of this story, Indra is cursed to be covered with a thousand yonis or vaginas, a curse which he turns to a boon by having the yonis changed into a thousand eyes. When Indra's excesses weaken him, he becomes vulnerable in battle; often he is overcome by demons and must enlist the aid of the now supreme sectarian gods, Ĺiva and Viᚣášu, to restore his throne. Sometimes he sends one of his voluptuous nymphs, the apsaras, to seduce ascetic demons who have amassed sufficient power, through tapas "meditative austerities", to heat Indra's throne in heaven. And when the demon Nahuᚣa usurps Indra's throne and demands Indra's wife, ĹacÄŤ, the gods have to perform a horse sacrifice to purify and strengthen Indra so that he can win back his throne. Even then Indra must use a combination of seduction and deceit, rather than pure strength, to gain his ends ĹacÄŤ goads Nahuᚣa into committing an act of hubris that brings him down to a level on which he becomes vulnerable to Vedic gods never die; they just fade into new Hindu gods. Indra remains a kind of figurehead in Hindu mythology, and the butt of many veiled anti-Hindu jokes in Buddhist mythology. The positive aspects of his person are largely transformed to Ĺiva. Both Indra and Ĺiva are associated with the Maruts or Rudras, storm gods; both are said to have extra eyes three, or a thousand that they sprouted in order to get a better look at a beautiful dancing apsaras; both are associated with the bull and with the erect phallus; both are castrated; and both come into conflict with their fathers-in-law. In addition to these themes, which are generally characteristic of fertility gods, Indra and Ĺiva share more specific mythological episodes Both of them seduce the wives of brahman sages; both are faced with the problem of distributing where it will do the least harm certain excessive and destructive forces that they amass; both are associated with anti-Brahmanic, heterodox acts; and both lose their right to a share in the sacrifice. And just as Indra beheads a brahman demon Váštra whose head pursues him until he is purified of this sin, so Ĺiva, having beheaded BrahmÄ, is plagued by BrahmÄ's skull until he is absolved in Banaras. Thus, although Indra comes into conflict with the ascetic aspect of Ĺiva, the erotic aspect of Ĺiva found new uses for the discarded myths of AlsoJupiter; PrajÄpati; Ĺiva; Vedism and a detailed summary of the mythology of Indra, see pages 249â283 of Sukumari Bhattacharji's rather undigested The Indian Theogony Cambridge, 1970. For a translation of a series of myths about Indra, and a detailed bibliography of secondary literature, see pages 56â96 and 317â321 of my Hindu Myths Harmondsworth, 1975. For the sins of Indra, see Georges DumĂŠzil's The Destiny of the Warrior Chicago, 1970 and The Destiny of the King Chicago, 1973, and my The Origins of Evil in Hindu Mythology Berkeley, Calif., 1976. For the relationship between Indra and Ĺiva, see my Ĺiva The Erotic Ascetic Oxford, 1981, originally published as Asceticism and Eroticism in the Mythology of Ĺiva 1973.New SourcesJamison, Stephanie W. The Ravenous Hyenas and the Wounded Sun Myth and Ritual in Ancient India. Ithaca, Doniger 1987Revised Bibliography
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