 |
|
 |
Chosen people - Types of purposes | A Wisdom Archive on Chosen people - Types of purposes |  | Chosen people - Types of purposes A selection of articles related to Chosen people - Types of purposes |  |
| We recommend this article: Chosen people - Types of purposes - 1, and also this: Chosen people - Types of purposes - 2. |
|
More material related to Chosen People can be found here:
|
|
|  | |
Chosen people, Chosen people - Chosen to receive a message, Chosen people - Christian Identity groups, Chosen people - Christianity, Chosen people - Hinduism, Chosen people - Islam, Chosen people - Judaism, Chosen people - Latter Day Saints, Chosen people - Superiority?, Chosen people - The Unification Church Moonies, Chosen people - Types of purposes, Ethnocentrism, Chosen one
|  | | » Page 1 « Page 2 Page 3 More » |  |
 | |
|
ARTICLES RELATED TO Chosen people - Types of purposes | |
 |  |  | Chosen people - Types of purposes: Encyclopedia II - Chosen people - Types of purposesThe sense of being a chosen people occurs in both religious and nonreligious contexts. The Abolitionists, who were largely Christian, considered themselves chosen by God to bring freedom and equal rights to the slaves. Many slaveholders, another largely Christian group, saw themselves as chosen to keep and sell slaves.
The Nazis considered the Aryan race to be superior, and believed it was their mission to dominate over all races they considered "inferior." Many religious and charitable organizations consider themselves to be chosen by God to care for the sick and the suffering. Man ...
See also:Chosen people, Chosen people - Types of purposes, Chosen people - Chosen to receive a message, Chosen people - Superiority?, Chosen people - Judaism, Chosen people - Christianity, Chosen people - Roman Catholicism, Chosen people - Latter Day Saints, Chosen people - Christian Identity groups, Chosen people - The Unification Church Moonies, Chosen people - Islam, Chosen people - Hinduism Read more here: » Chosen people: Encyclopedia II - Chosen people - Types of purposes |
|  |
|
|
|
 |  |  | Chosen people - Types of purposes: The
Living Tradition of Sahaj MargSahaja Yoga: The Living Tradition of Sahaj Marg
The Raja Yoga system
known as "Sahaj Marg" is still relatively obscure in the West, even
among Yoga aficionados. This is largely due to the fact that Sahaj Marg has
been a low-key, word-of-mouth practice. Works by the lineage of Sahaj Marg
Masters, published under the auspices of the Shri Ram Chandra Mission (SRCM),
are difficult to locate, and beyond the abhyasis or practitioners of
Sahaj Marg, few are aware that SRCM centers have been established worldwide
since the Mission was founded in India fifty years ago.
Read more here: » Sahaja Yoga: The
Living Tradition of Sahaj Marg |
|  |
|
|
|
|
|
|
 |  |  | Chosen people - Types of purposes: Why sexuality?Tantra: Why sexuality?
In the act of
lovemaking the couple embodies the dyadic wholeness of the Supreme. TANTRIC
sexual union resonates with the very foundational energies of the Universe: it
captures, magnifies and re-directs the essential Cosmic Power of Life. It is
therefore not by chance that sexual intercourse brings the most intense
emotional experience that the human being can have while in the flesh.
Therefore TANTRA uses it predominantly to create that overwhelming unifying
energy. The erotic impulse stirs up the KUNDALINI energy so that it can rise,
through the subtle duct of power along the spine, to the highest center of
power above the head. This process renders the adept immortal:
Read more here: » Tantra Yoga: Why sexuality? |
|  |
|
|
 |  |  | Chosen people - Types of purposes:
Supreme Union of Body, Mind, Soul with the Patanjali Yoga SutrasThe
Sanskrit word 'yoga' is derived from the root verb yuj, which means union. The supreme
union of individual mind and cosmic mind is yoga. In his Yogasutras , Patanjali advocated the
eight-fold path of astanga yoga . Its eight limbs are: yama (self-restraint), niyama (life-regulating moral rules
and observances), asana (postures of bodily restfulness), pranayama (breath control), pratyahar (withdrawal of senses), dharana
(fixing the
mind on the Supreme), dhyana (absorption of self), and samadhi (liberation of the soul).
Read more here: » Patanjali Yoga Sutras:
Supreme Union of Body, Mind, Soul with the Patanjali Yoga Sutras |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Chosen people - Types of purposes: Kundalini and Sahaja Yoga (Spontaneous Yoga)Kundalini
Awakening
Kundalini
awakening or pranic awakening and its cross-tradition similars-the spontaneous
spinal rockings known in Judaism as davening and in
Sufisim as zikr; the "taken-over"
gyrations of gospel "holy ghost" shaking and dancing and
charismatic/pentacostal "mani-festations"; the Dionysian
"revel"; QuakerismÕs and Shakerism's autonomic quaking and shaking;
Tai Chi guided by chi itself; the shamanic trance-dance;
BuddhismÕs and Raja-YogaÕs effortless "straight back" (uju-kaya)
meditation; the yogically derived ecstatic belly-dance and Flamenco; and even
the full-bodied, spontaneous Reichian "reflex"-literally embody the
spiritual path.
Read more here: » Kundalini
Awakening: Kundalini and Sahaja Yoga (Spontaneous Yoga) |
|  |
|
|
 |  |  | Chosen people - Types of purposes:
Kundalini Yoga - Mudras and BandhasMudras and Bandhas are certain postures of
the body by which Kundalini is successfully awakened. In Gheranda Samhita, the
description of 25 Mudras and Bandhas, is given. The following 12 are the most
important:-,, 1. Mula Bandha, 2. Jalandhara Bandha, 3. Uddiyana Bandha, 4.
Maha Mudra, 5. Maha Bandha, 6. Maha Vedha, 7. Yoga Mudra, 8. Viparitakarani
Mudra, 9. Khechari Mudra, 10. Vajroli Mudra, 11. Shakti Chalana Mudra, 12. Yoni
Mudra.
From "Kundalini
Yoga" by Sri Swami Sivananda
Read more here: » Mudras and Bandhas:
Kundalini Yoga - Mudras and Bandhas |
|  |
|
|
 |  |  | Chosen people - Types of purposes:
Bhakti Yoga Dictionary on Anubhava
Anubhava - one of the five essential ingredients of rasa. The actions which display or reveal the spiritual emotions situated within the heart are called anubhavas. The anubhavas are thirteen in number: 1) nrtya (dancing) , 2) vilunthita (rolling on the ground) , 3) gita (singing) , 4) krosana (loud crying) , 5) tanu-motana (writhing of the body) , 6) hunkara (roaring) , 7) jrmbhana (yawning) , 8) svasa-bhua (breathing heavily) , 9) loka-anapeksita (giving up concern for public image) , 10) lalasrava (salivating) , 11) atta-hasa (loud laughter) , 12) ghurna (staggering about) , and 13) hikka (a fit of hiccups).
(See also:
Anubhava , Bhakti, Bhakti Yoga, Bhakti Dictionary, Body Mind
and Soul)
|
|  |
|
|
 |  |  | Chosen people - Types of purposes: Yoga
Sadhanas for Kundalini AwakeningOne should become perfectly desireless and
should be full of Vairagya before attempting to awaken Kundalini. It can be
awakened only when a man rises above Kama, Krodha, Lobha, Moha, Mada and other impurities. Kundalini
can be awakened through rising above desires of the senses. The Yogi, who has
got a pure heart and a mind free from passions and desires will be benefited by
awakening Kundalini. If a man with a lot of impurities in the mind awakens the
Sakti by sheer force through Asanas, Pranayamas and Mudras, he will break his
legs and stumble down.
From "Kundalini
Yoga" by Sri Swami Sivananda
Read more here: » Yoga Sadhana: Yoga
Sadhanas for Kundalini Awakening |
|  |
|
 | | » Page 1 « Page 2 Page 3 More » |  |
 | |
|
|
More material related to Chosen People can be found here:
|
|
|
 | |