User:Sharala/sandbox: Difference between revisions

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== Snyopsis ==
== Snyopsis ==
{{Quote box|width=360px|bgcolor=|align=left|quoted=1|salign=right|quote=You came from Him, you are moving within His mind, and finally you will be one with Him. That’s why I said that He as generator is represented by “G”; He as operator is represented by “O”; and He as destructor is represented by “D” “G”, “O”, “D”. He is “God”.<ref name="AV12"/>|source=Shrii Shrii Anandamurti}}
{{Quote box|width=360px|bgcolor=|align=left|quoted=1|salign=right|quote=Yes, He is a thief, but He is not against Sixteen Points or Yama and Niyama. How can this be? As explained, each and every entity is within His mind; He is the generator, operator and destroyer. Everybody is His, all are His loving children. But you know, whatever a man does, that very man will have to undergo the reactive momenta of his original action or actions. Suppose a man committed so many sins in so many lives; now he will have to undergo the reactions of those actions, of those bad actions. Then for all millions of years he will have to pass through so many troubles, so many pains, so many mental tortures. A father cannot like this, a father cannot think that His children will have to go through so much trouble because of their past bad actions. So what does He want? He wants His sons to give Him – what? The sins committed by them. But the sons will say, the daughters will say, “No, Father, we will give you flowers, we will give you sweets, we will give you so many things; but we can’t give you our sins. We can’t.”
Then what will this loving Father do? He will secretly take away the sins. He is the great thief.<ref name="AV12"/>|source=Shrii Shrii Anandamurti}}


Anandamurti starts the discourse by stating that Shiiva was called “Nat́arája” which means the King of dancers. Other names are describing Parama Purusa, but as He is beyond limitations, no name can fully describe Him.  Oriental dance contains various ''mudras'' (postures) and ''[[tandava]]'' is its pristine expression.<ref name="AV12"/>
Anandamurti starts the discourse by stating that Shiiva was called “Nat́arája” which means the King of dancers. Other names are describing Parama Purusa, but as He is beyond limitations, no name can fully describe Him.  Oriental dance contains various ''mudras'' (postures) and ''[[tandava]]'' is its pristine expression.<ref name="AV12"/>
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