459 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
459 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
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HE WHO SUBJUGATES SATAN
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Satan, Mara, Angra Mainyu, or the devil by whatever name, who
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holds sway over the world and over the inner desires of human beings, is
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the final obstacle which must be overcome if the founder is to realize the
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ultimate victory. The devil is only a spiritual creature who improperly
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lords it over human beings, and hence he inevitably comes into conflict
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with those exceptional souls who dare to take their rightful place as true
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human beings, the Lords of creation: see Lord of Spirits, pp. 309-15.
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Every religious founder must gain the qualification to reveal the truth
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through winning a contest with the devil. In more mythological texts, the
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founder may be represented as battling a many-headed serpent or
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dragon--surely an appropriate symbol for the irrational power of evil. In
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psychological terms, the founder engages in an internal struggle to
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overcome the selfish elements that cling to the heart. Thus in various
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forms, the scriptures of many faiths depict their founder as vanquishing a
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spiritual foe and showing the way for ordinary people to do the same.
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In all the texts here, with the possible exception of the episode
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from the boyhood of Krishna, the founder's struggle with the devil is a
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purely human one. Although there are traditions, especially in Hinduism,
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where the battle between the gods and the demons can be decided by the
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power of deity alone, it is a recognized spiritual principle that it is
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for human beings to subjugate Satan. God's grace does not obviate man's
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responsibility to deal with the temptations of his environment and the
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struggle within his own soul. In this struggle, the founders lead the
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way.
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Then Jesus was led up by the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted by
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the devil. He fasted forty days and forty nights, and afterward he was
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hungry. And the tempter came and said to him, "If you are the Son of God,
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command these stones to become loaves of bread." But he answered, "It is
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written, 'Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that
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proceeds from the mouth of God.'" Then the devil took him to the holy
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city, and set him on the pinnacle of the temple, and said to him, "If you
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are the Son of God, throw yourself down; for it is written, 'He will give
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his angels charge of you,' and 'On their hands they will bear you up, lest
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you strike your foot against a stone.'" Jesus said to him, "Again it is
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written, 'You shall not tempt the Lord your God.'" Again, the devil took
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him to a very high mountain, and showed him all the kingdoms of the world
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and the glory of them, and he said to him, "All these I will give you, if
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you will fall down and worship me." Then Jesus said to him, "Begone
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Satan! for it is written, 'You shall worship the Lord your God and Him
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only shall you serve.'" Then the devil left him, and behold, angels came
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and ministered to him.
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Christianity. Bible, Matthew 4.1-11
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Never did We send an apostle or a prophet before you, but, when he framed
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a desire, Satan threw some vanity into his desire. But God will cancel
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anything vain that Satan throws in, and God will confirm His signs--for
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God is full of knowledge and wisdom: that He may make the suggestions
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thrown in by Satan but a trial for those in whose hearts is a disease and
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who are hardened of heart.
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Islam. Qur'an 22.52-53
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On their way to Mount Moriah, Abraham and Isaac met Satan disguised as an
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old man. "Where are you going, Abraham?" asked Satan.
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"I'm on my way to pray," answered Abraham.
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"Why then the wood and the fire and the sacrificial knife?"
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"We shall be on top of Mount Moriah several days and will use them
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to prepare our food."
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"You are an old man and you have only one son with your wife Sarah,
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yet you are willing to sacrifice him," mocked Satan.
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"As God told me to do, so shall it be," answered Abraham.
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Satan then addressed Isaac, "Where are you going, Isaac?"
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"To study God's wisdom," said Isaac.
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"Do you intend to study after you are dead? For your father
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intends to sacrifice you."
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"If God wishes to accept me as a sacrifice, I am glad to do His
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will."
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Satan ran ahead to the foot of Mount Moriah and caused the stream
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to rise and overflow. Abraham and Isaac tried to wade across but the
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water reached over their heads.
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"You have asked me to sacrifice my son," Abraham prayed, "but I
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shall not be able to fulfill Your will if I drown."
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The waters at once receded and father and son proceeded to the top
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of the mountain.
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Judaism. Midrash, Genesis Rabbah 56
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Matthew 4.1-11: Cf. Luke 10.19-20, pp. 314f.; Psalm 91.11-13, pp. 561f.;
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Matthew 12.22-24, p. 379; Deuteronomy 8.3, p. 1084. Qur'an 22.52-53: This
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passage may refer to the so-called "satanic verses" which were allegedly
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uttered as Muhammad struggled with the temptation to compromise with the
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polytheists of Mecca. Muhammad overcame this temptation; hence the
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revelation in the Qur'an is a pure expression of truth.
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From the region of the north, from the regions of hell, forth
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rushed Angra Mainyu, the deadly, the arch-devil. And thus spoke the
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guileful one, the evil-doer Angra Mainyu, the deadly, "Demon, rush down
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upon him! destroy the holy Zarathustra!" The demon came rushing along,
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the demon Buiti, the unseen death, the hell-born.
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Zarathustra chanted aloud the [prayer] Ahuna-Vaira, "The will of
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the Lord is the Law of holiness; the riches of good thought shall be given
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to him who works in this world for Mazda, and wields according to the will
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of the Lord the power He gave him to relieve the poor... profess the Law
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of the worshippers of Mazda!" The demon, dismayed, rushed away, the demon
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Buiti, the unseen death, the hell-born.
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And the demon, the guileful one, said unto Angra Mainyu, "O baneful
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Angra Mainyu! I see no way to kill him, so great is the glory of the holy
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Zarathustra."
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Zarathustra saw all this from within his soul, "The evil-doing
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devils and fiends take counsel together for my death."
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Up started Zarathustra, forward went Zarathustra, unshaken by the
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evil spirit, by the hardness of his malignant riddles, swinging stones in
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his hand, stones as big as a house, which he obtained from the Maker, Lord
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Mazda, he the holy Zarathustra.
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[Said Angra Mainyu,] "At what on this wide, round earth, whose ends
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lie afar, at what do you swing those stones, you who stand by the river
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Darega, upon the mountains, in the mansion of Pourusaspa?"
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Thus Zarathustra answered Angra Mainyu, "O evil-doer, Angra Mainyu!
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I will smite the creation of the devil!"...
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Again to him said the guileful one, the Maker of the evil world,
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Angra Mainyu, "Do not destroy my creatures, O holy Zarathustra! You are
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the son of Pourusaspa [whom I know], born of your mother [who invoked me].
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Renounce the good Law of the worshippers of Mazda, and you will gain such
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a boon as the murderer [King Zohak] gained, the ruler of the nations."
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Thus in answer to him said Zarathustra Spitama , "No! never will I
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renounce the good law of the worshippers of Mazda, though my body, my
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life, my soul should burst!"
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Zoroastrianism. Videvdad 19.1-7
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Genesis Rabbah 56: See the story of the sacrifice of Isaac in Genesis 22,
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pp. 613f. Isaac is quite aware that he is about to be sacrificed, and his
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faith is tested as much as is Abraham's. Similar stories of demons
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testing a person's faith are common in Buddhism: see Samyutta Nikaya v.2,
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pp. 283f.; Mahaparinirvana Sutra 424-33, p. 753; Lotus Sutra 3, pp. 441f.
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When the future Buddha sat down at the foot of the Bodhi tree with
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his soul fully resolved to obtain the highest knowledge, the whole world
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rejoiced; but Mara, the enemy of good law, was afraid. He whom they call
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the God of Pleasure, the owner of various weapons, the flower-arrowed, the
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lord of the course of desire--it is he whom they also style Mara, the
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enemy of liberation. His three sons, Confusion, Gaiety, and Pride, and his
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three daughters, Lust, Delight, and Craving, asked him the reason for his
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despondency, and thus he answered them,
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"This sage, wearing the armor of resolution, and having drawn the
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arrow of wisdom with the barb of truth, sits yonder intending to conquer
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my realms--hence my mind is despondent. If he succeeds in overcoming me
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and proclaims to the world the path of final bliss, all this my realm will
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today become empty... While, therefore, he stands within my reach and
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while his spiritual eyesight is not yet attained, I will assail him to
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break his vow as the might of a swollen river assails a dam."
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Then, seizing his flower-made bow and his five arrows of
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infatuation, the Great Disturber of the minds of living beings, together
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with his children, approached the root of the Bodhi tree. Placing his
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left hand on the end of the barb and playing with the arrow, Mara
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addressed the calm seer as he sat on his seat preparing to cross to the
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further side of the ocean of existence,
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"Up, up, O Kshatriya, afraid of death! Follow your own duty [as
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member of the warrior caste] and abandon this path of liberation. Conquer
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the lower worlds by force of arms, and gain the higher worlds as well!
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That is a glorious path to travel, which has been followed by leaders of
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men for generations. This mendicant life is ill-suited for one born of
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royalty to follow. But if you will stubbornly refuse to rise, then be
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firm, if you will... When pierced by this weapon, even the son of Ida,
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the grandson of the moon, became mad; and Samtanu also lost his
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self-control. How much more then will one of feebler powers succumb, now
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that the age has become degenerate? Therefore quickly rise and come to
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your senses, for this arrow is ready, darting out its tongue."
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But even when thus addressed, the Shakya saint, unheeding, did not
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change his posture. Mara then discharged his arrow of love at him and set
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in front of him his daughters Lust, Delight, and Craving, and his sons
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Confusion, Gaiety, and Pride. Still he gave no heed and swerved not from
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his firmness. Mara, beholding him thus, sank down, and slowly pondered,
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"He does not even notice the arrow, the very one by which the god
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Sambhu was pierced with love for the daughter of the mountain and shaken
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from his vow. Can he be devoid of all feeling? He is not worthy of my
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flower-shaft, nor my arrow Gladdener, nor even my sending my daughter Rati
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to tempt him. He deserves the terrors, attacks, and blows from all the
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gathered hosts of the demons."
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Then Mara called to mind his own army, mustering them for the
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overthrow the Shakya saint. His followers swarmed around, wearing
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different forms and carrying arrows, trees, darts, clubs, and swords in
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their hands; with faces of boars, fishes, horses, asses, and camels, of
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tigers, bears, lions, and elephants--one-eyed, many-faced, three-headed,
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with protuberant bellies and speckled bellies; blended with goats, with
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knees swollen like pots, armed with tusks and claws, carrying headless
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trunks in their hands, assuming many forms, with half-mutilated faces and
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monstrous mouths.... Before these dreadful monsters, the great sage
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remained untroubled, sporting with them as if they were only rude
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children. Then one of them, his eyes rolling wildly, lifted a club
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against him; but his arm was instantly paralyzed, like Indra's of old with
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its thunderbolt. Some, having lifted up stones and trees, found them-
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selves unable to throw them against the sage.... Another hurled upon him
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a mass of blazing straw as big as a mountain peak.... Despite all these
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various scorching assaults on his body and his mind, and all these
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missiles showered down upon him, the Shakya saint did not in the least
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degree move from his posture nor deviate from his firm resolution....
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Then some being of invisible shape, but of preeminent glory,
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standing in the heavens and beholding Mara thus malevolent against the
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seer, addressed him in a loud voice unruffled by enmity, "Take not on
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yourself, O Mara, this vain labor; throw aside your malevolence and retire
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to your home; this sage cannot be shaken by you any more than the mighty
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mountain Meru by the wind.... Let not your greatness, O Mara, be mixed
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with pride. It is not well to be confident--fortune is unstable. Why do
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you accept a position whose base is tottering?"
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Having listened to his words, and having seen the unshaken firmness
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of the great saint, Mara departed dispirited and broken in purpose with
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those very arrows of desire by which, O world, you are smitten in your
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heart. With their strength at an end, their labor all fruitless, and all
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their stones, straw, and trees thrown away, that host fled in all
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directions, like some hostile army when its camp has been destroyed by the
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enemy.
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When the flower-armed god thus fled away vanquished with his
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hostile forces, and the passionless sage remained victorious, having
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conquered all the power of darkness, the heavens shone out with the moon
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like a maiden with a smile, and a sweet-smelling shower of flowers fell
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down wet with dew. With the wicked one thus vanquished, the different
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regions of the sky grew clear, the moon shone forth, showers of flowers
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fell down from the sky upon the earth, and the night gleamed out like a
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spotless maiden.
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Buddhism. Ashvaghosha, Buddhacarita 13
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Fargard 19.1-7: Cf. Yasna 32.9, p. 436. Buddhacarita 13: In this account
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Mara is depicted as a Cupid-like figure similar to Kama, the Hindu god of
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desire. But while in the Hindu myths of the battle between Kama and
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Shiva, Shiva revives Kama because he is a necessary part of creation (see
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Skanda Purana 1.1.21.82-99, p. 364), in Buddhism Mara is entirely evil.
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For another version of this encounter, cf. Sutta Nipata 436-39, p. 379.
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On Mara's argument that Buddha should abandon his asceticism and follow
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his duty (svadharma) as a member of the Kshatriya caste, see Bhagavad Gita
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18.44-48, pp. 705f.; Matsya Purana 18.5-7, p. 710.
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And Jacob was left alone; and a man wrestled with him until the breaking
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of the day. When the man saw that he did not prevail against Jacob, he
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touched the hollow of his thigh; and Jacob's thigh was put out of joint as
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he wrestled with him. Then he said, "Let me go, for the day is breaking."
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But Jacob said, "I will not let you go, unless you bless me." And he said
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to him, "What is your name?" "Jacob." "Your name shall no more be called
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Jacob, but Israel, for you have striven with God and with men, and have
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prevailed." Then Jacob asked him, "Tell me, I pray, your name." But he
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said, "Why is it that you ask my name?" And there he blessed him. So
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Jacob called the name of the place Peniel, saying, "For I have seen God
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face to face, and yet my life is preserved."
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Judaism and Christianity. Bible, Genesis 32.24-30
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[The hosts of celestial beings address Brahma], "O Blessed Lord,
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having been favored by thee, the rakshasa Ravana perpetually troubles us
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since thou hast granted a boon to him, and we are helpless and forced to
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endure his fearful oppression! The Lord of the demons has inspired terror
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in the Three Worlds. Provoking the sages, brahmins, and other beings, he
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tramples them underfoot, he who has become insufferable through pride,
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being under thy protection. In his presence, the sun ceases to shine, the
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wind fails to blow, and, before him, the ocean, garlanded with waves, is
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still. O Blessed One, be pleased to devise some means for his
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destruction!"
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Brahma reflected awhile and answered, "Here is a way of bringing
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about the end of that perverse being! 'May I not be destroyed by
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gandharvas, yakshas, gods or demons,' was Ravana's request, but thinking
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man to be of no account, he did not ask to be made invulnerable in regard
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to him; therefore, none but man can destroy him."
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At that time, the immortal Vishnu, Lord of the World, attired in
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yellow, bearing the conch, discus, and mace in his hands, appeared mounted
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on Garuda, like unto the sun above the clouds. All the celestial beings
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prostrated themselves before him and said, "O Lord, for the good of all
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creatures, we address this prayer to thee! The monarch Dasaratha who
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reigns in Ayodhya, a virtuous and liberal prince, has three consorts,
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distinguished by chastity and good qualities. O Vishnu, do thou incarnate
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in them by dividing thyself into four parts! Become a mortal and the
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vanquisher in combat of Ravana, the powerful tormentor of the worlds, who
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cannot be slain by the gods."
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Vishnu replied, "Have no fear, from now on be happy; Ravana, that
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cruel and insufferable monster, the terror of the gods and rishis, with
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his sons and grandsons, his ministers, relations, and allies, for the good
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of all, will be slain by me, and during eleven thousand years, I shall
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dwell in the world of men and protect the earth."
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Hinduism. Ramayana, Bala Kanda 15
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Genesis 32.24-30: The struggle of Jacob is usually interpreted as not
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against a demon, but against an angel whom God was using to test Jacob.
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The result is nevertheless the same--Jacob is victorious in the spiritual
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struggle. Cf. Pearl of Great Price, Joseph Smith 2.11-20, pp. 598f.;
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Mahaparinirvana Sutra 424-33, pp. 753f. Ramayana, Bala Kanda 15: The
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demon Ravana can only be conquered by man; hence Vishnu agrees to
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incarnate himself as Rama, son of King Dasaratha, and then as a man to
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defeat Ravana in combat. On the doctrine of avatars, see Bhagavad Gita
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4.7-8, p. 662n.
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Susa-no-o... descended to the upper reaches of the Pi river in the land of
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Idumo. There he found an old man and an old woman, with a maiden between
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them, crying.... "Why are you crying?" he asked. The old man replied,
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"We originally had eight daughters. But the eight-tailed dragon of Kosi
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has come every year and eaten them one by one. We are crying because it
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is now time for him to come again." He asked, "What is its appearance?"
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He replied, "His eyes are like red ground-cherries; his one body has eight
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heads and eight tails. On his body grow moss and cypress and cryptomeria
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trees. His length is such that he spans eight valleys and eight mountain
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peaks. If you look at his belly, you see that blood is oozing out all
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over it." Then Susa-no-o said to the old man, "Will you give me your
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daughter?" He answered, "Awed as I am, I do not know your name." Then he
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replied, "I am the brother of the Sun Goddess and have just descended from
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heaven." Then the old parents said, "If that is so, then we will with
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fearful reverence present her to you." Then Susa-no-o transformed the
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maiden into a hair-comb, which he inserted into his hair-bunch and said to
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them, "Distill thick sake of eight-fold brewings; build a fence, and make
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eight doors in the fence. At each door, tie together eight platforms, and
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on each of these platforms place a wine barrel. Fill each barrel with the
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thick wine, and wait." They made the preparations as he had instructed,
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and as they waited, the eight-tailed dragon came indeed, as predicted.
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Putting one head into each of the barrels, he drank the wine; then,
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becoming drunk, he lay down and slept. Then Susa-no-o unsheathed the
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sword ten hands long which he was wearing at his side, and hacked the
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dragon to pieces, so that the Pi river ran with blood. When he cut the
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dragon's middle tail, the blade of his sword broke. Thinking this
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strange, he thrust deeper with the stub of his sword, until a great sharp
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sword appeared. He took this sword out and, thinking it an extraordinary
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thing, presented the sword to Amaterasu. This is the sword Kusa-nagi.
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Shinto. Kojiki 19
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Kojiki 19: Susa-no-o is chiefly worshipped in the shrine at Izumo. Izumo
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was headquarters of an ancient Japanese clan and was the rival of the
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shrine at Ise, where the Sun Goddess Amaterasu-omi-kami is worshipped.
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The Kojiki sees the two kami as rivals, with Amaterasu winning out. Her
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victory symbolizes the all-conquering imperial family, which is seen as
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descending from Amaterasu. Thus Susa-no-o, as patron kami of a losing
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clan, is given an ambiguous role in the mythology, at once a primal
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culture hero of Japan and yet an impetuous character who offends the gods
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of heaven. This story represents his heroic aspect. It represents the
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myth of the hero defeating the demonic forces that is widespread among
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many cultures: e.g., St. George and the dragon, or Perseus and Andromeda.
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Kusa-nagi is one of the three symbols of Shinto in the possession of the
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emperor; cf. Kojiki 39.2-3, p. 851.
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The serpent Kaliya, who was full of pride because of the virulence of his
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poison... entered a pool in the river Kalindi.... When Krishna, who had
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become incarnate to restrain the wicked, perceived that the river had been
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polluted by that serpent whose poison was so virulent and swiftly active,
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he climbed a very high Kadamba tree, clapped his hands, girded his loins
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tightly, and plunged into the poisoned water. The mass of water in that
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pool of serpents was swelled by the poison emitted by serpents who were
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shaken by the blast caused by the vigorous dive of the Man, and it
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overflowed for a hundred bow lengths on all sides with terrible waves
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tawny with poison, but this did nothing to him of infinite thought.
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When Kaliya heard the noise of the whirling of the club-like arms
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of Krishna, who was playing in the pool like a rogue elephant, and saw his
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own residence overwhelmed, he was unable to bear the sight and sound, and
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he slithered out. He enveloped angrily with his coils and bit in his
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vital spots that Boy whose feet were like the inside of a lotus, beautiful
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to see in his youth, adorned with the Shivatsa, wearing yellow garments,
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with a beautiful smile on his face, playing fearlessly. When Krishna's
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dear friends the cattle-tenders saw him caught up in the coils of the
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serpent, apparently motionless, they were greatly distressed... the cows
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and bulls and calves lowed in their misery... and the cow-herds' wives...
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were burnt by great sorrow and saw the triple world as empty, for it was
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devoid of their Beloved.
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Krishna, seeing that his own village, with its women and children,
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was so miserable because of him, and knowing that it had no refuge other
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than him, conformed to the way of mortals and, staying for a moment, rose
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up from the serpent's grip. The serpent's hoods were tortured by the
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expanding body of Krishna, and he released him; he raised his hoods
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angrily and stood spitting venom through his hissing nostrils; he stared
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at Hari with his unblinking eyes that were like frying pans, and he licked
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the two corners of his mouth with his forked tongue, and his very gaze was
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full of fire and virulent poison. Playfully, Krishna circled about him,
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like Garuda, the lord of birds, and Kaliya also moved about, watching for
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an opportunity. When the serpent's strength was exhausted by moving about
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in this way, the First bent down the snake's raised shoulder and mounted
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upon his broad heads. Then the Master of all musical arts danced, his
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lotus feet made bright red by their contact with the multitude of rubies
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on the serpent's head. When the wives of the gandharvas, siddhas,
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celestial players, and gods saw that he was preparing to dance, they
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approached him joyfully with offerings of drums and musical instruments
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and songs and flowers and praises.
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He who bears a cruel rod of punishment trampled with his feet
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whatever head of the hundred-headed one was yet unbent, and the serpent,
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his life span spent but still writhing, vomited clotted blood from his
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mouth and fell, suffering horribly. The Ancient Man danced on the
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serpent, who still spewed poison from his eyes and hissed loudly in his
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anger, and he trampled down with his feet whatever head the serpent
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raised, subduing him calmly as if he were being worshipped with flowers.
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Kaliya, his umbrella of hoods shattered by the gay dance of death, his
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limbs broken, vomiting blood copiously from his mouths, remembered the
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Guru of all who move and are still, the Ancient Man, Narayana, and he
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surrendered to him in his heart.
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Hinduism. Srimad Bhagavatam 10.16
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- - - - - - - - - - - -
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Srimad Bhagavatam 10.16: This passage is as much an expression of
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Krishna's compassion to His devotees and their utter dependence on Him as
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it is an account of His vanquishing a demon. By surrendering to Krishna,
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even the serpent Kaliya, in death, attains liberation. In the Bible, the
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motif of divine punishment of the wicked being meted out in a festal dance
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is found in Isaiah 30.29-33 and 1 Chronicles 20.20-23. On the submission
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of the serpent to the Buddha, see Udana 10, p. 314. On the Christian's
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power over serpents and evil powers, see Luke 10:19-20, pp. 314f.
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- - - - - - - - - - - -
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