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Hindu Article-Messenger with a mission

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Messenger with a mission

 

 

CHENNAI NOV. 11 . Worship of God has been broadly

classified into four groups by one of the major Hindu

religious systems. Devotees can undertake to do

service in temples like cleaning their precincts or

raising flower gardens. Others may resort to approach

God through the observance of rites and rituals. The

third can meditate and carry out similar devotional

exercises while in the advanced stage they can seek

identity with God by acquiring spiritual knowledge.

This four-fold path leading to God has been advocated

by the Saiva school and its torchbearers had adopted

these in their lives. Their devotional lyrics have

been held as sacred literature. Saivism, which extols

the supremacy of Lord Siva, draws its inspiration from

the "Agamas" and the first divine messenger, to take

credit, among the galaxy of 63 Nayanmars, to render

them in Tamil, was Thirumoolar.

 

In a lecture (on Periapuranam) Sri D. Gnanasundaram

mentioned about the Mantras incorporated in his 3000

stanzas. Several aspects of human life and other

extraordinary topics and scientific information and

other features on man's behaviour are contained in

them. For example the different stages in the growth

of the embryo in a mother's womb are illustrated

therein. The life of Thirumoolar reveals how leaving

his Himalayan retreat he came down to the plains of

India to meet Sage Agastya in the Pothigai hills in

the South, with a mission. The places he covered en

route include Varanasi, Srisailam, Kalahasti and

Kanchi. Of his own choice, filled with great

compassion for the erring humanity, he was in this

country. Literary evidence shows that in those days

the names of the towns and the temples therein

differed from one another.

 

One day the Yogi reached the outskirts of Sathanoor

village where he found a herd of cows lowing miserably

round the dead body of their master. Taking pity on

them and with his spiritual powers, he entered the

body of the shepherd. When the "corpse" thus came

alive, he led the cows to their homes. He continued to

remain in the cowherd's cast-off frame and was soon

immersed in deep contemplation under a peepul tree at

a nearby Saivite centre. Scientific data presents how

it exudes greater amount of oxygen and how its leaves

oscillate from top to lower level instead of the usual

manner of those of other trees moving sideways. People

flocked to him and he was credited as having rendered

one verse in one year. In spite of the passage of time

his work abides with devotees still.

 

 

 

 

copy right: The Hindu-daily

 

 

 

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