Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Taraka Brahma Mantras of four Yugas Yuga: Mantra: Satya Yuga: narayana para veda narayana paraksara narayana para muktir narayana-para gatih Treta Yuga: rama narayanananta mukunda madhusudana krsna kesava kamsare hare vaikuntha vamana Dvapara Yuga: hare murare madhu-kaitabhare gopala govinda mukunda saure
He would exhort them to perform japa of Rama-Nama. While still in his twenties, he began initiating youngsters into this great Rama Taraka Mantra. He was an ardent admirer of Sri Ramakrishna Math at Madras and regularly participated in the Satsangs (association with the wise) there.
The temples are connected to the "Taraka", the "ferryboat mantra" [2] or "mantra of the crossing" [3] believed to guide the spirit of the dying to moksha. [4] One Shivite form of the prayer is Om Sri Rama Jaya Rama Jaya Jaya Rama ("Om, Victory to God with his shakti, victory, victory to God"), supposedly taught by Shiva to his wife Parvati.
Devoted to Rama, Bhadra later met the sage Narada, who initiated an upadesam (instruction) of the Rama Taraka mantra. Bhadra mediated and chanted the mantra on the banks of the Godavari River for several years. Pleased, Rama promised to return to meet Bhadra when he had found Sita, who had been abducted by the demon king Ravana. However, Rama ...
The Uttara portion of the Rama Tapaniya text, states Lamb, asserts that Shiva repeated the Rama mantra for thousands of ages, and Rama then gave him the boon whereby if Shiva would whisper the Rama taraka mantra in a dying man's ear, he would be liberated. [12] The Uttara Tapaniya discusses the Om mantra but without predominance over the ...
The Rama Tapaniya Upanishad, emphasis is on the Rama mantra Rama Ramaya namaha. It presents him as equivalent to the Atman (soul, self) and the Brahman (Ultimate Reality). [ 143 ] [ 142 ] Tarasara Upanishad describes Rama as Paramatman, Narayana and supreme Purusha (cosmic man), [ 144 ] the ancient Purushottama , the eternal, the liberated, the ...
First chapter is known as Tattva-Nirūpaṇam, deals with the Tattva Trayam, i.e. Prakriti, Jiva and Parmatman. [6]Second chapter is known as Japyanirdhāraṇanirūpaṇam, deals with three main mantras in the lineage of Sri Rama Mantraraja, i.e. Rama Shadakshara Mantra (rāṃa rāmāya namaḥ), Dvaya Mantra (śrīmadrāmacandracharaṇau śaraṇaṃ prapadye, śrīmate rāmacandrāya ...
It is one of the texts which mentions the "Om Namo Narayana" mantra of Vaishnavism. [5] The Upanishad discusses the Om mantra, and integrates into its sound, the central characters of the epic Ramayana such as Rama, Sita, Lakshmana, Hanuman, Bharata, Shatrughna and Jambavan. [6] It also asserts that Hanuman is a manifestation of Shiva. [6]