Talking about magic and stuff |
Post Reply
|
Page <12 |
| Author | ||||
FunkyFarmers
Sensi Advanced Grower
Joined: 20 September 2004 Online Status: Offline Posts: 130 |
Quote Reply
Posted: 11 May 2005 at 14:23 |
|||
|
The Mystic Philosophers Cannabis legend and consumption are fundamental aspects of many of the world’s great religions. For example: SHINTOISM (Japan) - Cannabis was used for the binding together of married couples, to drive away evil spirits, and was thought to create laughter and happiness in marriage. HINDUISM (India) - The God Shiva is said to have brought cannabis from the Himalayas for human enjoyment and enlightenment. The Sadhu Priests travel throughout India and the world sharing chillum pipes filled with cannabis, sometimes blended with other substances. In the Bhagavad-gita, Krishna states, I am the healing herb (Ch.9:16), while the Bhagarat-purana Fifth Canto describes hashish in explicitly sexual terms. BUDDHISM (Tibet, India and China) - from the 5th Century B.C.E. on - ritually used cannabis; initiation rites and mystical experiences were (are) common in many Chinese Buddhist sects. Some Tibetan Buddhists and lamas (priests) consider cannabis their most holy plant. Many Buddhist traditions, writings, and beliefs indicate that Siddhartha (the Buddha) himself, used and ate nothing but hemp and its seeds for six years prior to announcing (discovering) his truths and becoming the Buddha (Four Noble Truths, the Eightfold Path). Regarding the ZOROASTRIANS or Magi (Persia, circa 8th to 7th Centuries B.C. to 3rd to 4th Centuries A.D.), it is widely believed by many Christian scholars, commentators, etc., that the three Magi or Wise Men who attended the birth of Christ were cult references to the Zoroastrians. The Zoroastrian religion was based (at least on the surface) on the entire cannabis plant, the chief religious sacrament of its priest class, and its most important medicine, (e.g., obstetrics, incense rites, anointing and christening oils), as well as lighting of fire oils in their secular world. The word magic is generally considered derived from the Zoroastrians - Magi. The ESSENES (ancient Israeli sect of extreme Hebrewites, approx. 200 B.C. to 73 A.D.) - used hemp medicinally, as did the THERAPUTEA (Egypt), from whom we get the term therapeutic. Both are believed by some scholars to be disciples of, or in a brotherhood with, the priests/magicians of the Zoroastrians. EARLY JEWS - As part of their holy Friday night services in the Temple of Solomon, 60-80,000 men ritually passed around and inhaled 20,000 incense burners filled with kanabosom (cannabis), before returning home for the largest meal of the week (munchies?). SUFIS OF ISLAM (Middle East) - Moslem mystical priests who have taught, used and extolled cannabis for divine revelation, insight and oneness with Allah, for at least the last 1,000 years. Many Moslem and world scholars believe the mysticism of the Sufi Priests was actually that of the Zoroastrians who survived Moslem conquests of the 7th and 8th Centuries A.D. and subsequent conversion (change your religion and give up liquor or be beheaded). COPTIC CHRISTIAN (Egypt/Ethiopia) - Some sects believe the sacred green herb of the field in the Bible (I will raise up for them a plant of renown, and they shall be no more consumed with hunger in the land, neither bear the shame of the heathen any more Ezekiel 34:29) and the Biblical secret incenses, sweet incenses and anointing oils to be cannabis. The RASTAFARIANS (Jamaica and elsewhere) are a contemporary religious sect that uses ganja as its sacred sacrament to communicate with God (Jah). www.friendsofcannabis.com |
||||
|
Friends of Cannabis
|
||||
![]() |
||||
FunkyFarmers
Sensi Advanced Grower
Joined: 20 September 2004 Online Status: Offline Posts: 130 |
Quote Reply
Posted: 16 May 2005 at 15:24 |
|||
![]() Emperor (left), priest, hemp fibre (right) at funeral of Emperor's mother
Source: Taima.org/ D. Olson.. |
||||
|
Friends of Cannabis
|
||||
![]() |
||||
FunkyFarmers
Sensi Advanced Grower
Joined: 20 September 2004 Online Status: Offline Posts: 130 |
Quote Reply
Posted: 16 May 2005 at 16:03 |
|||
|
Hemp And The Scythe Cannabis was undoubtedly used by the Scythians for many reasons. For example, the ancient Scythians grew hemp and harvested it with a hand reaper that we still call a scythe. Cannabis inhalation by the Scythians in funeral rituals was recorded by the Greek historian Herodotus in the early 5th Century B.C.E. The nomadic Scythians introduced the custom to other races such as the Thracians.
|
||||
|
Friends of Cannabis
|
||||
![]() |
||||
FunkyFarmers
Sensi Advanced Grower
Joined: 20 September 2004 Online Status: Offline Posts: 130 |
Quote Reply
Posted: 06 September 2005 at 13:49 |
|||
|
THE NECTAR OF DELIGHT
![]() Plants of the Gods - Their Sacred, Healing and Hallucinogenic Powers by Richard Evans Schultes and Albert Hoffman Healing Arts Press (Vermont) 1992 Tradition in India maintains that the gods sent man the Hemp plant so that he might attain delight, courage, and have heightened sexual desires. When nectar or Amrita dropped down from heaven, Cannabis sprouted from it. Another story tells how, when the gods, helped by demons, churned the milk ocean to obtain Amrita, one of the resulting nectars was Cannabis. It was consecrated to Shiva and was [the godess] Indra’s favourite drink. After the churning of the ocean, demons attempted to gain control of Amrita, but the gods were able to prevent this seizure, giving Cannabis the name Vijaya (“victory”) to commemorate their success. Ever since, this plant of the gods has been held in India to bestow supernatural powers on its users.
The partnership of Cannabis and man has existed now probably for ten thousand years – since the discovery of agriculture in the Old World. One of our oldest cultivars, Cannabis has been a five- purpose plant: as a source of hempen fibres; for its oil; for its akenes or “seeds,” consumed by man for food; for its narcotic properties; and therapeutically to treat a wide spectrum of ills in folk medicine and in modern pharmacopoeias. Mainly because of its various uses, Cannabis has been taken to many regions around the world. Unusual things happen to plants after long association with man and agriculture. They are grown in new and strange environments and often have opportunities to hybridize that are not offered in their native habitats. They escape from cultivation and frequently become aggressive weeds. They may be changed through human selection for characteristics associated with a specific use. Many cultivated plants are so changed from their ancestral typed that it is not possible to unravel their evolutionary history. Such is not the case, however, with Cannabis. Yet, despite its long history as a major crop plant, Cannabis is still characterised more by what is not known about its biology than what is known. The botanical classification of Cannabis has long been uncertain. Botanists have not agreed on the family to which Cannabis belongs; early investigators put it in the Nettle family (Urticaceae); later it was accommodated in the Fig family (Moraceae); the general trend today is to assign it to a special family, Cannabaceae, in which only Cannabis and Humulus, the genus of Hops, are members. There has even been disagreement as to how many species of Cannabis exist: whether the genus comprises one highly variable species or several distinct species. Evidence now strongly indicates that three species can be recognised: C. indica, C. ruderalia, and C. sativa. These species are distinguished by different growth habits, characters of the akenes, and especially by major differences in structure of the wood. Although all species possess cannabinols, there may possible be significant chemical differences, but the evidence is not yet available. We cannot known now which of the several uses of Cannabis was earliest. Since plant uses normally proceed from the simpler to the more complex, one might presume that its useful fibers first attracted man’s attention. Indeed remains of hempen fibers have been found in the earliest archaeological sites in the cradles of Asiatic civilisation: evidence of fiber in China dating from 4000 B.C. and hempen rope and thread from Turkestan from 3000 B.C.. Stone beaters for pounding hemp fiber and impressions of hempen cord bakery into pottery have been found in ancient sites in Taiwan. Hempen fabrics have been found in Turkish sites of the late eighth century B.C., and there is a questionable specimen of Hemp in an Egyptian tomb dated between three and four thousand years ago. The Indian vadas sang of Cannabis as one of the divine nectars, able to give man anything from good health and long life to visions of the gods. The Zend-Avesta of 600 B.C. mentions an intoxicating resin, and the Assyrians used Cannabis as an incense as early as the ninth century B.C.. Inscriptions from the Chou dynasty in China, dated 700-500 B.C., have a “negative” connotation that accompanies the ancient character for Cannabis, Ma, implying its stupefying properties. Since this idea obviously predated writing, the Pen Tsao Ching, written in A.D. 100 but going back to a legendary emperor, Shen-Nung, 2000 B.C., may be taken as evidence that the hallucinogenic properties at very early dates. It was said that Ma-fen (“Hemp fruit”) “if taken to excess, will produce hallucinations [literally, ‘seeing devils’]. If taken over a long term, it makes one communicate with spirits and lightens one’s body.” A Taoist priest wrote in the fifth century B.C. that Cannabis was employed by “necromancers, in combination with Ginseng, to set forward time and reveal future events.” In these early periods, use of Cannabis as an hallucinogen was undoubtedly associated with Chinese shamanism, but by the time of European contact 1500 years later, shamanism had fallen into decline, and the use of the plant for inebriation seems to have ceased and had been forgotten. Its value in China then was primarily as a fiber source. There was, however, a continuous record of Hemp cultivation in China from Neolithic times, and it has been suggested that Cannabis may have originated in China, not in central Asia.
|
||||
|
Friends of Cannabis
|
||||
![]() |
||||
Ferre
Sensi Grower
Joined: 26 September 2004 Location: Netherlands Online Status: Offline Posts: 15 |
Quote Reply
Posted: 09 October 2005 at 20:25 |
|||
![]() |
||||
quantumspirit
Sensi Seedling
Joined: 07 November 2008 Location: Caboolture Online Status: Offline Posts: 1 |
Quote Reply
Posted: 07 November 2008 at 13:15 |
|||
|
My experiences convince me that we are all manifestations of the Essence of Nature. When we are high these foundations of our nature flow more fluidly and we notice the coincidences that our flowing state encourages into existence without our awareness. Living more in our Essential Nature while we are high connects us with our more mystical possibilities. Our mind opens upto these possibilities during our high in novel ways and leads us a journey of discovery, if we allow this. I find that walking/cycling amongst nature while high, strengthens my feeling of connectedness with all the diverse manifestations of Nature around me. Once I met and communicated with the Source of all Existence. A stunningly beautiful and brief moment that still inspires me 11 years later. I feel okay about sharing this personal moment with others now.
Will
|
||||
|
Insights of Quantumspirit
|
||||
![]() |
||||
M91286
Sensi Seedling
Joined: 17 August 2009 Online Status: Offline Posts: 7 |
Quote Reply
Posted: 07 February 2010 at 19:53 |
|||
|
the effect of cannabis would be a uplifting effect over one's mind,making its way to the body for example lazyness,
used in the past and even today to lift yourself away from moments, moments of pain,depression,unhappyness,etc,...
To a running away state of mind where you would be in a place called beeing "stoned"
sealed away from the present moment,in a moment called beeing high.A place where ---creativity and balance would domine
and not expression,process,discipline,etc....
|
||||
![]() |
||||
bongmeister
Sensi Seedling
Joined: 17 April 2010 Location: spain Online Status: Offline Posts: 1 |
Quote Reply
Posted: 17 April 2010 at 21:59 |
|||
|
coca cola is the work of the devil.....
|
||||
|
The house of government corruption is about to fall
|
||||
![]() |
||||
breizh ganja
Sensi Advanced Grower
Joined: 21 May 2009 Online Status: Offline Posts: 1237 |
Quote Reply
Posted: 18 April 2010 at 18:49 |
|||
|
drink BREIZH COLA !!!
|
||||
|
Rémi Gaillard;and do you know Gitta Mallazs ?...you should..
|
||||
![]() |
||||
Mikie
Sensi Seedling
Joined: 31 December 2008 Location: Dictator Sweden Online Status: Offline Posts: 22 |
Quote Reply
Posted: 27 June 2011 at 00:33 |
|||
|
I finally managed to understand the role och cannabis in meditation and the three of life and its functions.
Its element is fire and it promotes the kundalini to raise in meditaiton to with connect above with right training and intention. In same manner its fire affect mind feelings and thought. It connects to the root. Can anybody tell me if they know the adress to the holy church that use it as a sakramente in the prayers and where i can get a license to use it in my faith i lost the adress. |
||||
![]() |
||||
Post Reply
|
Page <12 |
| Forum Jump | Forum Permissions ![]() You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot create polls in this forum You can vote in polls in this forum |