AskSatanOperator
Well-known member
Satan has revealed himself in texts such as the Al-Jilwah and the Bhagavad Gita. What about the Havamal? I haven't seen any mention of it on this website. What Satanic teachings can we extract from it?
AskSatanOperator said:Satan has revealed himself in texts such as the Al-Jilwah and the Bhagavad Gita.
Shadowmage said:AskSatanOperator said:Satan has revealed himself in texts such as the Al-Jilwah and the Bhagavad Gita.
The Bhagavad Gita has nothing to do with Satan. It's in fact an enemy corruption, it teaches pacifistic bullshit and self denial, much like xianity. It's 100% enemy false teachings and have nothing to do with Satanism or Satan. It was written by members of enemy religious sects, possibly influenced by Buddhists or Jains, as it has teachings similar to them.
Krishna is also not Satan, but a jewsus-like figure, possibly an enemy thoughtform.
Havamal on the other hand seems to be just a poem, not a channeled text or anything like that.
What makes you say that?Shadowmage said:AskSatanOperator said:Satan has revealed himself in texts such as the Al-Jilwah and the Bhagavad Gita.
The Bhagavad Gita has nothing to do with Satan. It's in fact an enemy corruption, it teaches pacifistic bullshit and self denial, much like xianity. It's 100% enemy false teachings and have nothing to do with Satanism or Satan. It was written by members of enemy religious sects, possibly influenced by Buddhists or Jains, as it has teachings similar to them.
Krishna is also not Satan, but a jewsus-like figure, possibly an enemy thoughtform.
Havamal on the other hand seems to be just a poem, not a channeled text or anything like that.
existentialcrisis said:If you consider it a pacifist book then I think you have read a corruption or you missed the point entirely.
Ghandi, the Gita and Non-Violence
In the Bhagavad Gita, ahimsa is listed as the first and most important virtue. As a peacekeeping spiritual and political activist, the path of non-violence was at the heart of Gandhi's teachings. Ahimsa is an unconditional love for one's self, for others, and for all living beings on the planet. Gandhi walked the path of ahimsa every single day – even in the most dark and dismal situations. This is the message of non-violence from which Gandhi based his teachings.
Mahatma Gandhi, who based his daily life on the Gita from his twenties on, felt it would be impossible to live the kind of life taught in the Gita and still engage in violence. To argue that the Gita condones violence, he said, was to give importance only to its opening verses – its preface, so to speak – and ignore the scripture itself
10 Those who surrender to Brahman all selfish
attachments are like the leaf of a lotus floating
clean and dry in water. Sin cannot touch them.
11 Renouncing their selfsh attachments, those who
follow the path of service work with body, senses,
and mind for the sake of self-purification.
12 Those whose consciousness is unified abandon
all attachment to the results of action and attain
supreme peace. But those whose desires are
fragmented, who are selfishly attached to the results
of their work, are bound in everything they do.
2 Do not get angry or
harm any living creature, but be compassionate
and gentle; show good will to all.
existentialcrisis said:Have you read the gita? Which edition/translation?
bsod said:Bit of a harse assertion, no? Influenced by enemies, sure. But absolutely nothing to do with Satan?
"It is my desire that all my followers unite in a bond of unity, lest those who are without prevail against them." - Satan