This is a brief historical and comparative overview, of the vajra artifact - part one, of the monograph. Part two describes in more depth the background and esoteric ritual uses of the object.
The vajra represents an important ritual implement of Vajrayana Buddhism. In Sanskrit, the word vajra is defined as something hard or mighty, as in a diamond. It symbolizes an impenetrable, immovable and indestructible state of knowledge and enlightenment.
Knowledge of the vajra goes back to deep antiquity. Ancient texts indicate that the vajra was not always a symbol of peace - but something very different.
It is first associated with the Vedic god Indra, the King of the Devas. According the Hindu Puranas, the Asuras, Namuchi and Vritra removed all of the light and moisture from the earth. It made the land inhospitable to living beings. Indra battled the demon gods unsuccessfully and as a last resort called upon their supreme god Vishnu for help. Vishnu informed him that only a weapon that was neither solid nor liquid could kill Namuchi and Vritra.
Vishnu had the divine carpenter Tvashta fashion Indra a marvelous weapon he could use to vanquish the dreadful demonic Asuras.
This new weapon, the vajra, emitted thunderbolts. With it, Indra annihilated Namuchi and Vritra and returned the much needed light and moisture back to the earth. The Rigveda describes the conflict that ensued with Indra and the Asuras.
"Now I describe the glorious deeds of Indra, who holds Vajra. He killed the serpent and made waters flow. He broke the hearts of mountains. He killed the serpent, which was taking refuge in mountain. Tvashta made the Vajra for him. Like the cows making sounds, flowing waters reached the sea. Mighty Indra chose Soma, and drank from three containers. Generous Indra held Vajra in his hand, and killed first born among the serpents."
Rigveda 1.32
The vajra's effect was described thus:
“As a hurled weapon the indestructible thunderbolt blazed like a meteoric fireball across the heavens, in a maelstrom of thunder, fire and lightning.”
Traditional images of the vajra depict it as metal shaft with three, five or nine prongs that emanate from lotus blossoms on either end. Originally, according to the ancient Indian text the Rigveda, when Indra used his vajra it had open prongs.
Buddhist legend suggests that Shakyamuni himself, seized the vajra from Indra and forced its prongs closed, thus transforming it from a destructive weapon into a peaceful scepter.
Historical Connections -
Most mainstream historians and scholars contend and assert that there is no direct or real relationship between Indian, Greek, Australian, Norse and the cosmology of the Americas. They submit that each civilization conceived of their gods independently and that a deeper, older, universal tradition does not exist. Of course if this were the case - then the foundation of these societies - their myths, traditions, beliefs and iconography should be localized and unique to the cultures, their location and their history. The tales of war, intrigue and conquest that come out of American history are vastly different from those of England, France, India and China. Customs, traditions and symbols that represent the nation.
Yet when we look at a wide range of ancient and indigenous groups a curious pattern of commonality exists. Myths and symbols found in Indian readily appear in the oral and written descriptions of other cultures. They also appear in their artistic images. These representations seem to transcend time and location.
The symbol of thunder or a thunderbolt as a tool of destruction, is for example, present in many ancient civilizations. Mythology unfailingly associates lightning with a sky god, the god of thunder, who uses it as a weapon.
In the West, the thunderbolt is most readily associated with the Greek sky god Zeus. With it, he defeated the Titans and took control of the Greek pantheon. Greek myth tells us, that Zeus freed the Cyclopes, the master builders, who were imprisoned in the depths of the underworld – Tartarus.
In gratitude for their release, they gave him a marvelous weapon, the thunderbolt. In another story, Zeus used his formidable weapon to battle the largest and most fearsome creatures in all of Greek mythology, the hundred-headed serpent Typhon.
Early images of Zeus depict show him holding a rod like thunderbolt while others show this deadly weapon with its ends splayed into three prongs.
A vajra-like weapon also appears in Sumerian cosmology. Its use is recorded in the Bablyonian Epic of Creation, the Enuma Elish. A battle between the sky god Marduk (Bel) and serpent Tiamat is detailed on the fourth tablet of this ancient document. The evil and powerful Tiamat, according to the Enuma Elish, was devising treacherous plans against Ea and the other reigning gods. The gods were afraid to invoke her evil wrath and search for a solution. Ea attempts to confront Tiamat, but instead of fighting backs down. Marduk, his son, steps forward and volunteers to fight the enraged serpent, on one condition… If he is successful, he will have dominion over the entire universe. The gods agree and provide Marduk mighty weapons including a bow, a mace and a net to use in his battle against Tiamat. Images of this epic scene show Marduk holding a three tipped scepter in his hand. Subsequent images clearly depict this same deadly three-pronged weapon.
"They gave him the unrivalled weapon, the destroyer of the enemy [saying]: “Go, cut off the life of Tiâmat. “Let the wind carry her blood into the depth [under the earth].” The gods, his fathers, issued the decree for the god Bel. They set him on the road which leadeth to peace and adoration."
Enuma Elish
Alternate forms of the Vajra -
The Rigveda also offers an alternative description of the vajra. Some texts represent it as a notched metal club with thousands of prongs.
This form of the vajra is found in many other diverse cultures.
The most common stories that may describe the vajra in its club-like form - come from Norse cosmology.
They are associated with the sky god Thor. The hammer Mjölnir was the most fearsome weapon in Norse mythology. Images of the thunder god Thor traditionally show him carrying Mjölnir. Some texts describe Mjölnir as a hammer, while others refer to it as an ax or club.
The dwarfs, in the depths of the earth, fashioned Mjölnir. The Norse Skáldskaparmál, which can be found in the Snorri’s Edda describes Mjölnir as a hammer which would not fail. As a weapon, it could level mountains. It goes on to state that if aimed it at anything; it would never miss its target. It informs us that in addition to never missing its target, it would always find its way back to the hand of its owner.
Thor used his mighty hammer to battle his deadliest foe, the giant serpent Jörmungandr. In these tales, the Midgard Serpent, Jörmungandr is not killed. It would not be until near the end of the world in the apocalyptic battle of Ragnarök, that Thor will clash with Jörmungandr the final time.
In Slavic mythology we learn of the evil serpent Veles who ascends from the underworld and steals something of value to the sky god Perun. Perun, using lightning bolts, would vanquish Veles back to his underground realm annually. His deadly axe, like Thor’s mighty hammer was used to subdue evil and overcome the iniquitous serpent Veles. It too would return to his hand after being thrown.
In Irish mythology, the magical weapon of the hero of Ulster Cúchulainn is the Gae Bolga or lightning spear. Cúchulainn fights and kills his childhood friend and foster brother, Ferdia with this magical weapon. The Gae Bolga is described as a dart or spear, which separates into multiple barbs when entering the body, causing fatal wounds. It was next to impossible to withdraw once it had impaled the body. The Irish Book of Leinster describes the devastating effects of the Gae Bolga as such:
"It entered a man’s body with a single wound, like a javelin, then opened into thirty barbs. Only by cutting away the flesh could it be taken from that man’s body."
Book of Leinster
In China, the legend of Hua-hu Tiao Devours Yang Chien describes a magical spike carried by Huang T’ien Hua which sounds remarkably similar to Indra’s vajra.
"The Chin-kang, deprived of their magical weapons, began to lose heart. To complete their discomfiture, Huang T’ien Hua brought to the attack a matchless magical weapon. This was a spike 7 1/2 inches long, enclosed in a silk sheath, and called ‘Heart-piercer. It projected so strong a ray of light that eyes were blinded by it. Huang T’ien Hua, hard pressed by Mo-li Ch’ing, drew the mysterious spike from its sheath, and hurled it at his adversary. It entered his neck, and with a deep groan the giant fell dead."
Finding myths, with similar storylines, and their corresponding images in relatively close geographic areas, while interesting, does not fully support the universality of the gods. When we uncover similar narratives and corresponding imagery, in remote regions of the world, this concept takes on a more serious tone. Myths of a vajra-like weapon are found all over the world.
In Australia, the sky gods, the Wati Kutjara brothers, wield a magical boomerang, Wo-mur-rang or club. Boomerangs are known for their ability, once thrown, to return to their owner. Legend states that their father Kidili attempted to rape some of the first women. Throwing their wo-mur-rang, they castrated their father where he disappeared into a water hole.
Vajra Weapons In the New World -
In the new world we encounter a similar deadly lightning weapon used by the sky gods. In the Aztec culture there is the god Huitzilopochtli. Huitzilopochtli, with his weapon Xiuhcoatl, “the fire serpent”, killed his sister Coyolxauhqui soon after he was born.
The Mayan rain deity Chaac and the later Aztec Tlaloc are both are depicted carrying their lightning axe. Sometimes they are depicted holding snakes, which represent lightning bolts, which they would hurl from the mountaintops where they made their retreat.
In Peru, we find the god Illapa who is described as a man wielding a club in his left hand and a sling in his right.
One variation of the lightning motif is the concept of the thunderstone. It is believed that thunderstones fall from the sky when the gods are battling each other. This idea is widely held throughout Africa. The Yoruba of southwestern Nigera, for example, believe their axe carrying storm god Shange creates thunder and lightning and casts “thunderstones” down to earth. The elders of this culture would search wherever lightning struck for these magical stones.
The thunder-producing weapon, the vajra, is only one example of the enormous number of commonalities found in myth, legend, culture and iconography around the world. Similarities exist throughout Greek, Sumerian, Norse, Aztec and Australian and American cosmology. These parallels include the gods, their lives and their amazing weapons. They also include the laws and customs that govern our lives – the very fabric of society.
The universality of symbolism found around the world implies something else. Weapons, like the vajra, were not born from the imagination of man. They did not come into being as part of a cultures evolution. They were real. They possess a tangible nature.
Someone somewhere in our remote past saw it and documented it. It is only through an actual encounter with a marvelous weapon that emitted thunder that a clear and specific portrayal of it could be made. Likewise, if tools like the vajra are genuine then we are forced to accept that the gods who wielded these weapons were factual individuals as well. This newfound knowledge would open the door to a revolutionary new understanding of who we are.
Friday, April 29, 2016
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Updates
I have posted here in an on and off fashion. I am on no schedule though and post to please myself mostly. So no real apologies there. I plan on doing a bit more here. Facebook, is tedious and I get tired of the constant dramatics.
Wednesday, April 20, 2016
Onmyodo - The Way of Yin and Yang
Onmyodo (literally ‘The Way of Yin and Yang’) is a traditional Japanese esoteric cosmology, a mixture of natural science and occultism. It is based on the Chinese philosophies of Wu Xing (five elements) and Yin and yang, introduced into Japan at the beginning of the 6th century. It was accepted as a practical system of divination. These practices were influenced further by Taoism, Buddhism and Shintoism, and evolved into the system of onmyodo around the late 7th century. Onmyodo was under the control of the imperial government, and later its courtiers, the Tsuchimikado family until the middle of the 19th century, at which point it became prohibited as superstition.
In the 5th and 6th centuries, the principles of yin-yang and the Five Elements were transmitted to Japan from China along with Buddhism and Confucianism. Yin-yang and the Five Elements, as well as the divisions of learning to which they were linked – astronomy, calendar-making, the reckoning of time, divination, and studies based on observation of nature – were amalgamated into fortune telling. This process of judging auspicious or harmful signs present in the natural world was accepted into Japanese society as a technique for predicting good or bad fortune in the human world. Such techniques were known mostly by Buddhist monks from mainland Asia who were knowledgeable in reading and writing Chinese. Over time demand from members of the imperial court who believed that onmyodo divination would be helpful in decision-making made it necessary for the laity to perform the art, and onmyoji began to appear around the middle of the 7th century.
With the implementation of the ritsuryo system law codes in the 7th and 8th centuries, yin-yang techniques were put under the jurisdiction of the Bureau of Onmyo in the Nakatsukasa-sho of the Imperial bureaucracy. The Bureau of Onmyo was responsible for overseeing the divinations of Onmyodo, astrological observations, and the creation of calendars. Also, by law the Buddhist clergy was forbidden to practice astrology and fortune-telling; hence, government-controlled onmyoji came to monopolize the practice.
From the Heian period onward, as the ritsuryo system relaxed and the Fujiwara family rose to power, the society of the Imperial court took on a more formal shape, and adherence to rituals to placate the souls of the dead to combat the creation of vengeful ghosts burgeoned. Because onmyoji displayed methods that were believed to avert disasters with their skills of divination and magic, the practice afforded onmyoji influence over the personal lives of the Emperor and the nobility of the court. Consequently, popular awareness of onmyodo gradually spread from court society to Japanese society as a whole, strengthening its development into a characteristically Japanese art.
Onmyodo merged with other beliefs and occultism, and evolved from imported Chinese thought into a syncretism found only in Japan. Japanese onmyodo took in elements from Taoism, which was transmitted to Japan at the same time as onmyodo, including magical elements such as katatagae, monoimi, henbai, and ceremonies to Taoistic gods such as the Taizan Fukunsai. Elements of feng shui and the medical art of jukondo were incorporated as well, and as onmyodo and Japanese Shinto mutually influenced each other, onmyodo grew more distinctive. From the end of the 8th century onward, it was influenced by the magical elements of esoteric Buddhism and the Indian-derived astrology (Sukuyodo) that were transmitted with it.
During the Heian period the nobility organized their lives around practices recommended by onmyoji. The practice of "lucky and unlucky directions" provides an example. Depending on the season, time of day, and other circumstances, a particular direction might be bad luck for an individual. If one's house was located in that direction, such an individual was advised not to go back directly to his house but had to "change direction" (katatagae), by going in a different direction and lodging there. Such a person would not dare to go in the forbidden direction, but stayed where they were, even if that resulted in absence from the court, or passing up invitations from influential people.
In the 10th century Kamo no Tadayuki and his son Kamo no Yasunori made great advancements in onmyodo, astronomy and calendar science, and from among their students emerged Abe no Seimei, who displayed superior skills in the divining arts of onmyodo, by which he gained an uncommon amount of trust from the court society. Tadayuki and Yasunori passed on their skills in astronomy to Seimei while their advances in calendar-making went to Yasunori's son. From the end of the Heian period into the Middle Ages, astronomy and calendar science were completely subsumed into onmyodo, and the Abe and Kamo families came to dominate the art.
Onmyoji was one of the classifications of civil servants belonging to the Bureau of Onmyo in ancient Japan's ritsuryo system. People with this title were professional practitioners of onmyodo. Onmyoji were specialists in magic and divination. Their court responsibilities ranged from tasks such as keeping track of the calendar, to mystical duties such as divination and protection of the capital from evil spirits. They could divine auspicious or harmful influences in the earth, and were instrumental in the moving of capitals. It is said that an onmyoji could also summon and control shikigami.
Famous onmyoji include Kamo no Yasunori and Abe no Seimei (921–1005). After Seimei's death the emperor had a shrine erected at his home in Kyoto.
Onmyoji had political clout during the Heian period, but in later times when the imperial court fell into decline, their state patronage was lost completely. In modern-day Japan onmyoji are defined as a type of Shinto priest, and although there are many that claim to be mediums and spiritualists, the onmyoji continues to be a hallmark occult figure.
In the 5th and 6th centuries, the principles of yin-yang and the Five Elements were transmitted to Japan from China along with Buddhism and Confucianism. Yin-yang and the Five Elements, as well as the divisions of learning to which they were linked – astronomy, calendar-making, the reckoning of time, divination, and studies based on observation of nature – were amalgamated into fortune telling. This process of judging auspicious or harmful signs present in the natural world was accepted into Japanese society as a technique for predicting good or bad fortune in the human world. Such techniques were known mostly by Buddhist monks from mainland Asia who were knowledgeable in reading and writing Chinese. Over time demand from members of the imperial court who believed that onmyodo divination would be helpful in decision-making made it necessary for the laity to perform the art, and onmyoji began to appear around the middle of the 7th century.
With the implementation of the ritsuryo system law codes in the 7th and 8th centuries, yin-yang techniques were put under the jurisdiction of the Bureau of Onmyo in the Nakatsukasa-sho of the Imperial bureaucracy. The Bureau of Onmyo was responsible for overseeing the divinations of Onmyodo, astrological observations, and the creation of calendars. Also, by law the Buddhist clergy was forbidden to practice astrology and fortune-telling; hence, government-controlled onmyoji came to monopolize the practice.
From the Heian period onward, as the ritsuryo system relaxed and the Fujiwara family rose to power, the society of the Imperial court took on a more formal shape, and adherence to rituals to placate the souls of the dead to combat the creation of vengeful ghosts burgeoned. Because onmyoji displayed methods that were believed to avert disasters with their skills of divination and magic, the practice afforded onmyoji influence over the personal lives of the Emperor and the nobility of the court. Consequently, popular awareness of onmyodo gradually spread from court society to Japanese society as a whole, strengthening its development into a characteristically Japanese art.
Onmyodo merged with other beliefs and occultism, and evolved from imported Chinese thought into a syncretism found only in Japan. Japanese onmyodo took in elements from Taoism, which was transmitted to Japan at the same time as onmyodo, including magical elements such as katatagae, monoimi, henbai, and ceremonies to Taoistic gods such as the Taizan Fukunsai. Elements of feng shui and the medical art of jukondo were incorporated as well, and as onmyodo and Japanese Shinto mutually influenced each other, onmyodo grew more distinctive. From the end of the 8th century onward, it was influenced by the magical elements of esoteric Buddhism and the Indian-derived astrology (Sukuyodo) that were transmitted with it.
During the Heian period the nobility organized their lives around practices recommended by onmyoji. The practice of "lucky and unlucky directions" provides an example. Depending on the season, time of day, and other circumstances, a particular direction might be bad luck for an individual. If one's house was located in that direction, such an individual was advised not to go back directly to his house but had to "change direction" (katatagae), by going in a different direction and lodging there. Such a person would not dare to go in the forbidden direction, but stayed where they were, even if that resulted in absence from the court, or passing up invitations from influential people.
In the 10th century Kamo no Tadayuki and his son Kamo no Yasunori made great advancements in onmyodo, astronomy and calendar science, and from among their students emerged Abe no Seimei, who displayed superior skills in the divining arts of onmyodo, by which he gained an uncommon amount of trust from the court society. Tadayuki and Yasunori passed on their skills in astronomy to Seimei while their advances in calendar-making went to Yasunori's son. From the end of the Heian period into the Middle Ages, astronomy and calendar science were completely subsumed into onmyodo, and the Abe and Kamo families came to dominate the art.
Onmyoji was one of the classifications of civil servants belonging to the Bureau of Onmyo in ancient Japan's ritsuryo system. People with this title were professional practitioners of onmyodo. Onmyoji were specialists in magic and divination. Their court responsibilities ranged from tasks such as keeping track of the calendar, to mystical duties such as divination and protection of the capital from evil spirits. They could divine auspicious or harmful influences in the earth, and were instrumental in the moving of capitals. It is said that an onmyoji could also summon and control shikigami.
Famous onmyoji include Kamo no Yasunori and Abe no Seimei (921–1005). After Seimei's death the emperor had a shrine erected at his home in Kyoto.
Onmyoji had political clout during the Heian period, but in later times when the imperial court fell into decline, their state patronage was lost completely. In modern-day Japan onmyoji are defined as a type of Shinto priest, and although there are many that claim to be mediums and spiritualists, the onmyoji continues to be a hallmark occult figure.
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