Yoghi:
(Yoghina) (Yoghis ) ( Yuga)
Seeing also :
Tantra ; Magic; Satya-yuga
The Yoga is one of the six
classical systems of philosophy in the Hinduism. It differentiates from the
other by providing the control of the body and the magical power
attributed to its advanced devout.
The yoga presents, by means of
the practice of certain disciplines, that the human being can reach the
liberation of the limitations of the meat, the deceit of the senses and
the traps of the thought and, therefore, to reach the union with the
authentic knowledge. Such union, is the true road of understanding.
For the majority of the yogis
the object of knowledge is the universal spirit, the Brahma. Thus it
teaches Krishna to Arjuna in the Bhagavad
Gîtâ:
<< Who use equanimity in the
pleasure and in the pain, lives in the "I Am" looking indifferent the clay,
the stone and the gold; who likewise sign in the vituperion and in the
praise does not distinguish between the beloved thing and the abhorred one.
The one that is shown
unalterable in the honor and in the infamy, the same is for the
friend and for the enemy, and that resigns to every business; a man such,
has transposed the qualities.
And the one that exclusively
is consecrated for the Yoga of the devotion, passing beyond the
qualities, worthy is of arriving to the Eternal. Because I Am the dwelling of
the Eternal one, of the incorruptible nectar of immortality, of the
eternal justice and the lasting happiness. [Annie
Besant; Bhagavad Gîtâ] >>
The tradition assures that
under many temples of the India and the
Tibet, they exist authentic
temples-cavern, excavated in unmemorable times , that possess unknown and
deep galleries, that only the highest initiated dare to explore. They affirmed that other subterranean galleries exist
running under those tunnels in all directions and covering fantastic
distances that challenge every logic. In those vast depths is where tells
itself that they inhabit the ‘Children of God' or Sons of Will and Yoga, also called Brahmaputras; which are the authentic
depositories of the three Sacred Arts: The yoghina, the tantra and the
magic; which confer to the one who dominates them, the qualities of
the Divinity.
The word Yuga refers
by the
contrary to a cycle of time or an Age of the Divinity. A Greater Yuga is
composed by four smaller yugas called: Krita, Tretâ, Dvâpara and Kali.
Our world is found to the final of the Kali Yuga and therefore
to the final of a Greater
Yuga, the next period will begin with the first Yuga of the
following evolutionary cycle, that is to say with the first
smaller Yuga or Krita Yuga, also called Satya Yuga.