Searching...
Showing 1-20
Passages similar to: Bundahishn — Chapter IV
Source passage
Zoroastrian
Bundahishn
Chapter IV (1)
This also is said, that when the primeval ox passed away it fell to the right hand, and Gâyômard afterwards, when he passed away, to the left hand.
Hindu
Prapathaka IV, Khanda 17 (9)
That sacrifice is inclined towards the north (in the right way) in which there is a Brahman priest who knows this. And with regard to such a Brahman...
Loading concepts...
Hindu
Brahmana 1 (1.1.2)
Verily, the day arose for the horse as the sacrificial vessel which stands before. Its place is the eastern sea. Verily, the night arose for him as...
Loading concepts...
Zoroastrian
Yasna 32 — Ahunavaiti Gatha (12)
(But Ahura will speak His rebuke, for) as to those doctrines which (such) men may be (basely) delivering (repelled) by the holiest action, (and...
Loading concepts...
Hindu
Prapathaka III, Khanda 17 (6)
Ghora Âṅgirasa, after having communicated this (view of the sacrifice) to Krishna, the son of Devăkî --and he never thirsted again (after other...
Loading concepts...
Hindu
Brahmana 2 (3.2.12)
* Yajnavalkya/ said he, * when a man dies, what does not leave him? ' All-gods. An endless world he wins thereby.'
Loading concepts...
Hindu
Brahmana 3 (3.3.1)
Then Bhujyu Lahyayani questioned him. £ Yajfiavalkya/ said he, ( we were traveling around as wanderers among the Madras. As such we came to the house...
Loading concepts...
Hindu
Prapathaka VIII, Khanda 6 (5)
And while his mind is failing, he is going to the sun. For the sun is the door of the world (of Brahman). Those who know, walk in; those who do not kn...
Loading concepts...
Hindu
Prapathaka IV, Khanda 6 (1)
'Agni will declare to you another foot of Brahman.' (After these words of the bull), Satyakâma, on the morrow, drove the cows (toward the house of...
Loading concepts...
Hindu
Brahmana 2 (3.2.13)
£ Yajnavalkya/ said he, 'when the voice of a dead man goes into fire, his breath into wind, his eye into the sun, his mind into the moon, his hearing...
Loading concepts...
Hindu
Brahmana 2 (1.2.7)
He desired: ' Would that this [body] of mine were fit for sacrifice! Would that by it I had a self (atmanmn)! J Thereupon it became a horse (asva),...
Loading concepts...
Hindu
Brahmana 3 (1.3.15)
Likewise it carried the Ear across. When that was freed from death, it became the quarters of heaven. These quarters of heaven have crossed beyond...
Loading concepts...
Hindu
Brahmana 2 (1.2.3)
He divided himself (atmanam) threefold: [fire (agni) one third], the sun (aditya) one third, wind (vayii) one third. He also is Life (prdna) divided...
Loading concepts...
Zoroastrian
Yasna 46 — Ushtavaiti Gatha (4)
(But e’er these helpers come to me, all rests as yet in gloom.) The evil man is holding back those who are the bearers of the Righteous Order from...
Loading concepts...
Tibetan Buddhist
The Tibetan Book of the Dead
Book I: The Third Day (6.2)
Again, calling the deceased by name, the setting-face-to-face is thus: O nobly-born, listen undistractedly. On the Third Day the primal form of the...
Loading concepts...
Hindu
Brahmana 8 (3.8.9)
Verily, O Gargi, at the command of that Imperishable the sun and the moon stand apart. Verily, O Gargi, at the command of that Imperishable the earth...
Loading concepts...
Hindu
Brahmana 3 (1.3.14)
Likewise it carried the Eye across. When that was freed from death, it became the sun. That sun, when it has crossed beyond death, glows.
Loading concepts...
Hindu
Fifth Vallī (6)
'Well then, O Gautama, I shall tell thee this mystery, the old Brahman, and what happens to the Self, after reaching death.'
Loading concepts...
Hindu
Prapathaka VIII, Khanda 9 (3)
Live with me another thirty-two years.' He lived with him another thirty-two years, and then Pragâpati said:...
Loading concepts...
Hindu
Brahmana 1 (1.1.1)
Om! Verily, the dawn is the head of the sacrificial horse; the sun, his eye; the wind, his breath; universal fire (Agni VaisVanara), his open mouth....
Loading concepts...
Buddhist
Chapter X: Punishment (135)
As a cowherd with his staff drives his cows into the stable, so do Age and Death drive the life of men.
Loading concepts...