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By The Powers Of Lord Shiva!
Part 3: The Stories Of Shiva
There are a number of mythological
tales and legends surrounding Lord
Shiva. Here're a few popular ones:
The Ganges Comes Down To Earth
A legend from the
Ramayana speaks of King
Bhagirath who once meditated before
Lord Brahma for a thousand years for
the salvation of the souls of his
ancestors. Pleased with his devotion
Brahma granted him a wish. He
requested the Lord to send the river
Ganges down to earth from heaven so
that she could flow over his
ancestors' ashes and wash their curse
away and allow them to go to heaven.
Brahma granted his wish but asked him
to pray to Shiva, for he alone could
support the weight of her descent.
Accordingly he prayed to Shiva and he
allowed the Ganges to descend on his
head, and after meandering through his
thick matted locks, the holy river
reached the earth. This story is
re-enacted by bathing the linga.
The Tiger & The Leaves
Once a hunter while chasing a deer
wandered into a dense forest and found
himself on the banks of river Kolidum
when he heard the growl of a tiger. To
protect himself from the beast he
climbed up a tree nearby. The tiger
pitched itself on the ground below the
tree fostering no intention to leave.
The hunter stayed up in the tree all
night and to keep himself from falling
asleep, he gently plucked one leaf
after another from the tree and threw
it down. Under the tree was a Shiva
Linga and the tree blessedly
turned out to be a bilva tree.
Unknowingly the man had pleased the
deity with bilva leaves. At
sunrise, the hunter looked down to
find the tiger gone, and in its place
stood Lord Shiva. He prostrated before
the Lord and attained salvation from
the cycle of birth and death.
Why Shiva Is Worshipped In His
Phallic Form
According to another legend, once
Brahma and Vishnu, two other deities
of the holy Trinity, had an argument
as to their supremacy. Brahma being
the Creator declared himself to be
more revered, while Vishnu, the
Preserver, pronounced that he
commanded more respect. Just then a
colossal lingam, known as
Jyotirlinga, blanketed in flames,
appeared before them. Both Brahma and
Vishnu were awestruck by its rapidly
increasing size. They forgot their
quarrel and decided to determine its
size. Vishnu assuming the form of a
boar went to the netherworld and
Brahma as a swan flew to the skies.
But both of them failed to accomplish
the self- assumed tasks. Then, Shiva
appeared out of the lingam and
stated that he was the progenitor of
them both and that henceforth he
should be worshipped in his phallic
form, the lingam, and not in
his anthropomorphic form. |