>>515093213
KEK
As described in the The Aryan Teaching, The Teacher faces two antagonists: Baka, a god who believes that his godhood is the highest attainment there is; and Mara, a god who wants (1) to keep Baka under his power by allowing Baka to maintain his deluded opinion, and (2) to prevent The Teacher from sharing his awakened knowledge with others. Of the two, Mara is the more insidious, a point illustrated by the fact that Mara always speaks through someone else and never directly shows his face. (Another interesting point is illustrated by the fact that Mara is the source of the demand that one obey a creator god.)
In overcoming his antagonists, The Teacher asserts the superiority of his knowledge in two major fashions: through a description of his awakened knowledge and through a display of psychic powers.
† The Four Providential Truths †
I. Suffering is inseparable from existence.
II. Craving is the root cause of suffering.
III. Suffering can be ended by ending craving.
IV. There is a path to ending craving and suffering.
ᛋ drive.google.com/file/d/1YxZS4v8-jlj-2CfpfDMPyk_6J0wqQBe_/view
ᛋ buddhanet.net/audio-lectures/
ᛟ gab.com/OvermanZ/posts/114739650376021972