2 results for "3a9071254f1ccce5b2a6601d77ec64b8"
>>18104920 #
The ( >>18104808 >>18104829 >>18104834 ) posts are mine ( >>18104679 ), your Paulista retard. What I pointed out in my post is that the Mead of Poetry did not arise from a sacrifice and was not sacrificed like Soma, despite having the same effects as it. The libations the Norse performed are not the same thing, as they were simply symbolic liquid offerings, using beer, common mead, milk, or water, poured over altars and sacred stones to honor gods or spirits, without destroying or transforming the substance like a real sacrifice. Libations are not even exclusive to Indo-European cultures. In Ancient Egypt, wine and beer were poured over altars and statues of gods. In Mesopotamia, oil and beer were poured, always as symbolic offerings on altars or divine statues to please the gods. The difference from Soma Ritual is that this one is actually sacrificed, its essence is delivered into the Ritual Fire, no altars, stones, statues or anything, and the Soma ingredient likely contained something flammable to keep the Yajna lit and not extinguish it. The other imporant difference is that the Soma Ritual was reserved only for Brahmins, while any ordinary worshipper in these other non-Indo-Iranian cultures could make libations to the gods.

Btw There was no fire sacrificer priest-sage class like the Brahmins in Europe. Of what little I know about Germanic paganism there were Skalds and female figures known as the Volva which were seers and shamans. Vedic religion had Brahmin, while the Persian Zoroastrians had the Magi firekeepers, but Skalds and Volvas did not take care of the sacred fire and the sacrifice to the gods in the place of the common people, again this is missing in Europe of a distinct fire sacrificer priest-sage class.
>>18104920
The ( >>18104808 >>18104829
>>18104834 ) posts are mine ( >>18104679 ), your Paulista retard. What I pointed out in my post is that the Mead of Poetry did not arise from a sacrifice and was not sacrificed like Soma, despite having the same effects as it. The libations the Norse performed are not the same thing, as they were simply symbolic liquid offerings, using beer, common mead, milk, or water, poured over altars and sacred stones to honor gods or spirits, without destroying or transforming the substance like a real sacrifice. Libations are not even exclusive to Indo-European cultures. In Ancient Egypt, wine and beer were poured over altars and statues of gods. In Mesopotamia, oil and beer were poured, always as symbolic offerings
on altars or divine statues to please the gods. The difference from Soma Ritual is that this one is actually sacrificed, its essence is delivered into the Ritual Fire, no altars, stones, statues or anything, and the Soma ingredient likely contained something flammable to keep the Yajna lit and not extinguish it. The other imporant difference is that the Soma Ritual was reserved only for Brahmins, while any ordinary worshipper in these other non-Indo-Iranian cultures could make libations to the gods.

Btw There was no fire sacrificer priest-sage class like the Brahmins in Europe. Of what little I know about Germanic paganism there were Skalds and female figures known as the Volva which were seers and shamans. Vedic religion had Brahmin, while the Persian Zoroastrians had the Magi firekeepers, but Skalds and Volvas did not take care of the sacred fire and the sacrifice to the gods in the place of the common people, again this is missing in Europe of a distinct fire sacrificer priest-sage class.