That's just the power of sound which musicians are particularly familiar with. Any sound will have an impact on consciousness. There are just some sounds that make better mantras than others.

On 12/12/2014 01:45 AM, lengli...@cox.net [FairfieldLife] wrote:

As I read it, one or another of the mantra traditions in India assign mantra-hood to any short set of Sanskrit syllables, so if there are equivalent Hebrew and Sanskrit sounds, then by definition, the equivalent collection of Hebrew syllables are mantras.


There's a LOT of 1, 2, 3 and 4 syllable combinations in Sanskrit, are there not? That means there are a LOT of vedic mantras, depending on which tradition(s) you look at.


L


---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <hepa7@...> wrote :

The Hebrew noun plural ending (mostly masculine) is -im.

E.g. Genesis 1:1 - bereshit bara elohim* et-hashshamaim ve-et ha-arets.


* G-d; (pagan) gods.


Song of Songs in Hebrew is shir hash-shirim!


What gives??




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