When I was watching The Vikings, the series stirred up something multidimensional in me — which means “the Collective” was activated.
We were all watching, across timelines. I binged four seasons in about three weeks, maybe two to three episodes a day. I would've finished faster, but I was also deep in other projects.
One of my favorite things to do is to recite Qur’an and then watch mythical TV shows. The pairing stirs something deep in me — the sacred meets the symbolic, the eternal meets the imagined. It’s a way to trace divine archetypes across cultures, to see how different traditions hold reflections of one another.
Vikings & The Magnificent Thrones
The Vikings and the Qur’an hit a collective nerve. What we often miss is how the Qur’an offers pathways to God through the concept of the Throne — Al-‘Arsh.
The Vikings built their thrones not with velvet, but with blood sacrifice, vision, and lineage. Their gods ruled from Asgard, sitting atop Yggdrasil, the great world tree.
Ragnar — he was like a man floating in the cosmos. He judged everything around him by how it served his dream.
And Ragnar’s death? Glorious — he spoke of joy at last, to meet his god, the All-Father — Rabb al-‘Ālamīn — in Valhalla.
Who else watched the Vikings?
The Three Thrones of the Cosmos
Across sacred verses and stardust echoes, the soul is called to walk three paths. Each throne — al-‘Aẓīm, al-Karīm, al-Majīd — is a gateway to the Divine.
‘Arsh al-‘Aẓīm — The Magnificent Throne
Frequency: Liberation Pulse – 396Hz
‘Arsh al-Karīm — The Generous Throne
Frequency: Abundance Flow – 528Hz
‘Arsh al-Majīd — The Glorious Throne
Frequency: Divine Light – 963Hz
Inspired by ancient myths, Qur'anic wisdom, and the heart's yearning. Created by The Collective.