THE CONCEPT OF GOD IN
HINDUISM-2
The
Bhagavadgita in the Mahabharata says: The Supreme Brahman
is beyond existence and non-existence. It has hands and feet everywhere, heads,
mouths, eyes everywhere, ears everywhere, and it exists enveloping everything.
Undivided, it appears as divided among beings; attributeless, it appears to
have attributes in association with things. It is the Light of all lights,
beyond all darkness, and is situated in the hearts of all beings.
He
is the sacrifice, He is the oblation, He is the performer thereof, He is the
recitation or the chant, He is the sacred fire, and He is what is offered into
it. He is the father, the mother, the grandfather, the support, the One
knowable Thing, He is the three Vedas, the Goal of all beings, the Protector,
the Reality, the Witness, the Repository, the Refuge, the Friend, the
beginning, the middle and the end of all things. He is immortality and death,
existence as well as non-existence. He is the Visvarupa, the Cosmic Form,
blazing like fire and consuming all things.
According
to the Bhagavata and the Mahabharata, God especially manifested
Himself as Bhagavan Sri Krishna, who is regarded as the foremost of the divine
Incarnations, in whose personality the Supreme Being is fully focussed and
manifest.
Srimad Bhagavata says: He is Brahman (the Absolute),
Paramatman (God), Bhagavan (the Incarnation).
According
to the Pancharatra Agama and the
Vaishnava theology, God has five forms: the Para or the Transcendent,
Antaryamin or the Immanent, Vyuha or the Collective (known as Vasudeva,
Sankarshana, Pradyumna and Aniruddha), Vibhava or the Incarnation, and Archa or
the symbolic form of daily worship.
According
to Saiva tradition, God is Pati, the Lord who controls the individuals known as
Pasu, with His Power known as Pasa.
According
to the Sakta tradition, God is the
Divine Universal Mother of all things, Adi-sakti, or the original Creative
Power, manifesting herself as Kriya-Sakti or Durga, Ichha-Sakti or Lakshmi, and
Jnana-Sakti or Sarasvati. But the Supreme Mother is beyond all these forms. She
is one, alone, without a second.
According
to the Bhakti tradition, God is the
Supreme Object of Love, in respect of Whom love is evinced as in respect of
one's father, mother, friend, son, master, or one's own beloved, in the five
forms of affection, known as Shanta, Sakhya, Vatsalya, Dasya and Madhurya.
To
the Vaishnavas, God is in Vaikuntha
as Vishnu. To the Saivas, God is in Kailasa as Siva, or Rudra. To the Saktas,
God is in Manidvipa, as the Supreme Sakti or the Divine Mother. To the
Ganapatyas, God is Ganesa, or Ganapati. To the Sauras, God is Surya, the Sun.
To the Kaumaras, God is Kumara, or Skanda.
To
the saints like Tulasidas, God is
Rama; to those like Surdas, He is Krishna. To those like Kabirdas, He is the
Impersonal, Attributeless One, known by various names for purposes of worship
and meditation.
All
the Vaishnava saints worship Him as
Rama or Krishna, Narayana or Vishnu. The Saiva saints worship Him as
Paramasiva. The Saktas worship Him as Adi-sakti. The philosopher-saints worship
Him as Brahman, the Absolute, as Isvara, Hiranyagarbha, and Virat or the Cosmic
Being.
The
Virat-Saivas worship God as Siva,
especially manifest as the Linga (symbolised in the rounded sacred stone which
they wear round their necks).
The
symbol of Vishnu is the Saligrama, the symbol of Siva is the Linga, and the
symbol of Devi is the Yantra (sometimes, a Mantra).
According
to the Nyaya and Vaiseshika schools,
God is the instrumental cause of creation, like a potter fashioning a pot of
clay, but not the material cause of creation.
The
Samkhya school holds that there are
only two Primary Principles, Purusha and Prakriti, and creation is only a
manifestation or evolution of the constituents of Prakriti due to the action of
Purusha's consciousness. There is no other God than these two Principles.
The
Yoga school of Patanjali accepts
God's existence as a Special Purusha frees from all afflictions, Karma the
effects of Karmas and impressions or potencies of a binding nature. But this
Purusha, known as Isvara, according to Patanjali's Yoga System, is not the
creator of the world, but a Witness thereof. Nor is He the goal of the
aspirations of the Jivas or individuals.
The
Yogavasishtha defines Reality as the
Consciousness which is between and transcends the subjective and objective
aspects in perception and cognition, etc. Consciousness is the Absolute,
Brahman, the only existence, of which the world is only an appearance.
The
Brahmasutra states that God is that
from whom this Universe proceeds, in whom it subsists, and to whom, in the end,
it returns.
Kalidasa, in his Raghuvamsa and
Kumarasambhava, points out that God is the Supreme Being, is prior to the forms
of Brahma, Vishnu and Siva, who are three aspects or phases of God, and that
Brahma, Vishnu and Siva, being three forms of one and the same Reality, are
equal to one another in every respect, without inferiority or superiority among
them.
Bhartrihari prays to that Infinite Consciousness,
which is Peaceful Effulgence, which is undifferentiated by the interference of
space, time and causal relation, etc., and whose essence is Self-Experience
alone.
Madhusudana Sarasvati blends Advaita Vedanta and
Bhakti-Rasa, and he is the author of the most polemical and authoritative
Advaita text, known as the 'Advaitasiddhi', and of an unparalleled compendium
of the various processes and stages of devotion to God, known as
'Bhaktirasayana'. His commentary on the Bhagavadgita is a monument of a fusion
of knowledge of the Impersonal Absolute with devotion to the Personal God.
Religions
are founded on a metaphysical rock-bottom. There is a philosophical import
behind every ethical canon.
Generally,
the tradition of worship of Deities in India is according to a sort of protocol
which the devotees associate with the importance of the Deities. For instance,
worshippers of a particular Deity, such as Ganesa, Siva, Vishnu, Surya or
Skanda, will place their own Deity as the first in importance and every other
Deity as secondary. There is another tradition according to which the order of
worship places Ganesa as the first, to be worshipped on any occasion, and then
Devi, Siva, Vishnu, Surya and Skanda. This order may get slightly changed in
different circles of religious belief. But the discourses recorded in this book
do not follow any of these patterns but a chronological arrangement according
to the festivals that come one after the other, seriatim, during the course of
the calendar of the year, that is, from the beginning of the year to the end of
the year. The functions and festivals repeat themselves every year on specific
days or dates. Thus, the orders in which the functions or the Deities of
worship are mentioned here follow their calendar-wise chronology.
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