God in Hinduism
God in Hinduism
God in Hinduism
INTRODUCTION
From its beginning, Hinduism has been undergoing evolution. At
a very early stage of their civilization the ancestors of the Hindus
are believed to have been polytheistic. Earth, water, fire, wind, sky,
sun, dawn, night, thunderstormall were deified and adored as
gods. But while being praised by the Vedic hymns, each of these
gods was addressed or referred to as the Supreme God, the Lord
of all gods, and the Creator of this universe. According to the
famous German Indologist Max Muller, the earliest ancestors of the
Hindus were, therefore, not polytheistic; they were henotheistic.
Gradually the Indo-Aryan mind discovered some common ground
behind this multiplicity of gods. The Ndsadiya Hymn, or the
"Creation Hymn" of the Rig-Veda tells us in beautiful and poetic
language about a single primordial and extremely abstract
principle designated THAT, from which the entire world has
evolved. This principle is Pure Consciousness or Pure Spirit.
It is beyond the world of space and time, beyond multiplicity,
unfathomable and unknowable by ordinary human minds.
That principle was there when neither the gods, nor men, nor
anything else in creation existed. From that One and Only principle
the world of Many has evolved. The Indo-Aryan genius at last
arrived at the One and Only cause of everything, the One and Only
God, who in Vedic Sanskrit is called Brahman. After that divine
revelation the Vedic texts echoed the truth of the Oneness of
Brahman again and again.
Vedic statements like "Ekam sad vipra bahudhd vadanti
"One alone exists, sages call it by various names," not only
emphasize the oneness of God, but also form a firm foundation of
catholicity and tolerance in Hinduism. The idea of harmony of
religions is a fundamental ingredient of Hinduism.
The great sage Manu declared, "One ought to know the Supreme
Spirit Who is the Ruler of all, subtler than the subtlest, of
resplendent glory, and capable of being realized only by the
meditation of pure-minded ones. Some call Him Agni (Fire); others
call Him Manu (Thinker); and others Prajapati (Lord of creatures).
Some again call Him Indra (the Glorious); others Prana (the Source of
life); and still others the Eternal Brahman (the Great)."
GOD IN HINDUISM
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NIRGUNA BRAHMAN
If we ask, "Who was there before creation?" then the logical
reply will be that only the creator, or God, was there. But if we
ask, "What was God like before creation?" then Hinduism's reply
will be that God was in a transcendental state of existence before
creation. The word "transcendental" means that God's existence
was beyond our time, space and causation. Hinduism holds that
when God created the world he created time and space along with
it. His pre-creation existence must, therefore, have been beyond
time and space since they pertain only to this world.
To make this idea clear, let us take the help of an analogy. Let us
consider a person who has fallen asleep and is dreaming. In his
dream world, he exists in dream space and dream time, both of
which he created with his mind when he created his dream world.
He no longer belongs to the time and space of his waking state. In
the dream state he has transcended the time and space of his
waking state.
In the same manner, God's precreation existence must have been
transcendental existence, because God then did not belong to the
time and space pertaining to this world. God's existence in that
state may be called the True State of the Existence of God. In that
state God is beyond all limitations imposed by time, space and
causation. God in that transcendental state is eternal, infinite and
changeless.
In Hinduism, God in this transcendental state of existence is called
Nirguna Brahman, the Supreme Spirit, the Supreme Brahman, or
the Impersonal and Attributeless God. Nirguna Brahman cannot
have a personality. Personality is a limitation. Being devoid of a
personality, Nirguna Brahman is also beyond sex. Neither the
pronoun "He" nor "She" can be used to denote Nirguna Brahman.
The Vedas use the Sanskrit neuter pronoun Tat, the counterpart
of the English word That, indicating that Nirguna Brahman is
neither male nor female.
Transcending space, Nirguna Brahman is Infinite. Transcending
time, Nirguna Brahman is Timeless or Eternal. Free from the
ceaseless change generated by causation, Nirguna Brahman is
Changeless.
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Just as a hen, which itself is not hungry, may pick up and gobble
up birdseed to teach its young ones how to eat, so also a Divine
Incarnation, for the sake of mankind, goes through various
spiritual austerities in order to teach them how to attain
perfection through spiritual practice.
The Divine Incarnation liberates from their sins those who
completely surrender to Him, and helps them attain perfection.
Shri Krishna, a Divine Incarnation, says in the Bhagavad Gita,
"Abandoning all rites and duties take refuge in me alone. Do not
grieve; for I shall liberate you from all sins. Bhagavad Gita
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