Title: Vedas & Vedic Pantheon
1Vedas the Vedic Pantheon
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3Vedic Religion Hinduism
4Vedic Religion Hinduism
- The Religion of the Vedic period (1,500 to 500
BCE), or of Brahmanism, though significantly
different from it, is a historical predecessor of
modern Hinduism. The term Hindu is originally a
geographical nomenclature and refers to the
inhabitants of the Indian subcontinent, the land
across the Sindhu or Indus river. Al-Hind was,
therefore, a geographical identity, and the
Hindus were all the people who lived on this
land. The term Hindu became a term of
administrative convenience when the rulers of
Arab, Turkish, Afghan and Mughal origin-all
Muslims-had to differentiate between the
believers and the rest. - Historically, religions like Buddhism and
Jainism can claim greater antiquity than the
Hinduism of today. It can be said that many of
the religious aspects of Hinduism began in Vedic
Siddha Harappan civilization of the Dravids,
known as Aseevaham (Ajivika). The religion we
know today as Hinduism is of a much later origin.
Hinduism began to take a systematic form from the
time of Adi Sankara (8th cent. CE). It is now
argued that Vedas are the foundation of the
Sanatana Dharma and that Hinduism is the oldest
religion in the world, with a tradition going
back to the very beginning of what we know of as
history over 5,000 yrs. ago. However, some argue
that modern Hinduism has drifted miles away from
the Vedic faith and no noticeable continuity of
Hinduism exists from the religion of the Vedas. - The Vedic people not only did not call
themselves Hindus, but also did not possess the
essential characteristics of the Hinduism of
today. In addition, the gods and goddesses of
Hinduism differ considerably from the deities of
Vedas. Much of the modern Hinduism is
Pauranic-Upanishadic Hinduism. For most Hindus
of today, scriptures like the Bhagavad Geeta,
Ramayana, Mahabharata and Puranas are more
attractive and appealing than the Vedas. The
influence from some elements from the Vedas may
be considered as one of the many factors
influencing modern Hinduism. The Vedanta school
also may have received a part of the inspiration
from the Vedas. For the rest of the Hindu
philosophical schools and religious sects, the
influence of the Vedas is nominal.
5Vedic Religion Hinduism
- Gods like Indra, Varuna, Agni, Soma and the
like, whom the Vedic people worshipped, hardly
have any significance in present day Hinduism.
The gods and goddesses important to the Hindus of
today are Rama, Krishna, Kali, Ganesh, Hanuman,
Shiva, Brahma, Vishnu, Shankar and the respective
consorts of the last three, viz., Saraswati,
Lakshmi and Parvati said to be forms of Shakti.
None of these deities figured prominently in the
Vedic pantheon and some of them are clearly
non-Vedic. The major gods of Hinduism like
Vishnu and Shankar, are non-Aryan in origin.
Though they may have belonged to the Vedic
tradition, they did not play major role in the
Vedas. - Hindu sects like Vaishnavism, Shaivism,
Shaktism and so on did not have a Vedic origin,
but came into existence in comparatively recent
times. Originally, Shankar and the cult of the
Mother Goddess belonged to the religion of the
Indus Valley people. The substance of the Vishnu
and Shankar cult is a melting of at least two
cultures, if not three, namely, the pre-Aryan
culture of the Ganges Valley (probably
indirectly), the Indus Valley culture and the
Aryan culture. Vedic worshipper did not use
temples and idols as Hindus of today do. For
them, the sacrificial rituals were more important
than temple or idol worship. The major Hindu
feasts of today are based on the epic feats of
Rama and Krishna and the Pauranic lore pertaining
to god Shankar and the Goddess Durga. - Belief in reincarnation, central to Hinduism of
today, is not really attested to in the Vedas,
though Rig Veda speaks of two paths for the souls
of the deceased, viz., the path of the gods
(Devayana) and the path of the manes (Pitriyana).
The theory of Avatara (descent) of gods is
non-Vedic. The caste system, so integral to
Hinduism, was also not practiced in the Vedic
times. The Vedas, however, speak of various
classes of people, based on the names of
professions, and they were not hereditary. The
Purusha-sukta hymn of the Rig Veda (X.90), often
referred to in order to give a religious sanction
to the caste system, is considered by some a
later day interpolation. It was precisely because
the cow was a sacred animal that the authors of
the Vedas sacrificed cows and ate beef on special
occasions.
6Vedic Scriptures Philosophy
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8Vedic Scriptures
- The Vedic scriptures are divided into two
categories Shruti (which is revealed) and Smriti
(which is believed). Shruti contains Vedas (which
gives light or knowledge) Smriti contains Manus
Code, Itihasas (such as Mahabharata, Ramayana and
Bhagavad Geeta) and Puranas, written to help the
common people to understand the culture of Vedic
people. - There are four Vedas Rig, Sama, Yajur
Atharva. Each Veda has been sub-classified into
four major text types 1. Samhitas or Mantras-
collection of hymns, prayers, charms, litanies
and sacrificial formulas. The Samhitas are four
Rig Veda Samhita (a collection of Hymns), Yajur
Veda Samhita (White Yajur Veda contains hymns
of prayer and sacrificial formulas Black Yajur
Veda consists of texts to be recited by the
Atharva priests in connection with the more
important sacrifices), Sama Veda Samhita (mostly
melodies responsible for the development of
Indian music) Atharva Veda Samhita (dealing
mostly with charms, magic and spells which are
believed to be used to overcome enemies, win over
friends and gain worldly success). 2. Brahmanas-
massive prose of text, which contains the
meanings of the hymns. It gives precepts for
their application, relates stories of their
origin in connection with that of social rites,
and explains the secret meanings of the latter.
3. Aranyakas and Upanishads embody philosophical
meditations of hermits and ascetics on soul, god,
man and cosmos. 4. Aagamas- commandments. The
Samhitas, Brahmanas and Aranyakas are preoccupied
with ritualistic worship to appease the diverse
deities all rather uncertain elements who
require frequent and fervent propitiation. - Upa-Vedas and Vedangas are necessary for reading
and understanding the Vedas for the purpose of
offering sacrifices. Upa-Vedas deal with Ayur
Veda (medical science), Dhanur Veda (military
science), Gandharva Veda (music and art),
Sthapatya Veda (architecture) etc. There are six
subjects in Vedangas Sutras Shiksha
(pronunciation), Chhandas (metier), Vyakarana
(grammar), Nirukta (explanation of words),
Jyotisha (astronomy) and Kalpa (ceremonial).
9Vedic Tradition
The Vedas
- Veda means sacred spiritual knowledge. This
knowledge was obtained, through education,
devotion and meditation, by several hundred sages
for years. It was orally handed down from
generation to generation and compiled to book
form over a period of time. The Vedas honour the
Divine as One (not as one god), recognizing a
common Self and Being in all beings. Yet the
Vedas also honour the Divine as many, seeing the
many as different forms and functions of the One.
The Vedas honour the Divine as both pervading all
nature (pantheism) and as transcending all
manifestation in time and space (as the
Absolute). The Vedic view has a place for monism
(unity of all), monotheism (oneness of the
creator), polytheism, pantheism and other
approaches to truth. Yet, it cannot be defined
according to any one of these alone. - The Vedas approach Unity through a comprehensive
vision of the sacred presence pervading all of
life. The Vedas emphasize wholeness and
completeness, instead of singularity and
exclusion. Their supreme deity is not a one God
opposed to other Gods, but a unity of truth that
encompasses all Divine powers and principles, and
is both behind all names and forms and beyond all
names and forms. The Vedic deities can be equated
with one another, but have specific roles as
well. They represent a difference of function,
not one of reality. - The Rig Veda, which is the oldest religious
document, contains 1,028 hymns that speak much of
the religious ideas and deities of the Vedic
religion. Various deities are described, which
are personifications of phenomena in nature, upon
whom Divinity is imposed. Often these beings are
depicted in wholly or partially anthropomorphic
forms, complete with a set of unique and complex
iconography in each case. Vedas describe the
ceremonies for each of them, intended to procure
related material benefits to the worshipper. The
exact nature of belief in regards to each of
personal gods (Ishvaras) varies between
differing Hindu denominations and philosophies.
10Vedic Tradition
The Vedas
- Vedas are assemblies of poetic hymns devoted to
gods, and also explanations of essences,
according to which, transcendental gods are
connected with people and impact the physical
world. Vedas, as Mantric poetry, may claim
several levels of meaning including meanings
that are hidden or esoteric, or very different
from their literal import in which ordinary
objects can take on cosmic connections. The Rig
Veda itself mentions four levels of speech, three
of which are hidden in secrecy. As part of such
secret meanings, the Vedas have several
well-defined traditional levels of interpretation
that we find mentioned in later Vedic texts,
reflecting such multiple types of meaning that
exist simultaneously. - Vedic Sanskrit is one of the most ancient
languages of mankind. Theologians and researchers
of Indian philosophy approve that human speech is
source of Vedas. Names of gods in Vedas can be
compared with phonetic ordering of language and
acoustic parameters of human speech, and in
essence the hierarchy of gods in Vedic mythology
can be correlated to letters of alphabet. - Vedas can thus be considered as a source of
knowledge about language by means of which the
first man names and realizes phenomena of world
around, and also, phonetic ordering of alphabet
can be considered as an acoustic matrix of sounds
or phonemes, which form comprehensive essence of
phenomena. - Vedas comprise the entire microcosmic Universe,
and all its live essences. Some of the Vedic gods
are clearly of astronomical inspiration, but
there are some amongst these that represent
cognitive categories, and others that have both
astronomical and cognitive function. The
functions of the Devas are not clearly
delineated. This shadoweyness is owing to the
mutual interconnections that also are a fact of
cognitive function.
11Vedic Philosophy
- Vedic Philosophy primarily begins with the later
part of the Rig Veda, which was compiled before
1,100 BCE. Most of the philosophy of the Rig Veda
is contained in the sections Purusha Sukta
and Nasadiya Sukta. Major philosophers of this
era were the rishis Narayana, Kanva, Rishabha, Vam
adeva and Angirasa. - Ethics in the Vedas are based on the concepts
of Satya and ?ta. Satya is the principle of
integration rooted in the Absolute, whereas ?ta
is the expression of Satya, which regulates and
coordinates the operation of the universe and
everything within it. ?ta is the ultimate
foundation of everything it is the supreme. It
is the expression of the primordial dynamism that
is inherent in everything. Conformity with ?ta
would enable progress, whereas its violation
would lead to punishment. The term Dharma was
already used in Brahmanical thought, where it was
conceived as an aspect of ?ta. The concept
of Yajnas- sacrifice is also enunciated in the
Purusha Sukta, where reaching the Absolute itself
is considered a transcendent sacrifice when
viewed from the point of view of the individual.
In Hinduism, the Devas are expansions
of Brahman into various forms, each with a
certain quality. - The Hindu Samskaras or sacraments go back to a
hoary antiquity. The Vedas, Brahmanas,
Grhyasutras, Dharmasutras, Smritis and other
treatises describe the rites, ceremonies and
customs. The Worshipping Rituals developed in
such a way that a formal distinction was
maintained between Shrauta rites (rites using the
Vedic hymns), which were necessarily performed by
priests, and Griha (domestic) rites, performed by
the Aryan householder himself but both the
latter and the former were subject to priestly
influence. Some Griha rites became almost
indistinguishable from the priestly Shrauta
sacrifices and, even where older ceremonies were
retained, they were usually interwoven with
elements of the priestly ritual.
12Vedic Tradition
Vedic concept of Sacrifice
- The concept of Sacrifice plays an important
role in Hinduism. The Vedic scriptures dictate
the rules of sacrifice and priests follow highly
structured methods of incorporating sacrifice
into worship. In Hinduism, sacrifice, or Yajna
means to consecrate, to worship, to convert the
profane into the holy. Hindus use it to achieve
a limited Moksha, which is liberation of the soul
from the cycle of rebirth. It is intended, among
other things, for the attainment of the
heightened pleasures of the heaven of Indra. It
also provides a separation between everyday
activity and worship. Theories on the purpose and
function of the sacrifice arrange over many
explanations, such as homage to a communion with
the gods, catharsis, renunciation, rejuvenation
and social legitimacy. - Vedic rishis conceived of Yajna as a symbol of
creation. Yajna was given by God himself at the
beginning of the creation to human beings. It is
a link between the gods and the human beings.
Agni as the deity supervising over the elemental
fire, is looked upon as the carrier of the
offerings of oblation to the various Vedic
deities like Indra, Prajapati etc. Man approached
gods through Agni, who invoked them on their
behalf, and was known as Hota. - Following the Rig Veda, Brahmin priests use
grains, vegetables and ghee in sacrificial rites.
The belief behind sacrificial rites is that these
please the gods and preserve Dharma. Although
priests perform these sacrifices in a temple
setting, many Hindus perform these at home as
daily rituals. - Prajapati was described as the embodiment of
sacrifice, identifying himself with the universe.
Sacrifice is the food of the gods. "May this body
of mine be fit for sacrifice for the purpose of
creating the world," he desires. Purusha Sukta in
Rig Veda presents the whole process of creation
as Yajna. It says Through that sacrifice,
Purusha offered everything that he had, including
the Rig, Sama, Yajur Vedas and the Chhandas
(sacred writings). Thus, did all kinds of animals
of the sky, forest and country, including
sprinkled ghee (which represents the original
sacrifice), originate.
13Vedic Tradition
Vedic concept of Sacrifice
- In the ancient times, there was no place for
animal violence during the Yajna. The concept of
Bali or animal sacrifice came in much later
period, due to different impacts like the
political pressure, the poverty of Brahmanas and
mainly the changed meaning of Vedic words. For
instance, Aja is the name of a type of grain used
as oblation. It means the flame of Agni, the ray
of sunlight that leaves apart or demolishes the
darkness amongst the people. But, it also means
the goat! - During the Vedic period, three different kinds
of sacrifices were in practice 1. Nara (human)
medha (body), 2. Go (cow) medha, 3. Ashwa (horse)
medha. The sacrificial cow has now become a
sacred cow. In most of the Hindu temples, there
is a pillar big or small in front of the temple
called Yupa Stambha meant for tying the
sacrificial animal, and there is an altar to burn
sacrificed animal to ashes. The Trishoola was
used to position as well as to turn the animals
body on the altar, because the altar should not
be trampled by anyone. Now, this has been kept
standing in front of the temple, and the Yupa
Stambha in some places has become the flag-mast,
and the stone image of the sacrificial animal is
also kept by the side of the altar. - There is a Hindu belief that there are demons
who have great powers and satisfying their desire
for blood is a way of keeping them happy. Within
Hinduism there is a history of blood sacrifice,
particularly in the worship of the goddess Kali
she is the slayer of evil and has an appetite for
blood. Some 200 years ago in Calcutta's Kali
temple, a male child was sacrificed daily. In
some parts of the Hindu world, animal and human
sacrifice still exist. Assamese, Nepalese and
Balinese Hindus still practice animal sacrifice,
and its practice continues during special
occasions in some cases. Most Indian Hindus
disapprove of the tradition, because many believe
in non-violence and don't eat meat. Devotees
flock to the Kali temples, but pumpkins instead
of people are now used in the sacrificial rite.
14Vedas describe the Microcosm
15Vedas describe the Microcosm
- The Vedas are the foundation, upon which, most
world religions are based. They essentially
relate to the description of the Microcosm
during the Kali-yuga. The Microcosm is the region
of creation in which the Jivatma- soul, in its
present state of bondage, can traverse in
accordance with the constitution of its current
Kali-yugi Sutratma- soul-string, stretching from
the Guda chakra to Kali, reposing above crown of
human head. Although still connected with the
Supreme Divine, the souls connecting links are
in a stage of dysfunction. It is only when it
receives the impulse of a living perfect Master,
can it become free to traverse the entire
Macrocosmic creation. - Kali (Isis, Mary) is the deity at
ashta-dal-kanwal, the 8 petalled lotus in the
Astral. This dark plane, mistakenly, considered
by many religions to be Aadi- eternity, is the
Christ plane (the cave where Christ is born)
and the void (Shunya). It is the equator of
Brahmand and forms the womb of nirguna Shakti,
the feminine deity of the Astral, falsely taken
to be the mother of jivas. It is Mahar Loka,
where with the Big Bang, creation comprising
lower triple worlds (the lesser 3-fold worlds
Bhu, Bhuvah, Swah Lokas) and their gods and
beings takes place. One who reaches here becomes
a Siddha, having acquired the magical
supernatural powers, the Riddhi-Siddhis. - Being a representation of Shakti- power or
force, Kali is the powerhouse generator of
(inert) physical forces, the products of Big
Bang creation Heat, Sound, Light, Electricity,
Magnetism, Gravitation, Cohesion, Affinity, etc.
She is the powerhouse that provides energy to
these worlds through Bijli- the thunderbolt.
Above this plane is the luminous sun, and below,
the night-sky of the nether-world created by
the Astral light (let there be light). The
Dhruva Pole star here has 7 companions, the
Sapta-rishis enshrined in the Great Bear
constellation, the various representations of
manifestations of nature water, fire, flame,
heat, thunder, lightning, wind, dawn etc. 6 of
Sapta-matrikas are the Pleides, the 7th
Arundhati staying with Alcor in Great Bear.
16Sapta-rishis Sapta-matrikas
17Jain
Nordic
Hindu
The Triple Worlds
Buddhist
18Mahar Lok - Ashta-dal kanwal (Kali)
Manomayi Kosha (lower) Swarga Lok Heaven
7. Sahasrara chakra
6. Ajna chakra
Pranamayi Kosha Bhuvah Lok Atmosphere
5. Kantha chakra
4. Hridaya chakra
3. Nabhi chakra
Annamayi Kosha Bhu Lok Earth
2. Indri chakra
1. Guda chakra
THE MICROCOSM HUMAN SUTRATMA DURING KALI-YUGA
19Vedic Tradition
Vedic concept of Sound
- Sound embodies the organizing power of
intelligence that creates. Speech is a vibration
of the Akasha, a vibration of space itself. It
refers to the structuring intelligence of nature,
lively in its own organizing power. There is
something in speech of a universal, cosmic
character, something more than the vibration of
air molecules, a movement or flow of a deeper
broader field, called the Being, the pure field
of Self-referral Unified Wholeness. Sounds of the
entire Vedic Literature were the structuring
dynamics responsible for the creation of human
physiology, and there is comprehensive one-to-one
correlations between the structure and function
of the different branches of Vedic Literature,
and the various fibres and components of the
human nervous system and anatomy. - In the discovery of Veda and Vedic Literature in
human physiology is the recognition of a sequence
of sounds which create the human physiology, and
correspondingly create the whole universe. The
human physiology (including the DNA at its core)
has the same structure and function as the
holistic, self-sufficient, self-referral reality
expressed in Rig Veda. The specialized
components, organs, and organ systems of the
human physiology, including all the various parts
of the nervous system, match the 40 branches of
Veda and the Vedic Literature one-to-one, both in
structure and in function. This exact
correspondence between the structure and function
of the human physiology and the structure and
function of Veda shows that Veda is the blueprint
of creation the blueprint that evolves into
physical creation. - The human nervous system is made of Natural Law,
made of the principles of organizing power of
Nature that are expressed in the various
disciplines of Vedic Literature. The infinitive
creative power of nature is present in the
structure of the human nervous system. When the
human nervous system thinks, acts and speaks,
total natural law is made functional. In the
process of thinking, speaking and acting, the
human nervous system puts sequentially in motion,
in principle, all the laws of nature, all the
various mechanics of evolution and creation,
which have given rise to the whole universe.
20The 50 or 52 letters (with 33 consonents)of
Devanagari script represent the Chakras
of Microcosm
Human language can merely describe the Microcosm
Note In the 52 letter system, instead of the
2-fold Ajna chakra, 4-fold Antahkaran chakra is
included.
21Vedic Religion
22Vedic Religion
- The Aryans of the Vedic era were herdsmen, but
rather than propitiate rural deities, stressed
upon the adoration of more fundamental and
abstract conceptions and natural phenomena, such
as the sun (Surya) and fire (Agni). Most Vedic
deities were to a large extent visualized as
having human or animal forms, although in varying
degrees. Image worship started from the Vedic
period and later the images were multiplied
during the period of early Puranas and
Shilpa-shastras. But the emergence of a common
place of worship the temple, was of later
origin. There is a school which believes that
totemism also led to development of a formal
place of worship at a later stage. - The Vedic godheads represent an interdependent
reality, where all is One and One is All, as
various manifestations of the same light and
consciousness. The formed world is a symbolic or
a visionary manifestation of the formless world.
That is why the main Vedic deities are powers of
light and only vaguely anthropomorphic in their
attributes. The human side of their imagery is
outweighed by their other natural
correspondences. They are universal forces, not
simply a projection of the human psyche onto the
realm of nature. - When Aryans were yet a primitive civilization,
they had no gods other than the prominent
phenomena of nature in order to fulfill their
basic needs. Indra, lord of the sky was invested
with highest attributes as its light and clouds
were resplendent, its thunder and lightning
inspired terror and constant changes in it
inspired feelings of awe. The involvement of the
layman increased the awesomeness of the Vedic
deities like Varuna- guardian of the cosmic
order. All these deities were essentially nature
or Jada- inert deities. - With the passage of time, Rig Vedic gods went
through a phase of transformation and change in
the Atharva Veda. Most present day Hindu gods
were not so important in Rig Vedic period. The
Vedic texts have a different understanding of
properties which gods have, from Hindu gods.
23Vedic Religion
- The Mode of Worship comprised the worship of the
elements like fire and rivers, worship of heroic
gods like Indra, chanting of hymns and
performance of sacrifices. The priests performed
the solemn rituals for the noblemen, Kshatriyas
and wealthy commoners, Vaishyas. People prayed
for abundance of children, rain, cattle (wealth),
long life and an afterlife in the heavenly world
of the ancestors. - The Vedas are said to be apaurashaya, meaning
uncreated by man, which further reveals their
eternal non-changing status. The Vedic liturgy is
conserved in the mantra portion of the
four Vedas, which are compiled in Sanskrit. The
religious practices centered on a clergy
administering rites of worship. The Vedas record
the liturgy connected with the rituals and
sacrifices to be performed by the 16 or 17
Shrauta priests and the purohitas. - This practice involved recitations from the
Vedas by a purohita, for prosperity, wealth and
general well-being. This mode is largely
unchanged today within Hinduism. However, only a
small fraction of conservative Shrautins continue
the tradition of oral recitation of hymns learned
solely through the oral tradition, and the
primacy of Vedic deities has been seconded to the
deities of Pauranic literature. - Texts dating to the Vedic period, composed
in Vedic Sanskrit, are mainly the four Vedic
Samhitas, but the Brahmanas, Aranyakas and some
of the older Upanishads (Brhadaranyaka,
Chhandogya, Jaiminiya) are also placed in this
period. According to traditional views, the hymns
of the Rig Veda and other Vedic hymns were
divinely revealed to the rishis, who were
considered to be seers or hearers (Shruti means
what is heard) of the Veda, rather than their
authors. - The followers of the ancient Tamil Aseevaham
claim that Vedas were taught by god Shankar, the
first Siddha, to his four disciples, and were
later incorporated by the Aryans into their
culture.
24Vedic Religion
- Of the 1,028 suktas in Rig Veda, about 250
relate to Indra. Next in importance were Agni and
Varuna. There are no references of Devi or Linga
worship in the Vedas. The Rig Vedic deities of
Agni, Indra, Surya, Savitur, Pushan, Varuna,
Purusha, Prajapati, Brahma, Vishnu, Vayu, Rudra,
Maruts, Ashwins, Soma, Yama, Brahaspati, Ushas,
Aditi and Prithvi continued to survive in the
later literature and art. - Some of the rituals and sacrifices of the Vedic
religion were - The Soma rituals, which
involved the extraction, utility and consumption
of Soma, - Fire rituals involving oblations
(Havir), - The oblation to Agni (Agnihotra), a
sun charm, - The royal consecration (Rajasuya)
sacrifice, - The Yajna dedicated to the glory
and prosperity of the nation or empire
(Ashvamedha), - The rituals and charms in
the Atharva Veda are concerned with medicine and
healing practices. - With Aryan penetration into the Gangetic plain,
deities often lost and gained importance, as a
result of absorption of traditions of local
inhabitants. In the Atharva Veda era, almighty
Indra of Rig-vedic era had to yield to Prajapati,
who was then believed to be the creator and the
preserver of the universe. Local Pashupati merged
into Rig Vedic Rudra, then into Shankar. Varuna-
guardian of cosmic order rose to prominence due
to the social requirements. - Animal sacrifices arose with the desire for
communion with totem spirits. Sacrificial
enclosures and caves became temples. Brahmins
became sacrificers, with power to intervene
between gods and men. Stones in cylindrical and
ring forms merged with Rig Vedic Sthuna (pole) to
form Linga-Yoni. Images and idols were meant to
facilitate Bhakti- devotion, earliest being those
of minor deities like Yakshas (tree spirits) and
Nagas (serpent gods).
25Vedic Pantheon
26Vedic Pantheon
- Vedic Pantheon In the Rig Veda it is stated
that there are 33 deities associated with sky or
heaven (Dyu), earth (Prithvi) and the middle
realm (Antariksha), though several other deities
are also mentioned. Gods are called Devas (or
Devatas) and goddesses are called Devis. The most
prominent deities are Indra, a heroic god,
slayer of Vritra and destroyer of the Vala,
liberator of the cows and the rivers Agni, the
sacrificial fire and messenger of the gods
and Soma, the ritual drink dedicated to Indra. - Invoked in groups are the Vishvedevas (the
all-gods), the Maruts, violent storm gods in
Indra's train and the Ashwins, the twin horsemen.
Also Invoked are several group-deities Ribhus
(divine craftsmen), Tushitas, Abhaswaras, Anilas,
Maharajikas, Sadhyas etc. There are two major
groups of gods, the Devas and the Asuras. Unlike
in later Vedic texts and in Hinduism, the Asuras
are not yet demonized, Mitra and Varuna being
their most prominent members. Aditi is the
mother, both of Agni and of the Adityas or
Asuras, led by Mitra and Varuna. - Surya is the personification of the sun,
but Savitr, Vivasvant, the Ashwins and the Rbhus,
semi-divine craftsmen, also have aspects of solar
deities. Other natural phenomena deified
include Vayu (the wind), Dyaus (Dyeus, the chief
god of the Proto-Indo-European religion) Prithvi
- Heaven Earth, Ushas (the dawn, the most
prominent goddess of the Rig Veda) and Apas (the
waters). - Rivers play an important role, deified as
goddesses, most prominently, the Sapta-Sindhu and
the Sarasvati River. Yama is the first ancestor,
also worshipped as a deity, and the god of
the underworld and death. Vishnu and Rudra, the
prominent deities of later Hinduism (Rudra being
an early form of god Shankar) are present as
marginal gods.
27Vedic Pantheon
- Each Vedic deity has different roles and
functions according to the level of approached
involved. These are 1. Adhyatmik- relating to
the self or the individual being, the
psychological level, 2. Adhidaivik- relating to
the gods, deities or cosmic powers, 3.
Adhibhautik- relating to the elements of nature.
A fourth level is often added to this primary
three, which is Adhiyajna or relative to the
Vedic sacrifice. The Vedic Yajna or the way of
worship is twofold, as outer (Bahir Yajna) and
inner (Antar Yajna). - For instance, take Agni, which is generally
identified with the natural phenomenon of fire to
the modern mind. Agni has many forms. At the
Adhyatmik or individual level, Agni is identified
primarily with speech (Vak), our main form of
expression. At the Adhidaivik or cosmic level,
Agni is primarily the sun, the light of heaven,
not merely as a material force, but as the Divine
light. On the Adhibhutik level, Agni is fire as
an element, the fire that we use in our daily
lives. - The retinue of Indra, king of heaven, consists
chiefly of the Devas, Gandharvas, considered in
the epics as the celestial musicians
and Apsaras- lovely nymphs, who are frequently
employed by the gods to make the pious devotee
desist from carrying his austere practices to an
extent that might render him dangerous to their
power. Narada, an ancient sage (probably a
personification of the cloud, the water-giver),
is considered as the messenger between the gods
and men, and as having sprung from the forehead
of Brahma. Kamadeva (or Ananga), the bodyless, is
the god of love. - Lokapalas or Regents of Earth Indra, the chief
of the Devas, was the regent of E. Agni, the
fire, was associated with SE Yama, lord of death
and justice, with S. Surya, the sun, with
SW Varuna, originally the representative of the
all-embracing heaven (atmosphere), now the god of
the ocean, with W Vayu, the wind, with
NW Kubera, the god of wealth, with N. and
Soma with the NE. In some traditions, Ishana- an
aspect of Shankar is regarded as the regent of NE
and Nirrti the regent of SW. Dikpalas or
Guardians of Cardinal Directions Sudhanva (E),
Shankhpad (S), Ketuman (W) Hiranyaroma (N).
28RigVedic Pantheon
-
- Celestial or Heavenly deities Surya, Dyaus,
Ashwins, Savituh, Mitra, Pushan, Soma etc. - Atmospheric deities Indra, Vayu, Maruts, Vata,
Rudra, Parjanya etc. - Terrestrial deities Agni, Prithvi, Brahaspati
etc.
- Abstract Deities
- Dhatr- creator
- Vidhata- ordainer
- Vishvakarma- creator of cosmos
- Prajapati- lord of creatures
- Shraddha- faith,
- Manyu- wrath
- Rta- truth
- Hiranyagarbha- the Implicit
- Brahmanaspati- Lord of prayer
- Virat Purusha- OversoulMinor Deities
- Rbhus- aerial elves
- Apsaras- water nymphs
- Gandharvas- aerial spirits
- Adityas- sons of primeval goddess, Aditi
- Savituh, the diety of the Gayatri Mantra is not
just sun (Surya). Sa stands for (half) moon
Ha for (6clock) sun at ashta-dal-kanwal.
- Deities that represent phenomena of Nature
- Father Dyaus- the radiant god of the upper
region - Mother Prithvi- Earth
- Varuna- the all-comprehending sky
- Indra- the god of Thunder and Rain
- The Sun worshipped in five forms - Surya, as
source of light - - Savita, as source of fertility - Mitra, as
beneficent energy- Pushan, as source of plant
life and agriculture - Vishnu, as the swift
moving Sun - Rudra- god Shankar
- The two Ashwins- the morning and evening stars
- The Maruts- the Wind gods attending on Rudra
together with Vayu and Vata - Parjanya- god of rain and water
- Ushas- goddess of Dawn Domestic Deities
- Agni- Fire
- Soma- Cerebro-spinal fluid
29Prithvi
Prajapati
Chandra
Soma
Usha
Surya
Indra
Agni
Vishwakarma
Dyaus
Rudra
Yama
Vayu
Varuna
Tvasthri
Deities
Vedic
30Vedic Deities of the Brain
31The Astral Brain
- The higher Vedic deities pertain to the Brain,
in the region above eyebrows, representing last
quarter of the Astral plane. The region upto the
eyebrows is the Physical plane, comprising 6
chakras. - The Brain is an enlargement of front end of
neural tube into bulb-shaped Fore, Mid Hind
brain constituting heaven, atmosphere earth.
Two cavities- lateral ventricles are continuous
below with a 3rd ventricle, between two large
masses of nerve cells at the base of the
Fore-brain, called Thalami. Mid-brain is small,
consists of nerve tissue branching out into two
and connecting the two cerebral hemispheres with
hind brain. A passage, Aqueduct of Sylvius, runs
thru the mid-brain connecting 3rd ventricle in
fore-brain with 4th ventricle in hind-brain.
Upper part of Hind-brain forms the Pons, a bridge
of transversely running nerves connecting two
brain hemispheres of Cerebellum. Lower part of
hind brain is Medulla Oblongata, which is
continuous below spinal cord. It contains
centres, found in grey matter forming the floor
of 4th ventricle governing vital heartbeat and
breathing functions. It rests on the Occipetal
bone and projects thru the first part of spinal
canal. 8 of the 12 pairs of nerves, including
Vagus nerves, carrying messages from the centres
to the organs take origin here. - The respiratory tract is under the control of
the Vagus nerve which has two sets of fibres
Afferent or Sensory and Efferent or Motor. They
have their nerve endings in Thalamus (Agni) and
Corpus Stratum (Surya). Thalamus has a strong
influence on the activities of the Anterior
Pituitary, while the Corpus Stratum exerts its
influence on the Posterior Pituitary. They
regulate the emotional activities and serve as an
axis between physical and etheric bodies. - The Cerebellum has two fairly well defined
lobes. The white matter in the centre of the
Cerebellum spreads out from a central stem like
the branches of a tree (Tree of Life), to which
grey matter appears to form leaves. It is
concerned with balance. It receives all messages
from muscles that do not enter consciousness. It
sends out messages, which travel down the stem of
the Tree of Life and the spinal cord to the
muscles by way of the spinal nerves.
32The Brain
Brain as Trinty
Brain as Mt. Meru
33The Triple-worlded Brain
The Brain Holy Trinity The astral 6 5 or
1000 4 petalled lotuses The pituitary
glandthalamuspineal gland or heaven
(Indra)in-between (Yama)hell (Vritra), form 1st
2nd 3rd persons FatherSonHoly Spirit , the
void at 8 being Turiya- fourth. These are
symbolized by the triple belt stars of Orion
constellation the triple pyramids of Gizeh in
Egypt.
34Ganesha
Kartikeya
Ishwara
Maheshwara
Sadashiva
8 Lotus Ashta-dal
Turiya- the Fourth
Holy Spirit
Son
Father
Garden of Eden, Tunnel, Cave, Womb of Shakti.
Zurvane Akarne- Time Eternal, Wisdom Immortal.
Fertility goddess at Shaktis womb, Celestial
Virgin, Oceanus, Ourounos, Savituh, Aadi Kanya,
Aditi, Parvati, Kali, Durga, Isis, Mary, Astarte,
Gaia, Hathor, Kuan Yin, Celestial Cow, whose
male counterparts are Mithra, Christ, Bacchus,
Dyaus-pitar (Zeus-pater, Jupiter),
Brahma-Prajapati, Vishwakarma, Lord God. Aadi of
Buddhists, Siddhas and Naths. Adam-Eve Earth.
4 Lotus Naraka
6 Lotus Swarga
5 Lotus Pitri Loka
Pituitary
Thalamus
Pineal
The Trinity the Fourth in Astral
Q-IV Deities Brain parts
Yama
1st Person
2nd Person
3rd Person
Indra
Vritra
35Vedas describe Human Physiology
- Human physiology is an expression of the
fundamental structures of Natural Law, which not
only underlie the structures and orderly
functioning of the body, but also underlie and
govern the orderly functioning of the entire
universe. These laws exist in an unmanifest form
in an unmanifest field of intelligence or Atma.
Modern quantum field theory describes this field
of intelligence as the Unified Field of Natural
Law. - Human physiology, including the DNA at its core,
has the same structure and function as the
holistic, self-sufficient, self-referral reality
expressed in the 40 branches of Veda and the
Vedic Literature. Each of these can be located in
both structure and function in the human
physiology. A precise relationship exists between
the structures and functions of the different
aspects of the Vedic literature and the
structures and functions of the human physiology. - The sounds of Veda are the intelligence at the
basis of the physiology. As the laws of nature
express themselves in material creation, they
first emerge as waves. These dynamic waves in
their subtle expression are available in the
sounds of Veda and the Vedic literature. From
this perspective, all matter, including cells,
tissues, organs and the entire physiology are
based on these vibrations of Natural Law. - The principles describing the transformation of
one condition of the physiology into another
condition are also available in the Veda and the
Vedic literature. These principles explain that
at the level of the field of pure intelligence,
the transformations of one sound into another are
the mechanics of the transformations of Natural
Law responsible for evolutionary processes in
nature. - Using the knowledge of these principles and of
the specific sounds of Veda and the Vedic
literature corresponding to specific parts of the
physiology, the expert enlivens the intelligence
at the basis of that part of the physiology to
transform disorderly functioning into orderly
functioning.
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37The Navagrahas
Basal Ganglia
38Nyaya in the Thalamus A view of the thalamus
with its 16 nuclei and the names of the nucleii
and the 16 aspects of Nyaya to which they
correspond.
Vedic Symbolism Of the Brain
The four chapters of Yoga-Sutras
Vyakaran and the Hypothalamus A cross section
of the cerebral cortex and a highlight of the
anterior hypo-thalamus areas, corresponding to
the 1st and 2nd chapters of Vyakaran. The 4
nucleii in each area correspond to the 4
divisions of each chapter. The other 3 chapters
have been similarly correlated with different
aspects of the hypothalamus.
39The Ganga
in the Brain
RED - The emergence and flow of the cerebrospinal
fluid LIGHT BLUE BrainORANGE - Choroid plexus
resembles Shivas string of Rudraksha
beads GREEN Hypothalamus represents the moon
on Shivas head DARK BLUE - Brainstem
The 3 directions of Gangas flow the
cerebrospinal fluid flows from the choroid plexus
in 3 directions to right ventricle, to left
ventricle, and through cerebral aqueduct to
fourth ventricle. The cerebrospinal fluid also
covers the whole brain (Heaven). It goes around
the spinal cord area (Earth). It also moves deep
within these structures (subterranean
regions). The 7 streams of Ganga correspond to
the ventricular system inside the brain, which is
a hollow structure with 2 heads (2 anterior
horns) and 4 other horns (the 2 inferior and the
2 posterior horns). The final stream is the flow
that goes in direction of brainstem and spinal
cord, where the 4th ventricle is located.
40The Rishis in the Brainstem
Jyotish
41The ventral view of the brain, (the brain
seen from underneath), shows the clear
correspondence between Ganesh and the pons,
medulla and cerebellum. The face of Ganesh
corresponds to the pons. The medulla represents
the trunk of Ganesh. The roots of the trigeminal
nerves represent the eyes of Ganesh. A group of
nerves at the pons represent the tusks of Ganesh.
The cerebellum constitutes the ears of Ganesh.
These structures not only look like Ganesh, but
their functions in human physiology correspond to
the functions and activities ascribed to Ganesh.
42The Deities
In the Brain
43Ramayana Deities in the Brain
44Vedic Deities of the Brain
Agni is Electricity (or Electrons) that powers
the world. Fire is in heaven as the sun, in air
as lightning, and on earth as fire from friction,
latent fire (Vaishwanara) subterranean fire,
fire in trees, fire of digestion etc. In the
brain, it is Thalamus. Indra is Jivatma or
Energy, Cerebrum, controlling the Sensory and
Motor nerves. The energy is fuelled by Soma-
nectar, cerebro-spinal fluid in its ventricles,
described as giver of Pranas and Virya- sperm.
Mitra-Varuna are Proton-Electron (Aryaman being
Neutron), the children of Aditi. Mitra-Varuna
control Ashwin twins- Prana-Apana or
Sensory-afferent Motor-efferent nerves, in
turn, regulated by Surya (Buddhi- intellect).
They are connected to Maruts- Pranas or Sensory
Motor nerves, the sons of Rudra- Pons. The
Adityas are the messengers of Mitra-Varuna, the
12 pairs of brain nerves that terminate at Pons.
Vishnu (Vedic) is Sun (Virat- macro) or Atom
(Vaman- micro), Universal or Nuclear Energy. His
3 steps are 1. Prithvi- Earth or Merudanda-
spinal cord upto Medulla Oblongata (Surya) 2.
Antariksha- Atmosphere upto Thalamus (Agni) 3.
Dyu- Heavens upto Cerebrum (Indra). Surya,
provider of energy to the world, represents its
Prana. Sun is Corpus Striatum, the ganglion
connected to Sensory Motor nerves its 7
horses refer to Gyanendriyas 2 eyes, 2
nostrils, 2 ears tongue, whereby it receives
signals from the environment and passes them onto
Indra or brain. Savita-Savitri are its
static-dynamic aspects. Savitri is solar energy
to earth and Gayatri the returning energy from
earth to the sun. Aditi is Chidakash, the
creative power of Vishnu, located in Central
Sulcus, the lateral fissure of the brain
containing centres of Sensory-Motor nerves. She
gets Karmendriyas (Motor nerves) to execute
messages received by Gyanendriyas (Sensory
nerves). Aditi is matter, Daksha is energy born
from one-another. She is mother of 8 Vasus head,
trunk, limbs, eyes, nostrils, ears, tongue
speech centre (Martanda). Diti is her opposite
her sons are Asuras, Daityas, Danavas etc.
Tridevis, the respective goddesses of heaven,
atmosphere earth are Pingla (Ganga), Sushumna
(Saraswati) Ida (Yamuna), Prana, Vak Manas
being their tattwas. Saraswati is Vak, provider
of Soma from Mansarovar (4 ventricles 2 in
Cerebrum- heaven, in Thalamus- atmosphere
Medulla- earth), to Indra or jivatma.
45The 33 Vedic gods
46The 33 main Vedic gods
- There are two sources of creation in the
universe Prajapati created the heavenly Adityas,
while Tvastar created the Rudras. Tvastar is the
first born creator of the universe and the
visible form of creativity that emerged from the
navel of the invisible Viswakarman. Each god is
glorified and given epithets that endow it with
various characteristics and qualities. A harmony
between gods of and men is sought to be
established thereby. - The concept of Vak or Name personifies knowledge
and is source of Vedas. Vedas are poetic texts
composed of hymns (Mantras), devoted to the
various gods. The 33 gods correspond with sounds
of human speech and personify the essence of
language, while Vak personifies sounding speech
and senses of words. The sounds of human speech
and the gods are but the image of this divine
Logos. The hierarchy of gods in Vedic mythology
is display of universal acoustic system. Vedic
mythology can thus be correlated to letters of
the alphabet. 33 gods correspond to letters in
the Russian alphabet. - The various qualities of light of heavenly gods
are incorporated in the spectral palette of the
atmosphere. Corpuscles of heavenly light are also
incorporated in the displays of color in the
Earths atmosphere, and form a visible picture of
a universe, which is described in Vedas in the
context of Vedic mythology. The hierarchy of
Vedic gods corresponds with a phonetic structure
of human speech that allows us to analyze
metaphysical senses of words according to
characteristics of gods. - The 33 gods of the Vedic pantheon are elements
of the Microcosmic universe, filling the sky and
penetrating space between heaven and earth, and
the human spheres. The heavenly (Swah) Adityas
correspond with human consciousness, while Rudras
or Maruts occupy the space between heaven and
earth (Bhuvar) and correspond with human
individuality, and terrestrial (Bhu) Vasus are
Ganas, inferior group deities (attendant upon god
Shankar), who correspond with human feelings.
4733 main gods
- The astrological circle or zodiac symbolizes
the universe comprising the 12 Adityas. They are
mostly the children of Aditi, the daughter of
Daksha, himself a descendent of Prajapati, the
primary god. Adityas can be either solar or lunar
deities, but are not heavenly bodies as such, and
in essence personify the sky and light in space.
They also have qualities of four basic elements
air (dry), fire (hot), water (damp) and earth
(cold). Adityas are the beneficent gods, who act
as protectors of all beings, who are provident
and guard the world of spirits and protect the
world. They are bright and pure as streams of
water, blameless, perfect, and free from all
guile and falsehood. - The 11 Rudras (or Maruts) form an atmosphere of
the Earth according to spectral parameters of
color and according to their hierarchy.
Rudras, ones who make cry are forms and
followers of the god Rudra and are the sons of
Kashyapa and Aditi. Rudra here identified
with Shankar was born from the anger of the
creator-god, Brahma. The furious Rudra was in
Ardhanari form, half his body was male and other
half female. He divided himself into two the
male and female. The male form then split itself
into 11, forming the 11 Rudras. From the female
form were born the 11 Rudranis, who became wives
of the Rudras. - In the Vedas, two classes of Maruts came into
existence the white and gentle, friendly and
beneficent, and the dark and fierce, roaring and
turbulent the latter grew into the distinct
group of deities called the Rudras, who were
associated only with the wild Rudra. They are at
times identified with the Maruts- sons of Rudra
while at other times, considered distinct from
them, as 49 sons of Diti, sister-wife of Aditi,
and attendants of Indra. Brahma allotted to the
Rudras the 11 positions of the heart and the
5 sensory organs, the 5 organs of action and the
mind. Rudras are associated with the 10 vital
energies (Rudra-prana) in the body, the 11th
being the Atman (soul). As wind-gods, Rudras
represent the life-breath.
4833 main gods
- The 8 Vasus personify directions of light or
cardinal and intermediate points of world, i.e.
the world space. They are the terrestrial
displays of the heavenly Adityas. N symbolizes
cold, S symbolizes heat, W symbolizes sunset,
while E symbolizes the rising sun. They
correspond to the zodiac signs related to matter,
energy, space and time. Vasus, dweller' or
dwelling' are attendant deities of Indra, and
later Vishnu. They are 8 elemental gods
representing aspects of nature, and representing
cosmic natural phenomenon. They are children of
sage Kashyapa by Aditi and are full siblings to
Adityas. Mahabharata makes them to be sons
of Prajapati, son of Manu, son of Brahma by
various mothers. - The wife of Dyaus spotted an excellent cow and
persuaded her husband to steal it, which he did
with the aid of Prithu and his other brothers
the Vasus. The cow was owned by sage Vashishta,
who cursed the Vasus to be born on earth as
mortals, but then promised that 7 of them would
be free of earthly life within a year of being
born, and only Dyaus would pay the full penalty.
When the 8th was born, did their father, king
Shantanu finally oppose his wife, Ganga, who
therefore left him. The 8th son, Dyaus
incarnated, remained alive, imprisoned in mortal
form, and became known as Bhishma. - The 2 Ashwins (having horses) or Ashwini
Kumaras are divine or cosmic (space) twins or are
the brother and the sister, who mythologically
personify not only the sky and ground, but all
existing dual phenomena and contrasts of a
universe, such as even and odd, right and left,
top and bottom, and particularly, time and space.
They are represented as humans with head of a
horse. They are divine twin horsemen, sons
of Saranya (daughter of Vishwakarma), a goddess
of the clouds and wife of Surya in his form
as Vivasvat. They symbolize the shining of
sunrise and sunset, appearing in the sky before
the dawn in a golden chariot, bringing treasures
to men and averting misfortune and sickness. They
are the doctors of gods and are Devas of Ayurvedic
medicine. They are also called Nasatya (kind,
helpful) in the Rig Veda later, Nasatya is the
name of one twin, while the other is
called Dasra (enlightened giving). -
49The 33 Main gods of Hinduism
50The Heavenly Adityas 12 gods created by
Prajapati (Consonents) Infinity of heavenly space
The sphere of consciousness
12 Adityas Description Personification of
Surya Sun A bright and shrill sunlight
Mitra Contract or consent Illuminated and dawned sunlight
Vishnu Universal Radiant and shining light
Pushan Blossoming Clear and transparent light
Ushas Morning light Sparkling light
Aryaman Friendliness or hospitality Vast and gaping light
Savitr Stimulator Pale and dim light
Ansha Part or share Unclear and vague light
Bhaga Donator or happiness Brilliant and crystal light
Varuna True speech Indistinct and vague light
Vivasvat or Martanda Shining or dead born Foggy and gloomy light
Dhatr Founder Indiscernible and disappearing light
51Atmospheric or air Rudras (or Maruts) 11 gods
created by Tvastar (Vowels) Cosmic light of
heavenly gods The sphere of individuality
11 Rudras (or Maruts) Description Colour Personification
Indra World autocrat - Rules over functions of all gods
Matarishvan Growing in the Mother Yellow Cosmic fire or tongues of flame
Trita Aptya The third Brown Smoke and fume-ashes of fire or steam
Apas Waters Orange Water of the rivers
Apam Napat Grandson of waters Pink Fog
Rudra Roaring Red Electromagnetic eneRigy of sky
Aja Ekapad One-legged goat i.e. lightning Purple Electric dischaRige of lightning
Parjanya Thundercloud Green Thundercloud, water in air space
Ahir Budhnya Serpent of depths Light blue Drops or jets of a rain
Vayau Wind Dark blue Breathing wind, Prana
Vata Wind force Violet Howling whirlwind
52Terrestrial Vasus 8 gods Cardinal points of the
world The sphere of feelings
8 Vasus Description
Apa Water or pervading
Anila Wind
Dhara Ground or support
Pavaka or Anala Fire or living
Prabhasa Morning dawn or pre-dawn
Soma Moon or soma-plant
Pratyusha Sun or shining light
Dhruva Polestar or motionless
53The Ashwins (or Nasatyas) "possessing horses",
Cosmic twins of Gemini, Personify duality 2
gods created by Dyaus Prithvi (do not belong
to the 3 classes) The sphere of individuality
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