Jump to content

Ishvara/is: Difference between revisions

Created page with "Ishvara hof, Arasikere, Indland (snemma 13. aldar)"
(Created page with "Ishvara")
 
(Created page with "Ishvara hof, Arasikere, Indland (snemma 13. aldar)")
Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit
Line 1: Line 1:
<languages />
<languages />
[[File:Le temple Kalameshwara (Arsikere, Inde) (14388091487).jpg|thumb|upright=1.2|Ishvara Temple, Arasikere, India (early 13th century)]]
[[File:Le temple Kalameshwara (Arsikere, Inde) (14388091487).jpg|thumb|upright=1.2|Ishvara hof, Arasikere, Indland (snemma 13. aldar)]]
'''Ishvara''' is a Sanskrit word meaning “Lord of the universe” or “Lord.” In Hinduism, Ishvara is seen as the “immediate personal aspect of the supreme impersonal Godhead.”<ref>R. S. Nathan, comp., ''Symbolism in Hinduism'' (Bombay: Central Chinmaya Mission Trust, 1983), p. 13.</ref> We cannot know God unless we know him personified, and God personifies himself in extensions of himself to whom he gives spiritual and physical form. In reality, there is only one God, but the one God appears to us in his many manifestations. Thus, the many gods in Hinduism are simply rays of light from the one central Source.  
'''Ishvara''' is a Sanskrit word meaning “Lord of the universe” or “Lord.” In Hinduism, Ishvara is seen as the “immediate personal aspect of the supreme impersonal Godhead.”<ref>R. S. Nathan, comp., ''Symbolism in Hinduism'' (Bombay: Central Chinmaya Mission Trust, 1983), p. 13.</ref> We cannot know God unless we know him personified, and God personifies himself in extensions of himself to whom he gives spiritual and physical form. In reality, there is only one God, but the one God appears to us in his many manifestations. Thus, the many gods in Hinduism are simply rays of light from the one central Source.  


88,079

edits