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isha in this sense is lord as is jehovah. a hybridization of sorts. can i claim it exclusively? self-aggrandizing? meglomaniac?I'm afraid I don't understand the question with relation to Brahman. Can you please rephrase?
To "take the Lord's name in vain" I believe means to swear an oath to Jehova, or invoke Jehova, inappropriately.
you won't gain anything.Is it OK if i take the Lord's name in vain
That would be funny, actually.or exclusively as mine?
I'm not familiar with a Jehovah-Brahman hybrid, so I can't help you sorry. Maybe someone else can
As I said, I'm more familiar with the idea of taking the Lord's name in vain in a Christian context.
Since Brahman is the all-pervading reality (I believe .. happy to be corrected) then I don't know what "taking Brahman's name in vain" would even be. I don't think it's possible to directly transgress against Brahman?
the first name in exodus 3:14 is a verb. the second name in exodus 3:15 is a noun, or a verb noun.The Tetragrammaton (aka, YHWH) is quite literally, comparable to Brahman. The essential distinguishing quality between the two though, is that YHWH is transcendent and self-revealing (like the philosophy of Allah, although it has been obscured in ways which Allah hasn't) whereas Brahman is not.
Unlike YHWH/Allah/Ahura Mazda, Brahman can often (depending on the philosophy, like Vedanata for instance) can be reduced down to simple Pantheism (not that it necessarily is pantheism overall) - whereas YHWH/Allah/Ahura Mazda has the essential quality of it's active, revelatory nature.
In a way, Ik Onkar is like the middle between the two.
The best thing to realize for anyone interested in this stuff, whether theist or atheist, is that proper Monotheism is not about deities and men with beards in clouds.
When it comes to taking YHWH's "name" in vein (in a Jewish context), it's a reverence of the sacredness of one's own relation back to the Ultimate Reality. In these forms of not-deistic monotheism, the name is important to trying to grasp it's profundity, the names bare significance before and after some form of attainment of gnosis of the Ultimate Reality.
(And of course, it should go without having to say that the Ultimate Reality doesn't have a "name", as each "name" is subject to it's own revelation and realization.)
I'm afraid I don't understand the question with relation to Brahman. Can you please rephrase?
To "take the Lord's name in vain" I believe means to swear an oath to Jehova, or invoke Jehova, inappropriately.
But the usual concept of "God," at least to western ears, is a personage; a conscious entity, with likes, dislikes, opinions, &c. Brahman is none of that. it's not even a "stuff" or a force. Pure Brahman has no features at all. it just is.Brahman is considered as a name for God in Hinduism, along with Ishwar and Om.
But the usual concept of "God," at least to western ears, is a personage; a conscious entity, with likes, dislikes, opinions, &c. Brahman is none of that. it's not even a "stuff" or a force. Pure Brahman has no features at all. it just is.
But the usual concept of "God," at least to western ears, is a personage; a conscious entity, with likes, dislikes, opinions, &c. Brahman is none of that. it's not even a "stuff" or a force. Pure Brahman has no features at all. it just is.
No. Pure consciousness just is. It's reality itself. No spirit or individualism.pure consciousness isn't an unconditional loving spirit?
Popular religion is always different from academic or philosophic theology.isn't it typical for the unlearned, exoteric to anthropomorphize things in symbols as literals? vs the esoteric to see them as images, metaphors, of ithoughts or actions? like a light bulb representing an idea, thought
No. Pure consciousness just is. It's reality itself. No spirit or individualism.
Popular religion is always different from academic or philosophic theology.
That is a personalised God, which is similar to Saguna Brahman or Brahman with attributes, as I have described in the post above.
What you have stated as 'Pure Brahman' is Nirguna Brahman or Spirit which is distinct from Saguna Brahman or God.
I have always been of the understanding that "Brahman" is the nirguna spirit more or less equatable with Ik Onkar in Sikhi, and that the form with qualities that you call "saguma Brahman" is usually written as "Brahma" (without the 'n' sound at the end) and is the creator aspect of the triple Brahma/Vishnu/Shiva set. Does that match what you're describing?
I was trying to emphasize the unadulterated, nirguna aspect.pure is a qualitative descriptor. why isn't it just consciousness?
Not at all. Brahma is a deity associated with creation, just as Vishnu is associated with maintenance and Shankar with destruction.
Saguna Brahman in Hinduism is first associated with Shiva, who is considered to be a cosmic pillar of light as per the Vedas and scriptures. Shiva here is not related to Shankar, the deity associated with destruction. (That is an association that came with the Tantrik sect as per Vivekananda.)
The Prajapita Brahmakumaris also state that Shiva is distinct from Shankar, the deity associated with destruction.
Sikh scholars had rejected the impersonal nature of Nirguna Brahman and considers Waheguru to be of a personal nature like Allah or Ahura Mazda.
Sikhi is panentheistic and not monotheistic
a creator that is separate and distinct from the creation such as Allah, for example.