LostKiera
Member
Hi all. I'm fairly new to Hinduism, but more and more I'm feeling I could have found the religion for me. However there ae some things I find plain confusing and would appreciate some guidance about. To start off I want to apologise if I misrepresent any group's views - like I say I'm a bit confused! So stop me if I say aything completely off-base.
My main point of confusion concerns gods or perhaps more precisely God. My initial understanding of the Hindu view of God was one probably a lot of non-Hindus have as it seems to be the most commonly offered academic explanation. That is, basicaly God is Brahman and Brahman is everything and impersonal. However aspects of Brahman are the three "great" gods, Brahma the Creator, Vishnu the Maintainer and Shiva the Destroyer. There are also various lesser gods.
However, after doing a bit of research, it turns out very few Hindus actually subscribe to this "official" stance. Most could be categorised as Vaishnavites (worshippers of Vishnu), Shaivites (worshippers of Shiva), Shaktivites (worshippers of Shakti) or Smartivites (non-sectarian universalists regarding five major gods). Putting Smartism to the side for the time being, the other three sects each equate their own God solely with Brahman. Other gods are either lesser gods, different aspects of that main god or plain non-existent.
So this is where my confusion starts. If Vaishnavites say Brahman is Vishnu, Shaivites say Brahman is Shiva and Shaktivites say Brahman is Shakti, is it a case that the only real difference between the theology of the three sects (ignoring their practices for the time being) is they just give different names to Brahman? Or are there integral differences between say Vishnu interpreted as Brahman and Shiva interpreted as Brahman? Do Vaishnavites who believe in Shiva think of Shiva the same way that Shaivites do, only they don't interpret him as Brahman? Or does the Vaishnavist view of Shiva bear no real relation to the Shaivite version bar the name? Similarly do Shaivites and Shaktivites tend to believe in the 10 incarnations of Vishnu? Or do they see them as incanations of Shiva/Shakti or not divine at all (or perhaps even dispute their existence completely)?
Some things I have read seem to suggest the only real difference between the sects is practice. Vaishnavism tends to focus on devotion and community life, Shaivism on the self and austerity and Shaktism on magic and power. Is there much to this?
Sorry I know this is a massive post, but would love to hear some views on the subject.
My main point of confusion concerns gods or perhaps more precisely God. My initial understanding of the Hindu view of God was one probably a lot of non-Hindus have as it seems to be the most commonly offered academic explanation. That is, basicaly God is Brahman and Brahman is everything and impersonal. However aspects of Brahman are the three "great" gods, Brahma the Creator, Vishnu the Maintainer and Shiva the Destroyer. There are also various lesser gods.
However, after doing a bit of research, it turns out very few Hindus actually subscribe to this "official" stance. Most could be categorised as Vaishnavites (worshippers of Vishnu), Shaivites (worshippers of Shiva), Shaktivites (worshippers of Shakti) or Smartivites (non-sectarian universalists regarding five major gods). Putting Smartism to the side for the time being, the other three sects each equate their own God solely with Brahman. Other gods are either lesser gods, different aspects of that main god or plain non-existent.
So this is where my confusion starts. If Vaishnavites say Brahman is Vishnu, Shaivites say Brahman is Shiva and Shaktivites say Brahman is Shakti, is it a case that the only real difference between the theology of the three sects (ignoring their practices for the time being) is they just give different names to Brahman? Or are there integral differences between say Vishnu interpreted as Brahman and Shiva interpreted as Brahman? Do Vaishnavites who believe in Shiva think of Shiva the same way that Shaivites do, only they don't interpret him as Brahman? Or does the Vaishnavist view of Shiva bear no real relation to the Shaivite version bar the name? Similarly do Shaivites and Shaktivites tend to believe in the 10 incarnations of Vishnu? Or do they see them as incanations of Shiva/Shakti or not divine at all (or perhaps even dispute their existence completely)?
Some things I have read seem to suggest the only real difference between the sects is practice. Vaishnavism tends to focus on devotion and community life, Shaivism on the self and austerity and Shaktism on magic and power. Is there much to this?
Sorry I know this is a massive post, but would love to hear some views on the subject.