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Lord Brahma

Shrew

Active Member
I know Brahma receives little worship, but is there any community in India who regards Brahma as its tutelary deity?
 

Shrew

Active Member
I have an interst in Lord Brahma because he is not much worshipped.
Somehow I feel sympathy for him.
Is there any Mantra of Brahma?
 

Spirit_Warrior

Active Member
It is curious that Brahma is not worshipped, because Brahma is the creator and in Abrahamic religions the creator enjoys the highest worship. In Hinduism, however, it is the preserver and destroyer that enjoys the highest worship. I think one way to explain this the pragmatic attitude of Hindus, of being always in the here and now or present than dwelling in the past. Brahma is like the deistic god that started the ball rolling so to speak, created the universe and then took a back seat. Vishnu is the one preserving it and periodically taking avatars to save the world from adharma, hence as the saviour Vishnu enjoys the most popularity. Shiva as the god is ultimately going to destroy it from the future perspective draws awe, hence is he also described as awful and terrible and the Vedas beg his mercy.

The real competition though is between Shiva and Vishnu for supremacy, it is fascinating and even amusing to read the Shiva and Vishnu Puranas argue over who is the most supreme. From a Shaiva point of view Shiva is seen as the most supreme because Shiva does not destroy, but transform, because every act of destruction is also at the same time an act of regeneration. Thus Shiva is simultaneously the creator, preserver and the destroyer and hence the true God of all Gods.
 
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Aupmanyav

Be your own guru
In modern Hinduism, Brahma creates at the bidding of Vishnu, Shiva or the Mother Goddess and writes the fate of a being on its forehead. In that form he is called Vidhata (I suppose from some root in Sanskrit which means 'what happens'). Brahma is worshiped in association with other Gods (Gurur Brahma, Gurur Vishno, Gurur devo Maheshwara..).

Why his worship was banned (I have described it in other topics) goes back to some 2,200 BC and it perhaps relates to the changeover of the beginning of the year from the rising of the sun on the day of vernal equinox in the asterism of Orion (Mrigashiras, that was the head of Prajapati which Rudra severed, the original Prajapati Brahma of the Vedas) to the asterism of Pleiades (Krittika) due to precession of equinoxes. What happened was that the rising sun moved towards Rohini, considered the daughter of Prajapti, and this action was considered as attempted incest. Prajapati Brahma, rightly or wrongly, was branded the culprit for the action. The change also perhaps created Kartikeya. New stars had to have a new God, so a six-headed God raised by six sisters in the sky.
 

निताइ dasa

Nitai's servant's servant
Lord Brahma is not worshiped that much, especially in Kaliyuga, due to Rishi Brhgu's curse. There is one big Temple dedicated to him in Rajasthan, but I have not seem in him worshiped in diety form anywhere. Nor do I know any sampradaya that worships him as a primary diety.
 

Nyingjé Tso

Dharma not drama
Vanakkam,

He does enjoy quite some popularity alongside Indra in south east asia, especially Thaïland.

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Aum Namah Shivaya
 

Aupmanyav

Be your own guru
We do have a few Brahma temples here and there.

Pushkar, Chikkamagaluru, Kumbakonam, Thirupattur, Valpoi (Goa)
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Jainarayan

ॐ नमो भगवते वासुदेवाय
Staff member
Premium Member
The real competition though is between Shiva and Vishnu for supremacy, it is fascinating and even amusing to read the Shiva and Vishnu Puranas argue over who is the most supreme.

I don't know why that is. From my pov they are flip sides of the same coin, as reflected in my signature. The same goes for Devī.
 

Jainarayan

ॐ नमो भगवते वासुदेवाय
Staff member
Premium Member
Ahh ... the Puranas, they're stories. Maybe a little competition makes for a better story. But I'm with you.

I also look at them as learning and teaching tools, morality tales, and such. Not to mention a little bit of humor thrown in.
 
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