It is true that God is often depicted with a spouse in our traditional stories. However, on a deeper philosophical level, the Supreme Being and the Gods are neither male nor female and are therefore not married.
In popular, village hinduism God is represented as male, and God’s energy,or Shakti, is personified as His spouse—for example, Vishnu and Lakshmi. In Hindu temples, art
and mythology, God is everywhere seen as the beloved, divine couple.Philosophically, however,the caution is always made that God and God’s energy are One,and the metaphor of the inseparable divine couple serves only to illustrate this Oneness.
Hinduism is taught on many levels to many different people,and to uneducated people who are not able to understand high philosophy, Hinduism is taught in story form. Because the temple is the center of every Hindu community,and everyone is focused
on the temple and the Gods within it, the Gods are the major players in these stories. Hindus who understand the higher philosophy seek to find God on the
inside while also worshiping God in the temples. Simple folk strive to be like a God, or like a Goddess.
These tales, called Puranas,have long been the basis of dance, plays and storytelling around the fire in the homes to children as they are growing up. The stories illustrate how a family should live, how they should raise their children, and much more. Before the printing press, there were few books, and Hinduism was conveyed orally through stories and parables. While these often violent children’s tales should not be perpetuated, there remains much of value in the extensive writings of the Puranas.
Elaboration: Those who learn the higher Hindu philosophies know that Gods are neither male nor female. In fact, attaining to that Godly level of being is one of the mystical goals of yoga.This is accomplished by blending the feminine and masculine currents, ida and pingala, into the spiritual current, sushumna,in the center of the spine within each individual.
Hindus know that the Gods do not marry, that they are complete within themselves. This unity is depicted in the traditional icon of Ardhanarishvara,Siva as half man and half woman, and in the teaching that Siva and Shakti are one, that Shakti
is Siva’s energy. Siva is dearly loved as our Father-Mother God.Yet, sexual gender and matrimonial relations are of the physical and emotional realms, whereas
the Gods exist in a stratum that far supersedes these levels of life.For that matter, the soul itself is neither male nor female.
Some modern swamis now urge devotees not to pay any attention to Puranic stories about the Gods, saying that they have no relationship with the world today—that they are misleading and confusing and should no longer be taught to the children. Instead,
they encourage followers to deepen themselves with the higher philosophies of the Vedic Upanishads and the realizations of Hindu seers.Other faiths sometimes criticize
the Hindu religion as a sort of comic-book religion, and we should not be part of perpetuating that image by passing on such misconceptions as the marriage of the Gods. Other religions move and adjust with the times. Hinduism must also do so. It must offer answers to the questions about God, soul and world—answers that are reasonable, that can be understood and accepted even by a child, that are coherent,
sensible and strictly in accord with scripture and tradition.
This is necessary in the technological age, necessary in order that Hinduism will be a religion of the future, not of the past.
In popular, village hinduism God is represented as male, and God’s energy,or Shakti, is personified as His spouse—for example, Vishnu and Lakshmi. In Hindu temples, art
and mythology, God is everywhere seen as the beloved, divine couple.Philosophically, however,the caution is always made that God and God’s energy are One,and the metaphor of the inseparable divine couple serves only to illustrate this Oneness.
Hinduism is taught on many levels to many different people,and to uneducated people who are not able to understand high philosophy, Hinduism is taught in story form. Because the temple is the center of every Hindu community,and everyone is focused
on the temple and the Gods within it, the Gods are the major players in these stories. Hindus who understand the higher philosophy seek to find God on the
inside while also worshiping God in the temples. Simple folk strive to be like a God, or like a Goddess.
These tales, called Puranas,have long been the basis of dance, plays and storytelling around the fire in the homes to children as they are growing up. The stories illustrate how a family should live, how they should raise their children, and much more. Before the printing press, there were few books, and Hinduism was conveyed orally through stories and parables. While these often violent children’s tales should not be perpetuated, there remains much of value in the extensive writings of the Puranas.
Elaboration: Those who learn the higher Hindu philosophies know that Gods are neither male nor female. In fact, attaining to that Godly level of being is one of the mystical goals of yoga.This is accomplished by blending the feminine and masculine currents, ida and pingala, into the spiritual current, sushumna,in the center of the spine within each individual.
Hindus know that the Gods do not marry, that they are complete within themselves. This unity is depicted in the traditional icon of Ardhanarishvara,Siva as half man and half woman, and in the teaching that Siva and Shakti are one, that Shakti
is Siva’s energy. Siva is dearly loved as our Father-Mother God.Yet, sexual gender and matrimonial relations are of the physical and emotional realms, whereas
the Gods exist in a stratum that far supersedes these levels of life.For that matter, the soul itself is neither male nor female.
Some modern swamis now urge devotees not to pay any attention to Puranic stories about the Gods, saying that they have no relationship with the world today—that they are misleading and confusing and should no longer be taught to the children. Instead,
they encourage followers to deepen themselves with the higher philosophies of the Vedic Upanishads and the realizations of Hindu seers.Other faiths sometimes criticize
the Hindu religion as a sort of comic-book religion, and we should not be part of perpetuating that image by passing on such misconceptions as the marriage of the Gods. Other religions move and adjust with the times. Hinduism must also do so. It must offer answers to the questions about God, soul and world—answers that are reasonable, that can be understood and accepted even by a child, that are coherent,
sensible and strictly in accord with scripture and tradition.
This is necessary in the technological age, necessary in order that Hinduism will be a religion of the future, not of the past.
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