Tuesday, June 19, 2018

🛫REVELATION 12🛫 ON:"COULD THEY BE A LITTLE MORE LU-TARDED!!!!INDIA THINKS THAT REVELATION 12🛫 AND ALL THAT IS WITH IT ABSOLUTELY IS ABOUT WHO THEY ARE!!!! THEY ARE EVEN MONOTHEISTIC&THEY DEFINITELY DONOT CLAIM JESUS CHRIST MY HUSBAND THE HEBREW MESSIAH;ARAGORN AS THEIR LORD AND SAVIOUR WITH THE GOD OF THE HEBREW SCRIPTURES NOW FALLEN AS THEIR OWN ONE AND ONLY OR AT ALL. THEY ARE ONE OF THE ABSOLUTE WORST COUNTRIES FOR THE PERPETUATING OF FALSE DEITIES AND THE WORSHIP OF THESE FAKSE DEITIES."&ALL KINDS OF ANIMALS WORSHIP WITH THEIR GRAVEN IMAGES AND SACRED TREATMENT OF THESE FALSE DEITIES AND THEIR SYMBOLIC ANIMALS."

Hindu deities


Examples of Hindu deities (from top): BrahmaSaraswatiLakshmiVishnuShivaDurga, Brahmanarayana and Ardhanarishvara.
Hindu deities are the gods and goddesses in Hinduism. The terms and epithets for deity within the diverse traditions of Hinduism vary, and include DevaDeviIshvaraBhagavān and Bhagavati.[1][2][note 1]
The deities of Hinduism have evolved from the Vedic era (2nd millennium BCE) through the medieval era (1st millennium CE), regionally within Nepal, India and in southeast Asia, and across Hinduism's diverse traditions.[3][4] The Hindu deity concept varies from a personal god as in Yoga school of Hindu philosophy,[5][6] to 33 Vedic deities,[7] to hundreds of Puranics of Hinduism.[8]Illustrations of major deities include VishnuSri (Lakshmi)ShivaSatiBrahma and Saraswati. These deities have distinct and complex personalities, yet are often viewed as aspects of the same Ultimate Reality called Brahman.[9][note 2] From ancient times, the idea of equivalence has been cherished for all Hindus, in its texts and in early 1st millennium sculpture with concepts such as [10]Ardhanārīshvara (half Shiva, half Sati),[11] with myths and temples that feature them together, declaring they are the same.[12][13][14]Major deities have inspired their own Hindu traditions, such as VaishnavismBrahmanismShaivism and Shaktism, but with shared mythology, ritual grammar, theosophyaxiology and polycentrism.[15][16][17] Some Hindu traditions such as Smartism from mid 1st millennium CE, have included multiple major deities as henotheistic manifestations of Saguna Brahman, and as a means to realizing Nirguna Brahman.[18][19][20]
Hindu deities are represented with various icons and anicons, in paintings and sculptures, called Murtis and Pratimas.[21][22][23] Some Hindu traditions, such as ancient Charvakas rejected all deities and concept of god or goddess,[24][25][26] while 19th-century British colonial era movements such as the Arya Samaj and Brahmo Samajrejected deities and adopted monotheistic concepts similar to Abrahamic religions.[27][28]Hindu deities have been adopted in other religions such as Jainism,[29] and in regions outside India such as predominantly Buddhist Thailand and Japan where they continue to be revered in regional temples or arts.[30][31][32]
In ancient and medieval era texts of Hinduism, the human body is described as a temple,[33][34] and deities are described to be parts residing within it,[35][36] while the Brahman (Absolute Reality, God)[18][37] is described to be the same, or of similar nature, as the Atman (self, soul), which Hindus believe is eternal and within every living being.[38][39][40] Deities in Hinduism are as diverse as its traditions, and a Hindu can choose to be polytheistic, pantheistic, monotheistic, monistic, agnostic, atheistic or humanist.[41][42][43]

Devas and devis

Ishvara

Number of deities

Iconography and practices

Examples

See also

Notes

References

Further reading

External links


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