A
adawgj
Guest
Question is the title.
How many gods do you want?Question is the title.
Actually almost nobody ignores Shiva, Vishnu, Laxmi and Ganesha, maybe also Durga (even Krishna and Rama/Hanuman are pretty universal) - some may be worshiped more than the others.How many gods do you want?
One: The one Brahman (note the “n” at the end) is universal and unknowable. How can mere humans know the ultimate? Brahman is a very high level philosophical abstraction.
Three: Brahma (no “n”), Vishnu, Shiva. There are more comprehensible versions, but not complete. The parable of the blind men and the elephant applies here. These three are each a large part of the elephant, but not all of it.
Man/God: Krishna, who is a human incarnation of Vishnu.
Goddess: plenty to pick from – Durga, Kali, Lakshmi etc.
Tens of thousands: all the others, such as Ganesha, Kubera etc.
Hinduism offers many options, you merely select the option you want and can ignore the others.
rossum
The Hindus I know would say there is one God with a myriad of manifestations.Question is the title.
Not all Hindu’s believe in the same thing.The Hindus I know would say there is one God with a myriad of manifestations.
That’s why I qualified my statement.Not all Hindu’s believe in the same thing.
I misread what you wrote, my mistake.That’s why I qualified my statement.
when the original hinduism started there were nearly two different beliefs held by the different groups; belief in only one god or semi-polytheism. when “middle” hinduism asserted itself in ~200 B.C. rejection of pagan polytheism started and there were three known prominent views: semi-polytheism(precursor to “modern” hindu liberalism), emergence of a “new” interpretation called faceted-"polytheism, and a belief in only one God. (which may have been the minority) and “modern” hinduism which has belief systems ranging from 1 or less god - more than millions of gods.Question is the title.
Where are you getting this from?when the original hinduism started there were nearly two different beliefs held by the different groups; belief in only one god or semi-polytheism. when “middle” hinduism asserted itself in ~200 B.C. rejection of pagan polytheism started and there were three known prominent views: semi-polytheism(precursor to “modern” hindu liberalism), emergence of a “new” interpretation called faceted-"polytheism, and a belief in only one God. (which may have been the minority) and “modern” hinduism which has belief systems ranging from 1 or less god - more than millions of gods.
God bless
kWhere are you getting this from?
Nevermind I see the link in your post