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Meet  the God Shiva, Deity of Transcendence

Meet  the God Shiva, Deity of Transcendence

Shiva

As our society enters a dissolution phase, more people are turning intuitively to Shiva, the deity of transcendence, because we need his support.

Meet  the God Shiva

 by William T. Hathaway

 

 

Shiva is the deity of transcendence, the cosmic force that returns all matter and energy, all manifestation and activity, back to its Source. The return is the final stage of an evolutionary process that begins with creation through the power of Brahma, maintenance through the management of Vishnu, then dissolution through the power of Shiva, back into the unified field of pure consciousness.

The same unified field that quantum physics has discovered. This ground state is the universe’s interface with God. Manifested forms dissolve into waves of a nonmaterial, abstract field. New forms continually emerge from it to continue the cycle.

We can see this evolutionary process all around us. A seed becomes a plant that blossoms, creates new seeds, and dies. We manifest into a body that grows, develops, dies, and later re-emerge as a new, more highly evolved person. Socio-economic systems emerge, grow over centuries, and crumble like ours is doing now. They are replaced by more highly developed, more egalitarian ones. As society enters this dissolution phase, more and more people turn intuitively to Shiva because we need his support.

The universe begins with God’s thought, “I am one. Let me be many.” God first becomes the Divine Mother, Mahashakti. She gives birth to the universe, or more accurately, she becomes the universe. She does this by manifesting her creator aspect (Brahma and his partner Saraswati), her maintainer aspect (Vishnu and his partner Lakshmi), and her destroyer aspect (Shiva and his partner Durga or Parvati).

All these aspects of God working together, unfold, and administer the universe. Everything in creation is fundamentally One: God. And God, according to panentheism, is also beyond the creation.

When, after trillions of billions of years, God wanted to be just one again.  Shiva and his partner close down the show, they all return to the Divine Mother, she returns into God, and creation takes a rest. This is the glorious divine play. Our purpose is to get enlightened. When we achieve that, our separation boundaries disappear, and we live this cosmic unity as our own most profound nature. Then we enjoy 200 percent of life – the fullness of the material relative along with the fullness of the spiritual absolute. The deities will help us reach enlightenment because they love us and are us. The essence of the creation is love.



This little philosophical sketch is the interpretation of Vedas set forth by Shankara, the 8th-century proponent of Advaita Vedanta (unity, non-duality). He said all the deities are different aspects of the One. They offer different paths to the same goal: enlightenment, union with God. All are worthy of reverence, but people tend to prefer one of them based on their personal affinities.

To decide which One you prefer, you can start by gazing at pictures of them. These images are just conventions, but they can be useful. The Vedic deities are fundamentally beyond form and gender. Still, they appear to us in specific set images to better relate to them. (Yes, they really can be seen.) They are cosmic forces, administrators of natural law who keep creation functioning. We tend to project contemporary concepts of femininity and masculinity onto these divine beings. In that case, we will distort them (just as these concepts distort us).

Whose appearance interests you the most. Whom do you want to get to know better? Do you feel a heart connection? If so, listen to Vedic chanting of their names (each deity has over a thousand) on YouTube and notice how you respond. Then learn more about them on the internet. Trust your intuition, but if it’s not clear, a good Vedic astrologer can help you choose which One suits you best.

My new website will put you in touch with Shiva, his partner Durga-Parvati, and an offspring of their union, Ganesha. Ganesha is the great remover of obstacles, like a cosmic snowplow clearing our road of evolution. He rides on a mouse because mice are so skilled at getting around obstacles. As the Divine Mother’s representative, Durga has two sides: the loving, caring side for her children and the fierce, protecting side against those who threaten them. She is the demon slayer par excellence.

Getting to know this holy family is a journey of joy. Contact with them through bhakti – devotion – awakens divine energy that permeates our heart, mind, and body and improves our thoughts, activities, and relationships.



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About the Author

William T. Hathaway is the author of the Rinehart Foundation Award-winning novel A World of Hurt. He was a Fulbright professor of creative writing at universities in Germany, where he currently lives, writes, meditates, and hangs out with Shiva. His website offers a complete program of meditation, kundalini yoga, chanting, and puja. When done regularly, the procedures and techniques described there will gradually take you to higher states of consciousness. https://meetshiva985866381.wordpress.com/.

 

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