Sanatana Dharma Gods and Goddess (Hinduism A Perspective)
There are so many gods in Hinduism. Do Hindus believe that there are multiple Gods ? Why do they worship multiple gods?
There are 33 devas (divines) that include Agni, Indra, Varuna, Vayu, and others. There are many references to these names in the Vedas. If we analyze it we could see that each one is an essential function (fire, water, air, sun, etc) that supports our living in this world. So these 33 aspects are hailed in the Vedas. But Hindus consider the trinity (Brahma, Vishnu, Rudra) to be above these divines. While Brahma does not get worshiped by many as the God, Shiva (Rudra is an aspect of Lord Shiva) and Vishnu are worshiped by the Shaivites and the Vaishanavaites respectively. Along with Shaivism and Vaishnavism,Shaktam, Ganapatyam, Kaumaram, Sauram are the four religions that make up the Shanmata (six Dharmas) on Hinduism.
Vedas state clearly that there is only one Supreme God (ekam sad viprAH bahutA vadanti). Then why are so many deities and worship? It can be understood by reading the scriptures that each of these devas represents/has an aspect/energy of the Supreme. So in essence it is a complete divine system that operates. For example, the Shaivites consider shakti as the dynamic part of the Supreme. Each of the six religions of Hinduism would call by different names and would put forward different philosophies, but all agree that there is one and only one Supreme God.
It is in fact the specialty of Hinduism that it lets multiple perspectives of God coexist on its platform, all sharing the same common dharma.
In essence, there is only one God and the other divines (many times called as gods) are responsible of one part of nature or another. God is worshiped in multiple perspectives, names in Hinduism that has six major religions in it.
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