Brahmā: Difference between revisions

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<blockquote>The student must distinguish between Brahma the neuter, and Brahmâ, the male creator of the Indian Pantheon. The former, Brahma or Brahman, is the impersonal, supreme and uncognizable Principle of the Universe from the essence of which all emanates, and into which all returns, which is incorporeal, immaterial, unborn, eternal, beginningless and endless. It is all-pervading, animating the highest god as well as the smallest mineral atom. Brahmâ on the other hand, the male and the alleged Creator, exists periodically in his manifestation only, and then again goes into pralaya, i.e., disappears and is annihilated.<ref>HPB, ''Theosophical Glossary'' (???:????), 62</ref></blockquote>
<blockquote>The student must distinguish between Brahma the neuter, and Brahmâ, the male creator of the Indian Pantheon. The former, Brahma or Brahman, is the impersonal, supreme and uncognizable Principle of the Universe from the essence of which all emanates, and into which all returns, which is incorporeal, immaterial, unborn, eternal, beginningless and endless. It is all-pervading, animating the highest god as well as the smallest mineral atom. Brahmâ on the other hand, the male and the alleged Creator, exists periodically in his manifestation only, and then again goes into pralaya, i.e., disappears and is annihilated.<ref>HPB, ''Theosophical Glossary'' (???:????), 62</ref></blockquote>


In [[Theosophy|Theosophical]] literature Brahmā is usually identified with the manifested, or [[third Logos]].
In [[Theosophy|Theosophical]] literature Brahmā is usually identified with the [[third Logos|manifested Logos]].


== Notes ==
== Notes ==

Revision as of 16:14, 21 March 2012

Brahmā (ब्रह्मा) is the Hindu god of creation and one of the Trimūrti, the others being Viṣņu and Śiva. This Sanskrit word derives from the verbal root bṛh "to expand, grow, fructify", because "Brahma ‘expands’ and becomes the Universe woven out of his own substance" [1] In one of his letters, Mahatma M. says it is "the vivifying expansive force of nature in its eternal evolution." [2]

In her Theosophical Glossary H. P. Blavatsky says:

The student must distinguish between Brahma the neuter, and Brahmâ, the male creator of the Indian Pantheon. The former, Brahma or Brahman, is the impersonal, supreme and uncognizable Principle of the Universe from the essence of which all emanates, and into which all returns, which is incorporeal, immaterial, unborn, eternal, beginningless and endless. It is all-pervading, animating the highest god as well as the smallest mineral atom. Brahmâ on the other hand, the male and the alleged Creator, exists periodically in his manifestation only, and then again goes into pralaya, i.e., disappears and is annihilated.[3]

In Theosophical literature Brahmā is usually identified with the manifested Logos.

Notes

  1. HPB, SD vol. I (???:????), 83
  2. Mahatma Letters No. 44 (???:????), 118
  3. HPB, Theosophical Glossary (???:????), 62