It gained its name after the Hindu
god Brahma, while there is an ancient Pura Luhur Poten Hindu temple on the northern slope of the volcano.
@Truth Be A Troll The Hindus say that
the god Brahma created the Universe at Vishnu's command.
Rama is greatly distressed and begs Mother Earth to restore her to him, but only
god Brahma comes to comfort him with the hope that he will be reunited with her in heaven.
a. Simply declare that, because we don't know what caused the Big Bang, the Hindu
god Brahma must have created the Universe.
Not exact matches
Not an alien intelligence, not the Hindu
god, Lord
Brahma, not nature itself, but her
god.
«Our father, who is in heaven, Harold be thy name...»
God, Allah, Jehovah, YHWH, the Tao, Creator, G - d, «that which can not be named»,
Brahma, «Harold», all refer to the same thing.
Though his exegesis of the
brahma sutra 1:1.2, Panikker (b. 1918) appears to present an idea similar to Upadhyaya and Sen.. But the balance between pre-existential cit and actualized
God - man experiences a tilt in favor of the absolute priority of the cosmic, universal Christ in Panikker's later writings.
Their ways of doing this are most varied, ranging from a sense of acting in accordance with the «rightness in things» (as in much Chinese religion), through a mystical identification of the deepest self or atman with the cosmic reality or
brahma (as in Hinduism), or a «blowing - out» of individual selfhood by sharing in the bliss of Nirvana (as in most varieties of Buddhism), to the sense of fellowship or communion with
God found in our own Jewish - Christian religious tradition.
I like to think of it as
God, Allah, Brahma, Buddha, Zoroaster, etc.... are all up there betting on who loves them more (We know god does this already in Job so it's not too much of a stretch) and each one is like, «I bet if I kill a shi.tload of people they'll still love me, see P
God, Allah,
Brahma, Buddha, Zoroaster, etc.... are all up there betting on who loves them more (We know
god does this already in Job so it's not too much of a stretch) and each one is like, «I bet if I kill a shi.tload of people they'll still love me, see P
god does this already in Job so it's not too much of a stretch) and each one is like, «I bet if I kill a shi.tload of people they'll still love me, see POW!
It should be said that, in general,
Brahma here means not the «neuter world soul,» but the personal creator
god who with Vishnu and Shiva forms the Hindu Trimurti, sometimes translated Trinity.
He goes then to the world of
Brahma but he is seated upon his lotus throne surrounded by all the
gods, and, filled with pride, does not even acknowledge the homage of Bhrgu.
Once a quarrel arose among the Rishis as to which of the three great
gods,
Brahma, Vishnu or Shiva, was most deserving of worship.
It was also interesting on a recent visit to the
Brahma Kumaris World Spiritual University at Mount Abu to see that the founder Dada Lekh Raj, whose spiritual name is Prajapita
Brahma, who died in 1969, is treated almost as divine and as an embodiment of the
god Siva.
In India, you'll see
Brahma and many other representations of their
gods.
The Hindu deities Krishna, Vishnu, Kali, and others were worshipped as manifestations of
Brahma, the one transcendental
God, the Hindu
God, much more reverently, however, than was the
God of Plotinus, because the Hindu religion presupposes a plurality of worlds as over against the geocentric narrowing of the world picture of classical antiquity.
For instance, I'm fairly certain that
god (in the bible,
brahma, zeus, odin, etc....) probably doesn't exist, however the agnostic point of view is that there could be a higher power, their might not be.
The word «Tershula» relates to the thunderbolt of Shiva (one of the Hindu Trinity of
Gods):
Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva; Shiva is the destroyer or regenerator, the ultimate deliverer.
Marichi is the son of
Brahma and chief of the Maruts («shining ones»), the war - like storm
gods.
The name «Bromo» comes from Javanese pronunciation of
Brahma, the Hindu creator
god.
It is a Hindu temple showcasing impressive sunset view at the stony tip, of which, according to the myth, the chiseled rocks have served as the seating of
Brahma's, the
god of creation.
The belief is of one
god, but in many forms including the Hindu Trinity of
Brahma, Wisnu and Siwa, but also deified kings, saints, ancestors and elemental spirits.
Hindus call our earth
Brahma, or
God, for they rightly see no difference between our earth and the divine.