In ancient Vedic Shaivism, we find two important concepts – the Panchabrahma and the Ashtamurti. The Panchabrahma concept remains very important through into modern Shaivism, whereas the Ashtamurti doctrine somewhat falls into the background, now largely forgotten and not understood.
The
Panchabrahma explains the nature of Ishvara, the Lord, who is ever active in
performing the panchakritya, the five
acts of creation, sustenance, dissolution, concealment and revealing of His
immanent nature. Sadashiva, the Lord, is, therefore, known through the five
syllables: na, ma, shi, va, and ya; and His divine body is said to be made of the five Panchabrahma mantras. Panchabrahma explains the nature of Shiva beyond the field of Maya, beyond
the phenomenal world, as its Overlord.
On the
other hand, the Ashtamurti explains divine immanence – how the phenomenal world
is also made up of and pervaded by Shiva. We have previously examined how the
Ashtamurti forms rule over the phenomenal world, which is envisioned as
composed of the eight elements – earth, water, air, fire and space (the five
great elements, mahabhutas), the individual knower (known variously as jivatman,
kshetrajna, anu, pashu or purusha), the Moon and the Sun (luminaries). The
Ashtamurtis and their association with these elements inform us of two
important doctrines of Shaivism: (1) the oneness of Shiva with the so-called
elemental Gods of the Vedas; and (2) Divine immanence – the doctrine that Shiva
not only pervades all of creation, but is also the pervaded, the very material of
creation itself.
The
oneness of Shiva with the so-called elemental Devas of the Veda is affirmed by
association of the Ashtamurtis with the very elements they rule over. Sharva
rules over earth, Bhava over water, Ugra over air, Rudra over fire, Bhima over
space, Pashupati over the individual knower, Mahadeva over the Moon, and Ishana
over the Sun, which correspond to Prithivi, Varuna, Vayu, Agni, Indra,
Prajapati, Soma and Surya, respectively. Shiva is, therefore, the Lord praised
by these very names in the Veda as the principal Deities therein. In the Veda,
the so-called elemental Devas represent not only the elements themselves as well as the
Deities of those elements, but also the higher psychic-spiritual principles as we
equate the human body with the cosmos, the pinda
with the brahmanda. Therefore, Shiva
is not just the elements and the Ruler over these elements, but He is, as
reaffirmed in later yogic language, the psychic-spiritual principles they
present as well. Shiva is Vayu, representing prana; Shiva is Agni, representing
consciousness, Shiva is Surya, representing enlightenment, Shiva is Soma, representing kundalini, etc. The ekam sat of the Veda, which is an idea
that the Deities are an organic whole, is what we call Shiva. The Ashtamurtis
are the vishvarupa, the universal
form of Shiva, His divine immanence understood through the eight elements.
Shiva is indeed all this!
All this (manifest creation) in ancient understanding is made
up of the 5 mahabhutas – earth, water, air, fire and space. In modern parlance,
we may understand this as matter in its three forms – solid, liquid and gas, plus
energy and space. Beyond matter, energy and space, there is also the element of
time. Time is represented by the Moon and the Sun because we use these
celestial bodies to measure time – the Moon defines our conception of month, and the Sun defines the day, the
seasons and year. The Sun, Moon and fire may together also be understood to represent light,
which is not different than energy in our modern understanding. All these principles together make up the kshetra, the field of knowledge. Apart
from this, there is the knower of the field, the kshetrajna, also known as
purusha, jivatman, anu, or pashu, the knowing consciousness, which represents
us individual beings. Indeed, these are the eight forms or Ashtamurtis of Shiva.
On a grosser level yet, the ancients understood the manifest
universe to comprise of the three worlds – the physical, the subtle and the
causal, or in Vedic terminology: prithivi, dhyaus and antariksha. The Ashtamurtis
also cover this. Shiva as Sharva is indeed prithivi, Shiva as Bhima or Indra is
indeed dhyaus, Shiva as Ishana or Surya is indeed antariksha.
The same doctrine seen here explaining Shiva as both the
subjective and objective reality is further developed in the Shaiva Tantras
using the terminology of shad-adhva. Although the terminology changes with the development of Sankhya and Tantric Shaivism and the early doctrine of the Ashtamurtis falls into the background, the base idea never does: Shiva is indeed all
this! Sarvam Shivamayam Jagat ~ सर्वं शिवमयं जगत् |
Aum Namah Shivaya.
Agnideva © 2019. All rights reserved.
Agnideva © 2019. All rights reserved.
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