The Religions Book

(ff) #1

100


See also: Physical and mental discipline 112–13 ■ Devotion through puja 114–15
■ Buddhas and bodhisattvas 152–57 ■ Shaktism 328

W


hile in many faiths the
image of the divine has
been mainly masculine,
Hinduism has many goddesses,
who represent creativity, fertility,
or power. The general term for the
feminine divine force is Shakti,
which means “to be able.” Shakti
is personified in Maha Devi, the
divine mother or “great goddess.”
She represents the active power of
the divine, as well as its nurturing
force, and in the Hindu school of
Shaktism she is worshipped as the
supreme deity. The great goddess
takes on many different forms, each
expressing particular qualities.
In her aspect as consort to Shiva,
for example, Shakti may appear
as gentle, loving Parvati, but she
is also Kali and Durga—terrible
and threatening.

The coiled serpent
As well as being the creative power
of the divine, Shakti represents the
feminine element within the self.
Hindus believe that our sexual
energy and life force (kundalini)
resides like a coiled serpent or

sleeping goddess at the base of the
spine. Awareness and development
of this force through yoga can be a
form of spiritual release. Sometimes
practiced physically, more often
through meditation, these Tantric
rituals are used to enhance the
union between a person’s male
and female elements. ■

Lakshmi, goddess of good fortune,
beauty, and fertility, is the consort of
Lord Vishnu. She has four arms and
hands, with which she dispenses
material and spiritual gifts to devotees.

IN CONTEXT


KEY TEXTS
The Vedas

WHEN AND WHERE
From 1700 BCE, India

BEFORE
3000 BCE Figurines dating to
this time found in the Indus
Valley suggest the worship
of a fertility goddess.

AFTER
5th–3rd century BCE The
Puranas, ancient Hindu texts,
celebrate female power, and
the goddesses described as
consorts of the gods in the
Vedas begin to gain their
own followings.

300–700 CE Tantric rites
use images of coupled male
and female deities as a focus
for meditation, and Shaktism
becomes a fully fledged
devotional branch of Hinduism.

c.800 CE Adi Shankara
composes Saundaryalahari
(“Waves of Beauty”), a hymn to
Parvati and her sexual power.

THE DIVINE


HAS A FEMALE


ASPECT


THE POWER OF THE GREAT GODDESS

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