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Vedic terminology for 'creation' implies that it is the steady process
transforming asat , the unmanifest, into sat , the manifest. In this sense,
the entire time-space continuum, all the vastness and infinite variety
of creation, exists within the existence of the Eternal One - as if it
were a concept in his mind. God is also called hiranyagarbha , the
'Womb of Light':
The Womb of Light existed before there was any other thing. It
gave birth to all. It is the sole ruler of all existence, maintaining
and upholding everything between earth and heaven. To this
Lord alone, and to no others, we should offer all our love and
respect.
- Rig Veda (10.121 .1); Atharva Veda (4.2.7)
This Supreme Reality is not a mere abstract concept of philosophy,
either. It is a reality in the Vedas, whose invocation and evocation
are essential for the whole process of spiritual growth and the
fulfilment of life. God is a dynamic reality that should concern an
individual every moment of his life. We forget this, or ignore it, but
many hymns remind us that God never neglects us:
God is always near, He never leaves. But near as He always is,
no one and no thing ever sees Him. Such is the great Art of the
Lord - Poetry that is deathless, Songs that will never seem old.
- Atharva Veda (10.8.32)
Vedic invocations, which are deemed animistic and crudely pagan
by many scholars, merely invoke God through his attributes and
functions. He is the Force behind all of nature's mighty forces, the
Light behind light; the Terror behind terror; the Delight behind
delights; the Ultimate Activity behind all activities. These forces
and qualities are praised and admired in the hymns, but as a way of
drawing closer to the One behind and within them.
Similarly, God's various names in the Vedas are the one God
viewed in terms of his attributes, functions, and nature. There is no
real suggestion of anything besides the One.
The Yajur Veda (60.17) states that, removed from the context of its
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