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Vishnu - Pre-Puranic Vishnu

Vishnu - Pre-Puranic Vishnu: Encyclopedia II - Vishnu - Pre-Puranic Vishnu

Vishnu - In the Vedas. In the Rigveda, Vishnu is mentioned 93 times. He is frequently invoked with other gods, especially with Indra, whom he assists in killing Vritra, and with whom he drinks Soma. His companionship with Indra is still reflected by his later epitheta Indrānuja and Upendra. His distinguishing characteristic in the Vedas is his association with Li ...

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Vishnu, Vishnu - Etymology, Vishnu - Pre-Puranic Vishnu, Vishnu - In the Vedas, Vishnu - In the Brahmanas, Vishnu - In the Upanishads, Vishnu - Theological attributes and more, Vishnu - Relations with other Deities, Vishnu - Iconography, Vishnu - Worship, Vishnu - Names, Vishnu - Theological beliefs and philosophy

Vishnu, Vishnu - Etymology, Vishnu - Iconography, Vishnu - In the Brahmanas, Vishnu - In the Upanishads, Vishnu - In the Vedas, Vishnu - Names, Vishnu - Pre-Puranic Vishnu, Vishnu - Relations with other Deities, Vishnu - Theological attributes and more, Vishnu - Theological beliefs and philosophy, Vishnu - Worship, Hindu deities, List of Hindu deities, the Journal of Vaishnava Studies

Vishnu: Encyclopedia II - Vishnu - Pre-Puranic Vishnu



Vishnu - Pre-Puranic Vishnu

Vishnu - In the Vedas

In the Rigveda, Vishnu is mentioned 93 times. He is frequently invoked with other gods, especially with Indra, whom he assists in killing Vritra, and with whom he drinks Soma. His companionship with Indra is still reflected by his later epitheta Indrānuja and Upendra. His distinguishing characteristic in the Vedas is his association with Light, or even his identification with the Sun.

The most celebrated act of Vishnu in the Rigveda is the 'three steps' by which he strode over this (universe) and in three places planted his step. The 'Vishnu Sukta' of the Rig Veda (1.154) says that the first and second of Vishnu's strides (those encompassing the earth and air) are visible to men and the third is in the heights of heaven (sky). This last place is described as Vishnu's supreme abode in RV 1.22.20:

The princes evermore behold / that loftiest place where Visnu is / Laid as it were an eye in heaven. (trans. Grittith)

Griffith's "princes" are the sūri, either "inciters" or lords of a sacrifice, or priests charged with pressing the Soma. The verse is later quoted as expressing Vishnu's supremacy by Vaishnavites,

( In the Rigveda the Sun is not a high-ranking deity, c.f. e.g. RV 2.12.7,

He who gave being to the Sun and Morning, who leads the waters, He, O men, is Indra. (trans. Griffith)

where Indra appears as senior to the Sun.)

One early commentator, Aurnavabha, who is mentioned by Yaska in his Nirukta, interprets the three steps as the different positions of the sun at his rising, culmination, and setting. Though such solar aspects have been associated with Vishnu by tradition as well as modern-scholarship, he was not just the representation of the sun for in Rigveda he traverses in his strides both vertcially and horizontally.

In hymns I.22.17, 1.154.3, 1.154.4 he strides across the earth with three steps, in VI.49.13 , VII.100.3 strides across the earth three times and in I.154.1,I.155.5,VII.29.7 he strides vertically, with the final step in the heavens. The same Veda also says he strode wide and created space in the cosmos for Indra to fight Vritra. By his stride he said to have made dwelling for men possible, the three being a symbolic representation of its all-encompassing nature. This all-enveloping nature, assistance to Indra and benevolence to men were to remain the enduring attributes of Vishnu. As the triple-strder he is known as Tri-vikrama and as Uru-krama for the strides were wide.(The reference to the three strides of Vishnu in the Rig Veda is most possibly a prototype for the later legend of Vamana.)

In the Vedas, Vishnu appears not yet included in the class of the Adityas (unless it is implied that he is identical with Surya, and included as the eighth Aditya), but in later texts he appears as heading them.

It is inexplicable how Vishnu (and Shiva) rose to the prominence enjoyed currently by referring only to the Vedic hymns as Indra and Agni are invoked far more. It must be remembered that these hymns are liturgical in nature and meant primarily for the Soma sacrifice, especially dear to Indra. They may not represent the popular religion of those times as Jan Gonda cautions.(He also gives an elaborate explantion of how the notion of Vishnu spread over various hymns contains the germs of future attributes.) In some Rgvedic hymns, Indra seeks the help of Vishnu in destroying Vritra, indicating that he is not sufficient to accomplish it on his own.(This story can be found in later epics and Puranas with ever increasing emphasis on Vishnu's role, till in the Bhagavata Purana, Vritra is a warrior, philosopher and devotee in whose comparison Indra is a pale figure.)

In another interpretation, the characteristic of Vishnu as the Supreme God appeared much earlier in the Vedic texts. For example, the following Vedic hymns express that point of view:

1. Purusha Sukta of Taittiriya Aranyaka (3.13.2) also refers master of Hri and Lakshmi (Vishnu) as Purusha, the Supreme God.

2. Visvakarma Sukta of Rig Veda (10.82) refers to Visnu indirectly as the Supreme God.

  • 10.082.06: The waters verily first retained the embryo in which all the gods were aggregated, single deposited on the navel of the unborn (creator), in which all beings abide. The reference to the navel of the unborn is an indication of reference to Vishnu.
  • Agni is the lowest among devatas and Vishnu is the highest. All other devatas except Lord Visnu and Agni Deva occupy positions between them. A similar view of Agni as the youngest deity and Vishnu as the oldest deity, in one interpretation, is even expressed in the Chamakam, the last lines in the famous Saivite Vedic hymn, Shri Rudram.

Vishnu - In the Brahmanas

By the age of the Brahmanas, various stories can be found associating Vishnu with the Sacrifice. The sacrifice being the core of interest for these texts, this association goes a long way in explaining the importance of Vishnu. How this association came about is not clear, but the various stories in the Brhamanas seem to explain a fiat accompli. Visnu is said to have become the most important of all gods by truly 'understanding' the meaning of the sacrifice before all else. In the Shatapatha Brahmana he is described as winning the sacrifice back from Asuras as a dwarf, where the kernel of the Vamana incarnation can be seen. Aitareya Brahmana: 1:1:1 mentions Vishnu as the Supreme God.

Vishnu - In the Upanishads

The Upanishads that form the philosophical culmination of the Vedas are dated around 900 BCE. The oldest of these are the Chhandogya and Brhadaranyaka. The former does not name Vishnu and the latter mentions him as part of ritual to obtain an exceptionally wise and learned son along with other deities. The slightly later Katha-upanishad, however, has Vishnu in prominence -

He who has no understanding, who is unmindful and always impure, never reaches that place, but enters into the round of births.But he who has understanding, who is mindful and always pure, reaches indeed that place, from whence he is not born again.But he who has understanding for his charioteer(intellect), and who holds the reins of the mind, he reaches the end of his journey, and that is the highest place of Vishnu.

His rise to supremacy is apparent in the epics (Mahabharata, Ramayana, and from this period he may be considered a manifestation of the Singular God. Thus, according to this interpretation, the division of Hinduism in Vaishnavism and Shaivaism appeared only with the Puranas, where Vishnu's descents in ten principal Avatars become his distinguishing characteristic.

Other related archives

Acyutah, Adi Sankara, Adityas, Advaita, Agni, Aryan, Asuras, Atharvaveda, Avatars, Bhrigu, Brahma, Brahman, Brahmanas, Caitanya Mahaprabhu, Chandra, Devanagari, Devas, Dvaita, Energy, Ganesha, Garuda, Gaudiya Vaishnava Theology, Gaudiya Vaishnavism, God, Govinda, Grittith, Hanuman, Hayagriva, Hindu Trinity, Hindu deities, Hindu philosophy, Hinduism, Hindus, Hrsikesha, IAST, ISKCON, Indra, Ishta-Deva, Janardana, Kesava, Krishna, Krishnology, Kubera, Lakshmi, List of Hindu deities, Madhava, Madhusudana, Madhva, Mahabharata, Manfred Mayrhofer, Maruta, Maya, Moon, Narasimha, Narayana, Nirukta, Omniscient, Padmanabha, Purana, Puranas, Rama, Ramakrishna, Ramakrishna Math, Ramakrishna Mission, Ramanuja, Rigveda, Sacrifice, Saguna Brahman, Shaivism, Shaivites, Shesha, Shiva, Shri, Shri Rudram, Singular God, Smartas, Soma, Sovereignty, Sridhara, Sriman, Sriman Narayana, Srinivasa, Srivaishnavism, Strength, Sun, Surya, Swami Tapasyananda, Tirupati, Trimurti, Upanishad, Upanishads, Vaishnava Theology, Vaishnavas, Vaishnavism, Vamana, Varaha, Varuna, Vasudeva, Vedas, Venkateswara, Vishishtadvaita, Vishnu Purana, Vishnu Sahasranama, Vishnu sahasranama, Vritra, Vāsudeva, Yama, Yaska, Zoroastrian, adharma, anthropomorphic, avatar, avatars, chakra, conch, cosmos, crown, devas, dharma, earrings, epithets, guņa, lingam, lotus, mace, mankind, narayana, navel, omnipresent, perfect tense, petals, popular etymology, reduplicated, root, saligrama, satya, seasons, the Journal of Vaishnava Studies, yuga



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Pre-Puranic Vishnu", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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