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Can Something Be Divine Independently of a Deity?

SalixIncendium

अहं ब्रह्मास्मि
Staff member
Premium Member
In another discussion, there was a comparison made between divine law and natural law. In a response, someone mentioned that they thought natural law might exist independent of deities.

I was going to engage in a discussion about the difference between divine and deities, but then looked at the dictionary definition of 'divine' and, to my dismay, found this.

As one that doesn't identify as a theist, I perceive Brahman to be divine, and, as I see it, Brahman is no deity. So my answer to the question in the title would be a resounding "yes," as I perceive deities to be an appearance of Brahman, but Brahman is not intrinsic to deity.

Your thoughts?
 

SalixIncendium

अहं ब्रह्मास्मि
Staff member
Premium Member
What do you see as being the distinction?

It is likely that the words in English have a monotheistic bias, so maybe a different word than 'divine' is more appropriate?

Perhaps the word 'sacred' is closer to the mark?

I don't think so. I've been poking around the link I left in the OP and if you click the link GOD entry 1 sense 1 in that link, you'll see it ties to "the supreme or ultimate reality." So the dictionary definition is not as problematic as I thought when I wrote the OP.

But I digress. The distinction I see is that while a deity can be considered divine, divinity actually transcends deity.
 

Polymath257

Think & Care
Staff member
Premium Member
I don't think so. I've been poking around the link I left in the OP and if you click the link GOD entry 1 sense 1 in that link, you'll see it ties to "the supreme or ultimate reality." So the dictionary definition is not as problematic as I thought when I wrote the OP.

But I digress. The distinction I see is that while a deity can be considered divine, divinity actually transcends deity.

Could you elaborate? I'm not clear about what 'transcends' means in this context.
 

Thief

Rogue Theologian
In another discussion, there was a comparison made between divine law and natural law. In a response, someone mentioned that they thought natural law might exist independent of deities.

I was going to engage in a discussion about the difference between divine and deities, but then looked at the dictionary definition of 'divine' and, to my dismay, found this.

As one that doesn't identify as a theist, I perceive Brahman to be divine, and, as I see it, Brahman is no deity. So my answer to the question in the title would be a resounding "yes," as I perceive deities to be an appearance of Brahman, but Brahman is not intrinsic to deity.

Your thoughts?
divine as termed to obedience of law.....?

I suspect we each can find in ourselves some level of spirit....
that we can recognize as .....more than human
 

beenherebeforeagain

Rogue Animist
Premium Member
I do think the English terms do tend to be monotheistic and universalist in nature, while in practice people who are pan or polytheistic would recognize more specific applications than offered in an English dictionary.

There are lots of other words, though, to express what seems to be at issue here: something can be divine by being superb, awe-inspiring, beautiful, amazing, sacred, etc., without even a hint of deity needed to make the term work.
 

Fool

ALL in all
Premium Member
In another discussion, there was a comparison made between divine law and natural law. In a response, someone mentioned that they thought natural law might exist independent of deities.

I was going to engage in a discussion about the difference between divine and deities, but then looked at the dictionary definition of 'divine' and, to my dismay, found this.

As one that doesn't identify as a theist, I perceive Brahman to be divine, and, as I see it, Brahman is no deity. So my answer to the question in the title would be a resounding "yes," as I perceive deities to be an appearance of Brahman, but Brahman is not intrinsic to deity.

Your thoughts?
i agree. brahman, pure consciousness, is manifested through deities but is not necessarily an exact form but an exact action, a spirit.


namaste
 

Terry Sampson

Well-Known Member
Terry's "Really Rough Rule of Thumb": Any thing in the universe is either rock, plant, animal, or god.
divine - Wiktionary
It seems to me to be a departure from the words' etymological origin, but I'd say: All gods are divine, but everything that's divine is not god.
 
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Thief

Rogue Theologian
if anything could behave as 'intended'....
and never fail to do so

that might be physical

and so.....pick up a rock and call it holy

but I think not
 

`mud

Just old
Premium Member
Like choosing a Brahman path to Nirvana and beyond....
Brahman, to me, is the idea behind the action or response.
The `life` after death is the way we live our lives and deaths,
but only in our minds ! There may be no end !
 

dybmh

דניאל יוסף בן מאיר הירש
In another discussion, there was a comparison made between divine law and natural law. In a response, someone mentioned that they thought natural law might exist independent of deities.

I was going to engage in a discussion about the difference between divine and deities, but then looked at the dictionary definition of 'divine' and, to my dismay, found this.

As one that doesn't identify as a theist, I perceive Brahman to be divine, and, as I see it, Brahman is no deity. So my answer to the question in the title would be a resounding "yes," as I perceive deities to be an appearance of Brahman, but Brahman is not intrinsic to deity.

Your thoughts?
Yes, your explanation fits perfectly and is in agreement with Chabad Chassidus ( the version of Judaism I practice ). I think there's a Wikipedia page out there somewhere that describes it ...

:rolleyes::D
 

Left Coast

This Is Water
Staff member
Premium Member
I don't think so. I've been poking around the link I left in the OP and if you click the link GOD entry 1 sense 1 in that link, you'll see it ties to "the supreme or ultimate reality." So the dictionary definition is not as problematic as I thought when I wrote the OP.

But I digress. The distinction I see is that while a deity can be considered divine, divinity actually transcends deity.

Hey Salix,

I think this ties to the issue that came up in the other thread. I think in Dharmic (and pagan) traditions, "gods" are individual manifestations, albeit supernatural or somehow more than human, of the divine. Which is part of the reason they would take such exception to Brahman being called a God, as Brhaman is much more than that. For classical theists/Abrahamics, however, God IS the divine, the Ultimate Reality.
 

Sw. Vandana Jyothi

Truth is One, many are the Names
Premium Member
As one that doesn't identify as a theist, I perceive Brahman to be divine, and, as I see it, Brahman is no deity. So my answer to the question in the title would be a resounding "yes," as I perceive deities to be an appearance of Brahman, but Brahman is not intrinsic to deity.

Your thoughts?

Namaste, I think your statement is dead bang on, Salixji, if by your phrase "not intrinsic" you also allow that Brahman pervades all but is not all. However, it's very difficult for most minds to grasp Existence without boundaries (Brahman/God). Hence man's need to "create" containers for that idea (which become gods and deities). The very nature of mind is to contrast and compare and in order to do so, it tries to encircle an idea from all sides in order to grasp it. Yet because mind can never know Brahman, the last obstacle to fall in Self-realization is even the idea of bonds and bodies.
 
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SalixIncendium

अहं ब्रह्मास्मि
Staff member
Premium Member
Namaste, I think your statement is dead bang on, Salixji, if by your phrase "not intrinsic" you also allow that Brahman pervades all but is not all.

Namaste Swamini. Can you please expand on this? What, in your view, is there within vyavaharika that is not Brahman?
 

SalixIncendium

अहं ब्रह्मास्मि
Staff member
Premium Member
Hey Salix,

I think this ties to the issue that came up in the other thread. I think in Dharmic (and pagan) traditions, "gods" are individual manifestations, albeit supernatural or somehow more than human, of the divine. Which is part of the reason they would take such exception to Brahman being called a God, as Brhaman is much more than that. For classical theists/Abrahamics, however, God IS the divine, the Ultimate Reality.

In my years of experience with Catholicism and Christianity, I have never heard of God referred to as an Ultimate Reality. In the Abrahamic religions I'm familiar with, God is perceived as a supernatural anthropomorphized being...a sentient creator and ruler. While there are such qualities in Saguna Brahman, there is no equivalent that I'm aware of in Abrahamic faiths for Nirguna Brahman (Brahman without qualities).
 

Sw. Vandana Jyothi

Truth is One, many are the Names
Premium Member
Namaste Swamini. Can you please expand on this? What, in your view, is there within vyavaharika that is not Brahman?

Warm salutations, Salixji
We may be just dancing with subtle semantics. In Eknath Easwaran's translation of the Bhagavad Gita, Chapter IX Verses 4-5, Sri Krishna states, "I pervade the entire universe in my unmanifested form. [To me, this is the reference to Brahman.] All creatures find their existence in me, but I am not limited by them. Behold my divine mystery! [There's that word "divine" again. :p] These creatures do not really dwell in me, and though I bring them forth and support them, I am not confined within them [italics mine.]

My own Guruji, Sadguru Sant Keshavadas, translated the same verses thus:
All this is by Me permeated
In My aspect unmanifested
In Me all these beings abide
They in the end in Me subside (4

Beings look at My yoga divine
As wonderful, beautiful and serene
I am not in them in reality [italics mine]
Though I sustain them with My ability (5
In other words, all that is within vyavaharika is perishable, but Brahman is not. I'm pretty sure you agree with that and it was this distinction I was alluding to when I said Brahman pervades all but is not all.

 
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9-10ths_Penguin

1/10 Subway Stalinist
Premium Member
In another discussion, there was a comparison made between divine law and natural law. In a response, someone mentioned that they thought natural law might exist independent of deities.

I was going to engage in a discussion about the difference between divine and deities, but then looked at the dictionary definition of 'divine' and, to my dismay, found this.

As one that doesn't identify as a theist, I perceive Brahman to be divine, and, as I see it, Brahman is no deity. So my answer to the question in the title would be a resounding "yes," as I perceive deities to be an appearance of Brahman, but Brahman is not intrinsic to deity.

Your thoughts?
There's a conceptual link between the two terms, but the link doesn't need to be literal.

... kinda like how calling something "majestic" doesn't mean it necessarily has a literal link to royalty.
 

Left Coast

This Is Water
Staff member
Premium Member
In my years of experience with Catholicism and Christianity, I have never heard of God referred to as an Ultimate Reality. In the Abrahamic religions I'm familiar with, God is perceived as a supernatural anthropomorphized being...a sentient creator and ruler. While there are such qualities in Saguna Brahman, there is no equivalent that I'm aware of in Abrahamic faiths for Nirguna Brahman (Brahman without qualities).

It's quite unfortunate, because modern Christianity in the last century or so has been hijacked by an anthropomorphized, creationist version of God that came out of fundamentalism and is really a caricature of the God described by classical theism and the more historic understanding of God in the Abrahamic traditions. God as these faiths have long understood him is not a super-human sky daddy. That is more akin to the gods of Greek mythology.

Regarding a close equivalent to Brahman without qualities, allow me to quote from from Vladimir Lossky's The Mystical Theology of the Eastern Church (pg. 25):

Dionysius [the Areopagite] distinguishes two possible theological ways. One--that of cataphatic or positive theology--proceeds by affirmations; the other--apophatic or negative theology--by negations. The first leads us to some knowledge of God, but is an imperfect way. The perfect way, the only way which is fitting in regard to God, who is of his very nature unknowable, is the second--which leads us finally to total ignorance. All knowledge has as its object that which is. Now God is beyond all that exists. In order to approach Him it is necessary to deny all that is inferior to Him, that is to say, all that which is. If in seeing God one can know what one sees, then one has not seen god in Himself but something intelligible, something which is inferior to Him. It is by unknowing that one may know Him who is above every possible object of knowledge. Proceeding by negations one ascends from the inferior degrees of being to the highest, by progressively setting aside all that can be known, in order to draw near to the Unknown in the darkness of absolute ignorance. For even as light, and especially abundance of light, renders darkness invisible; even so the knowledge of created things, and especially excess of knowledge, destroys the ignorance which is the only way by which one can attain to God in Himself.

The Western Church, which had tended toward a more intellectualized, cataphatic theology, I think has often confused the painting with the object being painted. However, even in the West, theologians like Paul Tillich have emphasized that God is beyond all our categories and conceptualizations.
 
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