Goddess in Vedic Period
During the Vedic age,
more than 3,000 years ago, women were assigned a high place in society. They
shared an equal standing with their men folk and enjoyed a kind of liberty that
actually had societal sanctions. The ancient Hindu philosophical concept of 'shakti',
the feminine principle of energy, was also a product of this age. This took the
form of worship of the female idols or goddesses.
Birth of the Goddess
The feminine forms of the Absolute and the popular Hindu
goddesses are believed to have taken shape in the Vedic era. These female forms
came to represent different feminine qualities and energies of the Brahman.
Goddess Kali portrays the destructive energy, Durga the protective, Lakshmi the
nourishing, and Saraswati the creative.
Here it's notable
that Hinduism recognizes both the masculine and feminine attributes of the
Divine, and that without honoring the feminine aspects, one cannot claim to
know God in his entirety. So we also have many male-female divine-duos like
Radha-Krishna, Sita-Ram, Uma-Mahesh, and Lakshmi-Narayan, where the female form
is usually addressed first.
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