Goddess Shakti - The Mystica
Hindu Goddess Shakti (or Sakti) is the Tantric
title for the Great Goddess
(Devi), realized
as a sexual partner and as the innermost animating soul of man or god, like
the Greek Psyche, Roman Anima, Gnostic
Sophia, and the Kabbalistic Shekina,
all based on the Skati. Jung declared her to be the figure known as My Lady
Soul: "Every mother and every beloved is forced to become the carrier
and embodiment of this omnipresent and ageless image, which corresponds
to the deepest reality in man."
Hindu Goddess Shakti is translated "Cosmic Energy." (see Soul
of the World) She implies "power, ability, capacity, strength prowess;
regal power; power of composition, poetic power, genius; the power or signification
of a word or term; the power inherent in cause to produce its necessary
effect…[S]hakti is the female organ; shakti is the active
power of a deity and is regarded, spiritually and mythologically, as his
goddess-consort and queen." The Tantras
say, "the female principle antedates and includes the male principle,
and…this female principle is the supreme Divinity"
Tantric doctrine stipulates mortal women are "life-itself" and Goddess-like, because they embody the principle of Shakti. The sages say, "...hold women in great esteem and call them Shaktis and to ill treat a Shakti, that is, a woman, is a crime." A Tantric synonym for "woman" was Shaktiman, "Mind of Shakti" or "Possessor of Shakti."
Tantric doctrine stipulates mortal women are "life-itself" and Goddess-like, because they embody the principle of Shakti. The sages say, "...hold women in great esteem and call them Shaktis and to ill treat a Shakti, that is, a woman, is a crime." A Tantric synonym for "woman" was Shaktiman, "Mind of Shakti" or "Possessor of Shakti."
In Hindu Goddess Shakti is the eternal and supreme power, variously described
as manifest energy, the substance of everything and all pervading. The Vedic
meaning of Shakti is "energy." In Hinduism
Shakti is a term for the manifestation of the creative principle. However,
the concept of Shakti is derived from the hoary past and brahminized in
later centuries. The concept of the supreme power as female, a mother, a
womb, a vulva is not found in the pre-eminently patriarchal scriptures of
the Aryans, but arises, to be made respectable by the higher castes, from
the submerged prehistoric mother cults of the earliest people of the subcontinent.
A Shakti was also a spirit-wife, or feminine guardian angel, who could
be incarnate in the earthly wife, mistress or whore, or a wholly supernatural
figure. "An important division of the ‘mythology of woman’
is devoted to showing it is always a feminine being who helps the hero to
conquer immortality or to emerge victorious from his initiatory ordeals…Every
Teleut shaman has a celestial wife who lives
in the seventh heaven, where he meets her and makes love to her during his
ecstatic journeys."
The final union with Shakti occurs at the moment of death, according
to the Tantric mystics. She was both the individual and the cosmic goddess
absorbing the body and soul of the dying sage into herself, an experience
of unsurpassable bliss on his part. "The possession of her, the cosmic
Shakti, the living embodiment of the principle of beauty and youth eternal,
is the ultimate quest, the very highest prize."
The Kulacudamani Nigama said not even God could become the supreme Lord
unless Shakti entered him. All things arose from their union, but she said,
"There is none but Myself Who is the Mother to create." The Lalita
Sahasranamam said, "The series of universes appear and disappear with
the opening and shutting of Her eyes." As God required her power before
he could do anything at all, so her worshipper on earth required the power
of his own Istadevata, Shakti, or fair-love."
Likewise, the Middle-Eastern mystics such as the Sufis
kept to a similar belief. They proclaimed such a fair-love or fravashi
essential to any man’s enlightenment. By the Christian Gnostics
Shakti was worshipped by such names as Sophia, Pneuma, Eide, or Anima. Some
Gnostic writings used sexual symbolism to describe the union of one’s
soul after death with Shakti, as in the Mandaean Liturgies for the Dead:
the soul or "image" (Eide) embraces and caresses the dead man
like a beloved woman. This Tantric idea came to the West by the Avesta doctrine
that, after the death of a believer, his own conscience would overcome him
"in the form of a fair maiden."
In Hinduism, for accuracy it should be noted, Shakti means eternal and
Supreme Power, variously described as manifest energy, and substance of
everything, and all-pervading. In the Vedas the term means energy. Presently
Shakti is both connected with and identical to the power of the gods Shiva, Vishnu,
or Brahma, the great Hindu triad. From the
most ancient Hindu scriptural times Shakti, under a variety of names, is
linked to Shiva, the Lord of Sleep (and his various guises, especially Rudra). Shiva is said
to be helpless without the divine energy, Shakti. The two, coupled in sexual
union, are the two inseparable forces that impregnate the universe with
life in all of its forms. Without Sakati, Shiva is merely the Void. "He
has no visible form," the Linga-arcana Tantra states. "What
can be expected from the worship of nothingness?" Shiva (or Rudra),
thus a corpse, cannot be worshipped without Shakti. The Goddess is the source
of all, the universal Creator. Shakti does not even need Shiva; as eternal
Virgin (Kumari) she does not depend on any one any power, for she is the
One Itself as Power.
Shakti, energy, is the personification of a god, recognized in Hinduism, Jainism,
and Buddhism. In the more specific context,
the Salti identifies the creative force of the god Siva, particularly the
ugra or violent aspects of Durga
and Kali. The Shakti
may frequently have the same characteristics and carry the same attributes
as the principle god. In Tantrism, the
Shakti defines the unity of opposites, which is the yoni sexuality that
unites with the lingam of Shiva. A.G.H.
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