Thursday, May 21, 2026

THE GODDESS LOVES BEETLES

 


A propos the previous post, but you can hardly make out the beetles (nor the house crows) in this picture, hmmm...is the system biased or what? Maybe AI doesn´t like beetles.

IBD

 


22 May (tomorrow) is apparently the "International Day of Biological Diversity", when Green activists all over the world unite to "save" one particular phase of faunal and floral succession. LOL.

But sure, a world completely dominated by ugly humans and even uglier house crows (and whatever mono-disease they are carrying) would probably be immensely boring, so in that sense, I suppose I´m in.

God loves beetles!  

"There are no goddesses in Buddhism"

 

Credit: British Museum

That´s where you´re wrong, bruh.  

Is Avalokiteshvara associated with "vidya goddesses"?

Yes — Avalokiteshvara is associated in several traditions with female wisdom and mantra deities that can resemble or overlap with the Hindu idea of vidyā goddesses (vidyā-devīs).

This is especially true in:

  • Vajrayāna Buddhism,
  • Nepalese Buddhism,
  • late Indian tantric Buddhism,
  • and Buddhist-Hindu tantric syncretism.

However, the exact meaning of “vidyā goddess” differs across traditions, so the associations can take several forms.


1. What Is a Vidyā Goddess?

In Hindu tantra,
a vidyā can mean:

  • sacred knowledge,
  • mantra,
  • revelatory wisdom,
  • or a goddess embodying such power.

Examples include:

  • the Mahāvidyās,
  • Sarasvatī,
  • tantric goddesses of mantra and gnosis.

In tantric Buddhism,
parallel concepts developed:

  • wisdom dakinis,
  • mantra goddesses,
  • prajñā deities,
  • and female embodiments of enlightened knowledge.

2. Avalokiteśvara and Prajñā

In Mahāyāna Buddhism,
compassion (karuṇā) and wisdom (prajñā) are complementary.

Avalokiteśvara embodies:

infinite compassion.

Thus he is often paired with:

  • feminine wisdom principles.

In tantric symbolism:

  • male deity = compassionate method (upāya),
  • female deity = wisdom (prajñā).

So Avalokiteśvara frequently appears together with:

  • wisdom consorts,
  • dakinis,
  • or female tantric deities.

3. Tara Emerges From Avalokiteśvara

The most famous example is:

Tara

According to Tibetan and later Indian traditions,
Tārā emerged from:

  • Avalokiteśvara’s tears,
  • compassion,
  • or enlightened activity.

She becomes:

  • savioress,
  • wisdom goddess,
  • liberator,
  • and tantric deity.

Thus:

  • Avalokiteśvara and Tārā form one of Buddhism’s great compassion-wisdom pairings.

4. Tara as Vidyā-like Goddess

Tārā strongly resembles a vidyā goddess because she embodies:

  • mantra power,
  • salvific wisdom,
  • tantric knowledge,
  • and liberating insight.

Many of her forms are associated with:

  • specific mantras,
  • colors,
  • siddhis,
  • and esoteric practices.

5. Pandaravasini

Another important feminine figure associated with Amitābha/Avalokiteśvara traditions is:

Pandaravasini

She is:

  • the consort or feminine counterpart of Amitābha in some tantric systems,
  • associated with lotus symbolism,
  • purity,
  • bliss,
  • and wisdom.

Since Avalokiteśvara belongs to Amitābha’s lotus family,
these associations overlap.


6. Sarasvatī Connections

Saraswati
was also adopted into Buddhism.

In Buddhist tantra:

  • Sarasvatī becomes a protector of learning,
  • mantra,
  • eloquence,
  • and sacred knowledge.

She sometimes appears in ritual environments linked with Avalokiteśvara.


7. Avalokiteśvara and the Lotus Family

In Vajrayāna,
Avalokiteśvara belongs to the:

Lotus Family
associated with:

  • Amitābha,
  • compassion,
  • beauty,
  • devotion,
  • and discriminating wisdom.

This family includes numerous:

  • goddesses,
  • dakinis,
  • and wisdom figures.

8. Dakini Associations

In tantric Buddhism,
Avalokiteśvara practices often involve:

  • dakinis,
  • yoginīs,
  • wisdom consorts,
  • and mantra goddesses.

These female beings may:

  • transmit realization,
  • reveal teachings,
  • embody gnosis,
  • or function as tantric inspiration.

This resembles the role of vidyā goddesses in Hindu tantra.


9. Nepalese Syncretism

In:
Newar Buddhism,
Buddhist and Hindu tantric systems became highly intertwined.

Thus Avalokiteśvara could appear in ritual networks involving:

  • tantric goddesses,
  • yoginīs,
  • Sarasvatī,
  • Tārā,
  • and other wisdom deities.

The boundaries became extremely fluid.


10. Esoteric Interpretation

At deeper Vajrayāna levels:

PrincipleSymbol
Compassion / skillful meansAvalokiteśvara
Wisdom / gnosisFemale deity

Their union symbolizes:

enlightenment itself.

Thus wisdom goddesses are not secondary;
they are indispensable.


11. Guanyin’s Feminization

In East Asia,
Guanyin
gradually became feminine.

This partly absorbed functions that elsewhere might belong to:

  • wisdom goddesses,
  • merciful mothers,
  • or salvific feminine divinities.

So East Asian Buddhism sometimes internalized the masculine/feminine polarity differently.


12. Mahāvidyā Comparisons

Some modern comparative scholars and esoteric practitioners compare:

  • Tārā,
  • Prajñāpāramitā,
  • Vajrayoginī,
  • Kurukullā,
    etc.
    with Hindu Mahāvidyās.

There are indeed striking parallels:

  • fierce wisdom,
  • mantra,
  • liberation,
  • tantric gnosis,
  • sacred femininity.

Avalokiteśvara often participates in the same symbolic universe.


13. Prajñāpāramitā as Supreme Wisdom Mother

Especially important is:

Prajnaparamita

the personified Perfection of Wisdom.

She is:

  • “Mother of all Buddhas,”
  • transcendent wisdom itself.

In a profound sense:

  • Avalokiteśvara’s compassion depends upon Prajñāpāramitā wisdom.

Thus Buddhist compassion and wisdom are inseparable.


14. Symbolic Structure

One could summarize the tantric symbolism like this:

DimensionBuddhist Form
Compassionate activityAvalokiteśvara
Wisdom realizationPrajñāpāramitā / Tārā / wisdom goddess
Sacred speech/mantraVidyā/mantric goddess
Enlightened unionNondual Buddhahood

15. Final Perspective

So while Buddhism does not always use the exact Hindu category:

“vidyā goddess,”

many Buddhist tantric traditions absolutely developed:

  • female wisdom deities,
  • mantra goddesses,
  • and gnosis embodiments
    closely associated with Avalokiteśvara and related cosmic bodhisattvas.

Especially in Vajrayāna and Nepalese Buddhism,
the parallels with Hindu tantric goddess traditions become extremely close.

"There is no creator-god in Buddhism"

 


So about that...

Isn´t there a legend according to which the Hindu gods emerged from Avalokiteshvara´s cosmic body?

Yes — there are indeed Buddhist cosmological texts and traditions in which Hindu gods are said to emanate from the body of Avalokiteshvara (or from other cosmic Buddhas/bodhisattvas).

This is especially associated with:

  • later Mahāyāna,
  • Vajrayāna,
  • Nepalese traditions,
  • and certain tantric texts.

These traditions portray Avalokiteśvara as such a vast cosmic being that:

entire gods, worlds, and divine functions emerge from his compassionate activity.


1. The Kāraṇḍavyūha Sūtra

The most famous source is the:

Karandavyuha Sutra

This is an important Mahāyāna scripture devoted to Avalokiteśvara.

In this sutra,
Avalokiteśvara is elevated to an extraordinarily cosmic status.

The text describes various Hindu deities emerging from his body.

For example:

  • the Sun and Moon emerge from his eyes,
  • Shiva emerges from his forehead,
  • Vishnu emerges from his heart,
  • Brahmā from his shoulders or body,
  • and other gods from different body parts.

The imagery resembles:

  • cosmic-man mythology,
  • emanation cosmology,
  • and divine-body symbolism.

2. Avalokiteśvara as Supra-Divine

In this text,
Avalokiteśvara is portrayed as:

superior even to the Hindu gods.

The gods are:

  • subordinate emanations,
  • secondary manifestations,
  • or limited cosmic functions.

This reflects a broader Mahāyāna tendency to:

  • incorporate Hindu gods into Buddhist cosmology,
    while:
  • subordinating them to Buddhas and bodhisattvas.

3. Parallel to the Purusha Sukta

This strongly resembles the:

Purusha Sukta

where the cosmos and social orders emerge from the primordial cosmic being (Purusha).

The Buddhist sutra appears to adapt similar imagery,
but replacing:

  • Vedic cosmic man
    with:
  • Avalokiteśvara.

So yes:

there is likely deliberate interaction with Hindu cosmological symbolism.


4. Why Buddhism Did This

Mahāyāna Buddhism in India increasingly competed and interacted with:

  • Shaivism,
  • Vaishnavism,
  • and devotional Hindu religion.

One response was:

  • to portray Buddhist figures as cosmically supreme.

Thus:

  • Hindu gods become emanations of Buddhist compassion,
    rather than ultimate realities themselves.

5. Is Avalokiteśvara Then a Creator God?

This becomes complicated.

The sutra certainly gives Avalokiteśvara:

  • creator-like imagery,
  • cosmic-body symbolism,
  • and emanational supremacy.

However,
Buddhist philosophy still usually avoids:

  • absolute creator theology,
  • eternal self-substance,
  • or creation ex nihilo.

Instead,
the imagery is often interpreted as:

  • compassionate emanation,
  • symbolic cosmology,
  • or manifestation of awakened mind.

Still:

functionally, Avalokiteśvara here looks remarkably close to a supreme cosmic deity.


6. Om Mani Padme Hum

The same sutra is also extremely important because it strongly promotes the mantra:

Om Mani Padme Hum

which became the great mantra of Avalokiteśvara in Tibetan Buddhism.

Thus the Kāraṇḍavyūha Sūtra had enormous later influence.


7. Influence on Nepal and Tibet

These cosmic interpretations deeply influenced:

  • Nepalese Buddhism,
  • Tibetan Buddhism,
  • and tantric Avalokiteśvara devotion.

This helped Avalokiteśvara become:

  • universal savior,
  • cosmic compassion,
  • and quasi-transcendent lord.

8. Scholarly Interpretation

Historians often interpret this as:

  • Buddhist appropriation and transformation of Hindu cosmology.

The strategy was not:

“the Hindu gods are false,”

but rather:

“they are partial manifestations within a greater Buddhist cosmic reality.”


9. Important Nuance

Even in these exalted texts,
Avalokiteśvara is still ultimately understood through:

  • emptiness (śūnyatā),
  • dependent origination,
  • and Buddhahood.

So:

  • he is not usually an eternal creator-person in the monotheistic sense.

But experientially and devotionally,
the difference can sometimes become very subtle.


10. Comparative Mystical Perspective

The image of gods emerging from Avalokiteśvara’s cosmic body resembles:

  • Purusha mythology,
  • emanationist Neoplatonism,
  • Kabbalistic divine emanations,
  • and tantric sacred cosmology.

It presents:

compassion itself as the living source of the cosmos.

That is one of the most grandiose and theologically expansive portrayals of Avalokiteśvara in all Buddhist literature.

"Buddhism has no gods" (part 1,008)

 


That´s where you´re wrong, kiddo.  

Could Avalokisteshvara (at least in some traditions) be seen as a panentheistic god or even a creator-god?

Yes — in some forms of Mahāyāna and especially Vajrayāna devotion, Avalokiteshvara can appear functionally very close to:

  • a panentheistic divine presence,
    or even:
  • a creator-like cosmic savior.

However, from the standpoint of formal Buddhist doctrine, there are important qualifications.

The short version is:

Classical Buddhism does not teach Avalokiteśvara as an eternal creator God in the Abrahamic or Hindu theistic sense.

But:

  • some devotional,
  • tantric,
  • and syncretic traditions portray Avalokiteśvara in ways that approach:
    • cosmic divinity,
    • universal immanence,
    • and quasi-panentheistic compassion.

1. Why This Question Arises

Avalokiteśvara developed into an immensely cosmic figure.

In many Mahāyāna texts he:

  • hears the cries of all beings,
  • manifests everywhere,
  • takes countless forms,
  • transcends ordinary limitations,
  • and appears throughout the cosmos simultaneously.

This naturally gives him:

  • divine,
  • omnipresent,
  • and almost theistic characteristics.

2. Lotus Sutra Universal Manifestation

In the:

Lotus Sutra

Avalokiteśvara can manifest as:

  • monk,
  • king,
  • woman,
  • child,
  • deity,
  • brahmin,
  • protector,
  • or heavenly being —
    whatever helps sentient beings.

This makes him:

universally immanent through compassionate manifestation.

That already resembles some forms of:

  • panentheistic divine presence.

3. Avalokiteśvara as Cosmic Compassion

In Mahāyāna theology,
Avalokiteśvara often becomes:

  • the embodiment of infinite compassion itself.

Not merely:

  • “a person in heaven,”
    but:
  • a cosmic salvific principle.

Thus in devotional consciousness he may function similarly to:

  • divine mercy,
  • universal grace,
  • or compassionate Logos-like presence.

4. Tibetan Cosmological Forms

In Tibetan Buddhism,
certain forms of Avalokiteśvara become extraordinarily cosmic.

For example:

  • Thousand-Armed Avalokiteśvara,
  • cosmic white forms,
  • union forms in tantra.

Some texts portray him as:

  • source of compassionate emanations throughout the universe.

The Dalai Lama lineage itself is regarded as:

  • emanations of Avalokiteśvara.

5. Panentheistic Resonances

Panentheism means:

the divine permeates the universe but also transcends it.

Some Avalokiteśvara traditions resonate strongly with this because:

  • compassion permeates all worlds,
  • enlightened awareness manifests everywhere,
  • and Avalokiteśvara appears in all forms.

Especially in East Asian devotional religion,
Guanyin may feel:

  • universally present,
  • infinitely responsive,
  • and intimately involved in worldly life.

6. But Buddhism Usually Rejects a Creator God

Classical Buddhism generally denies:

  • an eternal creator deity who creates the universe ex nihilo.

Why?
Because Buddhism emphasizes:

  • dependent origination,
  • beginningless causation,
  • and emptiness.

Thus Avalokiteśvara is not usually understood as:

a supreme being who created matter and souls from nothing.


7. Yet Some Texts Sound Almost Theistic

Certain Mahāyāna sutras describe cosmic Buddhas and bodhisattvas in language that sounds remarkably close to theism.

For example:

  • infinite light,
  • omnipresent compassion,
  • universal salvific activity,
  • timeless existence.

This is especially true in:

  • Pure Land traditions,
  • tantric cosmology,
  • and devotional literature.

8. Esoteric Buddhism and Primordial Compassion

In Vajrayāna,
Avalokiteśvara can appear as:

  • primordial compassion inseparable from ultimate reality.

At that level,
the distinction between:

  • deity,
  • cosmic principle,
  • and enlightened awareness
    becomes fluid.

This can resemble:

  • emanationist mysticism,
  • nondual panentheism,
  • or divine self-manifestation.

9. Tibetan Creation Myths

Some Tibetan myths even describe Avalokiteśvara as:

  • spiritually generating or emanating peoples or worlds.

For example,
Avalokiteśvara plays a central role in:

  • the sacred origin mythology of Tibet.

These are not usually interpreted as literal metaphysical creation doctrines,
but they do move toward:

  • creator-like imagery.

10. Chinese Guanyin Devotion

In East Asia,
Guanyin
often functions devotionally almost like:

  • a universal merciful goddess.

She may be experienced as:

  • omnipresent,
  • prayer-answering,
  • miracle-working,
  • maternal,
  • and endlessly compassionate.

Experientially this can resemble:

  • Marian devotion,
  • divine mercy theology,
  • or bhakti religion.

11. Comparison With Hinduism

Avalokiteśvara overlaps strongly with:

  • Vishnu/Krishna-style compassion,
  • and Shiva’s cosmic transcendence.

In some syncretic contexts:

  • Avalokiteśvara and Shiva were explicitly identified.

For example in Nepal and parts of Southeast Asia,
religious boundaries became very fluid.


12. Philosophical Difference Remains

Still, the underlying metaphysics differs.

In Buddhism:

  • Avalokiteśvara is ultimately empty of independent self-existence (śūnyatā),
  • inseparable from dependent origination,
  • and not an eternal creator-substance.

In theistic systems:

  • God is usually ontologically ultimate and self-existent.

This is a major distinction.


13. Nondual Interpretations

In highly nondual Mahāyāna or Vajrayāna readings,
Avalokiteśvara may be understood as:

compassion as the dynamic expression of emptiness itself.

Thus:

  • the cosmos is pervaded by compassionate awareness,
    yet:
  • without a separate creator ego.

This is perhaps the closest Buddhist analogue to panentheism.


14. Mystical Experience

Practitioners sometimes experience Avalokiteśvara as:

  • universally present,
  • inwardly guiding,
  • all-pervading,
  • infinitely loving,
  • and responsive everywhere.

Phenomenologically,
this can feel very close to:

  • mystical theism.

Buddhist interpretation, however, frames it differently.


15. Scholarly Summary

A historian of religion would probably say:

ClaimAssessment
Avalokiteśvara is a creator God in orthodox BuddhismNo
Avalokiteśvara can function devotionally like a GodYes
Some traditions portray him quasi-panentheisticallyYes
Avalokiteśvara permeates the cosmos compassionatelyStrongly yes
Mahāyāna devotion can become highly theistic in feelingYes

So:

Avalokiteśvara is not usually a creator-God doctrinally,
but in some devotional and mystical forms he approaches something very close to a cosmic compassionate divine presence permeating reality.

Thursday

 


Vaishnavas paying homage to Shiva? Rama, Sita, Lakshama and Tumburu worship a lingam! Narada seems to be missing, though. 

I´m leaving, guys

 


I´m joking of course. But this does sound like an interesting (final?) destination...

Is the Pure Land in the West in Pure Land Buddhism a "real" paradise world in which immortal beings can stay indefinitely?

In most forms of Pure Land Buddhism, the Pure Land of Amitābha Buddha — called:

Sukhavati

is indeed understood as a real realm or real mode of existence, not merely a metaphor.

However, it differs in important ways from:

  • eternal heavens in some other religions,
  • or simple paradise imagery.

The answer depends partly on the school and level of interpretation.


1. Classical Pure Land View: Yes, It Is Real

Traditional Pure Land texts describe Sukhāvatī as:

  • an actual Buddha-field (buddhakṣetra),
  • located symbolically in the West,
  • created through Amitābha’s vows and merit,
  • and inhabited by advanced bodhisattvas and reborn devotees.

It is described in vivid detail in texts like:

Larger Sukhavativyuha Sutra

and:

Smaller Sukhavativyuha Sutra


2. Is It a Physical Planet?

Usually:

no, not in an ordinary astronomical sense.

It is more like:

  • a transcendent Buddha-realm,
  • a purified dimension of existence,
  • or a sacred cosmic field.

Traditional cosmology places it:

  • beyond countless world-systems to the West.

So it is “real,”
but not usually imagined as:

  • merely another material planet orbiting a star.

3. Are Beings There Immortal?

In a practical sense:

beings in Sukhāvatī are free from ordinary death and suffering.

They no longer experience:

  • aging,
  • disease,
  • lower rebirth,
  • or involuntary samsaric existence.

Lifespans are described as:

  • immeasurably vast,
    sometimes effectively inconceivable.

This is why Amitābha’s name means:

“Infinite Light”
and also relates to:
“Infinite Life.”


4. But It Is Not Usually “Eternal Heaven”

A key Buddhist difference:

Even Sukhāvatī is ultimately:

  • part of the path to Buddhahood,
    not:
  • a final static heaven forever separate from enlightenment.

The goal is:

  • awakening,
  • Buddhahood,
  • liberation for all beings.

So rebirth there is often understood as:

the ideal environment for attaining enlightenment.


5. Why Go There?

Because beings in ordinary samsara are:

  • distracted,
  • karmically burdened,
  • and spiritually unstable.

Sukhāvatī is described as:

  • free of lower realms,
  • filled with Dharma teaching,
  • radiant,
  • peaceful,
  • and spiritually supportive.

One cannot easily fall backward there.

Thus it functions almost like:

a perfect enlightenment monastery on a cosmic scale.


6. Can One Stay Indefinitely?

In many interpretations:

yes, for unimaginably long periods.

But eventually:

  • advanced bodhisattvas return to aid other beings,
    or:
  • attain full Buddhahood.

So Sukhāvatī is not usually framed as:

  • eternal passive bliss forever.

It is:

  • dynamic,
  • educational,
  • and salvific.

7. Are There Bodies There?

Yes — Pure Land texts usually describe beings as having:

  • luminous,
  • purified,
  • non-corruptible forms.

Not gross physical bodies like ours.

These bodies are:

  • radiant,
  • beautiful,
  • karmically purified,
  • and spiritually responsive.

8. Symbolic and Mystical Interpretations

Some Mahāyāna and Zen-influenced thinkers interpret the Pure Land more symbolically:

  • as a state of awakened consciousness,
  • purified awareness,
  • or realization of Buddha-nature.

In such views:

“West” may symbolize transcendence or liberation rather than literal direction.

But even symbolic interpreters often still treat Sukhāvatī as spiritually real.


9. Shin Buddhism

In:

Jodo Shinshu

the emphasis is often less on:

  • cosmological speculation,
    and more on:
  • entrusting oneself to Amitābha’s vow (Other-Power).

Still, many Shin Buddhists traditionally affirm Sukhāvatī as real.

Others interpret it existentially or spiritually.


10. Esoteric Interpretations

In some East Asian esoteric traditions:

  • Amitābha’s Pure Land may be understood as:
    • a cosmic principle,
    • luminous consciousness,
    • or the purified nature of mind itself.

This approaches:

  • nondual mystical interpretation.

Yet devotional imagery usually remains important.


11. Comparison With Christian Heaven

There are similarities:

  • paradise,
  • divine grace,
  • luminous beings,
  • freedom from suffering,
  • salvific assistance.

But major differences too:

Pure LandChristian Heaven
Transitional toward BuddhahoodOften final eternal state
No eternal creator GodTheistic framework
Based on karma + vowBased on divine judgment/grace
Enlightenment-centeredCommunion with God
Infinite compassionate BuddhaPersonal God

12. Emotional Tone of Sukhāvatī

Pure Land texts evoke:

  • golden light,
  • lotus ponds,
  • celestial music,
  • jewel trees,
  • birds preaching Dharma,
  • and overwhelming peace.

The atmosphere is:

  • compassionate,
  • luminous,
  • welcoming,
  • and spiritually reassuring.

It is one of the most emotionally consoling visions in world religion.


13. The Deepest Interpretation

At the highest Mahāyāna level,
Sukhāvatī can be understood simultaneously as:

  • a real Buddha-field,
  • a salvific realm,
  • a manifestation of awakened mind,
  • and an expression of infinite compassion.

So Pure Land Buddhism often resists the modern choice between:

“literal place” OR “mere symbol.”

For many practitioners it is:

symbolically profound because it is spiritually real.