Vedas era red-stone Agni statue.
Art of Mathura. In the Hindu pantheon, Agni occupies, after Indra, the most important position. The Vedas describe the foster-parents of Agni as two kindling fire sticks of Prajapati, whose loving action creates him. Just born, he is poetically presented as a tender baby, who needs loving attention lest he vanishes. With care, he sparks and smokes, then flames and grows stronger than his foster-parents, finally so strong that he burns to ashes what created him his residence by Prajapati. The hymns in these ancient texts refer to Agni with numerous epithets and synonyms, such as
Jātaveda (he who knows all knowledge),
Vaiśvānara (he who is relating to all people),
Tanūnapāta (he who is self-made),
Narāśaṃsa (he who embodies all people's praise),
Tripatsya (he who is with three dwellings), and many others. In Hindu mythology, Agni is also presented as one who is mysterious with a tendency to play hide and seek, not just with humans but with the deities. He hides in strange places such as waters, where in one myth, he imbues life force into fishes that dwell therein, due to which the fishes report his presence to the deities, who take Agni to heaven. Agni is in hymn 10.124 of the
Rigveda, a
Rishi (sage-poet-composer) and along with Indra and Sūrya makes up the Hindu trinity of gods who create, preserve, destroy. Agni is considered equivalent to all the deities in the Hinduism, which formed the foundation for the various non-dualistic and monistic theologies of Hinduism. These theme of equivalence is repeatedly presented in the Vedas, such as with the following words in the Maṇḍala 1 of the
Rigveda: They call it Indra, Mitra, Varuna,
Agni, and he is heavenly-winged Garuda. To what is One, sages give many a title, they call it
Agni, Yama, Matarisvan (Agni). —
Rigveda 1.164.46, Translator:
Klaus Klostermaier Upanishads Agni features prominently in the major and minor Upanishads of Hinduism. Among the earliest mention is the legend of a boy sage named
Satyakāma Jābāla, the son of an unwed father and an unwed mother, in chapter 4 of the
Chhāndogya Upanishad (~700 BCE). He honestly admits his poverty and that his mother does not know who his father was, an honesty that earns him a spot in a Hindu school (
gurukula). During his studies, the boy sage meets Agni, who then becomes the god for him as a cardinal direction, world body, eye and knowledge, and the abstract principle of Brahman which the Upanishad states is in everything and is everywhere and he becomes a boy sage. Agni appears in section 1.13 of
Chandogya Upanishad as well. In verse 18 of the
Isha Upanishad, Agni is invoked with, "O Agni, you know all the paths, lead me on to success by the good path, keep me away from the wrong path of sin". In sections 4.5–6 of the
Maitri Upanishad, the students ask their Hindu
Guru (teacher) Maitri about which deity is best among deities they name, a list that includes Agni. The Guru replies that they are all supreme, all merely forms of the Brahman, the whole world is Brahman. So pick anyone, says the Upanishad, meditate and adore that one, then meditate over them all, then deny and discard the individuality of every one of these deities including of Agni, thus journey unto the universal reality, for a communion with the
Purusha, which is the
Ātman. Sections 3 and 4 of
Kena Upanishad, another major ancient Upanishad, presents a story which includes gods Agni,
Vayu,
Indra and goddess
Parvati. Indra shares this knowledge with Agni and Vayu. The
Kena Upanishad closes these sections by stating that "Agni, Vayu, Indra" are revered first because they were the first among the deities to realize Brahman from Parvati. The allegorical legend, states Paul Deussen, aims to teach that all the Hindu deities and natural things have their basis in the timeless, universal monistic principle called Brahman. The section states that Agni and other deities manifest as five gross constituents that combine to make the entire universe, and that all the deities are internalized in the temple of a living body with Agni as the eyes. Agni is mentioned in many minor Upanishads, such as the
Pranagnihotra Upanishad, the
Yogatattva Upanishad, the
Yogashikha Upanishad, the
Trishikhibrahmana Upanishad and others. The syncretic and monistic Shaivism and Shaktism text, namely
Rudrahridaya Upanishad states that Shiva is same as Agni, and Parvati is same as Svaha.
Mundaka Upanishad (2.4) mentioned the seven tongues of Agni as
kālī,
karālī,
manojavā,
sulohita,
sudhāmravarṇā,
sphuliṅginī, visvarucī. ==Significance==