The word ‘trimurti’ means ‘three forms’. In the trimurti, Brahma is the creator, Vishnu is the preserver and Shiva is the destroyer. Remember the difference between Brahman (with an ‘n’), which refers to Ultimate Reality, and Brahma (with no ‘n’), which refers to the creator god.
Shaivism at the
Elephanta Caves Shaivites hold that, according to
Shaiva Agama, Shiva performs five actions: creation, preservation, dissolution, grace, and illusion. Respectively, these first three actions are associated with Shiva as
Sadyojata (akin to
Brahma),
Vamadeva (akin to
Vishnu) and
Aghora (akin to
Rudra). Thus, Brahma, Vishnu and Rudra are not deities different from Shiva, but rather are forms of Shiva. As Brahma/Sadyojata, Shiva creates. As Vishnu/Vamadeva, Shiva preserves. As Rudra/Aghora, he dissolves. This stands in contrast to the idea that Shiva is the "God of destruction." Shiva is the supreme God and performs all actions, of which destruction is only but one. Ergo, the Trimurti is a form of Shiva Himself for Shaivas. Shaivites believe that Shiva is the Supreme, who assumes various critical roles and assumes appropriate names and forms, and also stands transcending all these. A prominent visual example of a Shaivism version of the Trimurti is the
Trimurti Sadashiva sculpture in the
Elephanta Caves on
Gharapuri Island.
Vaishnavism , the principal deity worshipped at
Angkor Wat, Cambodia Despite the fact that the
Vishnu Purana describes that
Vishnu manifests as
Brahma in order to create and as
Rudra (
Shiva) in order to destroy,
Vaishnavism generally does not acknowledge the Trimurti concept. Instead, they believe in the
avataras of Vishnu like
Narasimha,
Rama,
Krishna, and so forth. They also believe that Shiva and Brahma are both forms of Vishnu. For example, the
Dvaita school holds Vishnu alone to be the Supreme God, with
Shiva subordinate, and interprets the
Puranas differently. For example, Vijayindra Tîrtha, a Dvaita scholar interprets the 18
puranas differently. He interprets the Vaishnavite puranas as
satvic and Shaivite puranas as
tamasic and that only satvic puranas are considered to be authoritative. The tradition of
Sri Vaishnavism in the south holds that all major deities that are hailed in the Puranas are in fact forms of Vishnu, and that the scriptures are dedicated to him alone.
Shaktism The female-centric
Shaktidharma denomination assigns the eminent roles of the three forms (
Trimurti) of
Supreme Divinity not to masculine gods but instead to feminine goddesses:
Mahasarasvati (Creatrix),
Mahalaxmi (Preservatrix), and
Mahakali (Destructrix). This feminine version of the Trimurti is called
Tridevi ("three goddesses"). The masculine gods (
Brahma,
Vishnu,
Shiva) are then relegated as auxiliary agents of the supreme feminine Tridevi.
Smartism Smartism is a denomination of Hinduism that places emphasis on a group of five deities rather than just a single deity. The "worship of the five forms" () system, which was popularized by the ninth-century philosopher Adi Shankara| among orthodox Brahmins of the
Smārta tradition, invokes the five deities
Shiva,
Vishnu,
Brahma,
Shakti and
Surya. Adi Shankara| later added
Kartikeya to these five, making six total. This reformed system was promoted by primarily to unite the principal deities of the
six major sects on an equal status. The
monistic philosophy preached by made it possible to choose one of these as a preferred principal deity and at the same time worship the other four deities as different forms of the same all-pervading
Brahman. == See also ==