Among the prominent Vedic
Gods, Agni is the chief terrestrial deity, being celebrated in 200 hymns of the
Rig Veda. Next to Indra he is the most prominent of the Vedic gods. He is
represented as having flame-hair and having a tawny beard. He has burning jaws,
golden teeth, bearing many gifts in his hands for men. Sometimes he is said to
have three heads and three or seven tongues, facing in all directions. Agni is
likened to various animals like a bull, a calf, a horse, an eagle, or a
celestial bird. He darts with rapid flight to the gods. He is also likened to
various objects like gold, a hatchet, a car, wood, ghee and riches.
Agni is intimately
connected with domestic life. He is considered to be the master of the house,
the head of the clan, and the domestic god:
“In every home you are a
welcome guest
The lord of the household:
Son, father, mother, brother and friend.”
The lord of the household:
Son, father, mother, brother and friend.”
Agni takes birth in wood
and plants. He is the navel of the earth and takes birth in the sky as
lightning. He is in the sun and in fire. He is brilliant-flamed, of golden
form, and destroyer of darkness.
“Mighty Agni though you
are one
Your forms are three: you blaze on earth as fire,
And as lightning in the atmosphere.
You are the golden sun flaming in the heaven.”
Your forms are three: you blaze on earth as fire,
And as lightning in the atmosphere.
You are the golden sun flaming in the heaven.”
Interestingly, most
domestic rituals in India today have been handed down from Vedic times to the
present with little change or elaboration. Today, however, priests do not
control the house rituals as was the case in the Vedic times.
During fire sacrifices,
people offered their possessions to the gods. The most important sacrificial
offerings were placed in a fire. People believed that the god Agni conveyed
their offerings to the other gods through the fire. Agni was thought to be both
the god of fire and the sacrificial fire itself. As the god of fire, he was the
medium through which humans could relate to the other gods:
“You, oh Agni, are Indra,
the bull of all that exists;
You are the wide striding Vishnu, worthy of reverence;
Oh Lord of the Holy Word (Brahaspati), you are the chief priest
You, oh Agni, are King Varuna, whose laws are firm;
You are Mitra, the wonder-worker to be revered.
You, oh Agni, are Rudra, the Asura of lofty heaven;
As the troops of Maruts, you control sustenance.”
You are the wide striding Vishnu, worthy of reverence;
Oh Lord of the Holy Word (Brahaspati), you are the chief priest
You, oh Agni, are King Varuna, whose laws are firm;
You are Mitra, the wonder-worker to be revered.
You, oh Agni, are Rudra, the Asura of lofty heaven;
As the troops of Maruts, you control sustenance.”
In sacrifices, Agni
represented all the other gods. As the messenger to them, Agni linked humankind
to the divine world. Because he could assume various forms of fire, Agni was
believed to be an example of the divine world throughout nature. Agni quickly
became an all-important deity. In the celestial region, Agni was the sun. In
the atmospheric region, he was lightning. Finally, by lightning he was brought
to the earth, and rekindled as fire from the trees in which he was hidden. When
shrauta rituals were performed, three kinds of fire were kept so that they
might symbolically represent Agni of the sky, of the atmosphere, and of the
earth.
Courtesy-www.allaboutbharat.org
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