Hinduism… A Civilization of Many Books and the Absent God of Truth

Can a religion possess thousands of sacred books… hundreds of gods… millions of stories… and yet fail to provide a single clear answer about the Creator? This question begins to arise in the mind of anyone who approaches Hinduism sincerely.

Hinduism appears like a massive mountain of myths, philosophies, and rituals… but when you look more closely, you discover that it is not a religion with a defined message, but a vast heritage without a clear beginning and without a clear end. 1.

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A Heap of Books… Without a Single Word from God Between the earliest Indian texts and the latest, there spans more than 3,000 years.

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Hinduism venerates many books: the Vedas, the Mahabharata, the Gita, the Yoga Vasistha, the Ramayana… yet what is striking is that: No one knows the author of most of these books, nor the precise time of their writing, nor how they became “sacred.

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” No revelation… No prophet… No divine text… Only a long human accumulation that, over time, turned into “sacredness.

” Even their most sacred texts—the Vedas—became so linguistically distant that they required thousands of commentaries… then commentaries on commentaries… then summaries of all of that… Yet not a single Hindu today can understand them alone without the mediation of a priest.

The simple question remains: Why does a human being need all this effort to reach God? Where is the clear word of the Creator?

2. Everything Can Become a God… Except God Himself One of the main characteristics of Hinduism is that it considers the universe filled with gods: A god of rain, A god of the sun, A god of fire, A god of air, A god of the river, A god of destruction… It even extends to the sanctification of cows, serpents, monkeys, and animals.

What is even stranger is that when a Hindu turns to one god… he completely ignores the others. As if saying: “This is the god for now… and I have no need of the rest.” But truth cannot be accepted through neglect. The true God is not “one when we focus on Him,” and “many when we look around.

” Contradiction does not create a creed… it creates an inner confusion in which millions live. 3.

The Hindu Trinity… When the Divine Idea Becomes a Puzzle Around 900 years before the common era, priests attempted to solve the problem of polytheism by gathering all the gods into “one god with three faces”: Brahma – the Creator Vishnu – the Preserver Shiva – the Destroyer But this did not produce monotheism… it produced a complex idolized version of trinity.

The one god became expressed in three, and the three were one. Whoever worshiped one had worshiped the three, and whoever worshiped the three had worshiped “the whole.” It was a complex philosophical attempt… Yet it did not answer the most important question: Why would the true Creator need three forms in order to be understood?

The true God does not divide… does not split… and does not change.

4. Krishna… The Indian Version of an “Incarnate God” Hinduism does not stop at the concept of trinity; it also embraces the idea of God dwelling in human form, and the most famous example is Krishna. Krishna appears as an incarnate god—half divine and half human—much like what Christianity says about Christ.

The similarity is striking… and history reveals that the stories of Krishna are far older than the New Testament. The question that cannot be ignored is this: Can the story of the “incarnate god” be repeated in two different civilizations? Or is the idea human in origin… not divine? The truth may be closer than one thinks. 5.

When Injustice Becomes “Sacred Destiny”: The Tragedy of Hindu Castes Hinduism divided society into four classes: Brahmins – the priestly class Kshatriyas – soldiers and protectors Vaishyas – merchants and farmers Shudras – servants and laborers Beneath them is a fifth group of people… not even counted within the order: the outcasts.

More serious still, these classes are not a social choice… but a “divine destiny” that cannot be changed. Imagine being born a servant or an outcast… and being told that this is punishment from a previous life, and that you must accept humiliation because it is “the will of God.” What religion turns injustice into a virtue?

Humiliation into devotion? Caste hierarchy into an eternal system? No matter how much one tries, the human heart feels that this cannot come from a merciful Creator. 6. The Hidden Core: Why Does the Hindu Not Find God Despite the Many Rituals?

All of the above leads to one central question: Why does this vast heritage not produce a “relationship with God”? A Hindu offers sacrifices and recites hymns, visits temples, venerates statues, and celebrates many rituals… yet he does not know: Is this truly what God wants? Is this a divine message? Is there heavenly revelation?

Is there a certain word from the Creator? Everything is built on “cultural inheritance”… not on “divine teaching.” This is the reason for the spiritual emptiness many Hindus feel today. For the soul is not satisfied by many books… nor by many gods… nor by many rituals. The soul is satisfied only by one true God… who addresses it directly.

Conclusion Hinduism is not a revealed religion… but a long history of myths, philosophical customs, and social rituals. Thousands of books… but not a single word from God. Thousands of gods… but not one true God. Thousands of rituals… but no divine message. Social classes… placing one person above another in the name of religion.

And the sanctification of statues shaped by human hands… with no relation to the Creator.

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