Word as Revelation
Ram Swarup's study of the names of God and the concept of revelation across religious traditions, exploring how language and sound relate to the divine.
revelationnames of godwordmysticismram swarupcomparative religionspirituality
Word as Revelation: Names of Gods is Ram Swarup’s philosophical and mystical exploration of the concept of revelation across different religious traditions, with particular focus on the significance of divine names.
Key Themes
- The relationship between language, sound (shabda), and the divine
- The Vedic conception of revelation (shruti) as “heard” rather than dictated
- Different understandings of revelation across traditions:
- Hinduism: Shruti as eternal, impersonal, and discovered by seers (rishis)
- Christianity: Revelation through historical events and a personal saviour
- Islam: Revelation through a dictated book (Quran)
- The power of divine names (nama-japa) in spiritual practice
- The contrast between the Vedic view of word-as-revelation and the Biblical view
Philosophical Framework
Swarup draws on the Indian tradition of shabda-brahman (sound as ultimate reality) and the practice of nama-sankirtana (chanting divine names), arguing that these represent a profound understanding of the relationship between consciousness, sound, and the cosmos that is absent from purely textual or prophetic conceptions of revelation.
