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.

See Also