Dictionary Definition
goddess n : a female deity
User Contributed Dictionary
see Goddess
English
Pronunciation
- /ˈgɒdes/
- SAMPA: /"gQdes/
Hyphenation
- god·dess
Noun
Related terms
Translations
- Bosnian: boginja
- Chinese: 女神 (nǚshéng)
- Croatian: boginja
- Czech: bohyně
- Dutch: godin
- Finnish: jumalatar
- French: déesse
- German: Göttin
- Indonesian: dewi
- Italian: dea
- Hungarian: istennő
- Japanese: 女神 (めがみ, megami)
- Latin: dea
- Latvian: dieviete
- Norwegian (bokmål): gudinne /
- Norwegian (nynorsk): gudinne
- Novial: dea
- Polish: bogini
- Portuguese: deusa
- Romanian: zeiţă
- Russian: богиня (bogín'a)
- Scottish Gaelic: ban-dia
- Serbian:
- Slovak: bohyňa
- Slovene: boginja
- Spanish: diosa
- Sumerian: ilati
- Swedish: gudinna ()
See also
Extensive Definition
A goddess is a female deity. Many cultures have goddesses. Most
often these goddesses are part of a polytheistic system that
includes several deities. Pantheons
in various cultures can include both goddesses and gods, and in
some cases also intersex deities.
In both ancient and modern cultures, the
symbolism of gendered deities is open to a wide variety of
interpretations. The primacy of a monotheistic or near-monotheistic
goddess is advocated by some modern matriarchists and pantheists as a
female version of, or analogue to, the Abrahamic
god. In some feminist circles the Abrahamic
god is perceived as being rooted in the patriarchal concept of
dominance — to the exclusion of feminine concepts.
Among some duotheists, such
as Wiccans,
the primary deities are one goddess and one god, who are seen as
together making up a larger whole that is both the transcendent
divine and the substance of all creation.
Indo-European religions
Dharmic religions
Hinduism
See also: Hindu views on God and gender, List of Hindu goddesses, Mahavidya, Ashta Lakshmi, Navadurga Hinduism is a complex of various belief systems that sees many gods and goddesses as being representative of and/or emanative from a single source, Brahman, understood either as a formless, infinite, impersonal monad in the Advaita tradition or as a dual god in the form of Lakshmi-Vishnu, Radha-Krishna, Shiva-Shakti in Dvaita traditions. Shaktas, worshippers of the Goddess, equate this god with Devi, the mother goddess. Such aspects of one god as male god (Shaktiman) and female energy (Shakti), working as a pair are often envisioned as male gods and their wives or consorts and provide many analogues between passive male ground and dynamic female energy. For example, Brahma pairs with Sarasvati. Shiva likewise pairs with Parvati who later is represented through a number of avatars (incarnations): Sati and the warrior figures, Durga and Kali. All goddesses in Hinduism are sometimes grouped together as the great goddess, Devi.A further step was taken by the idea of the
Shaktis. Their ideology based mainly on tantras sees Shakti as the
principle of energy through which all divinity functions, thus
showing the masculine to be dependent on the feminine. Indeed, in
the great shakta scripture known as the Devi
Mahatmya, all the goddesses are shown to be aspects of one
presiding female force, one in truth and many in expression, giving
the world and the cosmos the galvanic energy for motion. It is
expressed through both philosophical tracts and metaphor that the
potentiality of masculine being is given actuation by the feminine
divine. Local deities of different village regions in India were often
identified with "mainstream" Hindu deities, a process that has been
called "Sanskritization". Others attribute it to the influence of
monism or Advaita which
discounts polytheist or monotheist categorization.
While the monist forces have led to a fusion
between some of the goddesses (108 names are common for many
goddesses), centrifugal forces have also resulted in new goddesses
and rituals gaining ascendance among the laity in different parts
of Hindu world. Thus, the immensely popular goddess Durga was a pre-Vedic
goddess who was later fused with Parvati, a process that can be
traced through texts such as Kalika Purana (10th
century), Durgabhaktitarangini (Vidyapati
15th
century), Chandimangal (16th
century) etc.
Sikhism
The fundamental belief of Sikhism is that God exists as a real entity, but does not have gender. The Sikh Scriptures refer to God as Father and Mother thus: So the concept of a goddess, although not normally referred to by Sikhs, is in keeping with the holy text of the religion and adheres to the overall concept of God.Graeco-Roman religion
- Eleusinian Mysteries: Persephone, Demeter, Baubo
- Aphrodite, goddess of love, lust, and beauty
- Artemis, goddess of forests and hills
- Athena, goddess of heroic endeavour
- Cybele
- Hera
- Nike
- Potnia Theron
- Selene
Celtic religion
Germanic paganism
Surviving accounts of Germanic mythology and later Norse mythology contain numerous tales and mentions of female goddesses, female giantesses, and divine female figures.Abrahamic religions
Monotheist cultures, which recognise only one central deity, generally do characterize that deity as male, implicitly already grammatically by using masculine gender, but also explicitly by terms such as "Father" or "Lord". In all monotheist religions, however, there are mystic undercurrents which emphasize the feminine aspects of the godhead, e.g. the Collyridians in the time of early Christianity, who viewed Mary as a Goddess, the medieval visionary Julian of Norwich, the Judaic Shekinah and the Gnostic Sophia traditions.Judaism
In Judaism, God (and souls, angels and other spiritual objects) has no gender. However, the word 'God' is grammatically male since Ancient Hebrew, like Modern Hebrew, had no neuter gender, only masculine and feminine. Although Judaism uses masculine words to describe God more than feminine words, Judaism maintains that God has no gender. While God is frequently referred to using masculine formations (because of the grammatical gender of the words generally used to describe God), the majority of objects related to worship in Judaism such as the Torah are grammatically feminine.Christianity
In Christianity, belief in a feminine deity was deemed characteristic of heresy, but veneration for Mary, the mother of Jesus, as an especially privileged human being, though not as a deity, has continued since the beginning of the Christian faith.Since the 1980s Christian feminists have
challenged this traditional view; some such as Mary Daly no
longer consider themselves Christian, but others continue to seek
room within their traditions for the Divine Feminine and to press
for female spiritual leadership. (See thealogy.)
However, while the term "goddess" was rejected in
what is usually considered orthodox Christianity, some Christians
believe that God transcends sex, whether masculine or
feminine.
Some people believe that the example of Jesus and
the tradition of centuries has Christians refer to and address God
as "Father", not "Mother". However, this is not the real meaning of
the words Jesus used to describe the deity. The original words have
a meaning of both mother and father. They believe that in Jesus,
who was male, God became
incarnate. Pronouns that grammatically are of feminine gender (not
pronouns that refer to the female sex, such as the English "she")
are used to refer to the Holy Spirit
in languages, such as Hebrew, where the word for "spirit" is of
feminine grammatical gender. In Greek, where the word for "spirit"
is of neuter grammatical gender, the pronoun that refers to it is
of neuter gender. In Latin, the pronoun is of masculine gender,
referring to the grammatically masculine word "spiritus". However,
while in English, a language without grammatical gender, the normal
pronoun to refer to a spirit would be "it", the Holy Spirit is
customarily referred to as "he", perhaps partly due to the
influence of Latin and of the other Germanic languages, in which
the word for spirit is of masculine grammatical gender.
Professedly Christian members of
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormons)
believe in, but do not worship, a Heavenly Mother, the wife and
female counterpart and equal of the Heavenly Father.
Sarah, also known as Sarai, is sometimes
translated (incorrectly) as 'goddess'. It actually means
Princess.
In some Christian traditions (like the Orthodox
tradition), Sophia is
the personification of either divine wisdom (or of an archangel)
which takes female form. She is mentioned in the first chapter of
the Book of
Proverbs.
In Christian
mysticism, Gnosticism, as
well as some Hellenistic
religions, there is a female spirit or Goddess named Sophia
that is said to embody wisdom and whom is sometimes
described as a virgin. In
Roman
Catholic mysticism,
Hildegard
of Bingen celebrated Sophia as a cosmic figure both in her
writing and art. Within the Protestant
tradition in England, 17th
Century Christian
Mystic, Universalist
and founder of the Philadelphian Society Jane Leade
wrote copious descriptions of her visions and dialogues with the
"Virgin Sophia" who, she said, revealed to her the spiritual
workings of the Universe. Leade was hugely influenced by the
theosophical writings of 16th Century German Christian
mystic Jakob
Böhme, who also speaks of the Sophia in works such as The Way
to Christhttp://www.passtheword.org/DIALOGS-FROM-THE-PAST/waychrst.htm.
Jakob Böhme was very influential to a number of Christian
mystics and religious leaders, including George Rapp
and the Harmony
Society.
Pre-Islamic Arabia and Islam
In pre-Islamic Mecca the goddesses Uzza, al-Manāt and al-Lāt were known as "the daughters of god". Uzzā was worshipped by the Nabataeans, who equated her with the Graeco-Roman goddesses Aphrodite, Urania, Venus and Caelestis. Each of the three goddesses had a separate shrine near Mecca. Uzzā, was called upon for protection by the pre-Islamic Quraysh. "In 624 at the battle called "Uhud", the war cry of the Qurayshites was, "O people of Uzzā, people of Hubal!" (Tawil 1993).According to Ibn Ishaq's
controversial account of the Satanic
Verses (q.v.), these verses had previously endorsed them as
intercessors for Muslims, but were
abrogated. Most Muslim scholars have regarded the story as
historically implausible, while opinion is divided among western
scholars such as Leone
Caetani and John Burton, who argue against, and William Muir
and William
Montgomery Watt, who for its plausibility.
In Islam, God (Allah), although
referred to with masculine pronouns, is specifically identified in
the Koran as genderless.
New religious movements
Religious feminism
At least since first-wave feminism in the United States, there has been interest in analyzing religion to see if and how doctrines and practices treat women unfairly, as in Elizabeth Cady Stanton's The Woman's Bible. Again in second-wave feminism in the U.S., as well as in many European and other countries, religion became the focus of some feminist analysis in Judaism, Christianity, and other religions, and some women turned to ancient goddess religions as an alternative to Abrahamic religions (Womanspirit Rising 1979; Weaving the Visions 1989). Today both women and men continue to be involved in the Goddess movement (Christ 1997). The popularity of organizations such as the Fellowship of Isis attest to the continuing growth of the religion of the Goddess throughout the world.While much of the attempt at gender equity in
mainstream Christianity (Judaism never recognized any gender for
God) is aimed at reinterpreting scripture and degenderizing
language used to name and describe the divine (Ruether, 1984;
Plaskow, 1991), there are a growing number of people who identify
as Christians or Jews who are trying to integrate Goddess imagery
into their religions (Kien, 2000; Kidd 1996,"Goddess
Christians Yahoogroup").
New Age and Wicca
In Wicca "the Goddess" is a deity of prime importance, along with her consort the Horned God. In the earliest Wiccan publications she is described as a tribal goddess of the witch community, neither omnipotent nor universal, and it was recognised that there was a greater "Prime Mover", although the witches did not concern themselves much with this being. Within many forms of Wicca the Goddess has come to be considered as a universal deity, more in line with her description in the Charge of the Goddess, a key Wiccan text. In this guise she is the "Queen of Heaven", similar to Isis; she also encompasses and conceives all life, much like Gaia. Much like Isis and certain late Classical conceptions of Selene, she is held to be the summation of all other goddesses, who represent her different names and aspects across the different cultures.The Goddess is often portrayed with strong lunar
symbolism, drawing on various cultures and deities such as Diana,
Hecate and
Isis, and is
often depicted as the Maiden, Mother and Crone triad popularised by
Robert
Graves (see Triple
Goddess below). Many depictions of her also draw strongly on
Celtic
goddesses.
Some Wiccans believe there are many goddesses,
and in some forms of Wicca, notably Dianic
Wicca, the Goddess alone is worshipped, and the God plays very
little part in their worship and ritual.
Triple Goddess
Goddesses or demi-goddesses appear in sets of three in a number of ancient European pagan mythologies; these include the Greek Erinyes (Furies) and Moirae (Fates); the Norse Norns; Brighid and her two sisters, also called Brighid, from Irish or Keltoi mythology.Robert
Graves popularised the triad of "Maiden" (or "Virgin"),
"Mother" and "Crone", and while this idea did not rest on sound
scholarship, his poetic inspiration has gained a tenacious hold.
Considerable variation in the precise conceptions of these figures
exists, as typically occurs in Neopaganism and indeed in pagan
religions in general. Some choose to interpret them as three stages
in a woman's life, separated by menarche and menopause. Others find this
too biologically based and rigid, and prefer a freer
interpretation, with the Maiden as birth (independent,
self-centred, seeking), the Mother as giving birth (interrelated,
compassionate nurturing, creating), and the Crone as death and
renewal (holistic, remote, unknowable) — and all three
erotic and wise.
In dominantly Hellenic derived religions and in
subsequent New Age and Wiccan religions, often three of the four
phases of the moon (waxing,
full, waning) symbolise the three aspects of the Triple Goddess:
put together they appear in a single symbol comprising a circle
flanked by two mirrored crescents. Some, however, find the triple
incomplete, and prefer to add a fourth aspect. This might be a
"Dark Goddess" or "Wisewoman", perhaps as suggested by the missing
dark of the moon in the symbolism above, or it might be a
specifically erotic goddess standing for a phase of life between
Maiden (Virgin) and Mother, or a Warrior between
Mother and Crone. There is a male counterpart of this in the
English poem "The Parliament of the Thre Ages".
Discordianism
In Discordianism, Eris or Discordia, is generally venerated as Goddess, as illustrated in the first clause of the Pentabarf:- "There is no Goddess but Goddess and She is Your Goddess. There is no Erisian Movement but The Erisian Movement and it is The Erisian Movement. And every Golden Apple Corps is the beloved home of a Golden Worm."
Reconstructionism
Polytheistic reconstructionists focus on reconstructing polytheistic religions, including the various goddesses and figures associated with indigenous cultures.Metaphorical reference
The term "goddess" has also been adapted to
poetic and secular use as a complimentary description of a
non-mythological woman. For example, Shakespeare
had several of his male characters address female characters as
goddesses, including Demetrius to
Helena in
A Midsummer Night's Dream ("O Helen, goddess, nymph, perfect,
divine!"), Berowne to Rosaline in Love's
Labour's Lost ("A woman I forswore; but I will prove, Thou
being a goddess, I forswore not thee"), and Bertram to Diana in
All's Well That Ends Well. Pisanio also compares Imogen to a
goddess to describe her composure under duress in Cymbeline. More
recently, CBS News
correspondent Bob Simon
described Aishwarya
Rai as "a Greek
goddess with an Indian spirit" while
interviewing her on 60
Minutes.
See also
- God (male deity)
- God and gender
- Goddess worship
- Goddess movement
- Deities
- List of deities
- Mother goddess
- Polytheism
- Henotheism
- The Hebrew Goddess
- Sacred feminine
- Sophia
- Shekhina
- Shakti
- Devi
- Kumari
- Tara (Buddhist) : the Buddhist Goddess / Bodhisattva
- Kwan Yin : the Chinese Buddhist Goddess / Bodhisattva
- Anahita : the goddess of Zoroastrianism.
- Tien Hou : the Chinese "Queen of Heaven"
- Amaterasu : the Great Goddess of Shinto
- Oh My Goddess! : manga and anime series about goddesses.
- Because I'm the Goddess : manga and anime series about a goddess.
References
Bibliography
- Knight, Peter, Thirteen Moons - Conversations with the Goddess, Stone Seeker, 2007.
- Christ, Carol P., Rebirth of the Goddess, Addison-Wesley 1997.
- Kidd, Sue Monk, The Dance of the Dissident Daughter, HarperSanFrancisco 1996.
- Jenny Kien, Reinstating the Divine Woman in Judaism, Universal 2000.
- David Kinsley, Hindu Goddesses: Vision of the Divine Feminine in the Hindu Religious Traditions, ISBN 81-208-0379-5.
- Plaskow, Judith, Standing Again at Sinai, HarperCollins 1991.
- Ruether, Rosemary Radford, Woman-Church, Harper & Row 1984.
- Womanspirit Rising, ed. Carol P. Christ and Judith Plaskow, Harper & Row 1979.
- Weaving the Visions, ed. Judith Plaskow and Carol P. Christ, Harper & Row 1989.
- Jackson, Jared, "The Rise of Kristy", New Deity Publications 2006.
- Ternes, Jacqueline, "Goddess Vision", Harper & Row 1987
goddess in Welsh: Duwies
goddess in German: Göttin
goddess in Spanish: Diosa
goddess in Esperanto: Diino
goddess in Hindi: देवी
goddess in Interlingua (International Auxiliary
Language Association): Dea
goddess in Hebrew: אלה (מיתולוגיה)
goddess in Latin: Dea
goddess in Lithuanian: Deivė
goddess in Dutch: Godin
goddess in Japanese: 女神
goddess in Norwegian: Gudinne
goddess in Narom: Déêsse
goddess in Portuguese: Deusa
goddess in Russian: Богиня
goddess in Slovenian: Boginja
goddess in Swedish: Gudinna
goddess in Turkish: Tanrıça
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Aides,
Aidoneus, Amen-Ra,
Amor, Aphrodite, Apollo, Apollo Musagetes,
Ares, Artemis, Ashtoreth, Astarte, Astraea, Athena, Atropos, Baal, Bellona, Bragi, Cailleac, Calliope, Castilian Spring,
Cerberus, Ceres, Charon, Clio, Clotho, Cora, Cupid, Cynthia, Dame Fortune, Davy, Davy Jones, Decuma, Demeter, Despoina, Diana, Dike, Dionysos, Dionysus, Dis, Dis pater, Discordia, Donar, Dylan, Earth, Enyo, Erato, Erebus, Eris, Eros, Euterpe, Fata, Fates, Faunus, Flora, Fortuna, Frey, Freya, Frigg, Gaea, Gaia, Ge, Hades, Heaven, Hecate, Hekate, Hel, Helicon, Helios, Hera, Hermes, Hestia, Hippocrene, Hymen, Hyperion, Indra, Isis, Juno, Jupiter Fidius, Jupiter
Fulgur, Jupiter Pluvius, Jupiter Tonans, Justice, Justitia, Kama, Kore, Lachesis, Loki, Love, Luna, Mars, Melpomene, Mercury, Minerva, Minos, Moirai, Morta, Muse, Nemesis, Neptune, Nereid, Nereus, Nona, Norns, Oceanid, Oceanus, Odin, Orcus, Osiris, Pan, Parcae, Parnassus, Persephassa, Persephone, Phoebe, Phoebus, Phoebus Apollo, Pierian
Spring, Pierides,
Pluto, Polyhymnia, Pomona, Poseidon, Priapus, Pronuba, Proserpina, Proserpine, Providence, Ra, Rhadamanthus, Satan, Savitar, Selene, Set, Shamash, Skuld, Sol, Surya, Teleia, Tellus, Terpsichore, Terra, Thalia, Themis, Thetis, Thor, Titan, Tiu, Triptolemos, Triptolemus, Triton, Tyche, Typhon, Tyr, Urdur, Varuna, Vayu, Venus, Verthandi, Vesta, Vidar, Vitharr, Weird Sisters, Weirds, Woden, Wotan, Zephyr, Zephyrus, Zeus, afflatus, artistic imagination,
ball lightning, biosphere, blindfolded
Justice, bolt, bolt of
lightning, chain lightning, clash, clashing, commercialism, conception, conflict, contention, corn god, corn
spirit, creative imagination, creative power, creative thought,
dark lightning, deep,
demigod, demigoddess, disaccord, disaffinity, discord, discordance, discordancy, disharmony, dread rattling
thunder, enmity,
esemplastic imagination, esemplastic power, faun, fertility god, field spirit,
fire of genius, fireball, firebolt, flying flame, forest
god, forked lightning, fresh-water nymph, friction, fulguration, fulmination, genius, geography, geosphere, globe, god, hero, heroine, idol, incompatibility,
incompatibleness,
industrialism,
inharmoniousness,
inharmony, inspiration, jangle, jar, kelpie, lares and penates, levin
bolt, lightning,
limniad, man fish,
mercantilism,
mermaid, merman, mischief, mother earth,
muse, mythicization, mythification, mythopoeia, naiad, nix, nixie, noncooperation,
oak-cleaving thunderbolts, ocean nymph, open conflict, panisc, panisca, paniscus, peal of thunder,
phoenix, poesy, poetic genius, poetic
imagination, rub, satyr, sea devil, sea god, sea
nymph, sea-maid, sea-maiden, seaman, shaping imagination,
sheet lightning, silenus, siren, strained relations, stroke
of lightning, sylvan deity, tension, terra, terrestrial globe, the
Muses, the blue planet, the goat god, this pendent world, thunder, thunderball, thunderbolt, thunderclap, thundercrack, thundering, thunderpeal, thunderstorm, thunderstroke, undine, unharmoniousness,
unpleasantness,
vale, vale of tears,
vegetation spirit, water god, water spirit, water sprite, whole
wide world, world