The First Gaze: Where Agni Witnessed the Sundering of the Waters
Rigveda (Hymn Context) (Not attributable to a single specific Vedic hymn or Puranic canto. The theology represents a highly synthesized Advaita-Vedantic interpretation of the Agni/Sakshi concept.)
A disillusioned scholar, Rishi Aryaman, travels to the cosmic boundary to observe the moment the primordial waters separate to form the landmass. Instead of finding an external source of order (Dharma), he encounters Agni, the Eternal Witness (Sakshi). Agni reveals that the Witness is not a separate deity, but the omnipresent consciousness that records the pattern of existence, teaching Aryaman that true divinity resides in his own capacity for pure awareness.
The First Gaze: Where Agni Witnessed the Sundering of the Waters
A disillusioned scholar, Rishi Aryaman, travels to the cosmic boundary to observe the moment the primordial waters separate to form the landmass. Instead of finding an external source of order (Dharma), he encounters Agni, the Eternal Witness (Sakshi). Agni reveals that the Witness is not a separate deity, but the omnipresent consciousness that records the pattern of existence, teaching Aryaman that true divinity resides in his own capacity for pure awareness.
Rigveda (Hymn Context) (Not attributable to a single specific Vedic hymn or Puranic canto. The theology represents a highly synthesized Advaita-Vedantic interpretation of the Agni/Sakshi concept.)
Sacred Storyen
Moral & Divine Teaching
The divine order (Dharma) is not something to be discovered outside the self, but the continuous, unwavering awareness within. The ultimate reality is the pure act of witnessing.