Parameshwara, also transliterated from Sanskrit in various other ways, literally means the Supreme God. The word "param" meaning the highest is added to Ishwara to intensify the title of God. See Ishvara. Sanskrit ( सà¤à¤¸à¥à¤à¥à¤¤à¤®à¥) is a classical language of India and a liturgical language of Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism. ... The term God is capitalized in the English language as a proper noun when used to refer to a specific monotheistic concept of a supernatural Supreme Being in accordance with Christianity. ... Saguna Brahman, also called Iswara, in Hinduism, is God with personal characteristics or attributes. ... Ishvara (à¤à¤¶à¥à¤µà¤° in devanagari script, pronunciation Ä«:shvÉrÉ), also variously transliterated (romanized) as Īshvara, Īshwara, Īshwar, ĪÅvara, etc. ...
The idea behind this universality is: God is one, His creation is one, his law is one, Humanity is one, Revelation is one; all that follows is historical and relative justifiable as corrective with reference back to the universal.
The Arya Samaj is a voluntary organisation working across the world for physical, moral, spiritual and professional education, eradication of superstition, inculcation of universal values, comparative study of cultures, religious and social systems, with open enquiry and debate for the propagation of truth.
Principle One : God is the original source of all that is true knowledge and all that is known by physical sciences.
Ishwara is God in the aspect of pervading all beings and thus is the underlying energy that is the cause of all energies and manifestations.
Parameshwara is Lord Shiva, the great Lord of the entire universe and Parameshwari is His divine consort, His active energy or Shakti, also called Parashakti, the Lord's supreme power.
She is God's force and infinite strength represented in a form as an all-powerful, sovereign Goddess who reigns over all the worlds.