
The Rig Veda (Annotated)
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Matthew Schmitz
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The Rig Veda stands as one of the oldest surviving testaments to human thought—a luminous tapestry of hymns composed over three millennia ago in the fertile lands of ancient India. More than a sacred text, it is a record of revelation, ritual, and the riddle of existence, set to the rhythms of fire and sky.
This collection of over one thousand hymns—composed in Vedic Sanskrit (presented here in English) and attributed to visionary seers known as ṛṣis—offers praise to a vast pantheon of gods and forces: Agni, the flame of sacrificial fire; Indra, the storm-wielding warrior; Varuṇa, guardian of cosmic law; Uṣas, the dawn; and countless others who are less entities than principles, less personalities than expressions of the living cosmos. Through these hymns, the Vedic poets do not merely worship—they investigate. They question, declare, and sometimes doubt, with startling openness. In their voices we hear not blind faith, but an urgent desire to understand the mystery behind the sun’s rise, the thunder’s roar, and the silence beyond the stars.
While rooted in the ritual life of an early Indo-Aryan society, the Rig Veda transcends its age. It speaks to an elemental spirituality, in which the world is not separate from the divine but infused with it. The fire that burns on the altar is the same fire that animates breath and thought. The hymns do not instruct so much as invite: to chant, to wonder, to enter a dialogue with the unknown.
This edition seeks to honor the Rig Veda’s dual nature—as both poem and scripture, as both a mirror of a civilization long past and a living document of humanity’s sacred search. Whether one approaches it as mythology, theology, literature, or metaphysics, the Rig Veda offers something rare: the voice of the earliest known spiritual consciousness, unclouded by dogma, still vibrating with awe.
©2025 Matthew Schmitz (P)2025 Matthew Schmitz