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Popular Hinduism

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Title: Popular Hinduism


1
Popular Hinduism
  • Indus Valley civilization 2500 1500 BC
  • Aryan invasion ca 1500 BC
  • Vedic period (2300 600 BC) Vedas are classed
    as Shruti
  • Classical period (Epics 500 BC 200 AD)
    Smurti
  • Sutras 4th century BC 5th century AD)
  • Scholastic and sectarian (6th century AD modern
    times)
  • Epic period ca 200 BC (Puranas and Epics)
  • First, the Puranas there are 18 of them
  • 6 are devoted to Brahma, 6 to Vishnu, 6 to Shiva
    (the Hindu trinity)
  • They are collections of Indian myths and legends,
    cosmologies
  • gods and goddesses, demons
  • Ancestors, genealogies, descriptions of
    pilgrimages, rituals
  • They illustrate the importance of caste, Dharma
    and Bhakti
  • Gandhi believed the Bhagavad Gita to be the
    dictionary for life
  • It systematically classifies the more important
    spiritual principles (to be seen soon)
  • Then the Puranas are the encyclopedia of that
    dictionary for all of Hinduism
  • If Hinduism (a Western term, remember) is a
    jungle of spirituality, containing just about
    everything imaginable, then the Puranas are a
    helpful guidebook
  • Hinduism does not have a nice, clean systematic
    theology (in the Western sense)

2
  • Puranas (one of the best known is the Bhagavata
    Purana)
  • Early life of Krishna
  • Glorification of the gods Brahma, Vishnu, and
    Shiva
  • Radha-Krishna (ideal love between the ideal
    husband and wife like spring)
  • This is similar to the Unification ideal
  • Another is the Srimad-Bhagavatam (tells the story
    of Lord Krishna)
  • Now the Ramayana and Mahabharata (the two great
    Indian epics)
  • Ramayana
  • Story of the righteous prince Rama and his
    virtuous wife Sita (ideal husband and wife) -
    again, the theme of an ideal husband and wife
  • Rama is the seventh incarnation of the god Vishnu
  • Justification for worship of the monkey god,
    Hanuman
  • Sitas virtue is upheld at the end, p162 The
    Ramayana
  • Young Oon Kim, p 6
  • Mahabharata (Maha great Bharata legendary
    first king of India)
  • Ganesha, the elephant god, records the story as
    it is narrated
  • 100,000 verses (larger than the Iliad and Odyssey
    of Greece)
  • Includes as one chapter, the Bhagavad Gita (will
    be examined later)
  • Elaboration of the orthodox social code, the four
    goals of life, and the four stages of life

3
Classical (popular) Hinduism
  • Four permissible goals (purusharthas) in life
    (you can have anything you want)
  • Path of Desire
  • Pleasure (karma) indulge, because anything
    goes one comes to a limit
  • The kama sutra is a well-known didactic text
    instructing one in erotic love-making
  • Some resemblance to the notion of absolute sex
  • Success (artha) you can reach the top of the
    ladder one comes to a limit
  • Path of Renunciation
  • Duty/righteousness (dharma) following ones
    conscience lifes purpose?
  • Release (moksha) liberated from this world of
    maya and union with the One
  • World Scripture, 153b
  • Four stages in life (ashramas)
  • Student (age 7), householder (most people),
    hermit, sannyasin (rare)
  • Four castes (varnas) have actually subdivided
    into many sub-castes
  • Twice Born (physical birth, and birth into the
    study of the Vedas)
  • See the following for the four castes

4
  • Brahmins (priests)
  • Teach and study the Vedas
  • Offer sacrificial offerings
  • Give and accept alms
  • Many Indian university students (in America) are
    from this caste
  • Kshatriyas (warriors/administrators)
  • Protect the people
  • Bestow gifts
  • Study the Vedas
  • Abstain from attachment to sensual pleasures
  • Vaisyas (the people, artisans, shopkeepers,
    merchants, etc.)
  • Tend cattle, bestow gifts, study Vedas, trade,
    lend money, cultivate land, etc.
  • It is only from one of these higher classes that
    one can even hope to achieve ultimate liberation
    (moksha)
  • The great majority of people simply hope for a
    higher level rebirth, a rebirth into a higher
    realm of existence, as they work their way up the
    spiritual ladder to ultimate liberation

5
  • Sudras (servants) the lowest class of people
  • They basically live in service to the three
    higher classes of people
  • Their hope is to be reborn into one of the
    higher classes
  • A certain acceptance of their given (poor)
    station in life it is karma, etc.
  • Untouchables (non-persons) are not even
    considered to be human are ignored are avoided
    they dont exist
  • The caste system is extremely deeply rooted in
    the culture
  • Ghandi hated the system, but it is very deeply
    ingrained and difficult to transform
  • Which caste one is born into is believed to be
    strictly determined by ones previous life, how
    one lived in ones previous life. The law of
    karma has completely determined ones current
    situation. Karma and reincarnation are important
    beliefs in Hinduism
  • Rarely is there marriage to someone of a lower
    caste sometimes up (rare)
  • Live, eat, work, and congregate with members of
    ones own caste
  • Basic acceptance of ones fate in life (it is
    karma) focus on your caste duty
  • Little impetus for social activism or changing
    the world
  • A sense of determinism
  • If one dutifully follows the way (Dharma) of
    ones present caste, one can hope to be reborn in
    one of the higher classes (often, many lifetimes
    are necessary)

6
  • Four orthodox paths (margas) to salvation
  • The recognition that all people are different,
    with different temperaments, etc.
  • Common assumptions authority of Vedas, idea of
    rebirth, ignorance brings bondage
  • All four exhort or encourage one to adhere to or
    follow moral preliminaries
  • Yamas (abstinences) non-violence, truthfulness,
    non-stealing, no sexual immorality, greed
  • Niyama (observances) purity, serenity,
    asceticism, spiritual study, surrender to god
  • The first orthodox path to salvation is Jnana
    Yoga (inner meditation seeking moksha)
  • For people more intellectually or philosophically
    inclined time for study meditation
  • The way to god through knowledge
  • Representative is Shankara (the Aquinas of
    India) non-dualism
  • Crest Jewel of Discrimination, p 70
  • Advaita Vedanta (Brahman-Atman)
  • Nirguna Brahman (without qualities) and Saguna
    Brahman (with qualities)
  • Saguna Brahman (Heavenly Father, Allah, Jehovah,
    etc.)
  • Nirguna Brahman represents a higher level of
    understanding
  • Perception of plurality is due to maya or
    ignorance
  • World Scripture 282b, 382b
  • Ramanuja represents vishishta advaita vedanta, or
    qualified non-dualism

7
  • The second orthodox path to liberation is Karma
    yoga (unattached work)
  • For active people who engage in daily work
  • The way to god through work (works like
    sacrifice, extreme asceticism, moral deeds, or
    fulfillment of the dharma for ones caste or
    social class)
  • Work diligently at important or relevant tasks
    (dont waste time, etc. but be effective)
  • Have no attachment to the fruits of your action/s
    (compare UT and the theory of art)
  • Laws of Manu (a guidebook for karma yoga
    something like Leviticus dos and donts)
  • The third path - Raja yoga (health disciplines
    includes kundalini yoga--chakras)
  • For people who have a scientific inclination
  • The way to god through psychological
    experimentation (on oneself)
  • Man is a layered being
  • Popular is Patanjali Yoga (the Yoga practiced in
    the West) willed introversion
  • Ethical practices 1) (yamas) abstinences 2)
    (niyamas) observances
  • Physical practices 3) asana (body postures) 4)
    pranayama (energy, breath control)
  • Sensorial practices 5) pratyahara (control of
    senses) 6) dharana (concentration)
  • Mental practices 6) dharana (concentration) 7)
    dhyana (meditation S and O)
  • and finally 8) samadhi (absorption) union
    mystical union
  • Three Heterodox systems Jainism, Buddhism,
    Carvaka (materialism)

8
  • The final orthodox path - Bhakti yoga (one of the
    most important paths to god)
  • For people who are more emotional in nature
  • The way to god through love (love and devotion to
    a personal god)
  • Especially promoted by the well-known Bhagavad
    Gita (Song of the Lord)
  • Bhagavad Gita (Song of the Lord)
  • A small scripture which emerges from (previously
    one chapter of) the great Sanskrit epic, the
    Mahabharata (p 21, Gita)
  • Introduction, p 24, Gita
  • 18 chapters (ca 500 BC preparation for the
    Messiah) National chart
  • Many believe it to be the highest point of Indian
    spirituality (ca 500 BC)
  • Best known and loved Indian scripture (Ghandi
    read it avidly)
  • A grand synthesis, the Gita tries to bring the
    different yogas or paths to salvation in line
    with bhakti (devotion)
  • Story (many levels of meaning) the war between
    two families
  • Arjuna, a warrior, seeing family, falters in his
    caste duty to fight
  • Krishna, the charioteer, counsels Arjuna and
    encourages him to fight
  • Jnana yoga the body can be killed, but not the
    Atman it is eternal
  • Karma yoga your caste duty as a warrior, is to
    fight
  • All paths (yogas) are valid ways to god, but
    Bhakti Yoga is the superior yoga (path)
  • The most perfect yogi is he who worships god full
    of faith

9
  • Song of the Lord the manifested Krishna
  • Expresses a deeply personal and devotional
    religious faith
  • Includes a dramatic revelation of the nature of
    god a loving relationship to him, when Krishna
    takes his cosmic form (Varuna) in a theophany in
    chapter 11 p 89
  • Krishna is an Avatar of the god Vishnu
  • This revelation of Krishna is an act of grace
    (the god was affected or influenced by human
    feeling)
  • Another level of meaning Arjuna becomes the soul
    of man, Krishna is the charioteer of the soul p
    22 (this is a famous image regarding the horses
    which represent the unruly senses which bind us
    to the sorrows of this world
  • Pre-Buddhistic p 23
  • Symphonic nature p 24
  • Essence p 34
  • Symbol of hope p 35
  • Avatar p 61 (4.5-8) (see 12 characteristics of an
    avatar)
  • Krishna/Rama/Buddha/Kalkin
  • World scripture 288a 294a-b 336a 337a 384a

10
  • A Christian spirit is expressed in the Bhagavad
    Gita (what Jesus would have encountered had he
    gone to preach the Gospel in India)
  • 6.47 p 73
  • 9.26, 30-32, 34 p 82
  • 12.19-20 p 98
  • 18.64-65 p 121
  • High point of Hindu spirituality 400 BC, in
    preparation for the coming of the Messiah
  • Neill p 57 Why, having come so far, did Hinduism
    not take the further step of the acceptance of
    the idea of a living God, personally conceived
    and known through his own revelation of himself,
    and accessible to the least of his worshippers?
    To this question no certain answer can be given.
    It remains the fact that this step was not
    taken.
  • Gods Will and the World p 341 If Jesus had not
    been crucified, instead of turning to the West
    and crossing the Atlantic to America,
    Christianity would have gone the other way to
    India, China, and the Orient, and then over to
    the Western world. However, because of the
    crucifixion, Christianity made a 180-degree turn
    and moved toward Rome, England, America, and then
    back to the Orient.
  • The Bhagavad Gita (and its spirituality) was a
    preparation for Jesus Christ

11
  • Popular Hinduism (The current religion of the
    masses)
  • Home worship (puja) especially in the upper
    (Brahmin) classes
  • Husband and wife must worship together
  • Preparing the altar removing the god from its
    abode and giving it a bath
  • Feeding the god food and water Replacing the god
    back into its home (altar) and closing with a bow
  • Cow veneration (the cow represents the creation
    and is of great use to the people)
  • Pilgrimage (to holy rivers Ganges, Benares,
    etc.)
  • People will bathe in the water to wash away their
    sins and be healed
  • Bhagavad Gita (most popular scripture)
  • A variety of gods (henotheism) pre-eminent is
    the Trimurti (trinity)
  • Brahma creator Vishnu preserver Shiva -
    destroyer
  • The gods have consorts, or wives (masculine and
    feminine in Reality)
  • Shiva destroyer vast mythology of
    wives/consorts shakti (female power)
  • Dance of Shiva (famous sculpture) see image
  • Vishnu the preserver
  • Avatars of Vishnu fish, tortoise, boar,
    man-lion, dwarf, Rama, Krishna, Buddha, Kalkin
  • The future avatar Kalkin - is now being
    awaited that is True Father

12
  • Hindu concept of time (vast) bird pecking
    chart, as seen here
  • Night of Brahman day of Brahman (kalpa)
    alternate
  • Day of Brahman 1,000 cycles of Great Yugas
    (4,320,000 human years)
  • One Great Yuga
  • Krita Yuga (4,800 years)
  • Treta Yuga (3,600 years)
  • Dvapara Yuga (2,400 years)
  • Kali Yuga (1,800 years)
  • We are now in the Kali Yuga ( the last days)
  • Dharma starts strong, but erodes as time passes
  • In the last days, it is very difficult to keep
    the Dharma
  • In the last days, evil and iniquity is very
    strong
  • Bhagavad Gita on the avatar from time to time I
    come into being

13
Significant Individuals in Hinduism
  • Ram Mohun Roy (1772-1833)
  • Swami Dayananda Sarasvati (1824-1883)
  • Sri Ramakrishnan (1836-1886)
  • Swami Vivekananda (1863-1902 Chicago Parliament
    of the World Religions speech)
  • B.C. Chatterjee (b 1838)
  • B.K. Tilak (1856-1920)
  • Aurobindo Ghose (1872-1950)
  • Mohandas Ghandi (1869-1948)
  • Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941)
  • Jawaharlal Nehru
  • Uinoba Bhave
  • Reform movements
  • Brahmo Samaj
  • Arya Samaj
  • Ramakrishna Mission
  • Sri Aurobindo, Ghandi, and Tagore

14
Worldview of Popular Hinduism
  • Deity In practice, polytheistic (henotheistic)
    Krishna, Vishnu and Shiva are very popular as
    preserver, Vishnu manifests avatars or
    descendings at certain intervals of time (when
    evil is strong, and help is needed)
  • Cosmos The universe is vast many worlds,
    heavens and hells cycles of creation of vast
    time durations (4,321,000,000 years)
  • Human being on the basis of past karma, people
    are reborn into a particular caste. A person is
    (truly) an Atman having a body of three threads
    or gunas (qualities) sattva or intelligibility
    or brightness rajas or activity or passion
    tamas (dullness or inertia).
  • Human plight entrapment in a body (repeated
    rebirth into this samsaric world). Failure to
    observe the dharma associated with ones given
    caste.
  • Salvation Predominantly, realization of the
    Brahman/Atman. There are four paths to salvation,
    designed for different kinds of people. A person
    may follow more than one
  • Conduct One should follow the dharma of ones
    class. Bhaktas serve their Lord through loving
    devotion.
  • Destiny Predominantly, union with the One
    (Brahman), once rebirth is no longer necessary.
    No clear description of the eternal state of the
    Atman, however
  • History is cyclical, ever recurring, playing
    over and over again, unless ultimate release
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