| |
NDOUBTEDLY,
RELIGION IS MAN'S ASSOCIATION with the Divine, and the ultimate
objective of religion is realization of Truth. Forms which
symbolize Truth are only indications; they are not Truth
itself, which transcends all conceptualization. The mind
in its efforts to understand Truth through reasoning must
always fail, for Truth transcends the very mind which seeks
to embrace it.
Hinduism is unique among the
world's religions. I boldly proclaim it the greatest religion
in the world. To begin with, it is mankind's oldest spiritual
declaration, the very fountainhead of faith on the planet.
Hinduism's venerable age has seasoned it to maturity. It
is the only religion, to my knowledge, which is not founded
in a single historic event or prophet, but which itself
precedes recorded history. Hinduism has been called the
"cradle of spirituality," and the "mother of all religions,"
partially because it has influenced virtually every major
religion and partly because it can absorb all other religions,
honor and embrace their scriptures, their saints, their
philosophy. This is possible because Hinduism looks compassionately
on all genuine spiritual effort and knows unmistakably that
all souls are evolving toward union with the Divine, and
all are destined, without exception, to achieve spiritual
enlightenment and liberation in this or a future life.
Of course, any religion in
the world is a mind stratum within people, isn't it? It
is a group of people who think consciously, subconsciously
and subsuperconsciously alike and who are guided by their
own superconsciousness and the superconsciousness of their
leaders which make up the force field which we call a religion.
It does not exist outside the mind. People of a certain
religion have all been impressed with the same experiences.
They have all accepted the same or similar beliefs and attitudes,
and their mutual concurrence creates the bonds of fellowship
and purpose, of doctrine and communion.
The people who are Hinduism
share a mind structure. They can understand, acknowledge,
accept and love the peoples of all religions, encompass
them within their mind as being fine religious people. The
Hindu truly believes that there is a single Eternal Path,
but he does not believe that any one religion is the only
valid religion or the only religion that will lead the soul
to salvation. Rather, the Eternal Path is seen reflected
in all religions.
To put it another way, the
will of God or the Gods is at work in all genuine worship
and service. It is said in Hindu scripture that "Truth is
one. Paths are many." The search for Truth, for God, is
called the Sanatana Dharma, or the Eternal Path, because
it is inherent in the soul itself, where religion begins.
This path, this return to the Source, is ever existent in
man, and is at work whether he is aware of the processes
or not. There is not this man's search and that man's search.
Where does the impetus come from? It comes from the inside
of man himself. Thus, Hinduism is ever vibrant and alive,
for it depends on this original source of inspiration, this
first impulse of the spirit within, giving it an energy
and a vibrancy that is renewable eternally in the now.
Naturally, the Hindu feels
that his faith is the broadest, the most practical and effective
instrument of spiritual unfoldment, but he includes in his
Hindu mind all the religions of the world as expressions
of the one Eternal Path and understands each proportionately
in accordance with its doctrines and dogma. He knows that
certain beliefs and inner attitudes are more conducive to
spiritual growth than others, and that all religions are,
therefore, not the same. They differ in important ways.
Yet, there is no sense whatsoever in Hinduism of an "only
path." A devout Hindu is supportive of all efforts that
lead to a pure and virtuous life and would consider it unthinkable
to dissuade a sincere devotee from his chosen faith. This
is the Hindu mind, and this is what we teach, what we practice
and what we offer aspirants on the path.
We often send people back to
their own religion, for Hindu doctrine would consider it
an unseemly karma to draw someone away simply because he
believed differently. To the Hindu, conduct and the inner
processes of the soul's maturation are more essential than
the particular religion one may be by the accidents of birth,
culture or geography. The Hindu knows that he might unknowingly
disturb thedharma of the individual if he pulls him away
from his religious roots, and that would cause an unsavory
karma for them both. He knows, too, that it is not necessary
that all people believe exactly the same way or call God
by the same name.
A Religion of Experience
Still, Hinduism is also extremely
sectarian, altogether adamant in its beliefs. Its doctrines
of karma and reincarnation, its philosophy of nonviolence
and compassion, its certainty of mystical realities and
experience and its universality are held with unshakable
conviction. Perhaps this is due to the fact that Hinduism
is a religion more of experience than of doctrine. It prefers
to say to its followers, "This is the nature of Truth, and
these are the means by which that Truth may be realized.
Here are the traditions which have withstood time and proved
most effective. Now you may test them in your own life,
prove them to yourself. And we will help as we can." Hinduism
will never say, "You must do or believe thusly or be condemned."
In Hinduism it is believed that none is eternally condemned.
That loving acceptance and unremitting faith in the goodness
of life is another reason I boldly say that Hinduism is
the greatest religion in the world.
Within Hinduism, as within
every religious system, are the practical means of attaining
the purity, the knowledge and the serenity of life. Each
Hindu is enjoined to attend a puja every day, preferably
at a certain and consistent time. He must observe the laws
of virtue and the codes of ethics. He must serve others,
support religion within his community. He should occasionally
pilgrimage to sacred shrines and temples and partake in
the sacraments. If he is more advanced, an older soul, then
he is expected, expects of himself, to undertake certain
forms of sadhana and tapas, of discipline
and asceticism.
Though it is broad and open
in the freedom of the mind to inquire, Hinduism is narrowly
strict in its expectations of devotees -- the more awakened
the soul, the higher the demands and responsibilities placed
upon him. And though other systems of belief are fully acceptable
mind structures within the structure of the higher mind,
there is no way out of Hinduism. There is no excommunication.
There is no means of severance. There's no leaving Hinduism
once you have formally accepted and been accepted. Why is
that? That is because Hinduism contains the whole of religion
within itself. There is no "other religion" which one can
adopt by leaving Hinduism, only other aspects of the one
religion which is the sum of them all, the Eternal Path,
the Sanatana Dharma.
I would say that, if it lacked
all the qualities of open-mindedness and compassion and
tolerance just mentioned, Hinduism would be the greatest
religion on the basis of its profound mysticism alone. No
other faith boasts such a deep and enduring comprehension
of the mysteries of existence, or possesses so vast a metaphysical
system. The storehouse of religious revelations in Hinduism
cannot be reckoned. I know of its equal nowhere. It contains
the entire system of yoga, of meditation and contemplation
and Self Realization. Nowhere else is there such insightful
revelation of the inner bodies of man, the subtle pranas
and the chakras, or psychic centers within the nerve system.
Inner states of superconsciousness are explored and mapped
fully in Hinduism, from the clear white light to the sights
and sounds which flood the awakened inner consciousness
of man. In the West it is the mystically awakened soul who
is drawn to Hinduism for understanding of inner states of
consciousness, discovering after ardent seeking that Hinduism
possesses answers which do not exist elsewhere and is capable
of guiding awareness into ever-deepening mind strata.
Hinduism's Unbounded Tolerance
In apparent conflict, the scriptures
written thousands of years ago explain how we should live,
and saints and rishis and seers throughout the ages have
told us that it is impossible to live that way. So, Hinduism
has a great tolerance for those who strive and a great forgiveness
for those who fail. It looks in awe at those who succeed
in living a life according to its own strict ethics. In
Hinduism, we have many, many saints. You don't have to die
to be acknowledged a saint in our religion, you have to
live. The Hindus, perhaps beyond all other people on the
earth, realize the difficulties of living in a human body
and look in awe at those who achieve true spirituality.
The Hindu believes in reincarnation.
He believes that he is not the body in which he lives, but
the soul or awareness which takes on a body for a definite
purpose. He believes he is going to get a better body in
a better birth, that the process does not begin and end
in a single life, that the process is continuous, reaching
beyond the limits that one life may impose on inner progress.
Of course, his belief in karma assures him that a better
birth, that progress inwardly will come only if he behaves
in a certain way. He knows that if he does not behave according
to the natural laws, to the Hindu ethics, that he will suffer
for his transgressions in a future life, or future lives,
that he may by his own actions earn the necessity of a so-called
inferior birth, earn the right to start over where he left
off in the birth in which he failed.
The belief in karma and reincarnation
is exclusively Hindu, and yet many people in the world today,
whether they call themselves religious or not, are coming
to the same conclusions, not from being told to believe
but in a natural way, from the inside out. This belief in
more than a single life brings to the Hindu a great sense
of peace. He knows that the maturity of the soul takes many
lives, perhaps hundreds of lives. If he is not perfect right
now, then at least he knows that he is progressing, that
there will be many opportunities for learning and growing.
This eliminates anxiety, gives the serene perception that
everything is all right as it is. There is no sense of a
time limit, of an impending end or an ultimate judgment
of his actions and attitudes. This understanding that the
soul evolves gives the Hindu remarkable insight into the
human condition and appreciation for all men in all stages
of spiritual development.
Hinduism is so broad. Within
it there is a place for the insane and a place for the saint.
There is a place for the beggar and for those who support
beggars. There is a place for the intelligent person and
plenty of room for the fool. The beauty of Hinduism is that
it does not demand of every soul perfection in this life,
a necessary conclusion for those who believe in a single
lifetime during which human perfection or grace must be
achieved. Belief in reincarnation gives the Hindu an acceptance
of every level of humanity. Some souls are simply older
souls than others, but all are inherently the same, inherently
immortal and of the nature of the Divine.
Hindu Views of the Divine
In Hinduism it is believed
that the Gods are living, thinking, dynamic beings who live
in a different world, in an inner world in the microcosm
within this world in which there exists a greater macrocosm
than this visible macrocosm. For the Hindu, surrender to
the Divine Will that created and pervades and guides the
universe is essential. The Hindu believes that these beings
guide our experiences on Earth, actually consciously guide
the evolutionary processes. Therefore, he worships these
beings as greater beings than himself, and he maintains
a subjective attitude toward them, wondering if he is attuned
with these grand forces of the universe, if his personal
will is in phase with what these great beings would have
him do. This gives birth to a great culture, a great attitude,
a great tolerance and kindness one to another. It gives
rise to humility in the approach to life -- not a weak or
false humility, but a strong and mature sense of the grand
presence and purpose of life before which the head naturally
bows.
There are said to be millions
of Gods in the Hindu pantheon, though only a few major Deities
are actually worshiped in the temples. That God may be worshiped
as the Divine Father or a Sainted Mother or the King of
kings is one of the blessings of Hinduism. It offers to
each a personal and significant contact, and each Hindu
will choose that aspect of the Deity which most appeals
to his inner needs and sensibilities. That can be confusing
to some, but not to the Hindu. Within his religion is monism
and dualism,monotheism and polytheism, and a rich array
of other theological views.
God in Hinduism is accepted
as both transcendent and immanent, both beyond the mind
and the very substratum of the mind. The ideal of the Hindu
is to think of God always, every moment, and to be ever
conscious of God's presence. This does not mean the transcendent
God, the Absolute Lord. That is for the yogi to ponder in
his contemplative discipline. That is for the well-perfected
Hindu who has worshiped faithfully in the temples, studied
deeply the scriptures and found his satguru. For
most Hindus, God means the Gods, one of the many
personal devas and Mahadevas which prevail in our religion.
This means a personal great soul which may never have known
physical birth, a being which pervades the planet, pervades
form with His mind and Being, and which guides evolution.
Such a God is capable of offering protection and direction
to the followers of Hinduism. The Hindu is supposed to think
of God every minute of every day, to see God everywhere.
Of course, most of us don't think of God even one minute
a day. That's the reason that each Hindu is obliged to conduct
or attend at least one religious service, one puja or ceremony,
every day in his temple or home shrine. This turns his mind
inward to God and the Gods.
Hinduism, Sanatana Dharma,
is an Eastern religion, and the Eastern religions are very
different from those of the West. For one thing, they are
more introspective. Hinduism gave birth to Buddhism, for
Buddha was born and died a good Hindu. And it gave birth
to other religions of the East, to Taoism, to Jainism, to
Sikhism and others.
Three Pillars: Temples, Philosophy
and Preceptors
There are three distinct aspects
of Hinduism: the temples, the philosophy and the satguru.
It is very fortunate that in the last two decades Hindu
temples have nearly circumferenced the world. There are
temples in Europe, in North America, in South America, Australia,
in Africa and throughout Southeast Asia. The Hindu temple
and stone images in it work as a channel for the Deity,
for the Gods, who hover over the stone image and in their
subtle etheric forms change people's lives through changing
the nerve currents within them through their darshana.
People come to a sanctified temple and go away, and in that
process they are slowly changed from the inside out. They
have changed because their very life force has changed,
their mind has been changed and their emotions have undergone
a subtle transformation. The temples of Hinduism are magnificent
in their immensity and in their ability to canalize the
three worlds, the First World of physical, outer existence
and the inner Second and Third Worlds.
Hindu temples are not centered
around a priest or minister, though there may be a holy
man associated with a temple whose advice is cautiously
and quietly sought. There is no sermon, no mediator, no
director to guide the worship of pilgrims. The temple is
the home of the Deities, and each devotee goes according
to his own timing and for his own particular needs. Some
may go to weep and seek consolation in times of sorrow,
while simultaneously others will be there to rejoice in
their good fortune and to sing God's name in thanksgiving.
Naturally, the sacraments of name-giving and marriage and
so forth are closely associated with the temple. One has
only to attend a Hindu temple during festival days to capture
the great energy and vitality of this ancient religion.
In its second section, philosophy,
Hinduism has influenced the deep religious thinkers of all
cultures through known history. There is not a single philosophy
which can be labeled "Hinduism." Rather, it is a network
of many philosophies, some seeming to impertinently contradict
the validity of others, yet on deeper reflection are seen
as integral aspects of a single radiant mind flow. In the
area of philosophy must be included the enormous array of
scripture, hymns, mantras, devotional bhajana and
philosophical texts which are certainly unequaled in the
world.
In the natural order of things,
temple worship precedes philosophy. It all starts with the
temple, with this sacred house of the Deities, this sanctified
site where the three worlds communicate, where the inner
and outer mesh and merge. It is there that devotees change.
They become more like the perfect beings that live in the
temple, become the voice of the Deity, writing down what
is taught them from the inside, and their writings, if they
are faithful to the superconscious message of the God, become
scripture and make up the philosophies of Hinduism. The
philosophies then stand alone as the voice of the religion.
They are taught in the universities, discussed among scholars,
meditated upon by yogis and devout seekers. It is possible
to be a good Hindu by only learning the philosophy and never
going to the temple, or by simply going to the temple and
never hearing of the deeper philosophies.
Hinduism has still another
section within it, and that is the guru -- the teacher,
the illuminator, the spiritual preceptor. The guru is the
remover of darkness. He is one who knows the philosophy,
who knows the inner workings of the temple, and who in himself
is the philosopher and the temple. The guru is he who can
enliven the spirit within people. Like the temple and the
philosophy, he stands alone, apart from the institutions
of learning, apart from sites of pilgrimage. He is himself
the source of knowledge, and he is himself the pilgrim's
destination.
Should all the temples be destroyed,
they would spring up again from the seeds of philosophy,
or from the presence of a realized man. And if all the scriptures
and philosophical treatises were burned, they would be written
again from the same source. So Hinduism cannot be destroyed.
It can never be destroyed. It exists as the spirit of religion
within each being. Its three aspects, the temple, the philosophy
and the satguru, individually proficient, taken together
make Hinduism the most vital and abundant religion in the
world.
Hinduism's Fathomless Diversity
Hinduism has a grand diversity
among its many sects. That diversity is itself a strength,
showing how broad and encompassing Hinduism is. It does
not seek to have all devotees believe exactly alike. In
fact, it has no central authority, no single organized institution
which could ever proclaim or enforce such sameness. There
is an immense inner unity, but the real strength and wisdom
of Hinduism is its diversity, its variety. There are so
many sects within Hinduism that you could spend a lifetime
studying them and never begin to assess them all. More is
there than any single human being could assimilate in a
single lifetime. Hinduism, therefore, has the magnetism
to draw us back into its immensity life after life. Each
sect may be said to be a full religion in its own right,
with all the increments of faith, with no necessary part
missing. Therefore, each sect works for the individuals
within it completely, and each tolerates all the other sects.
It does not totally divorce itself from the other sects,
denying their beliefs, but simply separates to stress or
expound a limited area of the vast philosophy, apart from
all others, to be understood by the limited faculties of
man.
These various sects and divisions
within Hinduism all spring from a one source. Most Hindus
believe in the transcendental God as well as the personal
Lord or God, and yet there is within the boundaries of the
faith room for the non-believer, for the atheist or for
the agnostic who is assessing and developing his beliefs.
This brings another unique asset to our religion -- the
absence of heresy. There is no such thing as a heretic in
Hinduism, for there is no single right perspective or belief.
Doctrine and sadhana are not considered absolutes,
but the means to an absolute end, and they can be tailored
to individual needs and natures. My satguru would
say that different prescriptions are required for different
ailments.
In Hinduism there is no person
or spiritual authority who stands between man and God. In
fact, Hinduism teaches just the opposite. The priests in
the temples are the servants of the Deity, the helper, the
keeper of the Gods' house. He prepares and purifies the
atmosphere of the temple, but he does not intervene between
the devotee and his God -- whichever of the many Gods within
our religion that he may be worshiping. Without a mediator,
responsibility is placed fully upon the individual. There
is no one to intercede on his behalf. He is responsible
for his actions, for his thoughts, for his emotions, for
his relationship with his God. He must work out his beliefs
from the inside without undue dependence upon external influences.
Of course, there is much help, as much as may be needed,
from those who have previously gone through what he is now
going through. It is not enough that he adopts an authorizeddogma.
He must study and bring the teachings to life from within
himself.
Within the philosophy, each
philosopher proclaims that God can be found within man if
man practices the proper precepts of yoga and delves within
himself through hiskundalini force. The guru himself teaches
the awakening of that force and how God can be realized
in His transcendental as well as His personal aspect within
the sphere of one's own personal experience in this very
lifetime if he but pursues the path and is obedient.
Hinduism is unique because
God and man, mind and God, instinctive mind, intellectual
mind and superconscious mind, can merge as one, according
to the evolution of the individual. Each one, according
to his own self-createdkarma, has his own fulfillment. Those
in the first stages ofevolution, whose interests and experiences
are basically instinctive, who possess little intellect
or mental prowess, are guided by their emotions and impulses,
are generally fearful. They have a personal experience of
the Deity in the temple, but it is generally a fearful experience.
They are afraid of God. Alongside of them during a puja
is a great rishi who has had many hundreds of lives on this
planet. He has his own personal experience of God, but it
is an experience of love, of oneness and of union. There
they are, side by side. Each experience of God is as real
to one as to the other. There is no one in-between, no arbitrator
of the experience to compel the one to see God exactly as
the other one does.
Within Hinduism is a Place for Everyone
Hinduism is as broad as humanity
is, as diverse as people are diverse. It is for the rich
and the poor, for the mystic and the materialist. It is
for the sage and the fool. None is excluded. In a Hindu
temple you can find every variety of humanity. The man of
accumulated wealth is there, supporting the institutions
that have grown up around the temple, seeking to spend his
abundance wisely and for its best purpose so that good merit
may be earned for his next life. The pauper is there, begging
in hopes that perhaps he will eat tomorrow and the God will
inspire some devotee to give him a coin or two. So, a Hindu
temple is a reflection of life, set in the midst of the
life of the community. It is not making an effort to be
better than the life of the village, only to serve that
life and direct it to its next stage of evolution. The same
Hindu mind which can consume within it all the religions
of the world can and does consume within it all of the peoples
of the world who are drawn to the temple by the shakti,
the power, of the temple. Such is the great embracing compassion
of our religion.
The greatness of Hinduism cannot
be compared with other religions. There is no basis for
comparison. Hinduism, the Eternal way or Sanatana Dharma,
has no beginning, therefore will certainly have no end.
It was never created, and therefore it cannot be destroyed.
It is a God-centric religion. The center of it is God. All
of the other religions are prophet-centric. The center of
those religions is a great saint or sage, a prophet, a messenger
or messiah, some God-Realized person who has lived on earth
and died. Perhaps he was born to create that particular
sect, that particular religion, needed by the people of
a certain part of the world at a certain time in history.
The Hindus acknowledge this and recognize all of the world's
religious leaders as great prophets, as great souls, as
great incarnations, perhaps, of the Gods, or as great beings
who have through their realization and inward practices
incarnated themselves into, or transformed themselves into,
eminent religious leaders and attracted devotees to them
to give forth the precepts of life all over again and thus
guide a tribe or a nation or a race into a better way of
life.
The
Hindu mind can encompass this, appreciate it, for it is
firmly settled in a God-centric religion. The center of
Hinduism is the Absolute, the timeless, formless, spaceless
God who manifests as Pure Consciousness and as the most
perfect form conceivable, the Primal Soul. He radiates out
from that form as a myriad of Gods and Goddesses who inhabit
the temples and bless the people, inspire the scriptures,
inspire the spiritual leaders and uplift humanity in general.
It is a one God in many forms. We recently heard a sannyasini
at the Ganesha Temple in New York describe this in a most
wonderful and profound way, "Siva is the fire. Shakti is
the heat of that fire. Ganesha is the red color of that
fire. Murugan is the light of that fire."
There are nearly a billion
Hindus in the world today. That's roughly four times the
population of the entire United States. Every sixth person
on the planet is a Hindu. Hinduism attends to the needs
of each one. It is the only religion that has such breadth
and depth. Hinduism contains the Deities and the sanctified
temples, the esoteric knowledge of inner states of consciousness,
yoga and the disciplines of meditation. It possesses a gentle
compassion and a genuine tolerance and appreciation for
other religions. It remains undogmatic and open to inquiry.
It believes in a just world in which every soul is guided
by karma to the ultimate goal of Self Realization, leading
to moksha, freedom from rebirth. It rests content
in the knowledge of the divine origin of the soul, its passage
through one life and another until maturity has been reached.
It offers guidance to all who take refuge in it, from the
nonbeliever to the most evolved maharishi. It cherishes
the largest storehouse of scripture and philosophy on the
earth, and the oldest. It is endowed with a tradition of
saints and sages, of realized men and women, unrivaled on
the earth. It is the sum of these, and more, which makes
me boldly declare that Hinduism is the greatest religion
in the world.
|
|