Arkangel
I am Darth Vader
I thought creating a new thread is appropriate for this. Many in the west have no idea about the hinduism being followed by hindus in India. They believe that what ISCKON preaches here to be the same in India. There is a lot of difference and i would like to mention some here.
This is a qoute from a different thread:
Secondly, Brahma is not just the ultimate godhead as mentioned and teached by ISCKON. It is Brahma, Vishu, and Shiva. The triune god who form the Ultimate Godhead. Brahma being the creator, Vishnu being the order and life, and Shiva being the destroyer. The 3 are said to be created from Om Shakti which means eternal energy.
Hindusim is not a religion as sense like others in the world. Their is no set order or hierachy. As you said no offical canon which also means you are free to choose which ever you want.
The vedas are divided into 3, Rig Veda, Yajur Veda and Sama Veda.
In the time of Rig Veda, Indra was the ultimate godhead with Varuna was the creator. Nothing much changed with the second Veda but by the 3rd Brahma, Vishnu, and Mahaeshwara (Shiva) came into existence. Indra was reduced to demi god and later just the god of thunder and heaven. Varuna to was reduced to demi god status of God of air. Varuna means Air.
Shiva by far is the oldest and first Hindu god to be ever worshiped.
Much before the Aryans invaded and brought with them much off their culture influnced by greek and viking( sorry forgot the name but i hope you get the meaning) cultures and religion. The dravidians who were the original inhabitants of India worshiped Shiva. When the aryans pushed into India from north, they pushed out dravidians to the south. But by the time the 3rd and last vedas were being written, the dravidian culture had fused with the aryan to form a new culture and religion. This is when most Indian historians believe that the present form of Hindusim started to develop and break away from the Vedic religion and the name Sanatana-dhrama was used. This is also when ritual sacrifice of animals as a part of worship to god ended. Dravidian philosophy and culture was starting to take importance in the Hindu religion.
After the vedas came the Puranas which are just mythlogical stories. These things are not tought by the ISCKON which does not believe in the Puranas. They have formed a kind of new-age view about the entire Hindu religion. Mainly focused on the Gita and Krsna.
Their is 2 path for Hindus, one of the spritual way and the other of the materialistic way. The spritual way is to sacrifice the materialistic life and be a yogi, even this is divided in many ways. One of utter hardship and the other of pure meditation. Many follow the materialistic way in India but the ISCKON combined the both materialistic and spritual way into a 3rd. This became a new-age way called the Hare-Krsna way. Not many born hindus follow this way but they do respect and visit Isckon temples in great numbers. But still the Puranas and mythology holds strong in their belief system. They do worship Krishna as god but he is not a popular god in India. Not as much as Ganesh or Ram. Ganesh is worshiped before any other god is worshiped in all schools of Hindu philosophies in India.
I guess Seyorni your view of the religion is from the Vedanta point of view or which in India is known as the Hara-Krsna way. They leave out the mythology and only concentrate on the spritual teachings of the religion which is a good thing but does not describe the Hindu religon. Without mythology hinduism is just another new-age religion. It is something the west will never understand. I guess ISCKON saw that and only teaches the ones which the west can understand.
This is a qoute from a different thread:
Firstly, the gita is not taken from the epic poem, it is mentioned in it. According to Hindu mythology, the Gita was given to mankind much befor the epic poem. Krishna just retells it to Arjuna when he says that he cannot battle his own bothers. This is told in the story of SatyaNarayana Pooja. Narayana is the other name of Vishnu and Satya means truth or true and Pooja is a form worship.Seyorni said:Clarification for non-Hindus:
The Mahabharat Arkangel mentions is the world's longest epic-poem. The Bhagavad-Gita, the equivalent of the Hindu Bible, is an excerpt from this poem.
Arkangel: The Gita is not official canon. In Hindu terms it is Smriti, not Sruti. It does, however,so nicely summarize certain Hindu themes that it has come to be revered as a sort of Hindu Bible.
Sruti -- the official, intuited revelations of hinduism, consist of the sacred Vedas.
I agree with your assessment of "Krishna Consciousness." This movement is a specific cult created by a single individual. It is dualistic and not quite in synch with most schools of Hindu philosophy.
The "ultimate godhead" -- Brahman, is not ordinarily personified (endowed with qualities) Qualified avatars such as Krishna are usually conceived of as manifestations or aspects of Brahman.
Secondly, Brahma is not just the ultimate godhead as mentioned and teached by ISCKON. It is Brahma, Vishu, and Shiva. The triune god who form the Ultimate Godhead. Brahma being the creator, Vishnu being the order and life, and Shiva being the destroyer. The 3 are said to be created from Om Shakti which means eternal energy.
Hindusim is not a religion as sense like others in the world. Their is no set order or hierachy. As you said no offical canon which also means you are free to choose which ever you want.
The vedas are divided into 3, Rig Veda, Yajur Veda and Sama Veda.
In the time of Rig Veda, Indra was the ultimate godhead with Varuna was the creator. Nothing much changed with the second Veda but by the 3rd Brahma, Vishnu, and Mahaeshwara (Shiva) came into existence. Indra was reduced to demi god and later just the god of thunder and heaven. Varuna to was reduced to demi god status of God of air. Varuna means Air.
Shiva by far is the oldest and first Hindu god to be ever worshiped.
Much before the Aryans invaded and brought with them much off their culture influnced by greek and viking( sorry forgot the name but i hope you get the meaning) cultures and religion. The dravidians who were the original inhabitants of India worshiped Shiva. When the aryans pushed into India from north, they pushed out dravidians to the south. But by the time the 3rd and last vedas were being written, the dravidian culture had fused with the aryan to form a new culture and religion. This is when most Indian historians believe that the present form of Hindusim started to develop and break away from the Vedic religion and the name Sanatana-dhrama was used. This is also when ritual sacrifice of animals as a part of worship to god ended. Dravidian philosophy and culture was starting to take importance in the Hindu religion.
After the vedas came the Puranas which are just mythlogical stories. These things are not tought by the ISCKON which does not believe in the Puranas. They have formed a kind of new-age view about the entire Hindu religion. Mainly focused on the Gita and Krsna.
Their is 2 path for Hindus, one of the spritual way and the other of the materialistic way. The spritual way is to sacrifice the materialistic life and be a yogi, even this is divided in many ways. One of utter hardship and the other of pure meditation. Many follow the materialistic way in India but the ISCKON combined the both materialistic and spritual way into a 3rd. This became a new-age way called the Hare-Krsna way. Not many born hindus follow this way but they do respect and visit Isckon temples in great numbers. But still the Puranas and mythology holds strong in their belief system. They do worship Krishna as god but he is not a popular god in India. Not as much as Ganesh or Ram. Ganesh is worshiped before any other god is worshiped in all schools of Hindu philosophies in India.
I guess Seyorni your view of the religion is from the Vedanta point of view or which in India is known as the Hara-Krsna way. They leave out the mythology and only concentrate on the spritual teachings of the religion which is a good thing but does not describe the Hindu religon. Without mythology hinduism is just another new-age religion. It is something the west will never understand. I guess ISCKON saw that and only teaches the ones which the west can understand.