Aupmanyav
Be your own guru
Whether it is Vedas or Puranas, the stories are important. Either they place before us precedents to follow or avoid, or are history. Hindu books do not confuse with metaphors or allegory ('now you guess the meaning'). If they have to say something, they would say it directly and precisely and proceed to give their reasons. Upanishads, Brahma Sutras, the various Gitas, Yoga Vasishtha, etc. are those sort of books.Is it fair to say that the strange stories and myths of the gods and their fights, marriages, etc. is a holdover from the more ancient polytheistic world (as in Europe) and is essentially unimportant, or are they reinterpreted in Vedic theological terms with more important metaphorical/allegorical meaning?
Sure, Vedas are old, older than 4,000 BC and from Indo-Europeans in Pontic steppe/Kurgan region. Similarly, we had the indigenous Hindu tradition (Ahimsa, Maya which Aryans would not have understood). These two combined from 2,000 BC onwards and gave us the present Hindu system. I do not think there is much debate about it except for Chauvinist Hindus who do not accept the foreign origin of Aryans.Does this mean that the deeper ideas had been originally clothed in very primitive religious ideas of the very ancient peoples, or that their ideas were later adapted into the sophisticated Vedic ones? Of course this needs to touch upon the old debate as to whether in fact the Aryans were the originators of Vedic religion from OUTSIDE India or were native to India too. Or that it all originated in an Iranian region that spread and adapted east and west ..
I think the gentleman meant that once you understand the truth (through a guru, or as I would say, even without a guru), the idea of a God or a Messiah seems very funny and hollow. I think the gentleman was studying 'Advaita'.Yeah, but what this dude was saying was not that - he was saying when you know a guru, then the messiah coming or not is irrelevant.
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