Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!
Doesnt it include all religions? As it is said in the Vedas, "Truth is One, though the sages know it variously."
Doesnt the very idea of Hinduism being a religion opposite to what a Hindu believes in?
...it can be very difficult to separate religious Hinduism from 'cultural' Hinduism...
Amusing how Muslims read an online article on Hinduism and assume they understand the religion better than Hindus.
I don't even know that you can call Hinduism one religion.
...
I interpret "Truth is One, though the sages know it variously" as meaning there is only One Truth, and many devotional paths will get you there. The various ways and sects of Hinduism are part of those paths.
As for the first, this is my point exactly.
I have that separation by birth and rearing. Hinduism is a belief system for me, but I have no Hindu cultural connections. I was raised in the west in a Roman Catholic Italian-American family. That might give some Indian Hindus a fit. Others get a kick out of western white people embracing Hinduism if done sincerely.
Doesnt it include all religions? As it is said in the Vedas, "Truth is One, though the sages know it variously." Doesnt the very idea of Hinduism being a religion opposite to what a Hindu believes in?
What you say is based on the assumption that the Judeo Christian Bible hasnt arisen from the Vedas in the sense that it says something distinct from them (thats what I assume you mean when you say something has arisen from the Vedas)
None of Hindu Scriptures lay down divine laws as in "thou shalt..." and "thou shalt not..." Those are strictly of Mesopotamian origin. Even the languages the various scriptures were written completely are unrelated: the bible and Qur'an, Semitic (Hebrew, Arabic, Aramaic); the Vedas, Vedic Sanskrit (Indo-European).
And all Spanish Catholicism share a distinct sub-Catholic culture sometimes.
Santería y brujaría? Someone I have the grave misfortune of being related to by marriage thinks she's a santera and bruja. She's always trying to place curses on people. I said "try it on me... my gods and goddesses are far older and stronger than yours and will knock yours into the next galaxy. Entonces, no joda conmigo, pendeja".
No assumption... fact based on archaeology, anthropology, and historical and comparative linguistics.
Perhaps not at face value... but they are more like... "It's preferable and the highest to do this... but if you can't, you can do that... and here's the result of such an action."
Although perhaps not in the same binding sense as Abrahamic religion in general. I think the idea lies behind the 'Covenant' in which the superseding Revelation is generally a considerable update of the former, as well as new laws or guidelines that are strongly recommended to follow.
Language is not of grave importance. Sri Vaishnavism utilises Sanskrit and Tamil for its Scriptures. Gaudiya Vaishnavism uses Sanskrit and Bengali (and with new acharyas, English). Swaminarayanis use Gujarati and Sanskrit.
While Abrahamics see Revelation as evolving by certain 'dispensations,' the traditional Orthodox Hindu will see revelation as continuously evolving according to the age and the guru's expertise in bringing practicality to the Scriptures.
Only I am not sure that this way of restricting Hinduism is quite just and appropriate though and was really meant by the Hindu saints.
Regards
I was thinking more like festivities, the huge veneration for various saints (santos) and Marian devotions, and honouring the ancestors with their own altars for one night in the year. And of course, the distinct way they make statues of the saints are very Spanish, whether from the Philippines or from Mexico.
and the "fact" you quote to be only a superficial understanding of them.