Shuddhasattva
Well-Known Member
Thanks for your informative and encouraging responses, everyone! I'll need more time to fully assimilate my thoughts, but I have a few quick questions and comments in the meantime.
We shall exact a toll: you will synthesize your findings, and, in order to make most use of this posting, put it up as an article thread here in the DIR! <Y/N?> :run:
I guess this is sort of tangential to my original line of inquiry, but I always imagined Hinduism as being "a (singular) religion" housing a web of many different denominations and specific beliefs, much like in Christianity. Is this an acceptable understanding in your opinion, or would you prefer to separate Hinduism into various religion categories as you described above, and then further, perhaps, into specific denominations?
Does the term "Jordanism" make sense? Or even "Abrahamism" to describe the vast range of beliefs in Judaism, CHristianity & Islam?
Likewise Hinduism is an internalized name given by Persian invaders and later recycled by British invaders and internalized by "Hindus" themselves. It is given from proximity to a river; the 'Sindhu,' - from which our "indus river valley civilization" emerged. S - > H in Persian commonly, so it became Hindu. Persian, thru urdu & Hindi[Hindustani] became the order of the day for about 600 years, just as English has now emerged as the language of the elite.
In any case, "Hinduism" is analogous to "Jordanism" or "Abrahamism." It's a convenient umbrella. All but some of the most heterodox of us claim decent from the Vedas. The Vedas are most assuredly polytheistic in a profound sense, but also point to an underlying panentheism and 'ground of being;' brahman.
Nonetheless, prescribed worship of various deities in a polytheistic, or better, kathenotheistic manner, was prescribed. And so it continued in the agamic tradition where an adept may worship as many as 150 deities in a single sitting, but all as aspects of a single underlying Self.
It always comes back to; what is the purpose for which deities are chartered?
Perhaps another more modern term would help: what is a self-authenticating key? How does this relate to nondual worship?
As to the differences in Hinduisms - they are basically systematic. I think it would be best to map a religion as a compilation of memes which accrue in tradition through development in the laboratories of the selves in raw spontaneity (sahaja; ati-margaphala) and their transmission as systematized practices sadhanas, which as disciplic lineages (paramparas; shrota-s) fill the veins of the various sampradayas (traditions), acommodating householders, renunciants, and even oddballs.
What I mean by mapping by memes is this: we identify ideas and practices, components if you will, and we understand where they came from, many coming from prehistoric times. How do they evolve, how do they synthesize when they encounter other systems, how are they diminished and eliminated, how do they script for behavior? Howabout consciousness? All religions, including all tradition and denominations, are like.. footprints of viewpoints that paved the way for the vantage of others. They're compilations of various previous ideas pulled together and systemized, and often defined thru the fires of debate - forged, if you will, sharply outlining their identity to swing it about in the name of dialectic.
I didn't get the sense that you were - and good! I feel that Hinduism 'proper' <and of course I'm biased> IS polytheistic, as well as monotheistic, transtheistic and monistic. Or we could dispense with this qualifier and that qualifier, and begin to see it in its own context, rather than thru the lens of Western appellations, though they may be provisionally useful.Just to clarify my opinion, I don't see "polytheism" as necessarily pejorative either.
I'm not here to try and prove Hinduism as non-polytheistic because I don't like the idea of polytheism. It's just that from my observations and thinking, Hinduism didn't really seem that polytheistic, and those who claimed it was seemed to be misunderstanding it. "Pantheistic", or "Panentheistic" as Madhuri stated above, seemed to be more credible labels.
Panentheistic can include polytheism and animism. Frankly, we see tremendous animism in Vedic and Agamic cults, which form the bedrock of Vedantic and Puranic cults respectively. <Here I use the word cult non-pejoratively as a distracting grenade from 'animism' used likewise> :run:
This is what attracted me to Hinduism in the first place. I've always found it easy to see things from multiple perspectives at once, along with a nagging awareness of the limitations of any understandings I generated.
Hinduism seems to embrace this inward awareness of human limitation even as it empowers us to move outward. It was like a breath of fresh air.
Hinduism is in some respects a mythical beast created in response to unmet demand in the West for spiritual fulfillment and actualization that conventional Christianity couldn't offer. One should be careful, and discerning, when one seeks to understand Hinduism as a westerner that one does not project one's ideas, even beautiful ideas, onto Hinduism. I am not saying that to be Hindu, or to believe in HIndu philosophies and do Hindu practices (from the ritualistic to the contemplative, there's a fairly wide range) you have to discard your ideas about what a system or religion should be, but that religion might not exist outside of your head/mind and the mind of others who have conceived such ideas.
In one way this is a beautiful illusion. If only Hinduism did live up to this.
On the flip side, Western converts are equally lackadaisical in assimilating, and prefer to mine for raw materials in constructing a belief system rather than put them to the test in practice.
Note that I am speaking relatively, and it concerns the decline of Hinduism(s) in INdia, and the failures of its transmissions to the West,
I like this idea that you described, this ability to use multiple reality tunnels, a certain flexibility, or perhaps we can say, not identifying with any particular belief system.
But is it represented in "Hinduism"? It is, to some extent, by soem people, at some times, in some traditions, and to some extent in [a few] traditions themselves, but to a surprisingly limited extent. To describe that as a HIndu belief, one ocmmonly held by practicing Hindus.
I guess what I am trying to get across is this:
Religions develop internal manuals for their own propagation and _conservation_ of practices and appropriate zeal. These fail when hypocrisy erodes their ethical and spiritual authority and instead became more like marketing materials. Fancy brochures, or worse, revered tomes of paper tigers and spines of dust, placed on pedestals out of reach.
Hinduism is not exempt from this. It suffers terribly from maltreatment both on the subcontinent and abroad - sometimes at the hands of outsiders, but truly? the real danger is from within, not through any kind of 'deliberate treason to the faith' - there is no faith as such, and no deliberation. It's simply ignorance in motion; people so busy with life that they fail to treasure the dharma while it makes an appearance, briefly like a full moon; the moment for progress passes, and it as worthless as a fool's goal.
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