Namaste, Jai Ma
Seems I've started quite a few threads in the last week. We go from me barely posting to me posting a lot! Clearly the way to get me posting is to irritate me until I can't keep silent!
The topic for this thread today is the idea I keep seeing pop up about a universal guru. How 'if you're not feeling a pull towards this person than something's wrong with you'. Perhaps I'm seeing more of this amongst white converts, or converts in general, who begin their practice after meeting their guru and, as I've said before, simply blindly accept anything the guru says as truth.
But I want to address this idea. Puranas, agamas etc, do any of these proclaim that there are universal gurus? While I can accept a deity as jagadguru (jagad meaning universal), many bear these names (primarily that I know of, Shiva, Hari and Ma although She is called Jagadamba) amongst their sahasranam. The real question I'm asking, I guess, is it really possible for a mortal person to be a jagadguru? Would that not imply that they must know all systems, all theosophical arguments? How can one person be all that? Even for a realised soul I find it hard to believe that they could really be privy to all that information as the human brain is finite and the systems, philosophies and approaches are infinite, one jug cannot hold the ocean, for example, so how can one mind hold all the knowledge?
Seems I've started quite a few threads in the last week. We go from me barely posting to me posting a lot! Clearly the way to get me posting is to irritate me until I can't keep silent!
The topic for this thread today is the idea I keep seeing pop up about a universal guru. How 'if you're not feeling a pull towards this person than something's wrong with you'. Perhaps I'm seeing more of this amongst white converts, or converts in general, who begin their practice after meeting their guru and, as I've said before, simply blindly accept anything the guru says as truth.
But I want to address this idea. Puranas, agamas etc, do any of these proclaim that there are universal gurus? While I can accept a deity as jagadguru (jagad meaning universal), many bear these names (primarily that I know of, Shiva, Hari and Ma although She is called Jagadamba) amongst their sahasranam. The real question I'm asking, I guess, is it really possible for a mortal person to be a jagadguru? Would that not imply that they must know all systems, all theosophical arguments? How can one person be all that? Even for a realised soul I find it hard to believe that they could really be privy to all that information as the human brain is finite and the systems, philosophies and approaches are infinite, one jug cannot hold the ocean, for example, so how can one mind hold all the knowledge?