Zelophehad
Member
You were saying Jesus was not an Avatar, yet you said that anyone can be a manifestation of God. I was thinking that is the same thing. Being a manifestation of God IS being his Avatar. That's what I am trying to understand.
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!
That's the thing is. Hinduism is really just another word for theologian. If you live in a free country with multiple religions, you are living the same philosophies as Hinduism. Same as the mythologies like Greek and Roman mythologies. They also were theologians who adopted deities and philosophies from other parts of the world. Hinduism kind of embodies that phenomenon.
You were saying Jesus was not an Avatar, yet you said that anyone can be a manifestation of God. I was thinking that is the same thing. Being a manifestation of God IS being his Avatar. That's what I am trying to understand.
You were saying Jesus was not an Avatar, yet you said that anyone can be a manifestation of God. I was thinking that is the same thing. Being a manifestation of God IS being his Avatar. That's what I am trying to understand.
All interpretations of religion change over time. They may have roots in traditions, but even the traditionalists of today, are not the same as the people that practiced 2000 years earlier. The only way they would be is if the culture remained static for 2000 years. I see no reason that people who identify as Hindus cannot adopt another figure from another culture and integrated it into their own beliefs and practices, which in time becomes a tradition itself. In time, that becomes "Hinduism", and then those 2000 years ago would argue that not having that figure was a violation of what Hinduism is. Bottom line is, traditionalists romanticize the past as a fixed set of beliefs, whereas they were novel then too.
All interpretations of religion change over time. They may have roots in traditions, but even the traditionalists of today, are not the same as the people that practiced 2000 years earlier. The only way they would be is if the culture remained static for 2000 years. I see no reason that people who identify as Hindus cannot adopt another figure from another culture and integrated it into their own beliefs and practices, which in time becomes a tradition itself. In time, that becomes "Hinduism", and then those 2000 years ago would argue that not having that figure was a violation of what Hinduism is. Bottom line is, traditionalists romanticize the past as a fixed set of beliefs, whereas they were novel then too.
To some he clearly does. You don't see a reason for you.No one is saying a Hindu CAN'T do that. They can do what ever, Hinduism is especially forgiving: "Got it wrong in this lifetime? Try again in the next!". Yet I see no reason certain things or people should be added that are unnecessary. Jesus honestly has no reason to be added.
Hinduism may be fairly tolerant of heterodoxy, but I'm pretty certain that you are taking the idea well into the breaking point.
Like it or not, there is such a thing as mainline Hinduism and it has a right to reject too extraneous ideas.
Not sure what you are getting at. I am saying that you don't need to be of the Hindu race to be Hindu-like.
Not sure what you are getting at. I am saying that you don't need to be of the Hindu race to be Hindu-like.
Which is why I prefer to use words such as "traditional Hinduism", to make a clear distinction between traditionalists and progressives or liberals, or what have you. I don't care for traditionalists to assume their understanding is what constitutes what the religion actually is, what is valid and what is not valid based on their own view of themselves as "true" to the religion itself. Yet, that is what is done again and again, excludes the rest as not truly Hindu, truly Christian, etc. It's a fallacy.While that is true, it is also true that there is a clear conception of Hinduism these days, and it hardly deserves to be pressured into vague syncretic conceptions of what it should be.
No one is saying a Hindu CAN'T do that. They can do what ever, Hinduism is especially forgiving: "Got it wrong in this lifetime? Try again in the next!". Yet I see no reason certain things or people should be added that are unnecessary. Jesus honestly has no reason to be added.
I never even saw race enter the subject matter.
But if we are talking about Hinduism, then it is only fair to acknowledge that it has doctrinary characteristics - and that it is not at all a part of the Abrahamic traditions.
Which is why I prefer to use words such as "traditional Hinduism", to make a clear distinction between traditionalists and progressives or liberals, or what have you. I don't care for traditionalists to assume their understanding is what constitutes what the religion actually is, what is valid and what is not valid based on their own view of themselves as "true" to the religion itself. Yet, that is what is done again and again, excludes the rest as not truly Hindu, truly Christian, etc. It's a fallacy.
But if the gods are manifestations of Brahman, and Jesus is the manifestation of God.... are they not all God?I feel the hindus have a handle on their own avatar term. It is the christains that cant find concensus on the divine nature of jesus. Depending on the denomination, they may view jesus the way hindus view avatars, that certainly was the case for me as I started delving into the dharma religions and straying from christianity. Hindus could have tons of god, jesus would just be one more.
Which is why I prefer to use words such as "traditional Hinduism", to make a clear distinction between traditionalists and progressives or liberals, or what have you. I don't care for traditionalists to assume their understanding is what constitutes what the religion actually is, what is valid and what is not valid based on their own view of themselves as "true" to the religion itself. Yet, that is what is done again and again, excludes the rest as not truly Hindu, truly Christian, etc. It's a fallacy.
Do christians accept it? Of course, I do not know about this baba, there are so many around.Hari das baba was in sahaj samhadi, he was himself Christ. His word is solid.