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| Basic
Study of Hindu Religion |
|
Hindu Heritage
Study Program |
|
Brief
Information about Hindu Religion -
Level 1 Introduction
to Hindu Religion for the Youth & the New Seekers | |
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2 - | UNITY
WITHIN DIVERSITY | |
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Every
Hindu understands the fact that the religion accepts varying forms of worship
and every method the devotee offers the prayers. They believe that the prayers
offered to every form of God, is for the same Almighty who will come to protect
them. Many believe that multiplicity of deities makes Hinduism polytheistic. Such
a belief is nothing short of mistaking the wood for the tree. The faith accepted
the varying levels of understanding of the faith even at this early period as
similar and the theory of One God with different names and varying forms or no
form at all accepting all names and all forms of worship without a dogma was seen
in Rig Veda. The bewildering diversity of Hindu belief - theistic, atheistic and
agnostic - rests on a solid unity. Ekam sat, Viprãh bahudhã vadanti, says the
Rigveda: The Truth (God, Brahman, etc) is one; scholars call it by various names.
What the multiplicity of deities does indicate is Hinduism's spiritual hospitality
as evidenced by two characteristically Hindu doctrines: The Doctrine of Spiritual
Competence (Adhikaara) and The Doctrine of The Chosen Deity (Ishhta Devata). The
doctrine of spiritual competence requires that the spiritual practices prescribed
to a person should correspond to his (or her) spiritual competence. Each person
studies, learns and follows a level of Spiritual study that is proper for their
needs and intelligence that they can understand and follow. | |
An
illiterate villager who worships a stone or clay image, decorated, in his fields
and prays with simple songs, is no different from a village priest who offers
the devotional prayers to a statue to the likeness of ones favorite Deity and
to a well read scholar who meditates on the Supreme with all the knowledge of
the qualities of Almighty the Formless or reads and recites the sacred scriptures.
So, the different forms of the religious practice and images are to serve the
mass according to each one's knowledge and understanding capacity. It is counter-productive
to teach abstract philosophical concepts to a person whose heart hungers for faith
in a higher power and vice versa. The doctrine of the chosen deity gives a person
the freedom to choose (or invent) a form of Brahman that satisfies his spiritual
cravings and to make it the object of his worship. In many instances the ancient
history [Purana] dictates the family or a local community to choose such a Deity
for themselves according to the needs. Notice that both doctrines are consistent
with Hinduism's assertion that the unchanging reality is present in everything,
even the transient. This Immanent Reality Itself makes the various Transcendent
Forms for our understanding the truth as It is. In spite of this diversity in
the forms of worship and practice there is a subtle unity that is understood by
all Hindu devotees, though few ignorant ones may find ways to "prove" the superiority
of their own beliefs. The true knowledgeable ones always finish their prayers
with the statement "Like all the rain waters that fall flows through the rivers
to the same ocean, let all my prayers to various forms of the Divine ultimately
flow to the same Almighty Kesava. There are five elements that contribute to the
essential unity of Hinduism: common ideals, common scriptures, common deities,
common beliefs, and common practices. | |
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