Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

stonehearted

Members
  • Content Count

    2,531
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by stonehearted


  1. I agree that this would be a nice note to close on. If we don't close, then a great new beginning.

     

    I've just arrived in Guanacaste, Costa Rica, where I'll spend some time helping with Tripurari Maharaja's project down here. The mood is sweet (therefore the name), and it would be nice to see the same audarya (generosity) here if we figure out how to keep going.

     

    Aloha.


  2. Thanks for this thread mahak. Whatever happens, I want to take a moment to mention how much I've enjoyed your posts, as well as much of the interaction here over the past few years. I'm happy to have "met" theist, gHari, Indulekha, and so many others. Despite the problems that have often arisen here and the trouble caused to JNdas and the others who have taken responsiblity for keeping these forums going, there has been so much more of real value.


  3.  

    Since 1969 doesn't mean much. Who're you to know everything what Prabhupada said?

     

    Jeez--pardon me! I just asked. I've never even hinted that I've heard everything; however, this is rather a startling quotation, and I'm surprised that it hasn't gotten around, even among ISKCON critics, hasn't showed up on any grouchy Web sites yet.

     

    And your efforts to put me down seem to have distracted you from answering my direct question: at which temple did he make this statement?

     

    Since you're unlikely to answer that question, I guess I'll take the hint and try not to bother you anymore.


  4.  

    "After I am gone you probably will not print my books, I need to see them printed while I am still here."

    Thats what Prabhupada said when visiting our temple in 1974. He said it exactly that way. But you're right, so many quotes by Prabhupada seem to be lost and not properly documented. Therefore good point to say, "I want to bump this".

    Which temple? Did he say this in public? I have to say, I've been around ISKCON since 1969, and I've never heard this one before.


  5.  

    Hey stonehearted. Was thinking today about the politics of Lord Nityanandas so to speak and I think he is simultaneously liberal and conservative. I mean at a fundamental level the requirements for Krishna Consciousness seem to be fairly conservative in the sense of no gambling, no intoxication, no illicit sex.

     

    :eek3: Blasphemy! :eek3: He is liberal, liberal, and only liberal. (He has no politics.) He gives away the most precious commodity for the least price: just a little faith. He has no interest in those other things, concerning people's inclination for gambling, sex, etc. What did He ask Jagai and Madhai? Stop your drinking? Stop your raping and whoring? Stop anything? Nope! Just "Please chant Krishna's holy names!" He's liberal and nothing else. Read Sri Chaitanya Bhagavat and Sri Chaitanya-charitamrita again and undergo a change of heart. :crying2:


  6.  

    Srila Prabhupada said -- "after I am gone you probably will not print my books, I need to see them printed while I am still here."

     

    Whoa! I've never heard this one before, or anything like it, and I've been around a while. Now, you put these words in quotation marks, which means that you assert he spoke these exact words. My guess it that you're really paraphrasing something. I did a VedaBase search and got 0 hits. I know that the VedaBase, the "Complete" mp3 collection, etc. are, even all together, not complete. Can you tell us where and when Srila Prabhupada is supposed to have said this? It may also help if you were to share your source with us.


  7.  

    Can agree there is plenty of nuttiness to go around.

    See? We agree!

     

    Didn't mean to get you defensive about your critical thinking abilities or your academic credentials. I was not saying I was taking either America or Irans side in this conflict just pointing out that you both are only mentioning the craziness of America when I have heard a lot of things the Iranian president has said that is alarming to say the least. I don't know what the best course of action is. You fellas seem to think diplomacy or whatever will definitively work and maybe that is so but I am not 100% sure about that

    I'm not at all defensive. (More like offensive.) Your response just sounded like something we'd hear of Fox News Channel, from O'Reilly, maybe, or Savage. These guys are good enough at what they do to make a pile of money from it, but I wouldn't accept them (or Franken or any of the folks at that awful Air America Radio) as great thinkers. And as far as my conviction that "diplomacy will definitely work" goes, I never said any such thing. But it was ruled out a priori when Cheney's puppet created his cute little "Axis of Evil." (Sounds like something from a Myers flick.) C'mon, we seem to have made some progress with Kim (talk about your nuts). At least Ahmadinajad has some fashion sense. ;)

     

     

    or convinced that Ahmadinajad is more suitable to handle the temptations of nuclear missiles than Americans are. I guess we will eventually find out one way or another.

    Let's hope not. Got a magic wand?

     

    I apologize for intruding on your asceticism.

     

    Nothing to apologize for; it was my fault. Anyway, it sounds like we're not as far apart on this as someone may have thought earlier.

     

    Stay cool, AM.


  8. In fact, you don't know me at all. In some ways I'm do doubt more "liberal" than you, and that's the result of many decades of carefully considering things, not some mindless reaction to one event or another. I'm well educated and spent nearly two decades teaching, among other things, critical thinking at colleges and universities in California and Hawaii.

     

    I've heard Michael Savage, and one would be tempted to think him mentally ill. The truth is more likely that he's a performer prone to exploit xenophobia and fear. Some people would call fandom, whether the object is Savage, Britney, Franken, or whoever, a mental disorder. But I wouldn't, as I'm kind of a fan of Lord Nityananda's. (And boy, is He liberal!) And I rather like gHari, too, although I wouldn't embarrass him by calling myself a fan.

     

    It's funny (well, odd)--when we build and test all sorts of weapons, it's some sort of service to God, but when someone we don't like does so, they have to be lunatics. I would sure prefer that someone else were running both the US and Iran (sure as hell not the shah or some other right-wing American puppet), but I think there are other ways to deal with him than all the saber-rattling, which we know will simply provoke him further. In fact, Hersh's point is that Bush's folks are doing just that--trying to provoke him. Bush thinks, as he has sometimes said, that God has chosen him for some sort of holy work here. Isn't that the same sort of nuttiness we hear from Iran's honchos? This stuff is all relative and, as you said earlier, has no real substance. My sense is that this particular forum is mostly a place for some folks to entertain themselves, and I apologize again for intruding.


  9.  

    In all fairness pretty much all of the players in the tragicomedy the World is facing are lunatics.

    No question.

     

    Don't buy into the liberal hate America mindset that permeates a lot of spiritual people.

    Talk about buying into cliches--this whole idea that "liberals" (that means anyone folks who call themselves "conservatives" don't agree with, I guess) hate America is so much bullsh*t, just as the stupid idea that all "conservatives" are Nazis. Some people just see failed policies as the stupid ideas they are. Does that show hatred of America? I think it shows disappointment in the country's leadership. Expressing that disappointment is patriotic.

     

    What do I know about patriotism? My people helped build this great country from the beginning and have been exploiting North America's resources (and any others we can get our hands on) for over 370 years. They're heroes of the revolution and served in every war we've been through Vietnam. We have a signature on the Declaration and the Constitution (although he had some misgivings, from what I've read). I did serve in the military during the Veitnam conflict, and I've paid taxes for many years. I think I have a right to express my opinion without its being denigrated as "buying in" to some party line. In fact, I've never registered with either of the two big parties. Never will.

     

    Moreover, I have hardly ever participated on this particular forum for the last several years. Why? Because complex issues get boiled down here to bumper stickers you could buy from Rush Limbaugh or Air America Radio. ugh.

     

     

    Ultimately it seems there is really nothing to worry about if you truly have faith in God because my understanding is that God ultimately protects the faithful no matter what condition the material world gets into. If you feel the need to preach against injustices by America or whomever than by all means do it if you feel it is gonna change things or make a difference, not trying to discourage you.

     

    Just made a comment, friend.I'm not preaching to you or anyone else. Pardon me for intruding into your turf. Ciao.


  10.  

    There are more eager canidates itching to enlist in the military, than we can tell from our frog-well's POV --as soon as the best bargains are drafted into GI-Bill law.
    Are you kidding? Are you among them? Some eager candidates perhaps, but not necessarily the best candidates. The facts on the ground are that O-3s (captains in the Army, Marine Corps, and Air Force, and Lieutenants in the Navy), who are the future of the officer corps and thus of the service, are leaving in droves for various reasons. Moreover, John McCain, candidate for Veteran in Chief, has worked in the US Senate against better benefits for vets.

     

    You're an energetic cheerleader, Bhaktajan. Have you ever served in the military?


  11. I have Narayan Maharaja's edition and have read it a couple of times. (I've also listened to Tridandi Maharaja's recording quite a bit.) There's an edition by an ISKCON devotee, whose name I can't recall. Both are quite nice, and I enjoy reading them together sometimes. I feel I get deeper understanding from the differences in the translations.

     

    I don't know what will come of the translation the BBT has been fussing with for many years (don't remember who did that translation, either). But I agree that a really snazzy presentation would be nice. Prapanna-jivanamritam is pretty cool, but I worry about my grubby hands and that nice, white silk.


  12.  

    Hari Sauri: As for the American connection, you cannot avoid it. Ambarish prabhu comes from one of the oldest money lines in America.

    I'm not sure how accurate that assertion is. The Fords' money goes back 100 years, to the Model T Ford. There are money lines in Boston and New York that go back 300, 350 years. Heck, even the Rockefellers' and other robber barons' money is older than the Fords'.

     

    Anyway, these folks will do what they will do, and neither my carping nor yours will budge them an inch. I thought the original idea was to show the relationships between material and spiritual planetary systems according to Brihad-Bhagavatamrita. :ponder:


  13. Originally Posted by realist

    Anyway, we continued to discus Prabhupada, the ‘miracle’ of Internet preaching, and the Jaiva dharma that ISKCON-BBT will eventually bring out. That Maharaj humbly explained that even though Srila Prabhupada and Narayana Maharaja have different teachings about the original position of the jiva, we are all devotees of Krsna

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Did Maharaja discuss how the BBT will deal with the sections of Jaiva Dharma that discuss that topic? Several yearrs ago, a senior editor at BBT asked my advice, and I told him that, if they intended to publish Bhaktivinoda Thakura's Jaiva Dharma,they ought to present the philosophy as he does. Apparently they still haven't figured that part out.


  14. Here's one of the chapters from the ToC:

    Chapter-10: Spiritual category

     

    Osho Rajneesh – For stating that India is a spiritual vibe

     

    Maharshi Mahesh Yogi – For his hopping Nationalism

     

    Srila Prabhupad – A Semitic version of Hindu nationalism

     

    Sri Sri Ravishankar: For taking nationalism to the upper crest

     

    Mata Amrutananda Mayi – For her hugging spree

     

    Baba Ramdev – For being India’s first Hindu tele-evangelist

     

    Sai Baba – For a heady mix of religion, magic and nationalism

     

    U.G. Krishnamurthy – For the iconoclast gave a new definition

     

    Panduranga Shastri Athavale – For the Swadhyaya movement

     

    Dalai Lama – For acknowledging Hindu roots

     

    Pramukh Swamiji Maharaja - For setting up the world’s largest Temple

     

    Tarun Sagar – For continuing the legacy of Acharya Tulsi

     

    Asaram Bapu - For being politically incorrect

     

    Um, "Semitic version of Hindu nationalism"? I guess that's what we could expect from an Osho/Rajneesh-type "spiritual" hedonist. :confused:


  15.  

    Yes but the symptom of that sort of real humility is not to stop chanting but to to to chant with more intense sincere feeling.

     

    We have to judge a thing by it's result. Is the result of humility to stop chanting? Lord Caitanya teaches that only from the position of humility can one chant the name of the Lord constantly, non-stop.

    Well said. Humility means constantly chanting. And if someone has committed some offense in chanting, the remedy is constant chanting. It may be helpful to study Siksastakam to better understand how dedication to chanting Hare Krishna both effects and reflects our spiritual progress. And in this age, there just isn't any chance of real progress, or happiness, without chanting.

     

    So, cbrahma, you clearly have some faith in chanting, so follow that faith, so it will grow, and don't give any attention to those who, for whatever reason, discourage you.


  16. The latest I heard was the day before yesterday. The fire on the opposite mountain slowed down because the wind cooperated. The firefighters were able to make a fire break and start a backfire. So the fire ended up not jumping the creek. There are a couple of other fires on the mountain, one of which may still pose a threat, but things look good so far. I don't think the Deities and the cows have been returned yet because the threat still exists.

     

    Yes, Bija, you're right about the underbrush burning; it's a very healthy thing for the forest. Maharaja commented that if our forest were burned, we'd grow more grass and bring more cows.

×
×
  • Create New...