Guest guest Posted March 13, 2001 Report Share Posted March 13, 2001 People may think I am some kind of fundamentalist because I put my faith in scriptural authority, but anyone who actually knows me can understand that's anything but the case. Just to set the record straight, I am a disciple of A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada since 1972, and a strict vegetarian since before that, but have had nothing to do with ISKCON since Prabhupada's disappearance in 1977. We find in life that things work when we accept authority. We accept authority whenever we look up a number in the phone book, access an Internet search engine, or book a flight through a travel agent. This is practical: if we had to verify each fact directly, life would be unbearably cumbersome. So we accept authorities in which we repose our trust. We trust authorities who have shown us that they know what they're talking about, or who we believe are motivated not to cheat us. We also see in life that when a group of people accept authority, such as in a corporation or government organization, they get things accomplished. Otherwise there is a tendency to simply bicker without any practical direction. (Of course that never happens on this list, since Das Goravani Prabhu is firmly in control...) Everyone on this list accepts the authority of the Vedic Hora-sastras, because we have seen by astrological application that they work. For example nobody understands why the dasha system works, but even a neophyte Vedic astrologer can make impressively accurate predictions with it. So we accept it on the authority of the scriptures. Things like vegetarianism are a little tougher to accept because it is harder to confirm subtle things like the karmic effects of the modes of material nature. Although we are so conditioned by empiricism, we cannot empirically verify things beyond our sense perception. But if Vedic astrology works, and other aspects of Vedic knowledge like Ayurveda, Raga (music) and Hatha-yoga work, then we should be open to the deeper aspects of Vedic knowledge on the basis of this trust. Of course, the problem is that so many self-interested people have created misinterpretations of the Vedic scriptures at variance with each other and with the Vedas themselves. So there is a lot of confusion over what the Vedic scriptures really mean. That's why Krsna says, yada yada hi dharmasya glanir bhavati bharata abhyutthanam adharmasya tadatmanam srjamy aham paritranaya sadhunam vinasaya ca duskrtam dharma-samsthapanarthaya sambhavami yuge yuge "Whenever and wherever there is a decline in religious practice, O descendant of Bharata, and a predominant rise of irreligion--at that time I descend Myself. In order to deliver the pious and to annihilate the miscreants, as well as to reestablish the principles of religion, I advent Myself millennium after millennium." [bg. 4.7-8] Lord Krsna descended just before the beginning of Kali-yuga and spoke Bhagavad-gita to restate the Vedic conclusions in terms that any layman of that time could understand. Now 5,000 years later, Bhagavad-gita is a lot more esoteric but it is still the best summation of the total conclusion of the Vedic scriptures. It is very difficult to understand the Vedas and Upanisads, let alone Vedanta. But the Puranas and the Mahabharata, including the Gita, are much more approachable. The Bhagavad-gita contains everything we need to know to attain enlightenment. The problem is, again, that so many conflicting editions and egregious misinterpretations of the Gita exist. Therefore we have to find a teacher of the Gita in the disciplic lineage from Krsna Himself, who has not deviated from the original intent of the Gita. The intent of the Gita is revealed at its conclusion where Krsna declares: sarva-dharman parityajya mam ekam saranam vraja aham tvam sarva-papebhyo moksayisyami ma sucah "Abandon all varieties of religion and just surrender unto Me. I shall deliver you from all sinful reaction. Do not fear." [18.66] If we find a teacher who has realized this intent, who is totally surrendered to Krsna, then we shall be able to understand the real message of the Gita from him. Anyone else is sure to introduce their own personal selfish motivation into their interpretation. But if can find a pure devotee of Krsna, then we can trust his authority in the matter of the meaning of the Gita. By accepting such pure authority without selfish motivation, we can understand the truth from the highest authority, Sri Krsna. If we attempt to understand spiritual truth by our own defective intelligence or from the opinions of another fallible human being, we will be cheated. We will wind up accepting so many bogus ideas and impure practices as religion, and this will keep us from the highest knowledge. Now from my personal point of view, it is hard to understand that maybe some people do not want the highest knowledge. But I know from astrology and from life experience that this is so. Nevertheless I cannot remain satisfied with anything less, and ultimately, we all need this enlightenment if we are to solve the real problems of life: old age, disease, death and rebirth. So I always recommend to people to accept the authority of Krsna, sastra and guru and make a real solution to life's difficulty by getting out of samsara once and for all. Vegetarianism is just a small part of this focus on attaining self-realization, but it is an important step on the way to liberation. It is a sign that this is not just an armchair pursuit, but we are willing to make real changes in our life and accept some austerities to get higher knowledge. I hope this communicates something of a deeper understanding why I am so firm on the principle of following the sastra as far as possible in all matters. Best to all, Dasanudas , Harmony School of Conscious Art (Miami) International Conscious Art Gallery: www.consciousart.org/ Vedic Astrologer . Writer . Musician www.harinam-arts.org/ Free Vedic Horoscope offer: www.consciousart.org/offer/ Listen to some of my tunes! www.mp3.com/DavidBruceHughes/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 14, 2001 Report Share Posted March 14, 2001 Bhaktisiddhartha Dasanudas wrote on March 13, 2001: > It is very difficult to understand the Vedas and Upanisads, let alone > Vedanta. But the Puranas and the Mahabharata, including the Gita, are much > more approachable. The Bhagavad-gita contains everything we need to know to > attain enlightenment. The problem is, again, that so many conflicting > editions and egregious misinterpretations of the Gita exist. Therefore we > have to find a teacher of the Gita in the disciplic lineage from Krsna > Himself, who has not deviated from the original intent of the Gita. >If we find a teacher who has realized this intent, who is totally > surrendered to Krsna, then we shall be able to understand the real message > of the Gita from him. Anyone else is sure to introduce their own personal > selfish motivation into their interpretation. But if can find a pure devotee > of Krsna, then we can trust his authority in the matter of the meaning of > the Gita. >By accepting such pure authority without selfish motivation, we can > understand the truth from the highest authority, Sri Krsna. If we attempt to > understand spiritual truth by our own defective intelligence or from the > opinions of another fallible human being, we will be cheated. We will wind > up accepting so many bogus ideas and impure practices as religion, and this > will keep us from the highest knowledge. I fully agree. >So I always recommend to people to accept the authority of Krsna, sastra and guru< But where do you find a BONA FIDE GURU that will fulfill such a role, and have the desired qualities? Thank you for your comments. Namaste. Dany > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 14, 2001 Report Share Posted March 14, 2001 | >So I always recommend to people to accept the authority of Krsna, sastra | and guru< | | But where do you find a BONA FIDE GURU that will fulfill such a role, and | have the desired qualities? | | | Thank you for your comments. | Namaste. | Dany | Dany, We have to use our best intelligence and discrimination to search for a qualified guru, but in the end, we have to depend on the kind mercy of God. We ourselves are unenlightened, therefore if we try to choose a guru on our own strength we will invariably be cheated. We have to educate ourselves in the qualities of pure devotion, and become qualified by attaining some degree of purity ourselves. Becoming vegetarian and chanting the Holy Names of God will purify our body and intelligence. But still, without having perfection in self-realization ourselves, how do we know what to look for? Mere numbers of followers proves nothing. There are many phonies who would like to cheat us. So ultimately we have to pray very sincerely and let the Lord arrange to send us a qualified guru. It is good not to be in a hurry, but observe the prospective guru over a long period to verify his qualifications. For example, my guru Srila Prabhupada waited over 13 years before taking initiation from his guru Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati. And we have seen in ISKCON that some neophytes pretending to be guru managed to maintain the pretense for some time, but ultimately they fell down or were otherwise exposed as cheaters. So be very careful. The pure devotee of God is very rare. Krsna says in the Gita, "Out of many thousands among men, one may endeavor for perfection, and of those who have achieved perfection, hardly one knows Me in truth." [7.3] So even among advanced devotees, it is very rare to find a completely pure devotee who is presenting the teachings and purpose of the Lord in unadulterated form. Maybe once in a century or so, God sends His pure servant to represent Him. Golokera prema-dhana, harinama sankirtana. The yuga-dharma is mercy coming down from above, it is not an ascending movement. The guru must be a resident of the spiritual world come down to earth to pick us up. An advanced student who is climbing up out of the material muck can of course help us, but this is second-class guru. Of course I can recommend my guru Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada's books for further transcendental education and enlightenment. Actually if you have the vision, you can approach him through his books. His Bhagavad-gita As It Is is especially helpful, since it puts not only the Gita but the entire Vedic literature in perspective. You can read it at www.asitis.com. The ultimate encyclopedia of Vedic lore is Srila Prabhupada's Srimad-Bhagavatam. You can read various excerpts from it at http://www.webcom.com/~ara/col/books/CLAS/bhag/welcome.html and http://www.srimadbhagavatam.org/contents.html. Of course the best thing is to read the entire work with purports. However, the next best alternative is to read the life story of Lord Krsna at http://www.krsnabook.com/. For a nice capsule biography of Srila Prabhupada go to http://www.stephen-knapp.com/a_c_bhaktivedanta_swami_prabhupada.htm. Actually it is very difficult to describe or understand Srila Prabhupada's qualifications. His appearance in this world was literally an answer to the prayers of many great devotees. He fulfilled prophecies made hundreds of years earlier by Lord Chaitanya, the incarnation of Lord Krsna Himself. So Srila Prabhupada is no ordinary guru, nor even a very great guru: he is considered a saktyavesa-avatar, or empowered incarnation of the Lord. Srila Prabhupada is certainly still accessible through his books and recordings if one has sufficient motivation and purity to receive his influence. Other than him I cannot really recommend anyone to approach as guru. In this vein I will conclude with a couplet by our predecessor guru Srila Bhaktivinod Thakur, who wrote, "He speaks ill who says that Vaisnavas die, when thou art living yet in sound. Vaisnavas die to live, and living, spread the Holy Name around." All the best, Dasanudas Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 15, 2001 Report Share Posted March 15, 2001 danielle-rose wrote: > > > >If we find a teacher who has realized this intent, who is totally > > surrendered to Krsna, then we shall be able to understand the real message > > of the Gita from him. Anyone else is sure to introduce their own personal > > selfish motivation into their interpretation. But if can find a pure > devotee > > of Krsna, then we can trust his authority in the matter of the meaning of > > the Gita. >> But where do you find a BONA FIDE GURU that will fulfill such a role, and >> have the desired qualities? >> There may be many for all I know, but how does a novice know that he has got the right one till he himself has attained a certain level of knowledge? He goes at first to one who is well-known as a guru, popular and with a large following. If I remember the story right, Ramanuja went to one such guru. One day the guru interpreted the description of the Lord - "pundarikaksha - as "having eyes like the red buttocks of a female monkey"! Ramanuja was shocked, said it meant "eyes like a lotus", and went away to find a better guru. A faux pas like that may reveal that the guru is not good at interpretation - but his devotion to God might have still been unquestionable! All philosophical and religious systems, if they survive, are closed systems based on axioms and logical derivation from the axioms. These have themselves to be defined, for the same word has different interpretations in the various systems. If one accepts the axioms, the system as a whole is tight, all further interpretations are made to suit this system. The disciple has to decide whether he can accept the axioms or not. This he can and should do only "intellectually" not "emotionally", which again calls for some basic knowledge and intelligence. Again, how does one know that he has picked up the right system unless he can compare it with other systems? In the ancient days a guru taught his disciples ALL the known systems, discussed them comparatively and perhaps expanded more on the one he himself preferred. But later on the teaching became one-sided, the attempt was not to teach and leave the disciple to decide for himself, but to convince him that the guru´s preference was the best. It became conversion to a particular religion or sect. A disciple who accepts this one-sided teaching thinks he had the best guru and is satisfied. If it doesn´t appeal to him he goes to another and may be disappointed there too! This can happen all through his life! All the religions of India claim to be derived from the 4 vedas. All have preserved the vedic rites, but none of them mention any of the principal Gods worshipped today, are limited to the 33 Gods of the vedas, with Indra at the head. The Supreme Being is mostly referred to as brahman, which is not Brahma. Beyond this one finds no real connection. The worship of Krishna was obviously not included, for the vedas were written long before he incarnated. But also Siva or Vishnu as the member of the Trinity is not mentioned. Some later ritual mantras do mention Maheswara - has some connection (castanets) with siva, but whether this was originally meant is uncertain. The Siva cult might have given him the castanets to equate him with Maheswara. Try reading the Rigveda. Radhakrishnan´s translation and commentary runs to 4 volumes. A straightforward translation would fill one volume only, but since every word can have various meanings, the discussion of which suits best fills the other three! Many words are simply not understood. Few are completely understood. The rest are a matter of vague interpretation and preference. Some show high intellectual content, some are beautiful, some humorous - like the Ode to the Frogs - some vulgar and trite, songs sung at drinking orgies! If one takes the upanishads they do teach the various philosophical systems, but each one is different. Each rishi had developed his own theory. Could all have been right? If not, we must accept that rishis could err. Since we revere all the rishis, how do we know which was better? Unless we decide on this, how can we say which religious direction is the best? Again, there is the language problem, as happened wit Ramanuja. Sanskrit is a terrible language when it comes to synonyms. Panini begins his book saying "Every word can be to mean any other word" - a dreadful situation, which is confirmed by looking into the dictionary. The number of entirely different things meant by one word is amazing, sometimes they even have exactly opposite meanings!!! For myself there was only one way: the way of philosophers like Schopenhauer, Gandhi etc. To read about all the systems and religions of the world and put together what IMHO fitted best. Accepted the Supreme Being as guru and begged Him to lead me. No matter how great a rishi was, he was only human, had frailties. God is God! Mahaasura can mean Great Deva or Great Demon! I once met a great lady who could read in the Akasha Chronicle. The moment she saw me she laughed and said, "So you are fed up with all dogmas and traditions? Don´t worry, you have found the right path for yourself ... and perhaps others too." I asked her how she knew this and why she said this. "Because I can see that you have been a high priest in all the religions of the world in your past lives and were never satisfied with them.." Her words certainly explained my attitude in this life! namaste Mani Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 15, 2001 Report Share Posted March 15, 2001 gjlist, subra@t... wrote: > danielle-rose wrote: > > > >> But where do you find a BONA FIDE GURU that will fulfill such a role, and > >> have the desired qualities? > >> > > There may be many for all I know, but how does a novice know that he has got the > right one till he himself has attained a certain level of knowledge? >....namaste Mani Om Amrtesvaryai Namah!! Namaste dear sisters and brothers!!! is it not said in the scriptures, dear ones, that WHEN THE STUDENT IS READY, THE GURU APPEARS? We do not have to go around the world looking, looking, looking, everywhere for just the right GURU, testing this one, discarding that one...we have not to do this....we have only to dissolve in love and longing to the Divine Beloved in whichever form we conceive of Him/Her, tearfully crying out to that Beloved to reveal Herself, just as Sri Mata Amritanandaji, Paramahansa Yoganandaji Bhagavan Sri Ramakrsna Paramahamsadeva and many, many, many, many, many, many, other Great Ones have proclaimed throughout the ages... When our hearts are purified through these tears of longing and Love, the The Divine Lord (Krsna) or the Divine Mother (Amma), will not be able to stay away any longer, and will just have to desert that cosmic chess game, or the pots and pans in the cosmic kitchen, and run hastily to the devotee child's side, wiping away the tears, and comforting that Child....Usually this is done by FIRST, sending to that Child a true Guru...the SAT GURU.... If we are lovingly demanding bread of our Divine Mother, will She give us stones??????? If we are longing for Her Darshan, How can She stay away???? If we want to play with Krsna in His eternal Leelas, how can He refuse this innocent demand from his child???? He will HAVE to send help to that child so that the child might come home to Him..... so if we do not have a Sat Guru, we must actually inquire into our own selves, as to whether we REALLY WANT one!!!or really want the Divine!! the Divine Who is the Indweller in every heart, knows what we REALLY want....and if we REALLY want His Darshan, do you think He will not send us a Guru to Bring us to that place where the Lord is sitting in bliss, in our own Hearts????? Do not worry my darlings, about the qualities of the Gurus, so much as the qualities of the student!!!! When the Student is ripe for a REAL Guru, the Guru will appear even in his own place....he will not have to wander the world looking for this Guru, the Guru will even come to a place near the child, such that the child can be with Her or Him.... If we place our utter reliance upon Lord Krsna or the Divine Mother, do you not think that they will take care of us...Even Christ has promised the same....Take no thought for the morrow....ask for the kingdom of heaven and all things shall be added unto you.... Amma says if you take one small step towards the Divine Beloved, that Beloved will take a thousand steps towards you..... it depends on what we ask for! if we ask for flashy popular gurus, that's what we get....more ego aggrandisement....if we really want God and God alone....then we get something else...we get such a Guru as God has sent to us....which will fulfill the desires of our hearts....if our hearts long only for the Darshan of the Divine Lord, then such a Guru will bring us lovingly into the Divine Presence....such that we become aware of the ParamGuru dwelling within our own hearts, Who is the REAL GURU of GURUS.....that One known as SATCHIDANANDA..... Sri Ramakrsna refused always the title of Guru, insisting instead that the real Guru is Satchidananda......Sri Ramakrsna is a perfect example of just what i was talking of...as is Paramahansa Yoganandaji...Both of them called and called and called out to the Divine in The Beloved Forms of Mother Kali, and Lord Krsna....and both were sent EVERYTHING they needed in their life's work, including the right Gurus at the right time.....if we really can model ourselves upon these great souls, do you not think that the Divine will also take care of us in exactly the same way?????? How do i know this???from my own personal experience!!!....i have followed to a small degree in the footsteps of those two Great Ones, and thought to just TRY their advice...Just call and call and call, never giving up.....and my Ammachi appeared very soon in my life...only a couple of years of tears and longing....and There SHE was...appearing in a place near where i live (near by cosmic measurements...only 600 miles....) i hadn't even been looking for a Guru, believing in Sri Ramakrsna's ideal of Satchidananda being Guru....but i HAD been tearfully calling to my Divine Mother to reveal Herself....and to the eternal bliss of my heart, She let me know that She had heard my childlike calls, and had Answered them in the form of my Ammachi...my Beloved Mother, Sri Mata Amritanandamayi Devi... even then i resisted the Guru idea....until Amma had had enough of this and inspired this child to ask Her if She is my Guru...to which She broke out into Loving Laughter, and thru Her chuckles, managed to get out "YES YES YES YES", reaching out to Her darling son to give him Her Darshan in the now famous Amma Hug...... so i can definitely feel for those who are longing for a true teacher...but my dear ones, have faith, and just call out longingly and lovingly to your Divine Beloved, and you will not be refused.... if a child asks his father for a hug will he be turned away? if a little one comes crying to his busy Mother, will She not put down Her pots and pick that little one, lovingly wiping away his tears, and giving him a sweet kiss on the cheek.... In the Divine Mother's Love, and in Her Service, this littlest child of Hers, bows again and again to his beloved sisters and brothers, who are verily the Embodiments of Divine Love as ever, Your own Self, visvanathan Om Amrtesvaryai Namah!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 15, 2001 Report Share Posted March 15, 2001 kasi_visvanath wrote: > gjlist, subra@t... wrote: > > danielle-rose wrote: > > > > > > >> But where do you find a BONA FIDE GURU that will fulfill such a > role, and > > >> have the desired qualities? > > >> > > > > There may be many for all I know, but how does a novice know that he > has got the > > right one till he himself has attained a certain level of knowledge? > >....namaste > Mani > > Om Amrtesvaryai Namah!! Dear KV, You have dealt with the matter beautifully! I gave the "intellectual" answer for a "mundane" question. You have given the spiritual answer. I see no contradiction in our answers, but together they mean more than what each of us said! If we read or hear the answers given by Amma or Meera, we find that they give answers that suit us. Fine. You are right in saying the heart must search for the guru. But it is the brain that receives the answer and passes it on to the heart. But it also censors the answer! You have chosen the advaitic teaching because you were pre-disposed to do this. You have read the scriptures of other religions, seen truth in all of them, realized that they are partial truths. So you accept the advaitic attitude, which is very broad-minded and encompasses all the religions - but is NOT emphatic in any direction! But what about the dvatiic devotees? They insist on clarity and emphasis. This restricts, but is a legitimate wish! A dvaitist cannot tolerate advaita, but an advaitist is compelled by its nature to tolerate dvaita! A funny state, where one wants to reject, the other wants to accept. We can only leave it at that, not fight about it! Let Christ decide whether he was a catholic or a protestant! He would probably say he was a Jew! love Mani Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 15, 2001 Report Share Posted March 15, 2001 - > Dear KV, > > You have dealt with the matter beautifully! I gave the "intellectual" answer for > a "mundane" question. You have given the spiritual answer. I see no > contradiction in our answers, but together they mean more than what each of us > said! > > You are right in saying the heart must search for the guru. But it is the brain > that receives the answer and passes it on to the heart. > You have chosen the advaitic teaching because you were pre-disposed to > do this. You have read the scriptures of other religions, seen truth in all of > them, realized that they are partial truths. So you accept the advaitic > attitude....... > love > Mani Om Amrtesvaryai Namah!! Namaste Mani and all my sisters and brothers..... Wonderful!!! Mani you are truly a gem, just as your shortened (i assume it's a shortened form of Subramaniyam...or something similar)name Mani implies!!!! i was a curious mixture of blissful laughter and tears as i read your loving response...however i do have a couple points of debate here with you... first of all, i suggest that the brain is possibly best left out of this department except to collect and dispose of "evidence"...even then it is faulty...i suggest that it is the heart which is calling out to the Divine Beloved, and it is the heart which hears the answer from deep within it....THEN the mind creeps in to muck everything up..... in the Guru department i suggest that it is best to leave the "choosing" to your heart...that brain will betray you every time....there are several quite simple questions you can ask yourself in the presence of a "potential" Guru...such as how does this person affect me when in Her presence....am i blissed out by divine love...or am i impressed with the power....how do the disciples behave, and what kind of feelings do we get from being in their presence over a period of time....is everything out in the open...is the Guru asking for money, or unquestioning loyalty....are there submachine guns around....actually all these questions are available at Cult information places, even on the internet....they're simple questions and the answers will give that monkey mind something to work with...if you don't trust your deepest feelings that is.... i'd always go for the "trust your deepest feelings" line of approach... When you suggest that i have "chosen" the Advaita way of seeing, there i feel you may have erred a little, as i feel, actually, that Advaita, has chosen ME to reveal Itself to...just as the Self is Chosen by That to Whom IT is revealed in all its splendour... not that i make any claims in that department, being only a little tiny toddler in this school....i only know to call Ma Ma Ma Ma Ma, and i KNOW that She'll come running to my side, pick me up and put me on Her vast lap for a little hug, and a kiss....because this is what She has done for quite a long time now....every little bit of surrender unto Her is rewarded with more deepening love for Her and my fellow children, my darling brothers and sisters, who also are Her children, and in fact are too, the Embodiments of Om, the Embodiments of Divine Love...themselves...only we do not usually see this...and thus our longing childlike calls to our Divine Mother, and thus the resulting appearance of the Sat Guru in whichever form you Love Her....if you love the Formless Guru...that is Who Shall be Your Own....if you Love to have a Guru in Form, She will take that form which is most beloved to you and appear in that form....if you must have Lord Krsna for your Guru, then She will even appear as Lord Krsna....and lead you by the hand to KrsnaLoka... in that way, dear friend i do not feel that i CHOSE advaita so much as a perennial, many lifetimes' understanding, or approach, or so, guided me into this direction...Actually it was all Guru's Grace in the end...as Rumi once was complaining to God, that God hadn't even listened to him and never answered him for so long....even though he had prayed and cried and wept and rolled on the ground in agonies....and do you know what the answer was: "Who do you think inspired you to do all that praying and crying and weeping and calling out My Name....." Whom the Self chooses, to him the Self reveals It Self. i can totally relate to the dvaitic view, just as you can Mani, but you and i see that both Nirguna and Saguna belong together, that you can't have the milk without the whiteness, you can't have the fire without it's light, and shape, and heat....the formless appears as form to us in Leela....just for "fun"....it's up to us to see that and to enjoy our stay in this kindergarten despite WHATEVER TESTS we are given, and for Bhaktas the tests can be very severe in the chronic disease realms, and all sorts of other testing realms too....we love the Divine but find that the world has renounced us...we do not have to put on saffron robes...the world just renounces us....the more absorbed in Sadhana we are, the more we are loving our Beloved Deity, the more the world renounces us....for we are NOT following in the so-called "dharma" of the world...we do not fit in...so the world renounces us....we are free to pursue our affair with the Divine Beloved.....until liberation, when suddenly the whole world will "rediscover" us, and try to make "use" of us in its world "dharma" trip again.... i really don't have any response to your question as to what we do with the dvaitics....it's hard to know, when confronted with such attitudes, what line to take, because you can understand and sympathise with their view, but you see another way....which feels "right" to you....and we may appear to be "conciliatory" when we agree with their views too much. Thus advaitics might be seen to be "wishy-washy" new ager types, because we can accept so many different pathways to the Divine Beloved as being equally valid for the people that are attracted to them....of course when we are tied to the stake and the fire begins to eat us up for our "liberal" views...then we are REALLY in a quandary.....but luckily we don't live in Afghanistan at the moment...or stonings might be the end of us...some Dvaitics can be so desirous of "order" that they simply must exterminate all different points of view....that is truly lamentable, and probably the reason why Hinduism is still the third most popular religion in the world, instead of being first.... We say "One Truth, Many Paths".... the islamics and christians say..."our way or the highway"..... this fundamentalist dualism is indeed hard to deal with, increasingly in the world as the Islamic countries radicalise backwards to the mediaeval ages.... In Mother's Love, and in Her Service, as ever, Your Own Self, visvanathan Om Amrtesvaryai Namah! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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