Transcript Hinduism
Hinduism
“We cannot know whether there is only one truth
or not, unless indeed, we let a particular faith
simply state the matter for us; and secondly,
even if there is only one truth, there are many
ways that lead to it.”
Swami Agehananda Bharati
A Few Facts and Figures
No unique philosophy
Over 800 million Hindus
No founder or central teacher
13.7% of the world’s religious
population is Hindu
No one deity (330 million of
them) in the strictest sense of
the word
99.2% of all Hindus live in Asia
The majority live in India and
Nepal (the only Hindu nation
in the world)
Large minorities in
Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and
Pakistan
What does Hindu mean?
The Persian word for
the Indus River is how
we get the word (in
Sanskrit it is Sidhu.)
Indigenous Term:
Sanatana Dharma or
“Eternal Duty”
Sri Ramakrishna (19th century
teacher)
God has made different religions to suit different aspirations, times and countries. All
doctrines are only so many different paths; but a path is by no means God
(God’s)self. Indeed, one can reach God if one follows any of the paths with
wholehearted devotion. One may eat a cake with icing either straight or sidewise. It
will taste sweet either way. As one can ascend to the top of a house by means of a
ladder or a bamboo staircase or a rope, so diverse are the ways and means to
approach God, and every religion in the world shows one of these ways......
People partition off their lands by means of boundaries,
but no one can partition off the all-embracing sky
overhead. The indivisible sky surrounds all and includes
all. So it is in all ignorance people say, ‘My religion is the
only one, my religion is the best.’ When a heart is
illumined by true knowledge, it knows that above all these
wars of sects and sectarians presides the one indivisible,
eternal, all-knowing bliss.
No One Hinduism
Classical or
Brahamanic Hinduism
favors elite, educated
men
Many variations in
deities worshiped and
practices of faith
A Little History
Dravidian People
Native
to Region
Harappan Civilization
Advanced
Urban
Areas in Indus Valley
2500-1500 BCE
Many figurines and
seals survive
Vedic Religion
Mixture of a new
cultural influence with
traditional forms
Vedas
Scriptural
texts
Sanskrit
“vid”
or “to know”
Vedas
Four Parts To a Veda
Samhitas
Brahmanas
Manuals about ritual
Aranyakas
Main Body
Oldest Part
Hymns of Praise
“forest texts”
Quite esoteric
Upanishads
“Near sitting”
Spiritual Teaching
Four Vedas
Rig-Veda
Sama-Veda
Yajur-Veda
Artharva-Veda
Two Basic Types of Literature
SHRUTI
Oldest
Texts
“Heard” by wise ones
or rishis
Recited for centuries
by pupils for their
teachers and thus
preserved
SMIRTI
500
CE or later
“Remembered”
tradition
Often collections of
either
Dharma (obligations,
duties, laws)
Itihasa (“how it was” or
epic literature)
Itihasa
Mahabharata
World’s
Longest Poem
Bhagavad-Gita
Book
6
“Song of the Adorable
One”
Krishna is the subject
Core Concepts -- Brahman
“To Be Great”
Sat
Nirakara and Nirguna
Without form and without
attributes
Sakara and Saguna
With form and with
attributes
Chit
Reality itself
Pure consciousness
Ananda
Bliss
More Key Ideas
Atman
Originally ‘breath’ or ‘soul’
Universal spirit
Physical
Jiva
Our individual self
More like the western
concept of a soul
More common in Jainism
Prakriti
matter
Maya
‘magic’
illusion
or ‘trick’
Samsara
Wheel
Continuous cycle of
birth/death/rebirth
Humans are trapped;
our goal is moksha or
liberation
Karma and Reincarnation
Karma
“To Do”
Deeds, Works
Reincarnation
The sum total of an
individual’s desires,
thoughts, feelings, and
actions.
Actions Produce
Consequences
Taking on bodily form again
Not necessarily human
Based on your karma
Ashramas – Life Stages
Bramacharya
Vanaspratha
Moksha
sannyasin
Grihastha
Four Life Goals
Artha
Dharma
Kama
Moksha
Castes
Brahmins
Priests,
Vaishyas
Farmers,
philosophers
Merchants
Kshatriyas
Warriors,
nobles
Shudras
Laborers, Artisans
Bhagavad –Gita 18:11
…the duties of the Brahmins, Kshatriyas, Vaishyas and
Shudras have been fixed according to the qualities
arising from their inherent natures. The natural duties of
a Brahmins are serenity, self-restraint, religious austerity,
ritual purity, forgiveness, uprightness, spiritual
knowledge, and belief in God. The natural duties of a
Kshatriya are bravery, splendor, fortitude, dexterity,
courage in battle, and the exercise of authority. The
natural duties of a Vaishya are agriculture, cattle-rearing,
and trade. In the same way, rendering work through
service is the natural duty of a shudra.
Final Notes on Caste
Social Order
Dvija or “twice-born”
Upper
Mlechcha or
“untouchables” are
outside of the system
Renamed
“harijan” or
“children of God” by
Gandhi
three castes
They can study the
Vedas
Spiritual Disciplines
Yoga
“Yug”
– yoke or union
State
of “living in the
divine”
Four
Paths
Bhakti Yoga
“To Share”
Most common path
Path of Devotion or
Love
Ishta
Mantra
Japam
Jnana Yoga
Path of Knowledge
Who am I?
Way of Wisdom
Neti-Neti
“not
Intellectual
Orientation; Spiritual
Insight
this, not this”
Karma Yoga
Path of Selfless Action
Putting yourself to work
helping others without
any thought to your own
reward
Every act part of the
divine that we all share
Raja Yoga
Raj – reintegration
Path of Stillness
Samadhi or union with
the divine is your goal
Sadhanas or “practices”
Date back in time
Coherent system finally
developed by 2nd century
Pantanajali’s sutras or
threads (196 total – eight
steps)
First, the body
The body is full of energy
(kundalini)
Seven chakras or circles.
They move energy
Must move energy
through the body in order
to reintegrate and reach
higher consciousness
Chakras
Mooladhara or “base”
Swadishthan or “sacral”
Nabhi (Manipura) or
“solar plexus”
Anahat, Anahata or
“Heart”
Vishuddhi or “throat”
Agnya or “brow”
Sahasara or “crown” –
1000-petal lotus
Step One
Yamas
Self-control
Five Abstentions
Ahimsa
or “non-injury”
Satya
Bramacharya
No
Greed
No Theft
Step Two
Niyamas or observances
Works with step one
5 observances
Clears your visual field by
removing you from
concerns of this world
Cleanliness
Contentment
Self-Control
Studiousness
Contemplation of the
Divine
Step Three
Asanas or posture
Most common is the
lotus (padmasana)
Align chakras for
good energy flow
Step Four
Pranayamas or breath
control
Prana is life energy
Three basic types of
breath
Clavicular
Thoracic
Deep Abdomina
Step Five
Pratyahara or sense
control
Learning to control all
of the data you see,
hear, smell, taste, and
touch
Step Six
Dharana
Steadying the Mind
Working to Focus on One
Thing
Mantras again are helpful
as are ishtas
Yantras – linear image
Step Seven
Dhyana
Meditation
Start Experiencing
Loss of Self
Step Eight
Samadhi
Sam
= with
Adhi = divine or Lord
Higher
Consciousness or
Illumination
Hindu gods and goddesses
33 gods/goddesses in the
sacred texts (more if you
count the names)
Trimurti or Triple Form
Brahma
Vishnu
Shiva
33 koti devas
Koti can mean kinds or
types
Koti can also mean
10,000,000
330 million
Most Hindus
Vaishnavites
Saivites
Saktas
Vaishnavites
580 million adherents
Third only to Roman Catholics
(1,030,000,000) and Sunni
Muslims (940,000,000)
Typically with four arms; on the
serpent Shesha; with consort
Lakshmi
Avatars or descents; 22
mentioned only 10 really key
Saivites
220 million followers
Fifth (Eastern Orthodox
Christians are fourth at 240
million)
Symbolizes asceticism
Mahadeva or “Great god”
Spouse is Parvarti
Saktas
50 million worship goddesses
Durga is the great goddess
Kali is the destroyer of evil
Also Parvarti, Uma
Tantras (sacred texts) help
explain the feminine and stress
the need for unity between the
male and the female
Union of a lingam and yoni
Mohandas Gandhi
1869-1948
Satyagraha or ‘reality
force’
Mahatma or “Great
Spirit”
Final Notes -- India
1,065,070,607
0-14 years: 31.7%
15-64 years: 63.5%
65 years and over: 4.8%
2.5% world’s land; 15% of the
world’s population
1.44% growth rate
15 million people added each
year
Median age is 24
Life expectancy is 65
Most women average 2.85
children
Literacy
definition: age 15 and over
can read and write
total population: 59.5%
male: 70.2%
female: 48.3%
Religion
Hindu 81.3%, Muslim 12%,
Christian 2.3%, Sikh 1.9%,
other groups including
Buddhist, Jain, Parsi 2.5%