Founder of Hinduism
Frequently Asked Questions
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Founder of Hinduism
Was there a specific founder of the religion (Hinduism?)
How did Hinduism start and when did it begin?
Question: What is
the most important part of the religion?
Do Hindus worship one god or many?
Is the Caste System an eternal
principle?
Is the use of images an
universal practice?
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Founder of Hinduism
Question:Was there a specific founder of the religion (Hinduism?)
Reply:
Hinduism cannot be described as an organized religion. It is not founded by any
individual. Hinduism is God centred and therefore one can call Hinduism as founded by God,
because the answer to the question Who is behind the eternal principles and who
makes them work? will have to be Cosmic power, Divine power, God
Swami Vivekananda wrote:
There are these eternal principles, which stand upon their own foundations without
depending on any reasoning, even much less on the authority of sages however great, of
Incarnations however brilliant they may have been. We may remark that as this is the
unique position in India, our claim is that the Vedanta only can be the universal
religion, that it is already the existing universal religion in the world, because it
teaches principles and not persons.
[The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda, III,
Topic 'The Sages of India']
Swami Vivekananda wrote:
If you want to be religious, enter not the gate of any organised religion. They do a
hundred times more evil than good, because they stop the growth of each one's individual
development.... Religion is only between you and your God, and no third person must come
between you. Think what these organised religions have done! What Nepoleon was more
terrible than those religious persecutions? If you and I organise, we begin to hate every
person . It is better not to love, if loving only means hating others. That is no love.
That is hell! If loving your own people means hating everybody else, it is the
quintessence of selfishness and brutality, and the effect is that it will make you brutes.
-The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda, Volume I,
Topic 'The Gita III']
Swami Vivekananda wrote:
Truth is of two kinds: (1) that which is cognisable by the five ordinary senses of man,
and by reasonings based thereon; (2) that which is cognisable by the subtle,
super-sensuous power of Yoga.
Knowledge acquired by the first means is called science; and knowledge acquired by the
second is called the Vedas.
The whole body of super sensuous truths, having no beginning or end, and called by the
name of Vedas, is ever existent. The Creator Himself is creating, preserving and
destroying the universe with the help of these truths.
The person in whom this super-sensuous power is manifested is called a Rishi, and the
super-sensuous truths, which he realises by this power, are called the Vedas.
This Rishihood, this power of super-sensuous perception of the Vedas, is real religion.
And so long as this does not develop in the life of an initiate, so long is religion a
mere empty word to him, and it is to be understood that he has not taken yet the first
step in religion.
The authority of the Vedas extends to all ages, climes and persons; that is to say,
their application is not confined to any particular place, time and persons.
The Vedas are the only exponent of the universal religion.
Hinduism is God centred. Other religions are prophet centred.
Question: How did Hinduism start and when did it begin?
Reply
Hinduism is God centred. Other religions are prophet centred.
Hinduism is based upon Eternal Principles. Eternal principles apply to all human beings
everywhere. The laws of physics exist and work all the time. The healing principle will
get to work immediately the moment a little cut is sustained on a finger. No one can tell
when this healing principle began or when it will end. It is there existing eternally, all
pervading (available everywhere), omniscient (aware all the time and therefore healing
principle gets to work when injury is sustained). (These simplified examples serve to
understand Gods power: omniscient, omnipresent, omnipotent).
Hinduism is based upon Eternal Principles. If a great scientist like Einstein,
discovered or realized laws of physics, Hinduism would call him a great Rishi (Maharshi or
seer of truth.) Such seers of truth are not confined to any one age or country. Self
realized persons like Jesus Christ would be called Rishis (seers) and their teachings
would be readily acceptable to those who properly understand the principles of
Hinduism. From the ancient times, many great Rishis achieved self-realisation
through such practices as meditation and austerities and they realised knowledge
concerning Eternal Principles. Their knowledge, taught to disciples, and eventually made
available in written form, is known as the Vedas (Ved = knowledge), the scriptures upon
which Sanatan Dharma (Hinduism) is based. Sanatan means eternal and Dharma means religion.
The word 'Hinduism does not appear anywhere in Hindu scriptures, The proper name
for Hinduism is Sanatan Dharma Sanatan =
eternal Dharma = religion.
Hinduism is God centred whereas other religions are prophet centred. For this reason
the whole of mankind has to abide by (or is affected by) the eternal principles. The
question of acceptance or rejection of Hinduism by any individual simply does not arise,
or is irrelevant. It is illogical to talk of conversion to Hinduism. It is like saying
that the laws of physics (e.g.gravity) will apply to you only if you belong to an
organization or organized religion.
[The ceremonies and rituals connected with Hinduism (and other religions) are
designed to cultivate increased spirituality. At advanced level of spirituality, rituals
and ceremonies are dispensed with]
Sri Madhusudana Sarasvati Wrote:
(Commentary Gita Ch.3, Shloka 16)
But he who has realised the Spreme Entity and does not derive pleasure from the senses, he
on account of being self-fulfilled, does not incur sin even by not performing the rites
which are thus the cause of the movement of the Wheel of the World.
From Brahadaranyaka Upanishad 1.4.10:
Even the gods cannot prevail against him (he who has realised the Spreme Entity). There
need be no performance of any action even in the form of worship of gods for averting
obstacles
Gita Ch. 3 Shloka 17:
The Blessed Lord said: But that man who rejoices only in the Self and is satisfied (only)
with the Self, and is contended only in the Self - for him there is no duty to perform
Swami Vivekananda wrote:
[The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda, III,
Topic 'The Sages of India']
The very fountain-head of our religion is in the Vedas (Srutis) which are perfectly
impersonal; the persons all come in the Smritis and Puranas- the great Avataras,
Incarnations of God, Prophets, and so forth.
[Note: Srutis means revealed knowledge; Smriti means memory, history]
And this ought also to be observed that except our religion (Sanatan Dharma; Hinduism),
every other religion in the world depends upon the lives of some personal founder or
founders. Christianity is built upon the life of Jesus Christ, Mohammedanism (Islam) upon
Mohammed, Buddhism upon Buddha, Jainism upon the Jinas, and so on. It naturally follows
that there must be in all these religions a good deal of fight about what they call the
historical evidences of these great personalities.
If at any time the historical evidences about the existence of these personages in
ancient times become weak, the whole building of the religion tumbles down and is broken
to pieces. We escaped this fate because our religion is not based upon persons but on
principles. That you obey your religion is not because it came through the authority of a
sage, no, not even of an Incarnation. Krishna is not the authority of the Vedas, but the
Vedas are the authority of Krishna himself. His glory is that he is the greatest preacher
of the Vedas that ever existed.
So with the other Incarnations; so with all our sages. Our first principle is that all
that is necessary for the perfection of man and for attaining unto freedom is there in the
Vedas. You cannot find anything new. You cannot go beyond a perfect unity, which is the
goal of all knowledge; this has been already reached there, and it is impossible to go
beyond the unity. Religious knowledge became complete when Tat Twam Asi (Thou art That)
was discovered, and that was in the Vedas.
What remained was the guidance of people from time to time according to different times
and places, according to different circumstances and environments. People had to be guided
along the old, old path and for this these great teachers came, these great sages. Nothing
can bear out more clearly this position than the celebrated saying of Sri Krishna in the
Gita : "Whenever virtue subsides and irreligion prevails, I create Myself for the
protection of the good; for the destruction of all immorality I am coming from time to
time."
What follows? That on the one hand, there are these eternal principles, which stand
upon their own foundations without depending on any reasoning, even much less on the
authority of sages however great, of Incarnations however brilliant they may have been. We
may remark that as this is the unique position in India, our claim is that the Vedanta
only can be the universal religion, that it is already the existing universal religion in
the world, because it teaches principles and not persons
No religion built upon a person can be taken up as a type by all the races of mankind.
In our own country we find that there have been so many grand characters; even in a small
city many persons are taken up as types by the different minds in that one city. How is it
possible that one person as Mohammed, or Buddha or Christ, can be taken up as the one type
for the whole world, nay, that the whole of morality, ethics, spirituality, and religion
can be true only from the sanction of that one person, and one person alone?
Now the Vedantic religion does not require any such personal authority. Its sanction is
the eternal nature of man, its ethics are based upon the eternal solidarity of man,
already existing, already attained and not to be attained.
The Hindu can worship any sage and any saint from any country whatsoever, and as a fact
we know that we go and worship many times in the churches of the Christians, and many
times in the Mohammedan mosques and that is good. Why not? Ours, as I have said, is the
universal religion. It is inclusive enough, it is broad enough to include all the ideals.
All the ideals of religion that already exist in the world can be immediately included,
and we can patiently wait for all the ideals that are to come in the future to be taken in
the same fashion, embraced in the infinite arms of the religion of the Vedanta.
"Let noble thoughts come to me from all directions"
- Rig Veda [Aano bhadra krtavo yantu vishwatah]
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Question:
What is the most important part of the religion?
[Note: Different scholars may emphasize other aspects
of the religion as the most important part]
Reply:
The affirmative attitude of Hinduism toward life
has been emphasized by its recognition of four
legitimate and basic desires:
1. Dharma or righteousness
2. Artha or wealth
3. Kama or sense pleasure
4. Moksha or freedom through communion with God
or the Infinite.
These four attainments of life are collectively known as Purushartha.
Question: Why?
Reply:
[Note: Reply based upon the teachings of Swami Nikhilananda, Ramakrishna Math]
Of the four grand objects of human aspirations (Purushartha), viz., Dharma, Artha, Kama
and Moksha, Dharma is given the foremost rank in the scriptures. Dharma alone is the
gateway to Moksha, to immortality, infinite bliss, supreme peace and highest knowledge.
Dharma alone is the primary Purushartha. Dharma is the first and foremost Purushartha.
Dharma is the cementer and sustainer of social life. The rules of Dharma have been laid
down for regulating the worldly affairs of men. Dharma brings as its consequence
happiness, both in this world and in the next. Dharma is the means of preserving
ones self. If you transgress it, it will kill you. If you protect it, it will
protect you. It is your sole companion after death. It is the sole refuge of humanity.
[Note: Dharma (roughly translated as righteousness or virtue, must be at the center and
at the circumference are Artha (wealth), Kama (all kinds of desires or pleasures), and
Moksha (liberation). All activities in life must revolve around Dharma. Dharma must
be kept in focus all the time and adhered to.]
Question: Do Hindus
worship one god or many?
The following is from page 'Ideal behind the idol'
There is no polytheism in India
By Swami Vivekananda
The foremost disciple of Sri Ramakrishna Paramhansa
Descend we now from the aspirations of philosophy to the religion of the ignorant. At
the very outset, I may tell you that there is no polytheism in India. In every temple, if
one stands by and listens, one will find the worshippers applying all the attributes of
God, including omnipresence, to the images. It is not polytheism, nor would the name
henotheism explain the situation. "The rose called by any other name would smell as
sweet." Names are not explanations.
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Question: Is the
Caste System an eternal principle?
Reply:
In the Mahabharata it is described as the Four Orders of Human Beings.
There is no country on earth where the four orders of human beings do not exist.
1.Teachers (at schools, colleges and universities) and spiritual leaders (priests,
Imams, Rabbi, Pandit)
(Brahmins).
2. Government, judiciary, law-enforcement agencies and the defence force.
Ministers, civil servants, military, soldiers, police (Kshatriyas)
3.Food producers & Wealth producers.
Farmers, industrialists, merchants, business people, professionals (doctors, lawyers,
architects, engineers, etc)
(Vaisyas).
4. Labourers
(Sudras)
"The four orders of human beings" refers to the whole of mankind and is not
confined to any one country, or any one race group. We usually associate 'the four orders
of human beings' with India (where it is generally known as the caste system, often
misunderstood, misused or abused).
Consider for a moment an imaginary scenario where from the map of the world India is
made invisible. Now apply the principle of 'the four orders of human beings' to all the
countries in the world. Not one country will be found where this principle is not made
applicable.
Imagine again that in a given country, all the men, women and able-bodied youths decide to
join the defence force of the country (claiming equality amongst all human beings). They
are all sitting pretty with a rifle in hand waiting for the enemy to show up.
Who will do the cooking to feed this defence force? What about tilling the land to grow
the food to feed this defence force, and who will wash the clothes? If during war
situation the wounded have to be operated upon, who will teach how to perform surgery? The
maintenance of general cleanliness, removal of garbage etc. will have to be done by whom?
The young boys and girls will remain uneducated because the whole population is sitting
pretty with a rifle in hand waiting for the enemy to show up. Who will run the schools?
There are no industries, no labour force, no business community, because there are no
'four orders of human beings'. Without the division of labour, there is no human progress.
Witness the crippling results of any general strike, by the workers of any vital industry,
when such strike is sustained over a lengthy period. Such action can cripple any country.
Let all the countries legislate that as from next month no human beings on this earth
will perform the task of labourers (claiming that it is beneath human dignity and
that all human beings are equal). What is stopping any country from enacting such
legislation?
If a labourer wins a lottery for ten million dollars, will he, thereafter, voluntarily
remain a labourer? Labourers in this world are not labourers by choice.
Now the big question is: who can decide who is to be the labourer and who is to be the
professor to teach at the medical college? Who will decide that? The division of labour,
which broadly falls into 'the four orders of human beings' is based upon "guna and
karma" of each individual. The word 'guna' in Vedanta means Sattwa, Rajas and Tamas
(the three qualities born of Nature also known as "prakriti).
To say that we should abolish the four orders of human beings (the caste system) also
amounts to saying that the authority of the scriptures is to be brushed aside and
substituted by some modern day thinker who argues that "In this day and age" the
eternal principles do not apply. Consider the following extracts from the Bhagavad Gita:
Bhagavad Gita, Ch.4, Verse 13: the Lord says:
"The fourfold caste has been created by Me according to the differentiation of Guna
and Karma;"
Bhagavad Gita, Ch.18, verse 40 the Lord says:
"There is no being on earth, or again in heaven among the
gods, that is liberated from the three qualities born of Nature."
Gita Ch.18, verse.41:
"Of Brahmanas, Kshtriyas and Vaishyas, as also the Sudras, O Arjuna, the duties are
distributed according to the qualities born of their own nature."
If we look at newly born human babies, we can see their physical features. Can we
see in them the potential of the future Beethoven, Michelangelo, Einstein, a great saint
or a common criminal? One baby may be endowed by nature with artistic abilities and
another with musical talent, and yet another may be devoid of both these attributes. These
are qualities born of nature. Human efforts can complement these qualities or attributes
as when a teacher guides and inspires a pupil to achieve greater heights in a chosen
field.
When those babies grow up, their careers are distributed according to the qualities
born of their own nature. The four orders of human beings are based upon "qualities
born of their own nature.
In a maternity hospital, can we draw lots from a hat and fasten a tag on baby numbered
one as the future labourer, the second baby as the future industrialist, the third baby as
the future army commander, the fourth baby as the future college professor and the fifth
baby as the future common criminal? Obviously not. The situation or the station in
life for the individual will be determined by "qualities born of their own
nature". These fundamental principles apply to all without geographical boundaries.
The eternal principles apply to all . One does not have to subscribe to a system of
belief or carry the banner of any religion to include or exclude the application of
eternal principles.
Question: Is the
use of images an universal practice?
Reply: A hundred Dollar currency note is much smaller than the Sunday
newspaper. The newspaper would be discarded within a few days. Why attach so much more
importance to a much smaller piece of paper that is called a hundred Dollar note? After
all both the newspaper and the currency note are pieces of paper. The image on the
currency note makes it different. The image attaches to the paper ( currency note) values,
qualities, awe (if it is a million Dollar note), etc. Power of the human consciousness is
transmitted to the currency note. An atheist who decries the use of images can empty his
wallet of all the Dollar notes and send them to us.
I can pull out a handkerchief from my pocket, blow my nose into it and then ask an
audience to salute my handkerchief. Why salute the flag of the nation and not my
handkerchief? After all both the handkerchief and the flag are inanimate pieces of cloth!
I can hear the patriot saying that he is prepared to lay down his life for his nation's
flag. Why would he not do the same for my handkerchief? Power of the human consciousness
is transmitted to the piece of cloth we call a national flag whereby the inanimate piece
of cloth acquires qualities of patriotism, noble values, pride, loyalty, identity etc.
If a stranger were to spit on your mother's photo, why would you feel hurt? After all
it is only a piece of paper with dots that are lighter or darker, giving an image or
resemblance of the face of mother. This piece of paper has acquired the ability to make
you angry or happy, or sad or fill you with memories and inspiration. An inanimate piece
of paper infused with such powers!
My mother scribbled three or four lines on a piece of paper and sent it off to me.
Another gentleman sent me a long discursive fifty page letter. Now, which is more
weighty? But the feeling in my mother's few lines is beyond measure; it is
sacred. The other stuff cannot stand comparison with it.
-Saint Vinoba Bhave
The Wailing Wall in Jerusalem is revered by the Jewish community. Why kiss the wall and
why does it invoke feelings of reverence? Inanimate stones or bricks! Power of human
consciousness is attached to it. A photograph of the wall (image) would invoke reverence
and respect for the piece of paper upon which it is printed.
Islam: Pilgrims to Mecca throw stones at the three pillars that are infused with the
images of devils!
And why kiss the stone of Kaaba? And if someone were to spit upon this stone of Kaaba,
why would it invoke and provoke angry reactions? After all that is only a piece of
stone! Muslim pilgrims visiting the Kaaba temple go around it seven times. Any pilgrim
going to a place of pilgrimage does so with the utmost worshipful attitude of the mind.
Why the display of reverence and the worshipful attitude towards the stone of Kaaba? After
all the stone of Kaaba is an inanimate object.
A sacred fount exists near the Kaaba. Its water is held sacred because it has been
traditionally regarded as sacred like the waters of the river Ganges since pre-Islamic
times (Zam-Zam water). Even today, Muslim pilgrims who go to the Kaaba for Haj regard this
Zam-Zam water with reverence and take some bottled water with them as sacred water.
Chemically speaking, water is water. What is the difference between this Zam-Zam water
and the water that flows downstream from some nearby mountains?
Christianity: The Cross of Christianity is a piece of wood or metal or stone. Why do
worshippers bow their heads before such image that is made of inanimate materials?
The qualifications at a university college are proudly hung on the wall for all to see.
A piece of paper, framed and attracting such high esteem! If you think that the use of
image is not universal then make sure you remove that inanimate piece of paper
(certifications) and promptly consign that to the garbage can.
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