[Advaita-l] New topic for Discussion - Religion vs Spirituality
Vishy
vishy1962 at yahoo.com
Wed Mar 23 06:42:45 CDT 2016
Dear Sadaji,
Pranams.
one has to be very religious, no doubt, but that doesn't mean that one has to followany organized religion or religious structures.Here religiousness is more important, ie,religious means true to be with himself totally, being very much conscious , to be very much aware.
I feel these kind of religiousness if fundamental for any spiritual journey, this search is the vedanta
namaskaras
Viswanath
On Wednesday, 23 March 2016 2:29 PM, kuntimaddi sadananda via Advaita-l <advaita-l at lists.advaita-vedanta.org> wrote:
Ryan - PraNAms
Interesting view point. Thanks for sharing your ideas in terms of the role of a Guru and Vedanta.
Hari Om!
Sada
--------------------------------------------
On Wed, 3/23/16, Ryan Armstrong <ryanarm at gmail.com> wrote:
Subject: Re: [Advaita-l] New topic for Discussion - Religion vs Spirituality
To: "kuntimaddi sadananda" <kuntimaddisada at yahoo.com>, "A discussion group for Advaita Vedanta" <advaita-l at lists.advaita-vedanta.org>
Cc: "yahoogroups" <advaitin at yahoogroups.com>
Date: Wednesday, March 23, 2016, 4:51 AM
PraNams
The second question is
more easily answered - Yes!
For the
simple reason that the guru has shed all ignorance and
speaks as the Lord.
He (She) is a
direct contact with the Supreme.
For the first question, I can certainly
say that the Vedanta is the purest expression of Truth
available to us.
I
have come across other teachings which advance the advaita
concepts -
Plato for instance - but these traditions do not have the
unbroken line
of Masters which Advaita Vedanta has.
Plato used a technique called
"dialectic" which is a form of question and
answer.
The
simple rules are that absolute honesty is required and that
one should
never be attached to a position but rather be grateful when
an erroneous
idea is pointed out.
Plato's
teacher, Socrates was famous for his humility in this
respect.
The technique allows the
mind to fall still and the Spirit to shine forth and I have
had the experience of Unity when practicing it.
Another tradition is
that of Lao Tzu. The Dao De Ching is again an expression of
Truth - I quote the beginning form memory (so please excuse
any errors):
"The Dao which can
be spoken is not the True Dao; The name which can be named
is not the Eternal Name."
As I said in the previous post, Christ
taught advaita and this is most evident in the "Gospel
according to Thomas" which is one of the famous
"Dead Sea Scrolls" and not included in the Bible.
(Originally there were over 20 Gospels, but only 4 were
chosen when the "official" New Testament was
compiled. This, in my opinion, is an example of politics
interfering with religion)
Having said all that, it may be possible
to achieve Realization without the Vedanta.
After all, the one Self only exists and
we all have Him as our essence regardless of tradition.
But the statement of Truth in the
Upanishads coupled with the vehicle of Sanskrit makes the
Vedanta (in my opinion) supreme amongst all Scripture.
Yours in Truth
Ryan
On 23 March 2016 at 10:22,
kuntimaddi sadananda via Advaita-l <advaita-l at lists.advaita-vedanta.org>
wrote:
Ryan - PraNAms
Thanks for sharing your wisdom. You have made very good
points. You mentioned that advaita was the original teaching
all the religions that have old testament as starting
point.
Now just a question, since you are member of this list, do
you think 1. Vedanta is required for a seeker for
self-realization 2. Does one need a guru or teacher.
Hari Om!
Sada
--------------------------------------------
On Wed, 3/23/16, Ryan Armstrong <ryanarm at gmail.com>
wrote:
Subject: Re: [Advaita-l] New topic for Discussion -
Religion vs Spirituality
To: "kuntimaddi sadananda" <kuntimaddisada at yahoo.com>,
"A discussion group for Advaita Vedanta" <advaita-l at lists.advaita-vedanta.org>
Date: Wednesday, March 23, 2016, 2:35 AM
namaste Sadaji
I think that there is a large difference
between the two.
In brief:
Religion is about ritual and the
organization and regulation of social affairs.
Spirituality is turning the attention to Truth
and allowing the paramaatman to manifest without
ego-interference.
Having grown up in the Catholic
tradition, I found that it offers paths to
spirituality.
But these are often hidden in the practices.
One of the problems with the
Christian tradition is that even through Christ taught
advaita, when the religion was organized (centuries
after
his death), it became politicized.
Christianity and Islam are both
grounded in the Judaism - they share the Scripture
called
the "Old Testament."
But interpretation and practice have
led to divergent paths.
In Genesis, the first book of the
Old Testament, there is the scene of Adam and Eve in
the
Garden of Eden.
They are told not
to eat of the fruit of the tree of "knowledge of
good
and evil".
In Religion, the
interpretation is geared towards what is good and what
is
evil.
In Spirit, this is a
statement of the movement from unity (advaita) to
plurality
- dualism.
Good and Evil is the
first duality. Before that, Adam and Eve knew only of
the
One.
By eating the fruit they
gained the "knowledge" of duality and hence
were
"driven out of paradise".
I believe that religion has a place
- it allows for an order in society which would be
chaotic
otherwise.
It also contains the
seeds which can lead to Spirituality.
Spirituality on the other hand is a
more "personal" endeavour.
In
my opinion, it is the direct experience of the One - and
the
constant striving to remove the impediments in the
being
which cling to the idea of being separate and
individual.
Yours in
Truth
Ryan
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Regards
Ryan Armstrong
+27 82 852 7787
ryanarm at gmail.com
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