Let's all of the good Christian folk here try to remember ... how does that First Commandment go again?
Hmmmm. The Jews were
not monotheists prior to the Mosaic revelation and Covenant. This should be made
CLEAR.
Again, for clarity's sake, since the Trinity is already being discussed, one might also reference:
Seven Spirits of God - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
To be certain, the idea of the Absolute, or
One God resting back of/underneath it all is ... most ancient. Islam, the most recent of the
`People of the Book' declares:
There is NO GOD but GOD; and Mohammed is His Prophet!
Hinduism might be said to be henotheistic, as Vajradhara pointed out. This term was coined by Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling, then popularized by Max Muller, and suggests that Hindus acknowledge multiple deities, yet an esoteric understanding is that there are many face[t]s or aspects of God, but only one God ultimately. The chart that Nick links us to demonstrates this wonderfully.
Any of us that understands the multifaceted nature of human beings is already well disposed to grasp something about this topic. We are definitely physical beings, yet most of us probably believe in and acknowledge
more to our existence than this dimension and expression alone. We are definitely emotional beings, yet here again, there is more to us than just a physical body and a set of emotions. We are obviously thinking, intellectual entities - to a greater or lesser extent - yet most of us would accept that even the inclusion of mind does not fully explain who and what we are.
Physical body, emotional self, mind, the creator of thoughtforms ... and what about Soul, or Spirit? Plenty of us here acknowledge a [possibly reincarnating] `spark' of the Godhead, and we affirm that in our connection with that spark [of Eternal Fire, as taught in
all of the ancient Fire-religions] we also connect with God, as well as with every other human being. Some of us go further, and affirm connection with
all beings, whether as esotericists, or as lay practitioners of Buddhism, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism or Christianity.
If Hinduism is among the
most ancient of our 5th Root Race exoteric religions (some of us believe the poet Vyasa
was Shakyamuni Buddha in a much earlier incarnation) ... maybe this is because the Ageless Wisdom was already present upon our planet at a very early stage, ready to be handed down in an unending Guru-shishya relationship, or
true Apostolic Succession. This, and no less, will suffice for many students of world religion.
A good understanding can develop if we consider that on the other side of
`the veil' (Maya), there is surely still diversity and latitude in understanding, while also a depth of meaning, an appreciation of Purpose and most certainly an accord which is only
sometimes present upon the Earth plane. We may reach this deeper appreciation while still in the body, or in the very least we may continue to aspire toward it.
Hinduism has sometimes been criticized for attempting to
gobble up each new presentation of the Truth. Buddha, for example, came as a definite Avatar and Reformer of the Vedic Wisdom, but not in its original form ... and
certainly not in some absolute sense, especially if we consider the view of some esotericists that Siddharta Gautama simply
was the originator of the Vedic Teachings [in that He wrote them down,
not that He Himself somehow
created them, or
gave birth to Truth Itself; after all, the DHARMA "just is," as any good Taoist can remind us].
I would suggest that Hinduism contains elements, found in the Vedic Wisdom when properly understood, which simply
cannot be improved upon. This is because there are definite aspects of Divine Revelation ~ coming from the ONE GOD, which is pretty much the topic of this thread ~ which are unique to Hinduism, and which reached a clear enough expression through this particular religion many thousands of years ago. There will be many people, especially in the East, for whom this is abundantly obvious, being a main tenet of their belief system and world philosophy.
To suggest anything else might not be blasphemy, but it is simply superfluous to them to speak of
Nirmanakayas who cannot be understood as coming to fulfill another part of the ongoing Divine Revelation. After all, the Guru-shishya relationship continues, both in the case of individual lineages, and also in terms of the several main branches of Hinduism: Shaivism, Vaishnavism, Shaktism, Smartism, etc. Thus, the Buddha was easily and quickly recognized by the true student for Who and what He was. This should not be confused with the attempt by others, such as certain elements of the Brahmin caste and other authority figures, to pretty much
squelch the teachings and overshadow the genuine authority and legitimacy of the Buddha ... since this clearly threatened them on many levels and evoked resistance, understandably enough.
All of this has a parallel with the Jews, the Sanhedrin and the appearance of the Galilean. History records the same phenomenon time and again. Today, we see no different, and so while it is possible to see a truly
timeless, eternal Dharma present within the earliest of the Vedic Teachings, it is only the sincere student of TRUTH who will be able to set aside differences and prejudices, narrowness of vision and the many arrows of ignorance that are aimed at him ... as he aspires to KNOW GOD and to follow the dictates of his own mind and heart. This, and no less, is
what the Buddha taught.
Interestingly, the Hindus do not fight about whether one should approach the Godhead through Siva, through Krishna/Vishnu or through Ganesh, or even one of dozens and scores and hundreds of other expressions of Divinity. And curiously enough, neither do the Buddhists, even while there are most certainly doctrinal differences between these great philosophies, and also within the specific traditions. No, there is enough fighting elsewhere, enough separateness, enough foolishness and enough challenge ... that we must work hard if Interfaith efforts are to succeed.
For if you haven't discovered yet that the vast majority of our world's problems today, as always, are rooted in
religious differences and, similarly, matters of ancient race hatred ... well, you just haven't been paying attention.
All hail the God within ... and may each one of us swiftly discover [this God] ... and why [this God] is there.
I don't want to move mountains. I just want to move.