MORAL PRINCIPLES OF
HINDU DHARMA
By S.P. Attri (USA)
1. In material reality, Hinduism
is Hindu Dharma or Sanatan Dharma, the Everlasting Eternal Dharma.
In popular parlance, Hinduism is familiar to most people as Hindu
Religion. In substantiality, Hinduism is not a religion at all,
but is a Dharma. Simply stated, Hinduism is a way of life
underlain by profound philosophies that were discovered by our
brilliant sages, seers, and rishis long long ago. These brilliant
rishis discovered the truths and realities that lie behind our
existence and explained them with radiant and reflective theories.
Our brilliant rishis also formulated a set of rules for good,
honorable, and righteous living on this earth---a set of DO's and
DON't's , identified as Dharma and Anti-Dharma or Adharma. These
rules, which are components and ingredients of Hinduism are
eternal and everlasting, they are embodied in the body of the
Vedas, and because they are time-independent, they never become
obsolete with the passage of time.
2. The most notable symbol of Hinduism is OM, which means
"that which has no beginning nor any end."
The ignoramuses mock at Hinduism, reviling and vilifying it as
idolatrous and polytheistic. The Authentic Truth, however, is that
Hinduism is Mono-theistic as well as Poly-theistic, and the Hindu
sees no confutation or contradiction in this dynamic duality. The
rationale for this absence of confutation comes from the fact that
the One Supreme Being of the Hindu (The Almighty God) has an
infintie number of personalities, manifestations, expressions, and
forms, that twine around us and inside of us perpetually. Hindu
God, therefore, is All-Pervading, girdles around, inside of, and
round about everything, exists in every atom, molecule, cell, and
sub-atomic particles. It is because of this besieging divine circumstance
that we see so much intelligence in every atom and
sub-atomic particles, that we have observed.
Hindus adore and exalt the multiple forms of One God who resides
over, inside, and round about the Universe, that exists in every
particle and fragment, known or imaginable. When it comes to the
worship of the idols, Hindus do not revere the mud that makes up
the idols but the power that these idols represent, and what they
represent as the Multi-Splendor forms and expressions of the
Almighty God. Such veneration of the Almighty God is a true honor
and accolade to the sublimity and grandeur of the Almighty God.
The above description explodes the fallacy of the ignoramuses, who
assail with ridicule that Hindus worship Multiple Gods. Hindus do
not worship Multiple Gods but adore and exalt the Multiple Forms
of Only One God. Hindus do not worship idols but worship God in
the form of idols. Idols are only to facilitate the visualization of the Infinite with our finite faculties. Through the
instrumentality of the idol, the devotee comprehends divinity.
Period.
3. Those ignoramuses who mock and ridicule the worship of the
idols by the Hindus, fail to grasp that Hinduism permits the
worship, veneration, or exaltation of God in any of his myriad
forms and expressions. In fact, a Hindu can worship the formless
aspect of the Almighty God. There is no confutation or
contradiction in this and the permitted adoration and veneration
of these myriads forms of the Almighty God, is the key facet and
feature of the hospitality and pluralism of the Hindu Dharma.
Contrasting with the hospitality and congeniality of the Hindu
Dharma are the extra-ordinarily violent beliefs and edicts of the
Religions Of Exclusivity (Islam and Christianity). Christianity
rests on the statements of only one person, Jesus Christ, whether
proved or unproved, on the claim that truth can exist only as
revealed by the Christian God (the Christian God who is not the
All-Pervading God like the God of the Hindu, but is a localized God and exists only in a place called the Heaven, whose location
no Christian knows) through his only begotten son, Jesus Christ.
Anything considered as conflicting with this revealed truth is
mocked as falsehood, to be suppressed with violent means.
Islam is virtually the same way, where the truth has been revealed
by God to his chosen Apostle, Hazrat Mohammad, and Mohammad's
statements are held beyond reason or questioning and anything in
conflict with these beliefs is to be suppressed violently. Moslem
God (Allah) is also a localized God, existing only in a place
called the Moslem Heaven, whose location is known to no Moslem.
Both Islam and Christianity reject all paths, other than their
own, any departure from which is a passport to Hell because it is
the works of the Devil. Both Islam and Christianity have each
murdered hundreds of millions of innocent Non-Moslems and
Non-Christians, whom they regard as Only the Works Of The Devil
and who are headed only towards Hell, and hence are considered fit
only to be slaughtered by the Moslem and Christian Faithfulls, for
being sent to Hell, in this very life-time, to save unnecessary
delay and wastage of time later on. The intolerance, brutality,
and barbarism perpetrated by the Religions Of Exclusivity, is
unspeakable and beyond any parallel. Both Islam and Christianity
are prisons without walls and neither of them does or can permit
their followers to explore alternate paths. In fact, both Islam
and Christianity maintain a truth-monitoring police within their
religious systems, which goes by the name of Clergy. The Clergy
watches for any blasphemy and any appearance or semblance of
blasphemy hits the Clergy like a tornado, requiring immediate
corrective and punitive action by them. Blasphemy is a high crime
in both Islam and Christianity. There is nothing like the
hospitality or congeniality of Hinduism in either Islam or
Christianity.
4. According to Hinduism, the entire cosmos is created (Srishti)
and dissolved (Pralaya) according to cycles of time. Only the
Almighty God is beyond time and who is beginningless and endless.
These cycles of Hindu time are four in number and have been named
Yugas as Satya Yuga, Treta Yuga, Dwapar Yuga, and Kali Yuga. These
Yugas have varied durations and all four of them, collectively
constituting as one Maha Yuga, total 4.3 million years. A total of
1000 Mahayugas total one Cosmic Day and equal 4.3 billion earthly
years.
All human beings come into existence at the beginning of the
Cosmic Day and are reborn countless number of times and this
seemingly endless cycle of births and rebirths continues until we
achieve the transcendental state called the "Moksha."
All souls experience this countless/endless cycle of births and
re-births (called Transmigration) except the One Absolute Truth,
which is beyond creation or destruction/dissolution. This Absolute
Truth is the Almighty God.
There are many and varied ways to transcend this process/cycle of
transmigration and these varied ways are narrated in the different
systems of philosophies that lie within the all-embracing,
all-inclusive body of Hindu Dharma.
5. Hinduism believes in transmigration/re-incarnation and in the
Karma Theory. This Karmic Theory co-exists and goes hand-in-hand
with the Re-incarnation Principle.
It is a matter of common observation that all life forms (and
there are billions of them around) do not undergo the same
experiences. Even amongst us Humans, we notice differences in the
modes of existence. Some of us are billionaires, some are paupers,
some are healthy, and some are disease-prone. Some religions
preach love, some preach hatred, violence, slaughter. There has
got to be a reason for all these divergences and differences.
Hinduism answers this question and explains these differences that
we commonly notice amongst the myriad life forms, via its theories
of Karma and Re-Incarnation and both these theories are
inter-related principles.
6. Karma and Re-Incarnation Principles are uniquely Hindu Dharma
Systems. There is nothing like it or even remotely similar to
these two principles anywhere within in either Islam or
Christianity. That is why there is no reliable or convincing
explanation, in either Islam or Christianity, for the divergences
and the differences, that we commonly observe amongst the myriad
life forms of this world.
Each spoke in the Re-Incarnation Cycle is a predecessor to the
next spoke. In this way, as we move through the cycle of births
and re-births, we are simply experiencing the results of our own
actions in our journey through this life cycle. Thus according to
Hindu Dharma, even though our actions are bound by and controlled
by the theories of Karma and Re-Incarnation, one can rise through
his actions during his life-time or in more than one life-time. He
is not pre-ordained or pre-elected to a set-state of Eternal
Heaven or Eternal Hell, as in Islam or Christianity. According to
Hindu Dharma, one can rise or fall according to his own actions (
his own unique Karma) in one life-time or in more than one
life-time. One is not condemned to an Eternal Hell or rewarded to
an Eternal Heaven as a results of actions in one life-time only,
an idea that is believed by both Islam and Christianity, an idea
that is highly illogical, irrational, and headstrong immoral to
contemplate.
7. The Karma Principle has been bad-mouthed as
"Fatalism" by fools and ignoramuses, especially by those
amongst the American and European Christian Missionaries, who are
unable to comprehend the profound thoughts and knowledge that
underlie this very momentous and imperative principle. Our
brilliant sages, seers, and rishis, who described and immortalized
this potent principle in the Vedas, put this knowledge into
practice and discovered that actions could determine destiny. Thus
Karma has come to be the fundamental principle of Hinduism, of its
culture, and of its Dharma.
Because the workings of the Karmic Principle explained the details
of the Cosmic Law, our Rishis accepted these experiences and
established Karma as the fundamental principle of Hinduism. In
this way, the valuation of actions, as good or bad, based on righteousness
or lack of it, came into being in the Hindu
consciousness. Thus Karma has reference, relation, and tie-in with
individual actions, with respect to questions of morality, reward,
and retribution. Hinduism clearly expects the Hindu to safeguard
his moral Karma through the performance of Righteous Actions and
through the removal of bad deeds and bad thoughts...one becomes
good by doing good actions and becomes bad by the doing of bad
actions, it is just that simple and these are the fruits of the
actions, which are either good or bad and these are the actions
that set the wheel of life in motion.
8. Our Rishis who tested the Karma Principle to profound levels of
scrutiny, stressed the profound nature of the Karmic influence and
bearing on the soul of man, which moves and persists from life to
life and carries with it the details of all past actions and
thoughts.
The popular saying "what goes around, comes around"
means that you get what you give out or put in. This saying is a
confirmation of the Hindu Principle of Karma and is based on the
Cosmic Law of Cause and Effect. It fixes the responsibility where
it belongs, on the individual himself and within himself.
As opposed to this, the Semitic Religions of Islam, Christianity,
and Judaism, preach that an individual's life is decided by
agencies outside of the individual. "Allah knows and decides
what to do with the individual," says Islam. Christianity is
virtually the same. These semitic religions, which are
belief-based, are fatalistic, illogical, and immoral. Why? Because
these semitic religions really do not face the problem of good and
evil at all. They altogether avoid it, they do not even ask the
individual to take responsibility for his actions (they do what is
called "Pass The Buck"), instead they enable their
followers to pass this responsibility on to external agencies such
as Allah, Jehova, Mohammad or Jesus Christ. The consequences of
these irresponsible and immoral beliefs and procedures, are
disastrous and crime statistics validate the truths of these
analyses.
9. Hinduism, on the other hand, boldly faces this problem and
states that man makes his own destiny, based on his actions and on
his decisions of "good or bad." Hinduism Principle of
Karma, because it is based on the Cosmic Laws of Cause and Effect,
is completely scientific. Semitic Systems of Religions (Islam and
Christianity), which have no such scientific basis, and which are
based only on beliefs, beliefs which are completely unproved, are
totally unscientific, fatalistic, and superstitious.
Because Hinduism does not pass the responsibility for individual
actions to any external agency, does not have any God or any
Intermediary between the Act and its Effect (Reward or
Punishment). Hinduism dauntlessly preaches that "you are what
you are because of what you did in the past and you can determine
your future with the actions of your present, you are the master
of your future and your future will be inseparable from your
present actions. Hinduism thus supports Free Will and Individual
Action in the most moral and ethical sense.
The principle of "As you sow, so shall you reap" which
is a universal axiom, is the one that Hinduism takes to the plane
of moral excellence, the excellence which controls the individual
and the cosmos, through the principle of Cause and Effect (Karma).
10. Because of the Karmic Principle and its sequel, the Hindu
regards his life on this planet as simply a passage to a reality,
not only beyond our planetary home, but beyond the manifested
universe ( the material creation). Hinduism, therefore, is the
highest spiritual poise, well beyond the material realm of the
universe. The Hindu's objective is said to be "to escape from
this material universe" to move onto spiritual domains, never
more to return to the gross material universe. Thus a Hindu's life
is an evolutionary phase, always intended to advance towards
spirituality, towards a new realm or a state of consciousness. It
is because of concepts and convictions like these that Hindu is
regarded as "Other-Worldly" by Non-Hindus.
11. Many absurd superstitions and mendacities have been imagined
and invented by the religions of exclusivity, with inevitable
wicked and immoral consequences. For instance, Christianity
teaches that Jesus Christ suffered for the sins of others. Because
the Christians believe this hocus-pocus, they use their belief in
this mumbo-jumbo, for their own purposes by "letting Christ
suffer while they (the Christians) go on committing sin and
crime." The Christians go on slaughtering the Non-Christians
with a clean conscience and with total freedom from worry, because
Christ will take care of their sins and crimes. The Christians,
because they are brain-washed to believe the teachings of
Christianity, do not even bother to ask themselves a Common-Sense
question that if a person commits a murder and then tells the
court that his Father will suffer in his place, will the courts
accept the substitute to suffer the sentence? Of course not. If
any court allowed this kind of substitution, the justice system of
the world would be totally destroyed and demolished. Is God's
justice system duller and dumber than the justice system of man's
courts?
Disregardful of commonsense and ordinary rules of decency, the
Christians keep on believing these absurdities, failing to realize
that this Christian belief is a despicable principle to begin with
and its perverted usage by the Christians, compounds its
disgraceful outrage.
Regardless of the absurdities, the Christians keep on swallowing
the belief notions that are offered to them, beliefs that take
responsibility away from the individual, in a "Pass The
Buck" procedure. Again, because of this willingness to
swallow, the Christians readily imbibe creation of a creature of
nullity which they name as the Satan or the Devil, who is
supposedly always at war with their jealous God and who is
supposedly responsible for everything that goes wrong in this
world. It does not occur to the Believing Christians that the real
purpose in creating this creature of non-existence, is to avoid
responsibility for their actions, to pass the buck, and to find a
scape goat to blame for things that always go wrong in the world.
This creature of non- existence (the Satan or the Devil) also
helps the Islamic and Christian Clergies to scare their faithfulls
and to fill their hearts with absolute terror and to snare them
into their net.
12. Hinduism neither uses nor has any need for an imaginary
creature like the Devil. Hinduism boldly faces goods and evils of
life, accepts them as normal occurrences in life, and deals with
them through the principles of Karma and Re-Incarnation. Hinduism
puts the individual in the Driver's Seat, dauntlessly asks him to
act and take responsibility for his actions. There is absolutely
no reason nor any need to Pass the Buck in Hinduism.
Arise Hindus!
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