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Sunday, March 6, 2016

Ashram Dharma: Grihasthas and Sannyasis

Śrīla Bhaktisiddhānta Saraswati Ṭhakura

শ্রী গৌड़िয-কন্ঠহার

Gaudiya Kanṭhahāra:

The Jeweled Necklace of the Gaudiya Vaishnavas
15th Jewel

ĀŚRAMA-DHARMA-TATTVA

The Ontology of Life-Stages, Āśramas





Being a compendium of quotations from revealed scriptures
concerning the truths about the cult of Chaitanya Mahāprabhu

Compiled under the authority and direction of
His Divine Grace
Bhaktisiddhānta Sāraswāti Goswāmī
Prabhupada

Translated and edited, with original Sanskrit and Bengali and Roman transliteration by
B. V. Mahāyogi, Michael Dolan


 The Unholy Household

१५.२२
व्यालालय-द्रुमा वै तेष्व् अरिक्ताखिल-सम्पदः 
यद्-गृहास् तीर्थ-पादीय-पादतीर्थ-विवर्जिताः

15.22
vyālālaya-drumā vai teṣv ariktākhila-sampadaḥ 
yad-gṛhās tīrtha-pādīya-pādatīrtha-vivarjitāḥ 

On the other hand, even though full of all opulence and material property, any householder's house where the devotees of the Lord are never allowed to come
in, and where there is no water for washing their feet, is to be considered a tree
in which venomous serpents live.
 (Bhāg. 4.22.12) 

The Duty of Vānaprasthas

१५.२३

वानप्रस्थाश्रम-पदेष्व् अभीक्ष्णं भैक्ष्यम् आचरेत्

संसिध्यत्य् आश्व् असम्मोहः शुद्ध-सत्त्वः शिलान्धसा

15.23

vānaprasthāśrama-padeṣv abhīkṣṇaṁ bhaikṣyam ācaret
saṁsidhyaty āśv asammohaḥ śuddha-sattvaḥ śilāndhasā

A vānaprastha should live by begging. He may accept food prepared from grains
left behind in the fields and markets. By such a practice, he will become
purified, free from delusion, and spiritually perfect. 
(Bhāg. 11.18.25)

Homes are in Different Modes

१५.२४
वनं तु सात्त्विको वासो ग्रामो राजस उच्यते 
तामसं द्यूत-सदनं मन्-निकेतं तु निर्गुणम्

15.24
vanaṁ tu sāttviko vāso grāmo rājasa ucyate 
tāmasaṁ dyūta-sadanaṁ man-niketaṁ tu nirguṇam

In order to attain pure devotional service, one's faith, residence, eating, and
activities should all be pure. From the mode of goodness, one can develop to the
mode of pure goodness; therefore it is important to live in a place which is pure.
The following is a description of residences in the different modes of nature: A
hut in the forest is in the mode of goodness, an apartment in the city is in the
mode of passion, and a room in a gambling den is in the mode of ignorance.

(Bhāg. 11.25.25)

Karma-sannyāsa, Jñāna-sannyāsa, and Tridaṇḍī- sannyāsa---

१५.२५
ज्ञान-सन्न्यासिनः केचिद्- वेद-सन्न्यासिनो ऽ
परे कर्म-सन्न्यासि-नस्-त्वन्ये त्रिविधाः परिकीतिताः
15.25
jñāna-sannyāsinaḥ kecid- veda-sannyāsino '
pare karma-sannyāsi-nas-tvanye trividhāḥ parikītitāḥ 

There are three kinds of sannyāsa: karma- sannyāsa, jñāna-sannyāsa, and vedicsannyāsa. 
(Padma Purāṇa, Svarga Khaṇḍa)

A Dhīra Sannyāsī

१५.२६
गत-स्वार्थम् इमं देहं विरक्तो मुक्त- बन्धनः
अविज्ञात-गतिर् जह्यात् स वै धीर उदाहृतः
15.26
gata-svārtham imaṁ dehaṁ virakto mukta- bandhanaḥ
avijñāta-gatir jahyāt sa vai dhīra udāhṛtaḥ

A sannyāsī is known as dhīra, or undisturbed, sober, and a self-realized soul
when he goes to an unknown, remote place and freed from all obligations and
false ego, quits his material body when it has become useless. 
(Bhāg. 1.13.26)

A Narottama Sannyāsī

१५.२७
यः स्वकात् परतो वेह जात-निर्वेद आत्मवान् 
हृदि कृत्वा हरिं गेहात् प्रव्रजेत् स नरोत्तमः
15.27
yaḥ svakāt parato veha jāta-nirveda ātmavān 
hṛdi kṛtvā hariṁ gehāt pravrajet sa narottamaḥ

 A narottama, or first class human being, is one who awakens and understands,
either by himself or from others, the falsity and misery of this material world
and thus leaves home and depends fully on the Personality of Godhead residing within the heart. 
(Bhāg. 1.13.27)

Prohibition Against Karma-sannyāsa in Kali- yuga

१५.२८
अश्वमेधं गवालम्भं सन्न्यासं पल- पैतृइकम्
देवरेण सुतोत्पत्तिं कलौ पञ्च विवर्जयेत्
15.28
aśvamedhaṁ gavālambhaṁ sannyāsaṁ pala- paitṛikam
devareṇa sutotpattiṁ kalau pañca vivarjayet 

In this age of Kali, the following five kinds of karma-kāṇḍa practices are
forbidden: offering a horse in sacrifice, offering a cow in sacrifice, accepting
sannyāsa, offering oblations of flesh to the forefathers, and a man begetting
children in his brother's wife. 
(Malamāsattatva- dhṇta, Brahma Vaivarta Purāṇa,
Kṛṣṇa-janma-khaṇḍa 4.115.113) 

The Meaning of the Word Tridaṇḍī

१५.२९
वाग्दडोऽथ मनो-दओडः काय-दण्ड-स्तथैव च
यस्यैते निहिता-बुद्धौ त्रीदण्डीति स उच्यते
15.29
vāgdaḍo'tha mano-daoḍaḥ kāya-daṇḍa-stathaiva ca
yasyaite nihitā-buddhau trīdaṇḍīti sa ucyate 

One who accepts in his mind the rod of chastisement for his speech, mind is
known as a tridaṇḍī one who has accepted the threefold rod of chastisement.
(Manu-saṁhitā 12.10)
१५.३०
दमनं दण्डं यस्य वाङ्-मनः-कायानां दओडाः निषिद्धाभिधानाः सत्सङ्कल्प- प्रतिषिद्ध-व्यापार-व्यापार-त्यागेन बुद्दाव- वस्थिताः स त्रिदण्डीत्युच्यते
न तु दण्ड-त्रय-धारण-मात्रेण
15.30
damanaṁ daṇḍaṁ yasya vāṅ-manaḥ-kāyānāṁ daoḍāḥ niṣiddhābhidhānāḥ satsaṅkalpa- pratiṣiddha-vyāpāra-vyāpāra-tyāgena buddāva- vasthitāḥ sa tridaṇḍītyucyate
na tu daṇḍa-traya-dhāraṇa-mātreṇa

The word daṇḍa means "punishment." One who "punishes" the speech, mind, and actions means one who gives up attachment for material sense enjoyment and who accepts what is favorable for the truth and rejects what is unfavourable for perfection. Such a person is called a tridaṇḍī. It is not that anyone who carries around three sticks can be called a tridaṇḍī. 

(Manu-saṁhitā 12.10, Kalukka Bhaṭṭa commentary on the above verse from Manu-saṁhitā).

Rūpa Gosvāmī's Definition of Tridaṇḍī

१५.३१
वाचो वेगं मनसाह् क्रोध-वगं जिह्वा-वेगम् उदरोपस्थ-वेगम् 
एतान् वेगान् यो विषहेत धीरः सर्वाम् अपीमां पृथिवीं स शिष्यात्
15.31
vāco vegaṁ manasāh krodha-vagaṁ jihvā-vegam udaropastha-vegam 
etān vegān yo viṣaheta dhīraḥ sarvām apīmāṁ pṛthivīṁ sa śiṣyāt

One who can control the forces of speech, mind, anger, the tongue, the belly,
and the genitals is known as a Gosvāmī and is qualified to accept disciples all
over the world.
 (Upadeśāmṛta 1)

Tridaṇḍī-sannyāsa is Mentioned in the Ancient Vedas

१५.३२
तत्र परमहंसा नाम संवर्तकारुणि- श्वेतकेतु-दुर्वास-ऋभू-निदाघ-जडभरत
दत्तात्रेय-रैवतक-प्रभृतयोऽव्यक्त लिङ्गा अव्यक्ताचारा, अनुन्मत्ता उन्मत्तवद्
आचरन्तस्त्रिदण्डम् कमण्डल्लुम् शिक्यम् पात्रं जलपवित्रं शिखां
यज्ञोपवीतं चेत्येतत् सर्वं भुः स्वाहेत्यप्सु परित्यज्यात्मानम्-अन्विच्छेत्
15.32
tatra paramahaṁsā nāma saṁvartakāruṇi- śvetaketu-durvāsa-ṛbhū-nidāgha-jaḍabharata
dattātreya-raivataka-prabhṛtayo'vyakta liṅgā avyaktācārā, anunmattā unmattavad
ācarantastridaṇḍam kamaṇḍallum śikyam pātraṁ jalapavitraṁ śikhāṁ
yajñopavītaṁ cetyetat sarvaṁ bhuḥ svāhetyapsu parityajyātmānam-anvicchet

In addition to the previously mentioned paramahaṁsas are these famous
wandering sannyāsīs (parivrajakas), Samvartaka, Aruṇinandana, Audālaka, Śvetaketu, Durvāsā, Ṛbhu, Nidāgha, Jaḍa Bharata, Dattātreya, Raivata, and so
on. They are all paramahaṁsas; none of them wear the outward signs of
varṇāśrama the śikhā and sacred thread of a brāhmaṇa. They are not mad but
behave like madmen. The paramahaṁsa, saying the mantra bhū-svāhā (I offer
you to the earth) leaves aside all external paraphernalia of the renounced order, including the tridanḍa, staff, the waterpot, the begging bowl made from a gourd,
the belt made of straw, the purifying cup for water, the tuft of hair, the sacred
thread, and dedicates himself solely to following the order of the bona fide guru
and the inner direction of the Paramātmā. 
(Jābālopanisad 6.1)

Śrīmad Bhāgavatam Mentions Tridaṇḍa- sannyāsa

१५.३३
केचित् त्रि-वेणुं जगृहुर् एके पात्रं कमण्डलुम् पीठं 
चैके ऽक्ष-सूत्रं च कन्थां चीराणि केचन
प्रदाय च पुनस् तानि दर्शितान्य् आददुर् मुनेः
15.33
kecit tri-veṇuṁ jagṛhur eke pātraṁ kamaṇḍalum pīṭhaṁ 
caike 'kṣa-sūtraṁ ca kanthāṁ cīrāṇi kecana
pradāya ca punas tāni darśitāny ādadur muneḥ 

Some took away his tridaṇḍa, some stole his begging bowl, and others snatched away his waterpot. Some of them pulled away his āsana, others harassed him by
taking his japa-mālā, his beads. Others grabbed at his clothing and took away
his cloth. (Bhāg. 11.23.34)


The Tridaṇḍī Attains Perfection According to theManu-saṁhitā

15.34
tridaṇḍam-etan-nikṣipya sarva-bhūteṣu mānavaḥ kāma-krodhau tu saṁyamya tataḥ siddhiṁ niyacchati

One who disciplines his mind, speech, and body and controls his lust and anger
towards other living beings and thus gives up these bad qualities is a tridaṇḍī
and attains liberation.
 (Manu-saṁhitā 12.11)

The Hārīta-saṁhitā Glorifies Tridaṇḍa-sannyāsa

१५.३५
त्रिदण्ड-भृद्-यो हि पृथक् समाचरेच्छनैः शनैर्-यस्तु बहिर्-मुखाक्षः
सन्-मुच्य संसार-समस्त-बन्धनात् स याति विष्णोरमृतात्मनः पदम्
15.35
tridaṇḍa-bhṛd-yo hi pṛthak samācarecchanaiḥ śanair-yastu bahir-mukhākṣaḥ
san-mucya saṁsāra-samasta-bandhanāt sa yāti viṣṇoramṛtātmanaḥ padam

The tridaṇḍi sannyāsa gradually withdraws his senses from any connection with
sight, sound, taste, smell, etc., and becomes indifferent. His mind is gradually
freed from any trace of involvement with material enjoyment, and his behavior
becomes similarly pure. Such a sannyāsī has freed himself from family bondage
and, becoming liberated, he tastes the nectar of spiritual bliss at the lotus feet of
Śrī Viṣṇu. 
(Hārīta-saṁhitā 6.23)

Śrīdhara Svāmī Mentions Tridaṇḍa-sannyāsa in his Bhāgavatam Commentary

१५.३६
"एवं बहूदकादि धर्मान् उक्त्वा परमहंस- धर्मानाह ज्ञान-निष्ठ इति
सार्धैर्-दश्भिः बहिर्-विरक्तो मुक्मुक्ष् सन् ज्ञान-निष्ठा वा मोक्षेऽप्य्
अनपेक्षो मद्-भक्तो वा स सलिङ्गान् त्रिदण्डादि-सहितान् आश्रमांस्-तद्-धर्मांस्- त्यक्त्वा तदासक्तिं त्यक्त्वायथोचितं धर्मं चरेद् इत्य् अर्थः" पुनराय

15.36
"evaṁ bahūdakādi dharmān uktvā paramahaṁsa- dharmānāha jñāna-niṣṭha iti
sārdhair-daśbhiḥ bahir-virakto mukmukṣḥ san jñāna-niṣṭhā vā mokṣe'py
anapekṣo mad-bhakto vā sa saliṅgān tridaṇḍādi-sahitān āśramāṁs-tad-dharmāṁs- tyaktvā tadāsaktiṁ tyaktvāyathocitaṁ dharmaṁ cared ity arthaḥ" punarāya 

After explaining the duties of other sannyāsīs such as bahūdaka the duties of a
paramahaṁsa are described in ten and a half verses begining with this one A
paramhaṁsa may be one desiring liberation and thus fixed in knowledge or may
be a devotee who disregards even liberation. He should perform proper religious
duties without any attachment to material desires. He can give up all the
external symptoms of varṇāśrama-dharma. He gives up the āśrama duties
means he gives up attachment to them and performs them with no material
motive. (Bhāvārtha-dīpikā commentary on Bhāg.
11.18.28)

Śrī Caitanya Mahāprabhu's Opinion on the Tridaṇḍī Verse of Bhāgavatam

১৫.৩৭
প্রভু কহে,-সাধু এই ভিক্ষুর ৱচন মুকুন্দ সেৱন-ৱ্রত কৈল নির্ধারণ 
পরাত্ম-নিষ্ঠা-মাত্র ৱেষ-ধারণ মুকুন্দ-সেৱায হয সংসার-তারণ 
সেই ৱেষ কৈল, এবে ৱৃন্দাৱন গিযা কৃষ্ণ-নিষেৱণ করি নিভৃতে ৱসিযা
15.37
prabhu kahe,-sādhu ei bhikṣura vacana mukunda sevana-vrata kaila nirdhāraṇa 
parātma-niṣṭhā-mātra veṣa-dhāraṇa mukunda-sevāya haya saṁsāra-tāraṇa 
sei veṣa kaila, ebe vṛndāvana giyā kṛṣṇa-niṣevaṇa kari nibhṛte vasiyā

Śrī Caitanya Mahāprabhu approved of the ekam samasthaya parātma-niñṭham
verse on account of the determination of the mendicant sannyāsī to engage in
the service of Lord Mukunda. He gave his approval of this verse, indicating that
is was very good. The real purpose of accepting sannyāsa is to dedicate oneself
to the service of Mukunda. 
By serving Mukunda, one can actually be liberated from the bondage of material existence. After accepting the sannyāsa order, Śrī Caitanya Mahāprabhu decided to go to
Vṇṛdāvana and engage Himself wholly and solely in the service of Mukunda in a solitary place. 
(Cc. Madhya 3.7-9)

Śāraṇagati

From Śāraṇagati:



[Note: Śāraṇagati is one of the favourite song-cycles for bhajan written by Bhaktivinoda Ṭhākura.  I tried to make a translation that might be more in the way of a popular song, and that captures some of of the song character of the original. With respect to other published editions whose versions I have consulted.]

১)
ৱিদ্যার ৱিলাসে, কাটাইনু কাল,
পরম সাহসে আমি
তোমার চরণ, না ভজিনু কভু,
এখোন শরণ তুমি

(1)
vidyāra vilāse, kāṭāinu kāla,
parama sāhase āmi
tomāra caraṇa, nā bhajinu kabhu,
ekhona śaraṇa tumi

1)  I spent my youth in the joys of study,
wasting my precious time.
I never did bhajana  at your feet. 
But now you're my shelter sublime.




(২)
পোডিতে পোডিতে, ভরসা বারিলো,
জ্ঞানে গতি হবে মানি’
সে আশা বিফল, সে জ্ঞান দুর্বল,
সে জ্ঞান অজ্ঞান জানি

(2)
poḍite poḍite, bharasā bārilo,
jñāne gati habe māni’
se āśā biphala, se jñāna durbala,
se jñāna ajñāna jāni

2) When I was young, I worked hard at school.
But all my book-learning has made me a fool.
I thought my schooling would make me happy.
I read and studied; my prospects were good.

My hopes grew and grew for a brighter future, 
for I thought learning was the goal of life. 
But My hopes were empty, 
and my knowledge was in vain: 

Now I know that knowing is not knowing. 


(৩)
জড়-ৱিদ্যা জত, মাযার ৱৈভৱ,
তোমার ভজনে বাধা
মোহ জনমিযা, অনিত্য সংসারে,
জীৱকে কোরযে গাধা

(3)
jaḍa-vidyā jata, māyāra vaibhava,
tomāra bhajane bādhā
moha janamiyā, anitya saṁsāre,
jīvake koraye gādhā

3)
O Govinda:
Blinded by my earthly learning, 
the shining snares of māyā,
I never sang your praise.
This poor soul was fooled;
Burdened by family woes,
trapped in saṁsāra.





(৪)
সেই গাধা হো’যে, সংসারের বোঝা,
বহিনু অনেক কাল
বার্ধক্যে এখোন, শক্তির অভাৱে,
কিছু নাহি লাগে ভালো

(4)
sei gādhā ho’ye, saṁsārera bojhā,
bahinu aneka kāla
bārdhakye ekhona, śaktira abhāve,
kichu nāhi lāge bhālo

4) What a fool I've been;
An ass, burdened by wife and family,
trapped on the wheel of death. 
And now I’m old; no energy left.
No power for earthly joy,
no satisfaction; nothing makes me happy.

(৫)
জীৱন জাতনা, হোইলো এখোন,
সে ৱিদ্যা অৱিদ্যা ভেলো
অৱিদ্যার জ্wআলা, ঘটিলো বিষম,
সে ৱিদ্যা হোইলো শেলো

(5)
jīvana jātanā, hoilo ekhona,
se vidyā avidyā bhelo
avidyāra jwālā, ghaṭilo biṣama,
se vidyā hoilo śelo(5)

5) Oh, how my heart burns in pain, 
wasted by ignorance I took for knowledge.
This mortal life is only pain and sorrow. 
My "learning" was ignorance:  a shaft that pierces my heart


(৬)
তোমার চরণ, বিনা কিছু ধন,
সংসারে না আছে আর
ভকতিৱিনোদ, জড-ৱিদ্যা ছাডি,’
তুবা পদ কোরে সার

(6)
tomāra caraṇa, binā kichu dhana,
saṁsāre nā āche āra
bhakativinoda, jaḍa-vidyā chāḍi,’
tubā pada kore sāra


6) But now I know, there is nothing more than shelter at your feet. 
My dear Krishna, Nanda-Kumar:  Bhaktivinoda now leaves his useless scholarship, and makes your feet the essence of his life.




Friday, March 4, 2016

"I have it, I know it, I saw it, I read it."

The Christ Myth and the Vicissitudes of Nerdity

The Compassionate Christ Jesus of the Sacred Heart


In my personal faith, the teachings of Jesus have certainly played a role and given me hope and comfort in the trials I have faced.

And yet, I find many of the churches and organized religions that have sprung up in his name worthy of disdain.

I have tried to maintain a certain positivity in this blog. And so I have avoided disdaining the religious points of views of organized churches, out of respect.

And yet, there is a limit to tolerance. When we tolerate intolerance we run the risk of being crushed.

As I have tried to cleave to the teachings of my guru, I have faced innumerable attacks on my faith by well-meaning “Christians.” Mostly I ignore this sort of thing and go on with my business. But every 50 years or so, one is entitled to a well-considered response.

I’m not really interested in Jesus.

I’m sorry if that offends you.

But before you try to convert me to your view, please respect mine.

My own particular perspective has been informed by scholarship, experience, and introspection.

I live 50 yards away from a church, and even now the church-bells are ringing in preparation for the Holy Week celebrations of the resurrection of Christ.

But I am not a follower of Christ.

I like Krishna.

The idea of God dancing in infinite joy, surrounded by his loving devotees as he intones a divine melody on his transcendental flute moves me much more than the notion of an Angry God throwing thunderbolts of justice. The compassion of Chaitanya Mahaprabhu who made animals dance to the holy name in the Jharikhanda forest inspires me more far more than the lonely Christ, brutalized and bloody on the cross.


I find childish the idea that I have one chance to mortify the flesh and take shelter of Jesus in this lifetime or face eternal hell at the hands of a compassionate but just God.

In the end, Christ offers liberation from the material world.

When I was initiated as a devotee by Śrīla Prabhupāda, he gave me the name “Mukunda Mala Das” after the book of prayers by King Kulashekhara: the Mukunda Mala Stotra.

I liked the name. Mukunda means “giver of liberation.”

But when I asked my guru Śrīdhara Mahārāja about the meaning of “Mukunda” he said, it means, “One who gives something that makes liberation look poor by comparison.”

Devotees of Krishna are not interested in liberation from this material world, while this might appear externally to be the goal. What the devotees of Krishna are after is divine love of the highest order. They are prepared to sacrifice liberation for divine love.

So, if by ignoring Jesus Christ, we run the risk of going to hell, so be it.

We are ready to go to hell for Krishna.

We would rather go to hell for Krishna, than hover around with angel-wings for Jesus.

So please don’t send me any emails threatening me with death or castigating me for not “understanding” Jesus.

I’ve done all the “understanding” of Jesus that I’m prepared to do.

Furthermore, the good Christians who try to inform my spiritual life with their interpretations of the Bible know that any real relationship with Jesus should be “personal.”

So, if you’re interested in having a conversation with me about my “personal relationship with Jesus,” be you Baptist, Anabaptist, Methodist, Catholic, Greek Orthodox, or Urantia Book People, I recommend that you read this blog carefully before asking me to consider your point of view and my eternal life with Jesus.

I remember when I used to distribute “Back to Godhead Magazine” in Calcutta in 1978. I went from one cloth shop to the next, dressed in my orange brahmachari dhoti and armed with a heavy bag filled with magazines.

At one shop I hit a wall. Before I opened my mouth, the kindly gentelman who ran the shop smiled at me and said in rapid-fire English...
“I have it, I know it, I saw it, I read it.”
I tried, “Excuse me sir...”

“...I know it, I have it I saw it, I read it.”

“Yes,” I said, “but...”

“I saw it I have it I know it I read it.”

There was no penetrating his defense. He had it, he saw it he knew it, he read it. I went to the next shop. I never came up with a good refutation to his argument.

So, in dealing with Christians, I submit:

“I know it, I have it, I saw it, I read it.”

To buttress the above point, in preparing this series  let me just say that I’ve been through a number of scholarly books and articles on the historical Jesus. If your interested in further information on the subject, you can go through them. I found Zealot by Reza Aslan a well-written popular treatment of the Life and Teachings of Jesus in his historical context. For a skeptical account of Christian Mythology, there’s The Christ Conspiracy by Acarya S. whose thesis is basically that Christianity was fabricated from a conglomeration of different myths and mystery cults and propagated by Rome as a way of consolidating control of their empire.   

Christ in Egypt, by D.M. Murdock continues the theme, attempting to prove that Christian mythology recapitulates the Egyptian Book of the Dead. How Jesus became God by Bart D. Ehrman is a less strident approach than Murdock’s that attempts to reconstruct the Apotheosis of Christ from the Synoptic Gospels and concludes that the Christ cult is really based on early Christian belief in resurrection. He concludes that there is no historical evidence for resurrection. Four Portraits, One Jesus by Mark L. Straus is a kinder and gentler look at the historical Jesus for the faithful, softening the criticism of the Gospels while relying on their version. I re-read Holy Blood, Holy Grail by Michael Baigen, Richard Leigh, Henry Lincoln. This book was the basis for the wildly popular Da Vinci code. Without wishing to spoil the book for anyone, the thesis of Holy Blood, Holy Grail has to do with the idea that Jesus was married to Mary Magdalene, that he had children with her, and that this bloodline (The “holy blood”) of the title flowed from the womb (or holy “vessel”--the cup or “Grail”) of Mary.

Here’s a representative quote from Holy Blood, Holy Grail: “Modern scholars are unanimous in concurring that the Gospels do not date from Jesus’ lifetime. For the most part they date from the period between the two major revolts in Judaea--66 to 74-- and 132 to 135--although they are most certainly based on earlier accounts. These earlier accounts may have included written documents since lost--for there was a wholesale destruction of records in the wake of the first rebellion. But there would certainly have been oral traditions as wel. Some of these were undoubtedly grossly exaggerated and/or distorted, received and transmitted at second, third, or fourth hand. Others, however, may have derived from individuals who were alive in Jesus’ lifetime and may even have known him personally. A young man at the time of the Crucifixion might well have een alive when the Gospels were composed.

The earliest of the Gospels is generally considered to be Mark’s, composed sometime during the revolt of 66-74 or shortly thereafter--except for its treatment of the Resurrection, which is a later and spurious addition.”

I went through “The Birth of Christianity--discovering what happened in the years immediately after the execution of Jesus” by John Dominic Crossan. He concludes that the most important attribute of the Christian God is Justice. He adds that the justice of Yahweh, the God of the Tetragrammaton, is tempered by the compassion of Christ, and that the balance between compassion and justice is the essential thesis and antithesis of Old and New testament as synthesized in the person of Christ.

“Yahweh is a God not only of justice but also of compassion. ...It is impossible to have justice without compassion, but it is possible to have compassion without justice. Where there is justice without compassion, there will be anger, violence, and murder. A thirst for justice without an instinct for compassion produces killers. Sometimes they are simply believers in a Killer God. But compassion without justice is equally problematic. Compassion cannot substitute for justice. Those who live by compassion are often canonized. Those who live by justice are often crucified.”

I took a look at Annie Besant’s “The Jesus of the Gospels,” where she questions the “reliability of the views of the Christian Fathers.”
Annie Besant founded the Theosophical Society and later promoted the career of J. Krishnamurti. Her translation of the Bhagavad-Gita is helpful in decoding the Sanskrit word for word, and helpful for students of that great book. She began her career as a “freethinker.”
In debate with the REV. A Hatchard on Nov., 25th, 1880, Besant remarks, “I am obliged to dissent from the view to which my opponent has given utterance, viz., that exactly the same Bible is in the hands of both Protestand and Catholic. The Douay Bible differs in many respects from the Bible received in Protestant Churches; and nothing is more common than for a Roman Catholic to warn his hearers on the peril of their souls not to read the Protestant Bible, while on the other hand the Protestant cautions his followers that the Douay version of the Scriptures is misleading and therefore not to be received.”

Little has changed since this statement made 136 years ago. If anything, modern scholarship as evidenced by some of the above-quoted authors has demonstrated even further the unreliability of the Gospels and early church fathers. Their testimony for such miracles as the loaves and fishes, raising Lazarus from the dead, walking on water, or the resurrection can hardly believed with any authority. And while, according to the stories that were told about Christ, the lame walked, the blind saw, the sick were healed, the dead were raised and demons were expelled, there is absolutely no objective historical reference to this anywhere, apart from the Gospel stories written down nearly a century later.

At the same time, the Romans kept careful records and wrote extensive histories of the period. We have preserved the works and letters of Cicero who wrote in the half-century before Christ, and whose books are filled with the current events of the day. Were the Romans sublimely unaware of these important events?


The Victorian Edward Gibbon, writing in the “Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire” expresses his wonder at this sin of ommission: “the sages of Greece and Rome.[during the age of Christ]..appeared unconscious of any alterations in the moral or physical government of the world. Under the reign of Tiberius, the whole earth, or at least a celebrated province of the Roman empire, was involved in a preternatural darkness for three hours [during the crucifixion]. Even this miraculous event which ought to have excited the onder, the curiosity, and the devotion of mankind, passed without notice in an age of science and history. It happened during the lifetime of Seneca and the elder Pliny, who must have experienced the immediate effects, or received the earliest intelligence of the prodigy. Each of these philosophers, in a laborious work, has recorded all the great phenomena of Nature, earthquakes, meteors, comets, and eclipses, which his indefatigable curiosity could collect. Both the one and the other have omitted to mention the greatest phenomenon to which the mortal eye has been witness since the creation of the globe.” [Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, ed. 1808, pp. 178,179]
One Roman historian does mention Jesus: Tacitus. Publius Cornelius Tacitus was a senator and historian of the Roman Empire. The surviving portions of his two major works, the Annals and the Histories, examine the reigns of the Roman Emperors Tiberius, Claudius, Nero and others who reigned from the death of Augustus, the successor of Julius Caesar in 14 AD to about 70 and the Jewish-Roman War. He is considered one of the greatest Roman historians, especially by Edward Gibbon himself, author of the above-quoted Decline and Fall. Tacitus mentions only that among those convicted of treason to the Roman state, Jesus was put to death as a criminal. He makes no mention of miracles, eclipses of the sun at the time of the crucifixion, or resurrection. The brief mention of the execution of Jesus by Pontius Pilate by Tacitus is all the evidence for the historical Jesus that may be found in the voluminous writings of different Roman scholars and historians writing within a hundred years of the crucifixion.

Having been through the above-mentioned literature as well as the Bible and its Gospels, I would still assert that the lack of evidence for a historical Christ is insufficient, in my opinion for a complete denial of the Christian faith. While history has its uses and scholarship often illuminates, there is still something to be said for transcendental experience itself.

Leaving aside the whole historical question about the biographical nature of Jesus, let me shift focus for a moment.

At this point, I must confess that I have little patience for the trivialities of Christology. I’m more interested in my own personal enlightenment to invest any more time in the history of ancient Jerusalem and the opinions of the Sanhedrin and the Saduccees.

As someone who spends too much time reading, I understand the vicissitudes of nerdity.

Too much scholarship tends towards skepticism. Intelligence functions by way of negation. In Sanskrit, this is called neti neti, not this, not this. We filter things. We arrive at truth by saying, “This is not it. This is not it.”

Scholarship of this sort, then, tends to destroy faith. The more one analyzes the historical Jesus, the more loses faith in his life and message. Analysis and scholarship destroys devotion.

We see this in the writings of Bhaktivinoda Ṭhākura.

The incredibly learned Bhaktivinoda Ṭhākura authored hundreds of books. His deep scholarship is evident in his writing, and yet he was critical of erudition.

In his Śāraṇagati, or “Journey to Surrender” that great Vaiṣṇava teacher and poet laments the time he had spent acquiring useless and trivial knowledge through scholarship.




Bhaktivinod’s critique of mundane learning is meant to be applied to ordinary study, but it might just as well apply to study of the historical Christ.

From Śāraṇagati:


(১)
ৱিদ্যার ৱিলাসে, কাটাইনু কাল,
পরম সাহসে আমি
তোমার চরণ, না ভজিনু কভু,
এখোন শরণ তুমি

(1)
vidyāra vilāse, kāṭāinu kāla,
parama sāhase āmi
tomāra caraṇa, nā bhajinu kabhu,
ekhona śaraṇa tumi

1) I spent my youth in the joy of study and never worshiped at your feet. Now, O Lord, You are my only shelter.

(২)
পোডিতে পোডিতে, ভরসা বারিলো,
জ্ঞানে গতি হবে মানি’
সে আশা বিফল, সে জ্ঞান দুর্বল,
সে জ্ঞান অজ্ঞান জানি

(2)
poḍite poḍite, bharasā bārilo,
jñāne gati habe māni’
se āśā biphala, se jñāna durbala,
se jñāna ajñāna jāni

2) When I was young, I worked hard at school.
I thought that learning would make me happy.
I read and studied; my prospects were good.
My hopes grew and grew for a brighter future,
for I thought learning was the goal of life.

But My hopes were empty,
and my knowledge was in vain:

Now I know that knowing is not knowing.

(৩)
জড়-ৱিদ্যা জত, মাযার ৱৈভৱ,
তোমার ভজনে বাধা
মোহ জনমিযা, অনিত্য সংসারে,
জীৱকে কোরযে গাধা

(3)
jaḍa-vidyā jata, māyāra vaibhava,
tomāra bhajane bādhā
moha janamiyā, anitya saṁsāre,
jīvake koraye gādhā

3)O Lord,
Earthly learning is a snare of māyā
that bars the path to your worship.

Love of scholarship makes a fool
of a poor soul
and traps him on the wheel of death forever.

(৪)
সেই গাধা হো’যে, সংসারের বোঝা,
বহিনু অনেক কাল
বার্ধক্যে এখোন, শক্তির অভাৱে,
কিছু নাহি লাগে ভালো

(4)
sei gādhā ho’ye, saṁsārera bojhā,
bahinu aneka kāla
bārdhakye ekhona, śaktira abhāve,
kichu nāhi lāge bhālo

4) Here is one such fool:
who like an ass has carried on his back
the burden of that wheel since time was born.
And now I’m old; No power for earthly joy,
I find no satisfaction; nothing makes me happy.

(৫)
জীৱন জাতনা, হোইলো এখোন,
সে ৱিদ্যা অৱিদ্যা ভেলো
অৱিদ্যার জ্wআলা, ঘটিলো বিষম,
সে ৱিদ্যা হোইলো শেলো

(5)
jīvana jātanā, hoilo ekhona,
se vidyā avidyā bhelo
avidyāra jwālā, ghaṭilo biṣama,
se vidyā hoilo śelo(5)

5) This mortal life is only pain and sorrow.
My wisdom was folly:
My ignorance a shaft that pierces my heart
with burning pain.

(৬)
তোমার চরণ, বিনা কিছু ধন,
সংসারে না আছে আর
ভকতিৱিনোদ, জড-ৱিদ্যা ছাডি,’
তুবা পদ কোরে সার

(6)
tomāra caraṇa, binā kichu dhana,
saṁsāre nā āche āra
bhakativinoda, jaḍa-vidyā chāḍi,’
tubā pada kore sāra


6) But now I know, there is nothing more than shelter at your feet.

My dear Krishna: Bhaktivinoda now leaves his useless scholarship, and makes your feet the essence of his life.