The Roots of Indian Religion
Karma and Liberation
The Upanishads, originating as commentaries on the Vedas between about 800
and 200 B.C., contain speculations on the meaning of existence that have greatly
influenced Indian religious traditions. Most important is the concept of
atman (the human soul), which is an individual manifestation of
brahman (see Glossary). Atman is of the same nature as
brahman , characterized either as an impersonal force or as God, and
has as its goal the recognition of identity with brahman . This fusion
is not possible, however, as long as the individual remains bound to the world
of the flesh and desires. In fact, the deathless atman that is so bound
will not join with brahman after the death of the body but will
experience continuous rebirth. This fundamental concept of the transmigration of
atman , or reincarnation after death, lies at the heart of the
religions emerging from India.
Indian religious tradition sees karma (see Glossary) as the source of the
problem of transmigration. While associated with physical form, for example, in
a human body, beings experience the universe through their senses and their
minds and attach themselves to the people and things around them and constantly
lose sight of their true existence as atman , which is of the same
nature as brahman . As the time comes for the dropping of the body, the
fruits of good and evil actions in the past remain with atman ,
clinging to it, causing a tendency to continue experience in other existences
after death. Good deeds in this life may lead to a happy rebirth in a better
life, and evil deeds may lead to a lower existence, but eventually the
consequences of past deeds will be worked out, and the individual will seek more
experiences in a physical world. In this manner, the bound or ignorant
atman wanders from life to life, in heavens and hells and in many
different bodies. The universe may expand and be destroyed numerous times, but
the bound atman will not achieve release.
The true goal of atman is liberation, or release (moksha ),
from the limited world of experience and realization of oneness with God or the
cosmos. In order to achieve release, the individual must pursue a kind of
discipline (yoga, a "tying," related to the English word yoke) that is
appropriate to one's abilities and station in life. For most people, this goal
means a course of action that keeps them rather closely tied to the world and
its ways, including the enjoyment of love (kama ), the attainment of
wealth and power (artha ), and the following of socially acceptable
ethical principles (dharma--see Glossary). From this perspective, even manuals
on sexual love, such as the Kama Sutra (Book of Love), or collections
of ideas on politics and governance, such as the Arthashastra (Science
of Material Gain), are part of a religious tradition that values action in the
world as long as it is performed with understanding, a karma-yoga or
selfless discipline of action in which every action is offered as a sacrifice to
God. Some people, however, may be interested in breaking the cycle of rebirth in
this life or soon thereafter. For them, a wide range of techniques has evolved
over the thousands of years that gives Indian religion its great diversity. The
discipline that involves physical positioning of the body (hatha-yoga), which is
most commonly equated with yoga outside of India, sees the human body as a
series of spiritual centers that can be awakened through meditation and
exercise, leading eventually to a oneness with the universe. Tantrism is the
belief in the Tantra (from the Sanskrit, context or continuum), a collection of
texts that stress the usefulness of rituals, carried out with a strict
discipline, as a means for attaining understanding and spiritual awakening.
These rituals include chanting powerful mantras; meditating on complicated or
auspicious diagrams (mandalas); and, for one school of advanced practitioners,
deliberately violating social norms on food, drink, and sexual relations.
A central aspect of all religious discipline, regardless of its emphasis, is
the importance of the guru, or teacher. Indian religion may accept the
sacredness of specific texts and rituals but stresses interpretation by a living
practitioner who has personal experience of liberation and can pass down
successful techniques to devoted followers. In fact, since Vedic times, it has
never been possible, and has rarely been desired, to unite all people in India
under one concept of orthodoxy with a single authority that could be presented
to everyone. Instead, there has been a tendency to accept religious innovation
and diversity as the natural result of personal experience by successive
generations of gurus, who have tailored their messages to particular times,
places, and peoples, and then passed down their knowledge to lines of disciples
and social groups. As a result, Indian religion is a mass of ancient and modern
traditions, some always preserved and some constantly changing, and the
individual is relatively free to stress in his or her life the beliefs and
religious behaviors that seem most effective on the path to deliverance.
this content is derived in part or whole from the
U.S. Library of Congress Country Studies