Guest guest Posted May 26, 1999 Report Share Posted May 26, 1999 If I have to respond to the challenge of Mother Hare Krsna suspecting me of being a "ritvik" then the deal is that I get to write as long a response as I want to! No one has to read it of course. On 25 May 1999, Madhava Gosh wrote: > > On 24 May 1999, Hare Krsna dasi wrote: > > > Prabhu, can you please clarify this for all the devotees. Do you agree with > > > the argument of the rtviks that a devotee can still take diksa initiation from > > > Srila Prabhupada? If your position differs from theirs, could you please explain > > the difference. > > And the witchhunt begins. > > You can call me any name you wish. I find it immature and naive, but that is > > only my opinion. > > If you are planning a long, drawn out trial to determine if I am a heretic > > I'll save you the trouble and exit from COM at your request. > Lighten up Janesh. It's just a question seeking clarification. I will respond to you, Gosh, because I feel friendship . I feel I am guilty until proven innocent with some of the other parties. Obviously 2 years of involvement on this conference affords me no credibility (I've been secretly poisoning everyone with my heresy). And I am not exactly preaching to the choir here, either. Anything even vaguely resembling "ritvik" is taken as a serious threat to every non-Prabhupada diksa disciple. Those are not my intentions. Hare Krsna dd wrote: > > Do you agree with the argument of the rtviks that a devotee can still take diksa initiation from Srila Prabhupada? First, I have never read even one page of "TFO". I have read small snipits of this publication from various areas of the internet and the responses from the other side of the issue as well. Any "conclusions" or opinions I have come to are as the result of my own study of Srila Prabhupada's books, tapes and letters. I do not have folio either. I am not a brahmana, I am a ksatriya. I am not a "ritvik", which means officiating priest, I am a ksatriya. I am not a great Ksatriya like my idols Sri Arjuna, Sri Yudhistira, Dhruva, etc., but then not every basketball player is Michael Jordan, yet still they are basketball players. I do not like the way the term "ritvik" is bandied about as if it is our own derogatory term to throw aimlessly at anyone we wish without knowing if they are in fact priests. Srila Prabhupada used the term very respectfully and I think he would not appreciate the way it is used these days. Both sides of the issue throw names needlessly. I am guilty also, but I would like to see myself stop such things in my life along with the other million or so faults. Admitting my faults is half my battle. I do not know the full details of the beliefs of those godbrothers of mine who embrace the conclusions of TFO, but I do know many of them are very intelligent people who I, wherever I meet such, try not to dismiss out of blind ambition and cultism. I have many, many friends who are devotees of the Lord who have very little if anything to do with ISKCON. Whenever I talk to them the subject of "ritvik" rarely comes up. Only friendly real people-to-people stuff and Krsna Katha is discussed. Most agree that all is well with their existing relationship with Srila Prabhupada Were I wise I would probably stay away from the issue as well. I think if Srila Prabhupada came back now he would be highly disturbed that thousands of his disciples are now gone from his movement and he would express his anger like he used to when we disturbed George Harrison and others who left. If we said, "Prabhupada, we do not want them here because they say you can still accept diksa initiation even though you departed from this world and your physical body. We feel this is against Pancharatriki-vidhi and our experience of the parampara to this point. So we made a law that they weren't allowed in your movement anymore." Do you really think he would say OK? I kind of hear him saying, "Initiation or no initiation...it is minor thing. Transcendental knowledge, Krsna consciousness, Bhagavat philosophy that is the important thing. They are chanting Hare Krsna and that will cleanse everyone no matter what their faults. They are mahatmas, too. Please invite them back immediately." Just my opinion though. My opinion is that siksa initiation from an uttama-adhikari is essential to be delivered from nescience. Nescience I consider to be ignorance of Krsna as the Supreme Personality of Godhead and that His name, form, fame, pastimes, entourage, etc. are absolutely equal to Him. The opposite of nescience is science and true science is knowing Krsna and serving Him in knowledge of that fact. Serving Him is the constitutional position of every living entity and it is comprised of nine activities (sravananam, kirtanamam, visnu smaranam, etc.). I believe that that siksa can be accessed through the words of the uttama-adhikari whether written or heard from the lips directly, IF the most current parampara acarya stated this as such. My opinion is that siksa is all that is necessary to become self-realized in this age and that the easiest process to obtain this siksa is the sankirtana process as enunciated by Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu. Hearing and chanting, or more specifically defined, describing the glories of the Lord. This is the only process necessary in this age. However, due to the nature of this age and the accumulated impurities of the spirit soul since time immemorial there is reluctance to take wholeheartedly to the sankirtana movement with full faith that it is the life of all transcendental knowledge, it increases the ocean of transcendental bliss and it enables us to taste the nectar for which we are always anxious. Therefore, the great sages and acaryas have enunciated the institution of Pancharatrika-vidhi for the purpose of providing material means of worship to the arca-vigraha form of the Lord known as arcana. Bhaktisiddhanta instituted the simultaneous practice of bhagavat-vidhi and arcana in the gaudiya sampradaya. Diksa initiation is a ritual of this pancharatrika-vidhi. However, it is my opinion that inclusion of Pancharatrika-vidhi rituals was primarily intended to emphasize Deity worship more than diksa initiation as reflected in Srila Prabhupada's program in ISKCON where diksa initiation was not clearly performed by him personally in many, many cases of his disciples. Bhagavata-vidhi far outweighs Pancharatrika-vidhi in my humble opinion and in Bhagavata-vidhi diksa initiation is not required, as in the example of Visvanatha Cakravarti Thakur, or at least is considered very minor. Chanting the holy names of the Lord is by far the most prescribed process for purification of any type in the Bhagavat line. If there was no fire sacrifice, no ritual diksa initiation but just a big kirtan welcoming a disciple into the program after sufficient siksa training, I personally think it would "work" just fine. The following are some reasons for my opinion: "In the Srimad-Bhagavatam there is no recommendation of pancharatriki worship because in this Kali-yuga, even without Deity worship, everything can be perfectly performed simply through hearing, chanting, remembering and worship of the lotus feet of the Lord." S.B. 7.5.24. The chanting of the Hare Krsna mantra is recommended even for persons who commit offenses, because if they continue chanting they will gradually chant offenselessly. ...Even if in the beginning one chants the Hare Krsna mantra with offenses, one will become free from such offenses by chanting again and again." 6.3.24 "It is recommended that even if one commits offenses, one should continue chanting the holy name. In other words, the chanting of the holy name makes one offenseless,...if one is an offender in chanting the holy name, he should submit to the holy name and thus be freed from his offenses. SB 7.5.24. "Especially in this age of Kali, sankirtan alone is sufficient. If the members of our temples inthe different parts of the world simply continue sankirtana before the Deity, especially before Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu, they will remain perfect. There is no need of any other performances. "Nevertheless, to keep oneself clean in habits and mind, Deity worship and other regulative principles are required. ... we strictly follow this principle of performing Deity worship and sankirtana along parallel lines. This we should continue." SB 6.3.25. I feel that since Srila Prabhupada departed physically, there has been an ever growing emphasis put on these rituals of which diksa initiation is a part. Diksa initiation has been stressed far more than siksa and Bhagavata-vidhi. (I will not go into my suspicions as to the motive behind this now.) This does not attract me personally. It makes the movement institutional, cultish at times, ritualistic, even church-like. I joined the movement because it was so different than those things. Srila Prabhupada was so simple and pure. Religion became a part of my life, where it was formerly completely absent with malice, because he preached bhagavata philosophy which meant I could be religious without joining some organized, institutional religious sect. I could just read his books, chant holy names and do my duty as a ksatriya. I had always idolized Arjuna from the very beginning because Bhagavad-gita was the first book I read and I had no idea their was an institution/organization behind the book. Krsna's friendship with and teachings to Arjuna represented to me the perfect form of high philosophy, religious duty and reaching the supreme goal of life. I could do it anywhere, at any time. Bhagavata and varnasrama-dharma go perfectly well together both having been spoken by Bhagavan and Bhagavatas. Bhagavat is the perfect spiritual system to be performed in the perfect social system- daiva varnasrama. Think Bhagavat, work in varnasrama. Think Bhagavat, work in varnasrama. Think Bhagavat, work in varnasrama. Pancharatriki, on the other hand, is not recommended in the Bhagavatam. It is, however, recommended by guru and sadhu in certain circumstances and therefore it must be understood to be applicable as prescribed for those requiring the same. I do not think that Srila Prabhupada gives diksa initiation now that he has departed "physically". The diksa initiation I am referring to is pancharatrika-vidhi formal ritualistic diksa. It is mostly for those interested in the flowery parts of the Vedic regulations and not a major consideration in Bhagavata philosophy. Diksa, to me, actually means transcendental knowledge imparted to the disciple. If true Vaisnava transcendental knowledge has not been imparted to a disciple by an uttama-adhikari, formal diksa initiation through a smarta-brahmana ritual will have no effect other than social status. If people are going to be attached to such things due to proportionate lack of faith or determined practice in the sankirtan process then there must be facility given to perform these rituals in order to encourage people on the spiritual path. Practically, I think that ISKCON should develop diksa initiation gurus through the institution of varnasrama colleges in order to train the most qualified brahmanas we can and the diksa initiation should be done primarily by grihasta-brahmanas as prescribed by the Pancharatrika regulations. We do not have to completely limit it to grihasta-brahmanas as Lord Caitanya spoke of sannyasi-gurus provided they were Vaisnavas who knew perfectly the science of Bhagavat, but for us some general guidelines should be there. These brahmanas would likely have been the initiate's siksa guru also (from gurukula, varnasrama college for example), but 90% of siksa, I feel, should be from Srila Prabhupada for the foreseeable future. Maybe even 10,000 years. I think a diksa-guru, he who performs the formal diksa ritual/initiation, does not have to be an uttama-adhikari maha-bhagavat, though I am not sure of myself on this aspect. There may be distinct qualifications required by sastra which should be clearly identified in the varnasrama college training. Certainly the diksa-guru must be a brahmana and those qualifications are pretty clear in Srila Prabhupada's books. We cannot gloss over these qualifications if we are going to attempt Pancharatrika rituals. Just as in Deity worship if we cannot do it properly we are forbidden to do it at all and Srila Prabhupada advised Pancha-tattva worship instead. Similarly, salagrama-sila worship was held off by Srila Prabhupada for many years because he felt his disciples were not advanced enough for it. This is a main point of mine. If we cannot do these Vedic rituals of Pancharatrika-vidhi as required in the regulations then better we abandon them and take up the sankirtana practice which, while we may perform it offensively in the beginning, will purify us by the same practice. Offensive Deity worship or improper diksa initiation is much harder to atone for and sinful reaction is magnified. Caution is everything. Especially when we have a superior method of purification which has no hard and fast rules. (Seems like a no-brainer, sometimes!) So qualifications should be vigilantly identified and defended despite humiliation or false egos if we are going to require such Pancharatrika rituals. I also feel that Srila Prabhupada's program can and will develop other pure devotee, mahabhagavatas capable of giving unquestioned, 100% Krsna conscious siksa and diksa. The timing of such an occurrence I cannot predict. I personally do not feel that there is such a devotee in ISKCON at present only because it is my personal opinion that if there were, this pure devotee, mahabhagavata would be promoting, teaching, training, actively and practicably, the implementation of daiva varnasrama-dharma (sankirtan/prescribed varna duty) within this society and everywhere else possible. No disciple, or grand, grand-grand disciple, etc., of Srila Prabhupada can read his teachings sincerely and non-enviously and come away with a different or better idea of how to spread the Krsna consciousness movement in the large manner he envisioned and spoke of so often, in my opinion. There is much more that could be said, but I doubt too many got anywhere's near this far in this text. So there you have it. If I am to be called a "ritvik"as the result of the foregoing opinions I am proud to be one. Personally if I were to be called something other than a ksatriya as the result of my beliefs I would prefer to be called a "bhagavat" (not to be confused with a maha-bhagavata!) Just a guy that would really like to see the emphasis switched to 95% bhagavata preaching and relating with other devotees. Your fallen servant, Janesvara dasa Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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