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The Indweller (Antharayamin) is Shakti/Holy Spirit/Ruh/Eykaa Mayee - the only Being worth realizing

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Dear All,

 

i regard the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad's narration of the nature of

The Indweller (Antharayamin) to be a most important revelation and

realization. After years i have finally found the most lucid and

intelligible explanation the holy scriptures have come to confirming

and identifying The Indweller (Antharayamin). It is the very proof i

needed to vindicate that a most profound reality Kash, Arwinder and

Lalita have been experiencing for years is the flawless witnessing

of The Indweller (Antharyamin).

 

> Esa ta atma: In short, this is the Atman. What we call the

> Antaryamin, or the Immanent Reality, is the Atman, the Self. When

> we say it is the Self, we mean it is Consciousness. We mean both

> things in the same, sense. It is an awareness which cannot be the

> object of another awareness. Therefore, it is not capable of being

> seen. Adrsto drasta: This Reality is the unseen Seer of all

> beings. You cannot see it, but it sees you. It sees everyone, but

> no one can see it - adrsto drasta. Asrutah srota: It can hear

> everything, but no one can hear it. Amato manta: You cannot think

> it, but it can think you. Avijnato vijnata: You cannot understand

> it, but it can understand you. Nanyo'to'sti drasta: There is no

> other Seer but that. Nanyo'to'sti srota: There is no hearer other

> than that. Nanyo'to'sti manta. There is no thinker but that.

> Nanyo'to'sti vijnata: There is no understander but that. So, if

> anyone thinks, it is that which thinks; if anyone hears, it is

> that which hears; if anyone sees, it is that which sees. If anyone

> understands anything, it is not you or I that understand, it is

> that which understands. If anyone does anything, it is that which

> does.

>

> Esa ta atmantaryamy amrtah: " This is the Self; this is the internal

> Ruler; this is the Reality. This is immortal, O' Uddalaka.

> Everything else is useless. Other than this, nothing has any sense

> or meaning - ato nyad artam. This is the only Being that is

> worthwhile considering and approaching and realizing. "

>

> /message/6662

>

 

Of even greater significance is that this priceless gem of moksa

also shines it liberating light on the Divine Feminine pervading all

the holy scriptures - Shakti, Holy Spirit, Ruh, Aykaa Mayee - and

confirms She is One and the same. It does not matter what religion

you previously belonged. The Indweller (Antharayamin) exist in all

and Her incarantion Shri Mataji Nirmal Devi, bearing the Divine

Message of the Last Judgment and Resurrection, makes humans embrace

all religions, holy scriptures and messengers unconditionally. The

incarnation of the Indweller (Antharayamin) is the biblical Paraclete

who has glorified Shri Jesus and commenced the Last Judgment; as the

Islamic Ruh She has explained and declared that Al-Qiyamah (The

Resurrection) has begun; as Shakti She has given evidence of being

The Indweller (Antharayamin) within humans.

 

Now the unity and harmony of Her Divine Message becomes apparent,

that " the Spirit is associated with contemplation and devotion and

acts of liberation rather than exclusively with one kind of

religious expression over against another ... Spirit christology

suggests an openness of approach to people of other faiths and a

willingness to affirm what is good and true in other faiths on the

grounds that the mission of the Spirit precedes and goes beyond the

incarnation. "

 

As the Divine Feminine entrenched in the holy scriptures She grants

both bodily resurrection (kundalni awakening/self-realization/second

birth) and spiritual immortality (moksa/eternal life). The Indweller

(Antharayamin) is Shakti/Holy Spirit/Ruh/Eykaa Mayee. Esa ta

atmantaryamy amrtah: " This is the Self; this is the internal

Ruler; this is the Reality. This is immortal, O' Uddalaka.

Everything else is useless. Other than this, nothing has any sense

or meaning - ato nyad artam. This is the only Being that is

worthwhile considering and approaching and realizing. "

 

Jai Shri Ganapathi,

 

 

jagbir

 

 

---------------------

 

The Holy Spirit in Mission in India

Indian Contribution to Contemporary Mission Pneumatology, Kirsteen Kim

 

In the late twentieth century, the Western churches rediscovered the truth of

the creedal statements that in addition to God the Father and God the Son, there

is also God the Spirit. Furthermore Western theologians began to discuss the

presence and activity of the Holy Spirit not only in the church and the human

heart but also in the world. The Canberra Assembly of the World Council of

Churches in highlighted controversy over the relationship between the mission

of the Son and the mission of the Spirit and raised the question of how and

where the Spirit is discerned. The Assembly drew attention to the importance of

further discussion on the mission of the Spirit and the potential for applying a

pneumatological approach to a range of missiological questions. These included:

What is the source of the Spirit and the spiritual resources for mission? What

is the nature of the Spirit’s involvement in history? What is the locus of the

Spirit – creation, community or human heart? Can pneumatology help to solve the

“christological impasse” in theology of religions? What does theology of the

Spirit suggest about identity, community and the nature of Christian unity? Are

we dealing with one Spirit or many spirits? What constitutes authentic mission

spirituality?

 

Many of the most interesting recent contributions to discussion of mission

pneumatology come from theologians who are reflecting on the Holy Spirit within

the context of a cultural understanding of spirit and spirits that differs

significantly from western frameworks. India – a land where there is deep

awareness of one universal Spirit and there are also many spiritualities –

offers outstanding examples of creative thinking on the Spirit from Christian

theologians. The purpose of this paper is to explore Indian Christian theology

from the perspective of pneumatology to highlight its contribution to

international debate.

 

God as Spirit

 

In his Introduction to Indian Christian Theology, Robin Boyd observed that over

nearly two hundred years of Indian Christian theology pneumatology, particularly

as it is expressed in John’s gospel, emerges as the “corner-stone”. That is,

God’s dealings with the world are seen primarily in terms of the Spirit. This

reflects the dominant cultural understanding that God is Spirit and that the

earth is the embodiment of the feminine power of God. Similarly, the Catholic

theologian Felix Wilfred explains to critics of Indian theology that, in keeping

with Eastern religions in general, Asian Christian theologies recognise

particularly “the inexhaustible aspect of the divine mystery which St John

expresses laconically: ‘God is spirit’ (Jn .)”.

 

Spirit christology

 

The Indian christology that Boyd describes tends therefore to be “Spirit

christology” rather than “Logos christology”, that is, it begins from the work

of God in the world through God’s Spirit since the creation and understands

Jesus Christ as the fulfilment of that, rather than by justifying the claims

about the person and nature of Christ. In other words, in their dialogue with

the twin realities of the religious traditions of India and in awareness of the

material poverty of its people, Indian theologians have been particularly

concerned with the role of Jesus Christ in mediating the presence and salvation

of God, rather than with the traditional Western preoccupation with matters of

ontology. According to James Dunn, the New Testament record gives grounds for

Spirit christology as one of the earliest traditions, which was combined with

Logos christology in the development of the Trinity.

 

Spirit christology amounts to a recognition that “Jesus is not only the giver

but also the receiver of the Spirit”. It is preferred by many Indian

theologians, first because it shifts the focus of the question of uniqueness and

universality from Christ to the Spirit, therefore providing a fresh approach to

the question of exclusive claims about Jesus Christ, which appear so divisive in

a pluralistic context. Secondly, Spirit christology is also seen as a better way

of justifying and affirming the presence and activity of God outside the

boundaries of the church or Christendom than the earlier “cosmic Christ”

theologies, which were criticised as patronising to those of other religions or

ideologies by describing them as “anonymous Christians” or in other ways

appearing to co-opt them into Christian faith.

 

Amongst Protestants, Spirit christology tends to be presented as an Indian

framework for theology as opposed to the Greek one of Logos. However this makes

it difficult for those who wish to retain their allegiance to the historic

creeds and a common Christian confession. The difference between these

approaches is illustrated by the respective interpretations by Stanley Samartha

and Lesslie Newbigin of John ., in which it is said that the Spirit will lead

“into all truth”. Samartha, Indian theologian and first Director of the World

Council of Churches’ sub-unit on dialogue, is confident that the truth to which

the Holy Spirit leads includes the truth contained in other religions, whereas

Newbigin, British missionary theologian and Bishop of the Church of South India,

argues that, since all truth is found in him, “the Holy Spirit does not lead

past, or beyond, or away from Jesus”. Samartha often refers to God as Mystery in

order to say that God is greater than human understanding and though Jesus is

the Revealer of God, there is room for other revelations. Whereas Newbigin

stresses the fullness of the revelation in Jesus Christ which has made known

what was unknown. The two therefore reached an impasse, although both affirm

that truth is one and both confess Jesus Christ as source of truth.

 

However, Indian Catholic theologians, led by Jacques Dupuis, though initially

criticised by the Vatican for their alleged view that “the mystery of God is not

exhausted in the revelation in Jesus Christ but is also revealed in other

religions”, have largely succeeded in establishing the legitimacy of Spirit

christology as long as it is understood that it is complementary to traditional

christology not an alternative. From their perspective, Spirit christology is

another way of saying that there is more to theology than christology or, in

other words, of stating Christian belief in the Trinity. It understands the

event of Jesus Christ from the perspective of the presence and activity of the

Holy Spirit of God in the world since creation, while also stressing the sending

of the Spirit into the world by the risen Christ. In this approach, “all truth”

in John . would be understood to be as broad as the Spirit’s work in the whole

creation but also focussed in Jesus Christ.

 

The Spirit as Atman and Antaryamin

 

Boyd pointed out that the concept of the Holy Spirit may be rendered in Sanskrit

by several different words – atman, antaryamin and shakti – each reflecting a

different tradition and carrying different connotations. The word atman (spirit,

soul, self) and its cognates – including Paramatman (Supreme Spirit) and

antaratman (inner spirit) – come from advaitic or classical Hinduism. Advaita

means “oneness”, or more literally “not two-ness” or “non-duality”. Describing

the Spirit as atman draws attention to the interior dimension, the spirit

within, and its union with the universal Spirit, Brahman. George Gispert-Sauch

finds the expression “ground of being” a better translation of the concept of

atman than “soul” or “self”. The Catholic ascetic, Abhishiktananda described the

Holy Spirit as “the advaita of God, the mystery of the non-duality of the Father

and the Son”. In this vein Vandana, a leader of the Catholic ashram movement,

presents ashramic spirituality as a holistic approach to life, leading to and

flowing from a realisation of oneness with the One Spirit and hence a

connectedness with the universe and with “spiritual” people regardless of

gender, caste and religion. This image of the Spirit as the unifying principle

of the Godhead and therefore of the universe lies behind Samartha’s theology of

dialogue, which is foundational to the ecumenical approach to other faiths. He

insisted on the relevance of the philosophy of advaita, claiming that the

universal or “unbound” Spirit or advaita provides the “unitive vision” that

holds Indian communities together and allows for the “traffic across the

borders” that is dialogue. Samartha describes dialogue itself as not so much a

method or technique but “a mood, a spirit, an attitude of love and respect” for

“our neighbours of other faiths”. That is, dialogue takes place in the “milieu”

of the Spirit.

 

Another word used for the Holy Spirit is Antaryamin – “Indwelling One”, a term

from the bhakti tradition of devotion to a personal deity. In the s Bishop A.J.

Appasamy used this concept to interpret the doctrine of the Holy Spirit in terms

of “abiding” in John’s Gospel, understanding this to refer to the inner life of

the believer, particularly in its moral dimensions. In fact, Appasamy uses

antaryamin to refer to the indwelling of all the persons of the Trinity, as do

other famous bhaktas such as Narayan Vaman Tilak, the Maharashtrian poet. It

seems the closeness of the bhakti relationship with the divine needs no

mediation and therefore no explicit theology of the Holy Spirit, though the

language is highly spiritual. This is clearly evident in the work of Vengal

Chakkarai who regards the Holy Spirit as the continuing presence of resurrected

Jesus, the permanent Avatar or appearance of God, and concludes that “the Holy

Spirit is Jesus himself taking his abode within us”. Chakkarai’s theology starts

from the reality of the experience of the Spirit, of “faith-union” with Christ

and he accuses Western theologians of obscuring this fact with creeds and

formulations. For the bhakta, the union with the Christ is not the result of

renunciation and a process of self-realisation but an immediate experience in

the midst of life from which loving devotion flows. This is what gives bhakti

its popular appeal. It is a revival or pentecostal-charismatic type of

spirituality and, in this sense, many indigenous Christian movements of India,

such as those described by F. Hrangkhuma, could be described as bhakti

movements.

 

The Spirit as Shakti

 

Believing that the Bible affirmed the presence of God in creation from the

beginning, Appasamy identified the meeting place of the communities of India as

a spiritual one and this paved the way for the dialogue with religion and

society initiated in post-Independence India by P.D. Devanandan. In Appasamy’s

view, the Christian experience of the Holy Spirit was an intensification of the

general presence of the Spirit that preceded it. He therefore disagreed strongly

with P. Chenchiah, who emphasised the “new cosmic energy” of the Holy Spirit

released in “an outburst or inrush into history” by the resurrection of Jesus

Christ, as if it had not been present before. Chenchiah, who was the leader of a

group of radical Indian theologians known in the s as the Madras “Rethinking

Group”, reversed advaita mysticism by advocating the affirmation of creation and

of activity rather than withdrawal from the world. He did so on the grounds that

the universal Spirit or Brahman is manifested in the power of Shakti, or the

Spirit, which comes upon the world from outside not within and empowers a

process of evolution of creation toward a better humanity – an idea that he

derived from the philosophy of Aurobindo Ghose.

 

Like Appasamy, Chenchiah found the immanence of the Spirit in the Fourth Gospel

in keeping with “the intellectual and spiritual leanings of India” but he

differed in that he based his theology of the Spirit on a dynamic conception of

shakti rather than the more static antaryamin. Chenchiah believed “the raw fact

of Christ” would lead to the establishment of a new universe by a process of

unconscious change in which the Spirit, like a gas, was infused into history.

Rethinking Christianity in terms of shakti, Chenchiah insisted that the

uniqueness of Christianity could not depend on its institutions or doctrines but

only in its transcendence over other faiths as the religion of new birth by the

Holy Spirit. Appasamy believed Chenchiah’s approach was more Western than

Indian, that it was incompatible with orthodox Christian doctrine, and that it

ignored the church. For his part, Chenchiah rejected Appasamy’s bhakti marga

because he saw it as a way of retreat as opposed to a dynamic way forward.

 

The shakti tradition derives from the pre-Aryan concept of primal energy, the

feminine power of the creation. That is, it predates the rise of the Brahmins

and the Hindu caste structure. It is therefore attractive to those who reject

the hegemony of Vedic Hinduism and seek to subvert it. The late elder-statesman

of Indian Christian theology, M.M. Thomas followed Chenchiah in making the new

creation wrought in Christ the starting point for theology in order to interpret

the gospel for modern, secular India, rather than in traditional, religious

terms. Thomas recounts how Hindu reformers struggled within classical Hinduism

to transform a static concept of the world as the unfolding of the Universal

Spirit into a purposive one in which the Spirit is “the dynamic of cosmic

evolution”. Though they succeeded in so doing, in Thomas’s view they still

tended to lack a “realistic appreciation of the depth of evil which the Spirit

of God has to contend with”, as described in the New Testament by the language

of Satan and evil spirits. The language of non-brahminic shakti contains within

it the “spirituality for combat” that Thomas was searching for and lays a

pneumatological foundation for theologies of liberation.

 

In his liberation pneumatology Samuel Rayan, theologian and long-time campaigner

for the rights of the dalits or outcaste people of India, sees “the Holy Spirit,

the Spirit of God and of Jesus Christ” as the “heart of the Christian gospel”.

Drawing on the shakti tradition, he portrays the Spirit as a “breath of fire”,

who comes “to enable us to re-create our earth, not to put us to sleep” and is

present “not in ethereal euphoria, but in committed historical action”. He

advocates “spiritual struggle” to overcome the forces of violence and oppression

in society and bring about justice. The Spirit is the “breath” or yeast of new

life that invigorates the “bread”, which is the earth, and brings about a

redistribution of its resources to the benefit of all. This understanding of the

earth as a theological and a liturgical reality has made Rayan is a leading

voice in eco theology in ecumenical circles. The feminine nature of shakti is

particularly attractive to feminist theologians, who have used the shakti

tradition, especially its close association between the female and nature, to

motivate eco-feminist commitment to the liberation of both women and creation.

 

Discerning the Spirit Study of theologians from different strands of Indian

Christian theology reveals that they discern the Spirit according to different

criteria. This can be illustrated by further consideration of three of the

theologians we have already mentioned, all from the late twentieth century –

Stanley Samartha, Vandana and Samuel Rayan. Samartha, a Methodist ecumenical,

for example, looks for the Spirit of dialogue, who creates openness to others

and enables “traffic across the boundaries” of one religion and another. In

order to bring communities together for the task of nation-building, he discerns

the Spirit where there is cooperation and mutual respect. Vandana, former

Provincial of the Society of the Sacred Heart, seeks to build bridges between

Christians and Hindus by inculturating the gospel in terms of Hindu traditions

of spirituality. She sees the Spirit in the common spiritual experience which,

she believes, lies at the heart of both Hinduism and Christianity: the

experience of the oneness of the inner self with the Divine Self or of the unity

of Son with the Father. She therefore looks for the Spirit of the waters of life

who brings personal peace and religious harmony. As a Jesuit liberation

theologian, Rayan discerns the Spirit at work in movements for the liberation of

the poor and oppressed. The “Breath of Fire” is an uncontrollable wind that

consumes the unjust structures that oppress the poor and frees them to

experience the good news of the kingdom where there is “bread for the breadless”

and “wine for the wineless”.

 

Samartha’s spirit of truth, Vandana’s spirit of abiding in God and Rayan’s

transforming Spirit of fire are all recognisably biblical models of the Spirit –

Samartha and Vandana drawing mainly on John’s Gospel particularly and Rayan

primarily on Luke. None of them alone is a full interpretation of the biblical

witness to the Spirit and this suggests that all three aspects of the Spirit’s

work need to be taken together. Other aspects could also be added such as

witness and charismatic power.

 

Spirituality

 

India not only has an awareness of God as Spirit, it is also a land of many

spiritualities, of which advaitic Hinduism, bhakti devotion and shaktism are

three major types. “Spirituality” is a very difficult term to define but it is

used to distinguish religious approaches or attitudes from religions themselves

and thus it crosses the boundaries of religious communities. So Samartha

identified and utilised a spirituality of dialogue found in all religious

traditions. As we have seen above, the term need not apply only to “passive

self-interiority or transcendentalism” – though it is most used by this camp –

but also to active response to the world that issues from a relationship with

the Divine. Nevertheless, the awareness of God as Spirit explains why Asian (as

illustrated by Indian) theology gives much more importance than Western theology

to the categories of interiority, experience and mystery. In other words, there

is a close relationship between theology and spirituality and between the mode

of theologising and the religio-cultural traditions of India. This

enablesVandana to define spirituality as “life lived according to the Spirit”.

Rayan’s awareness of the Spirit’s activity in the world as Liberator and

presence as Creator brings together action for human welfare with aesthetic and

mystical concerns. Rayan has developed a theology of “mission in the Spirit” is

also a comprehensive approach to the whole of life in which contemplation serves

to motivate historical action.

 

In the awareness that God is Spirit, Indian theology is not only propositional

but also sometimes mystical, analogical and creative in its imagery. Though

Indian theology may be very rational, Indian theologians of many persuasions

insist that theology should be interpreted more broadly than systematic

formulation of doctrine. Theology is enriched by the use of symbol and myth and

expressed in varied cultural forms; in words, it is an art-form as well as a

science. In the visual arts, Jyoti Sahi has reflected deeply on his work and the

significance of art as a mediator of the gospel and a form of theologising. A

Catholic with a Protestant and Reformed Hindu background, he aims to bridge

advaita, bhakti and shakti frameworks through his work by expressing the

“theology of Indian Christian culture” through its diverse traditions. The

heritage of bhakti leads many theologians to express themselves in poetry and

song. Thomas Thangaraj advocates a “singable theology” as a way of changing the

heart as well as educating the mind and, similarly, Rayan describes the Spirit

as a poet who “sees and senses symbolism, relationships, and meanings...” and

points them out in order to inspire action for liberation. Dance is also an

immensely popular art-form in India and so Vandana creatively interprets the

role of the Spirit in John’s gospel as the “dance of the waters”, moving

gracefully in and between contemporary movements in India under the direction of

the Master Choreographer. Thus Indian theology reflects awareness of the

creativity and boundlessness of the Spirit of God.

 

Conclusion: mission in the Spirit

 

Interaction between Indian theologians on the theme of the Spirit addresses and

sheds light on many of the questions raised in international debate at the

Canberra Assembly referred to earlier. This short paper does no tallow for a

detailed answer to each question from an Indian perspective; this I have

attempted elsewhere. However some brief concluding remarks can be made to

address them.

 

Indian Christian theologians have drawn attention to the mission of the Spirit

that everywhere precedes that of the church. Christian mission is then defined

as recognising and cooperating with the Spirit. If so, then discerning the

Spirit becomes a matter of crucial significance because it determines the nature

of the mission. It is clear that Christian criteria for discernment will be

derived from the life and teaching of Jesus Christ and therefore be distinct

(though not necessarily different) from Hindu criteria for spiritual

discernment. On the other hand, the varied interpretation of the Spirit as

atman, antaryamin and shakti highlights the problem of discernment and raises

the question of whether the one Spirit appealed to by religious leaders (both

Hindu and Christian) is always legitimately identified with the Spirit of God.

This diversity calls into question categorical claims that a particular

tradition or spirituality or movement represents the work of the Spirit. It

implies that the Spirit is associated with contemplation and devotion and acts

of liberation rather than exclusively with one kind of religious expression over

against another, and points towards the combination of the three – in Indian

terms jnana, bhakti and karma – as the true evidence of the Spirit’s work.

 

Spirit christology suggests an openness of approach to people of other faiths

and a willingness to affirm what is good and true in other faiths on the grounds

that the mission of the Spirit precedes and goes beyond the incarnation.

However, use of atman and antaryamin, which lead to theologies of the Spirit of

peace who promotes cooperation and mutual respect and who brings personal and

religious harmony, contrast in India with theologies of non-Brahminic shakti,

the Spirit of fire who refines and humanises society. They reflect the conflict

in Indian Christian theology between emphasis on the inculturation of the gospel

in Vedic terms that will be appreciated by caste Hindus educated in their

philosophical traditions and concern for a theology of liberation for the poor,

whose indigenous spirituality is of a folk tradition and who see the Hindu caste

system a sa major cause of their poverty. Taken together they imply that the

Spirit of mission is a way of peace with justice in the knowledge that the

Spirit of Jesus Christ both inspires whatever is good and true and also empowers

challenge and change.

 

The Indian spiritual tradition also brings a distinctive contribution to the

understanding of mission: the sense that mission, however it is done, should be

“in the Spirit” and therefore the need to consider mission spirituality to

ensure that the means of mission are consistent with its end. It implies that

mission should be understood not as a task but as a spirit – the Spirit breathed

into the disciples by Jesus Christ. Mission is a way of being in Christ that

orients us to share the gospel. “Mission in the Spirit” calls into question some

traditional models of mission and opens up the way to missionary activity that

is sensitive and appreciative of the cultural and spiritual heritage of others.

Awareness that the Spirit of peace is also the Spirit of fire is a reminder of

the need for both presence and prophecy, affirmation as well as discernment in

mission. The Spirit that is the both breath within us and also the wind that

comes from outside is the medium in which true mission takes place.

 

Kirsteen Kim, “The Holy Spirit in Mission in India”

 

Biodata

Dr Kirsteen Kim is Tutor at the United College of the Ascension, Selly Oak,

Birmingham, UK and Coordinator of the UCA Mission Programme. Between and she

taught missiology at UBS, along with her husband, Revd Dr Sebastian C.H. Kim.

She is British by birth and has also lived in Korea and the USA. Her book,

Mission in the Spirit: The Holy Spirit in the Indian Christian Theologies was

published last year by ISPCK. Kirsteen Kim, “The Holy Spirit in Mission in

India” OCMS, 6 April 2004

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