Guest guest Posted July 10, 2007 Report Share Posted July 10, 2007 Thank you Gopi Garu. Namasthe. Wish You A Happy And A Prosperous New Year. " Though one may conquer a thousand times a thousand men in battle, the person who conquers himself is the greatest warrior. " Budha " Before flooding India with socialistic or political ideas, first deluge the land with spiritual ideas. " ...... Swami Vivekananda Paritala Gopi Krishna <p_gopi_krishna Tuesday, July 10, 2007 7:13:46 AM www.telugubhakti.com THE NECESSITY OF RELIGION Posted by: " Uttishthata " uttishthata Mon Jul 9, 2007 8:06 pm (PST) THE NECESSITY OF RELIGION - Swami Vivekananda Of all the forces that have worked and are still working to mould the destinies of the human race, none, certainly, is more potent than that, the manifestation of which we call religion. All social organisations have as a background, somewhere, the workings of that peculiar force, and the greatest cohesive impulse ever brought into play amongst human units has been derived from this power. It is obvious to all of us that in very many cases the bonds religion have proved stronger than the bonds of race, or climate, or even of descent. It is a well-known fact that persons worshipping the same God, believing in the same religion, have stood by each other, with much greater strength and constancy, than people of merely the same descent, or even brothers. Various attempts have been made to trace the beginnings of religion. In all the ancient religions which have come down to us at the present day, we find one claim made -- that they are all supernatural, that their genesis is not, as it were, in the human brain, but that they have originated somewhere outside of it. Two theories have gained some acceptance amongst modern scholars. One is the spirit theory of religion, the other the evolution of the idea of the Infinite. One party maintains that ancestor worship is the beginning of religious ideas; the other, that religion originates in the personification of the power of nature. Man wants to keep up the memory of his dead relatives and thinks they are living even when the body is dissolved, and he wants to place food for them and, in a certain sense, to worship them. Out of that came the growth we call religion. Studying the ancient religions of the Egyptians, Babylonians, Chinese, and many other races in America and elsewhere, we find very clear traces of this ancestor worship being the beginning of religion. With the ancient Egyptians, the first idea of the soul was that of a double. Every human body contained in it another being very similar to it; and when a man died, this double went out of the body and yet lived on. But the life of the double lasted only so long as the dead body remained intact, and that is why we find among the Egyptians so much solicitude to keep the body uninjured. And that is why they built those huge pyramids in which they preserved the bodies. For, if any portion of the external body was hurt, the double would be correspondingly injured. This is clearly ancestor worship. With the ancient Babylonians we find the same idea of the double, but with a variation. The double lost all sense of love; it frightened the living to give it food and drink, and to help it in various ways. It even lost all affection for its own children and its own wife. Among the ancient Hindus also, we find traces of this ancestor worship. Among the Chinese, the basis of their religion may also be said to be ancestor worship, and it still permeates the length and breadth of that vast country. In fact, the only religion that can really be said to flourish in China is that of ancestor worship. Thus it seems, on the one hand, a very good position is made out for those who hold the theory of ancestor worship as the beginning of religion. The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda Volume 2 [ Page : 57 ] (Delivered in London) ------------ --------- --------- --------- --------- --------- - QUOTE OF THE DAY: Let the mind be cheerful but calm. Never let it run into excesses, because every excess will be followed by a reaction. - Swami Vivekananda www.telugubhakti.com - A one stop Bhakti and Cultural portal. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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