Hinduism and Workplace Ethics

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HinduismLongForm.ppt.pptx

Hinduism

An Introduction

to the

Sanatana Dharma

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Simple Background

“Hinduism” is a 19th-century word

Persian: hindu 

Sanskrit sindhu (“river”)

Religions from the Indus Valley

“Indian Religion(s)”

750+ million “Hindus” in India

30+ million “Hindus” abroad

Third largest religion in the world

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Hinduism is one of the oldest extant religious traditions in the world.

From at least 2500 BCE there were people living in the Indus Valley.

Several cities with advanced plumbing, architecture, and populations of 40,000+ (e.g., Harappa and Mohenjo-daro) flourished.

Some scholars have hypothesized that the “Aryan Invasion” is the key event in the founding of Indian civilization and Hinduism. (2000-1500 BCE)

Now other scholars have questioned the “invasion” theory in favor of more organic theories of cultural dispersion.

The earliest forms of Hinduism are often called “Vedic.” (2500-800 BCE)

Dominated by a priestly class concerned with “fire sacrifices.”

The fire rituals communicated with the gods, influenced them, and restored the vital powers of the universe.

Dyaus Pitr (cf: Zeus & Jupiter)

Agni (god of fire)

Soma (a god & a drug?)

“If I were asked under what sky the human mind . . . has most deeply pondered over the greatest problems of life, and has found solutions to some of them which well deserve the attention even of those who have studied Plato and Kant--I should point to India. And if I were to ask myself from what literature we who have been nurtured almost exclusively on the thoughts of Greeks and Romans, and of one Semitic race, the Jewish, may draw the corrective which is most wanted in order to make our inner life more perfect, more comprehensive, more universal, in fact more truly human a life . . . again I would point to India.” -- Max Müller.

“"I should have been glad to acquire some sort of idea of Hindu theology, but the difficulties were too great.”--Mark Twain

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What do people want?

Pleasure

What do people want?*

Pleasure

Success: wealth, fame, power

competitive (& precarious)

insatiable (potentially)

centers on the self (lower-case “s”)

achievements are ephemeral

*based on Huston Smith’s, World Religions

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What do people want?

Pleasure

Success: wealth, fame, power

Together, we can think of these two as the “path of desire.”

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What do people want?

Pleasure

Success: wealth, fame, power

Duty

What do people really want/desire?

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What do people want?

Pleasure

Success: wealth, fame, power

Duty

What do people really want/desire?

“being”

“knowing”

joy

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What do people want?

Pleasure

Success: wealth, fame, power

Duty

What do people really want/desire?

“being”infinite being

“knowing”infinite awareness

joyinfinite bliss

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What do people want?

Pleasure

Success: wealth, fame, power

Duty

Liberation (moksha)

“Liberation from the cycle of existence (samsara) often identified with a state of knowledge in which the phenomenal world and its concerns are shut out in favor of a mystical identification with the ultimate, changeless ground of all things.”--Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy

“release from the finitude that restricts us from the limitless being, consciousness, and bliss our hearts desire”--Huston Smith

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Life’s Limitations

pain (physical and psychological)

ignorance

restricted being

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Four Paths

reflective through knowledge Jnana (yoga)
emotional through love bhakti (yoga)
active through work karma (yoga)
experimental through experiment raja (yoga) [hatha]

yoga = “union”

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Common Preliminary Commitments

Cultivate habits of:

non-injury

truthfulness

non-stealing

self-control

cleanliness

contentment

self-discipline

compelling desire

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Jnana Yoga/Path

Path to oneness with God through knowledge--a transforming intuitive discernment--turning the knower into that which she/he knows.

Reflecting on the nature of the Atman--The self which is eternal and (in Advaita) identical with Brahman (sacred Power/Divine Being)

“Brahman is all, and the Self (Atman) is Brahman” (Mandukya Upanishad, 2)

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Bhakti Yoga/path

Directs towards God the love that is at the base of every human heart.

Probably the most popular and frequently practiced form

Tends to insist on God’s otherness: “Pray no more for utter oneness with God . . .”--Song of Tukaram

Strives to adore God with every fabric of one’s being (as opposed to acknowledging union)

Tends towards incarnational representations of the deity--an ishta

But:

Lord, forgive three sins that are due to my human limitations,

Thou art everywhere, but I worship you here;

Thou art without form, but I worship you in these forms;

Thou needs no praise, yet I offer you these prayers and salutations.

Lord, forgive three sins that are due to my human limitations.

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karma yoga/path

By wise and proper involvement in the work of the world, one can also move towards God/moksha.

every action performed on the external world reacts on the doer

work for God’s sake instead of my own

work done selflessly

“He who does the task/Dictated by duty/Caring nothing/For the fruit of the action/ He is a yogi. (Bhagava-Gita, VI:1)

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raja yoga/path

Disciplined bodily and mental activity designed to explore the nature of the true self.

Layers of human being:

bodies

minds

subconscious

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Being Itself

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raja yoga/path (cont.)

Eight Steps: (hatha yoga)

Five Abstentions: injury, lying, stealing,sensuality, greed

Five Observances: cleanliness, contentment, self-control, studiousness, contemplation of the divine

asanas (postures, e.g., “the lotus position”)

breathing

contemplation (turning inward)

concentration (leave the mind alone)

merging of subject/object; out of time;

samadhi: sam=together with, adhi=the Lord

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Stages of Life

The student

Householder (pleasure, success, duty)

“Retirement”

sannyasin (“the one who neither hates nor loves anything”)

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Caste System

Beginning with Aryan intrusion (2nd m. BCE)?

Four (plus) castes:

Brahmins (seers)

Kshatriyas (administrators)

Vaishyas (artisans, farmers, craftsmen)

Shudras (unskilled laborers)

-------------------------------------------------------------------------- “untouchables” (today: “dalit”)

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God

Brahman (etymology: br=breath, brih=to be great)

God can be thought of as Creator (Brahma), Preserver (Vishnu), and Destroyer (Shiva)

But in many Hindu expressions God is transpersonal: beyond it all

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Hindu Pantheon

Though affirming Brahman as “ultimate reality,” Hinduism is highly polytheistic.

The Hindu Pantheon is structured around “divine couples” (male-structure/form::female-energy/matter) who serve different functions in the universe; in a way, they point to the various forces in life/the cosmos.

Many deities are depicted with a “vehicle”—an animal with whom they are often portrayed.

The “Trimurti” is organized around Brahma (creation), Vishnu (maintenance), Shiva (destruction).

Brahma (creation)

Consort/wife: Saraswati, goddess of knowledge and speech.

Vehicle: hamsa or swan (seven swans).

Vishnu (maintainer of the universe)

Consort: Lakshmi (good fortune and prosperity)

Vehicle: “Garuda”—eagle/human hybrid

Vishnu appears in many avatars (traditionally ten, the last, who has not yet appeared, is Kalki, who will come when he is most needed).

The two most important avatars of Vishnu are Rama and Krishna.

Shiva (the destroyer)

Consort(s): Kali (et al, Sati, Parvati, Lalita, Durga . . .)

Vehicle: Nandi, the Bull

Ganesha (son of Shiva and Parvati)

Devi (the goddess) is sometimes worshipped as the supreme manifestation of Brahman. All other gods and goddesses would then be considered emanations of her.

Devi (Devanagari: देवी) is the Sanskrit word for Goddess.

Devi is synonymous with Shakti, the female aspect of the divine, as conceptualized by the Shakta tradition of Hinduism. She is the female counterpart without whom the male aspect, which represents consciousness or discrimination, remains impotent and void. Goddess worship is an integral part of Hinduism.Devi is, quintessentially, the core form of every Hindu Goddess. As the female manifestation of the supreme lord, she is also called Prakriti or Maya, as she balances out the male aspect of the divine addressed Purusha. [1]ManifestationsDevi or the divine feminine is an equal conterpart to the divine masculine, and hence manifests herself as the Trinity herself - the Creator (Durga or the Divine Mother), Preserver (Lakshmi, Parvati & Sarswati) and Destroyer (Mahishasura-Mardini, Kali & Smashanakali ).

Source: The Goddess Files

People

Individual souls (jivas) enter the world mysteriously

They begin as the souls of the simplest forms of life and reincarnate/transmigrate (samsara) into more complex bodies until they enter human bodies

Souls in human bodies are engaged in issues of freedom and responsibility (karma)

Is this fatalism?

there is choice

“natural” causes factor in

ultimately the soul gets what it wants

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The World

A multiple world with innumerable galaxies (horizontally), innumerable tiers (vertically), and innumerable cycles (temporally)

Moral world in which karma is always operational

a “middle” place; will never replace paradise

maya (an element of illusion)

a place of human growth

lila (site of exuberant divine activity)

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There are three major devotional traditions:

Vaishnava (Vishnu)

Generally vegetarian

Worship Vishnu, Rama, Krishna

Oriented towards duty and tradition

Shaiva (Shiva)

Worship focuses on union of opposites, especially creation and destruction

Tend to emphasize ascetic practices.

Shakta (Devi)

Worship “the goddess” as ultimate reality

(Bengali)

Not as likely to be vegetarian

Hindus worship principally through seeing (Darshan) an image of the divinity.

Shrines can be anywhere, in great temples, by the road, or in the home.

Puja is the act of worship, offering them fruit, flowers, incense, water, or cloth in order to symbolize an offering of the self to the god/goddess.

In some cases deities are processed through the streets (at festivals, etc.).

Sometimes the worshipper will take a pilgrimage to a sacred place, the most well-known being Benares, on the Ganges River.

Jainism

There are about 4 million Jains today, most of them “lay people”

Historians consider Jainism to have been founded by Mahavira (599-527 BCE) as a reaction to the conservative Brahminism of the 6th-century BCE

In general, they do NOT accept the Hindu Scriptures or rituals, but they do share a belief in the transmigration of souls

The most obvious characteristic of them is their devotion to the principle of ahimsa, or non-injury

monks wear a veil

even lay people forbidden to drink after sunset

Jainism (cont.)

Jains are followers of the Jinas, or “tirthankaras” (the ford-makers, who reveal the path to moksha)

They believe 24 tirthankaras appear in every half cycle

Mahavira is the 24th tirthankara in this cycle

A contemporary of Buddha, Mahavira renounced the world at the age of 30, and after 12 years as a wandering ascetic achieved enlightenment

He then converted 12 disciples who structure his teachings into the Jain Scriptures

He died in meditation and became a liberated soul

Jainism (cont.)

Jain monks commit to the Great Vows:

non-injury (ahisma)

truth-speaking (satya)

sexual abstinence (brahmacharya)

non-stealing (asteya)

detachment from persons, places, and things (aparigraha)

Lay people take the “lesser vows” which try to apply the great vows to more “normal” modes of living: e.g., strict vegetarianism, no work that involves the deliberate destruction of life (e.g., hunting no, farming okay).

In the fourth century CE a major split occurred:

Digambaras: all possessions, including clothing are hindrance to liberation

Shvetambaras: detachment is in the mind (and not wearing clothes can also cause injury; e.g., if you light a fire to stay warm)

The only objects a Digambara monk is allowed to carry are a water-pot and a fly-whisk of peacock feathers.

Sikhism

Some see them as rather different from Hinduism

Guru Nanak, ca. 1500, had encounter leaving him to seek a path to God that didn’t require strict identification with Islam or Hinduism.

In keeping with Hinduism, it affirms the ultimacy of a supreme and formless God beyond human conceiving

In keeping with Islam, it rejects the notion of avatars (divine incarnations), caste distinctions, images as aids to worship, and the sanctity of the Vedas

Follows Hinduism, but not Islam, in affirming reincarnation

Five k’s (in Punjabi):

uncut hair (conserves vitality, draws upward)

comb (cleanliness and order)

steel bracelet (shackles one to God)

undershorts (one always dressed for action)

dagger (originally needed for self-defense)

Seek salvation through union with God, by realizing, through love, the Person of God, who dwells in the depths of their own being.

World renunciation does not really figure in their faith.

About 13 million Sikhs in the world

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Though not really a proselytizing religion, Hinduism, especially in its most philosophical and meditative forms, has made a number of converts in the West.

Swami Vivekananda (appeared at the first World Parliament of Religions in Chicago in 1893)—philosophical Hinduism.

Transcendental Meditation (1960’s—Maharishi Mahesh Yogi)—ascetic Hinduism.

International Society for Krishna Consciousness— so called “Hare Krishnas” (1960’s Swami Prabhupada)—bhakti Hinduism.

Hatha Yoga.

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SIKHISM: HISTORICAL SOURCES

Sikhism is the newest of the major world religions

(Guru Nanak: 1469-1539)

Today, 16 – 20 million adherents

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SOURCES?

1) Adi Granth (Sri Guru Granth Sahib)

Devotional hymns and poetry

Not historical events

GURU NANAK

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BACKGROUND TO SIKH TRADITION: MILIEU

Nanak very much in line with Bhakti tradition

Version of Bhakti known as the ‘Sant tradition’

Sant = ‘one who knows the truth’

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SANT TRADITION:

God = nirguna – without form

Vedas are not authoritative

Brahmin priesthood rejected

Opposed to ALL outer forms of religion (pilgrimage, images, scripture)

Religion is strictly an interior affair

Salvation open to all, regardless of caste or gender

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THE EARLY FOLLOWERS OF THE GURUS WERE NOT INITIALLY CONSIDERED A DISTINCT COMMUNITY

THEY WERE SIMPLY ONE OF THE BHAKTI MOVEMENTS THAT WERE SWEEPING ACROSS INDIA

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GURU NANAK BELIEVED THAT GOD COULD BE FOUND IN ALL TRADITIONS

RITUALS, SCRIPTURE IN AND OF THEMSELVES ARE NOT ENOUGH

THESE BECOME ENDS AS OPPOSED TO MEANS WHEREBY TRUTH CAN BE FOUND

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COMMUNITY OF NANAK:

Householder is the ideal (not ascetic)

Nam simaran – meditation on Divine name and nature of God

Satsang – community

Devotion to the Guru – receive darshan

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GURU NANAK’S SUCCESSOR

Rejection of family lineage

Eldest son was an ascetic

Youngest son not interested

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5 Ks: SYMBOLS OF THE KHALSA

Kachh – undergarment (breeches)

Kes – uncut hair

Kirpan – dagger

Kanga – comb

Kara – iron bangle

5 Ks

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MEDITATION WAS STILL ON THE DIVINE NAME

BUT THERE WAS NOW A NEW ASPECT TO ‘BEING SIKH’

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GURU GRANTH SAHIB

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GOD IN SIKHISM:

Mul Mantra

True name

One who creates

Beyond all opposition

A form beyond time

Unborn, self-born

The guru’s grace…

The ancient truth, ageless truth

Is also, now, truth

And Nanak says,

It will always be truth.”

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GOD:

“There is One Supreme Being, the Eternal Reality. He is the Creator, without fear and devoid of enmity. He is immortal, never incarnated, self-existent, known by grace through the Gurus. The Eternal One, from the beginning, through all time, present now, the Everlasting Reality.”

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GOD HAS NO PHYSICAL ATTRIBUTES, ALTHOUGH THE IMAGERY OF GOD AS LOVER IS OFTEN USED

EVEN NAMES OF GOD SUCH AS RAM, ALLAH, AKAL PURAKH, SAT GURU

BUT GOD IS ALWAYS UNDERSTOOD AS ONE

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GOD AS CREATOR:

“For millions of years there was nothing but darkness over the void. There was neither earth nor sky, only the Infinite Will. There was neither night nor day, sun nor moon…The sources of creation did not exist, there was no speech, no air, no water, no birth, no death, no coming or going…There was no other only the One.”

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HUMANITY IN SIKHISM:

“People are born and then die. Where did they come from? Say where did they emerge and whither do they go?

Those who have the Name in their hearts and on their tongues become beyond desire, as God is.

They come and go in the natural way [according to the law of karma], born because of the desires of their mind. The God-minded are emancipated and are not bound again for they dwell on the word and attain deliverance through the Name” (AG 152).

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IGNORANCE IS THE ROOT OF HUMANITY’S PROBLEMS

NOT KNOWING THEIR TRUE NATURE

NOT KNOWING THEIR TRUE DESTINY

THUS, PEOPLE GO ‘ROUND AND ‘ROUND IN THE KARMIC CIRCLE OF REBIRTH

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IGNORANCE IS BASED ON HAUMAI = EGO

HAUMAI BLINDS US TO OUR DEPENDENCE ON GOD

IT BINDS US TO THE NEED FOR LIBERATION

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A PERSON CAUGHT UP IN EGO, IN HAUMAI IS CALLED MANMUKH (ONE WHO IS IN BONDAGE TO THE EGO PERSONALITY

A PERSON WHOSE FOCUS IS GOD, GOD’S WILL IS CALLED A GURMUKH

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SIKH STAGES OF LIBERATION:

PIETY, KNOWLEDGE, EFFORT, GRACE, TRUTH

FIRST THREE STAGES ARE AS FAR AS A HUMAN CAN GO BY HUMAN EFFORT

– PIETY, KNOWLEDGE, EFFORT

4TH STAGE: GRACE – GOD’S GRACE

- HUMAN EFFORT HAS REACHED ITS LIMIT

- NOW GOD’S GRACE MUST TAKE THEM FURTHER

“IF ONE GOES ONE STEP TOWARDS GOD, THE LORD COMES TOWARD ONE A THOUSAND TIMES.”

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5TH STAGE: LIBERATION = MUKTI

The level of truth

Can only be attained if one has gone through the first four stages

This is one who is ‘God-minded’ = gurmukh

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LIBERATION CAN BE ATTAINED WHILE IN LIFE

THIS STATE IS THAT OF THE JIWAN MUKT

HERE, JOY AND SORROW ARE THE SAME

HAPPINESS IS ETERNAL

ONE IS IN A STATE OF BLISS

NO KARMA IS ACQUIRED

ONE MERGES WITH THE WILL OF THE DIVINE

JIWAN MUKTI

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RESULT?

SERVICE TO OTHERS:

“Those who meditate on God do good to others” (Guru Arjan).

Nam Simaran (the practice of meditating on ‘the Name’)

Transforming of personality through practice

NISHAN SAHIB: SAFRON FLAG SIGNIFYING GURDWARA WITH KHALSA INSIGNIA

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KIRTAN: THE SINGING OF HYMNS

RAGIS: PROFESSIONAL SINGERS

SIKHS: ANANDPUR: 1999 – 300TH ANNIVERSARY OF KHALSA

SIKH LANGAR: KITCHENER

SIKH WORSHIP SERVICE: PRASAD DISTRIBUTED