| An Overview of Hinduism by Grady L. Davis, MDiv, PhD and Rickard L. Sawyer, ThM, ThD, DMin See also: The Vocabulary of Hinduism |
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Word of As the Olam Habah quickly approaches, each of us is faced with some very difficult choices. One of these choices is whether or not to defend ourselves from those who would force us to "submit" to the rule of Islam and Allah over every aspect of our daily lives. (The word "Islam" literally means "to submit" or "to surrender" [to Allah].) We have decided to stand with Joshua: "As for me and my household, we will serve ADONAI!" (Jos 24:15 (CJB) - Show Context) Our political and religious leaders tell us daily that Islam is a "peaceful religion" and that the great majority of Muslims want only to live next to us in peace. However, it is expressly forbidden by the Qur'an for a Muslim to accept a non-Muslim as a friend (Sura 3:28), and whoever does so "shall have nothing of Allah" (i.e., cannot, by their own definition, be a true Muslim). If a person claims to be a Muslim, they must (by definition) believe the Qur'an; if they claim to believe the Qur'an, they must believe the whole Qur'an, which says: "Say to those who disbelieve [the Qur'an]: You shall be vanquished, and driven together to hell; and evil is the resting-place" (Sura 3:12). In Islamic eschatology (the teaching about the future) the ultimate goal of Islam is to convert or kill all Jews and Christians, and to have a one-world Islamic government and religion. Click here for more from the Qur'an. Due to the numerous threats we have received from "peaceful" Muslims, we have been forced to remove our physical address from the website. |
"Every Man is a G-d "
Of all the world's great religions, Hinduism is the most difficult to define. It did not have any one founder. It has many "scriptures" which are authoritative but none that is exclusively so. Hinduism is more like a tree that has grown gradually than like a building that has been erected by some great architect at some definite point in time.
Hindus themselves refer to their religion as the "eternal system," or sanatana dharma. The term "Hindu" was coined by the Persians after the "Indus" or "Sindu" River.
Estimates put the origin of the Hindu sacred scriptures, the Vedas, meaning "wisdom" or "knowledge," as the first of the Hindu writings. The simple worship of the Vedic gods was transformed into an elaborate sacrificial ritual which benefits the worshiper only if the intricate ritual is followed exactly. It is from this direction of worship that the priestly class of Hinduism, the Brahmins, arose.
In their philosophy, they believe in pantheism, the idea that all is
The Upanishads are the concluding portions of the Vedas and contain the developed essence of Vedic teaching. They teach that any man can who strives for it reach a divine state. The individual personality is denied, being considered part of the world of illusion, or maya, the merging and the obliteration of the self in the sea of the "One Reality," or
Karma operates as an inexorable law of retributive justice. It is an internal law of nature, independent of the decrees of the gods. According to the law of karma, a man is the result of his own past. Whatever a man sows, he will also reap. If one does good, he will escape the human condition (which is illusion), and return to the divine state. If a man does bad, he will remain in bondage to the human condition, being born again and again until he has worked out his bad karma. This belief in the rebirth, or the transmigration of the soul, which many call reincarnation[1], is known in Hinduism as samsara. Not only men, but also all animals, are engaged in the wheel of samsara, passing from one level of life to another.
The formation of the Bhagavad-Gita marked a turning point in Hinduism. It is the philosophical basis of popular Hinduism. The book was probably written around 203 BCE and reached its present form around 200 CE. During this period the concept of the avatar, or incarnation of deity, was introduced and became very popular. The avatars are the warrior gods who triumph over sin and evil by becoming what could be termed redeemers within the evil world of maya.
There are three major paths to salvation discussed in the Gita and recognized generally by all Hindus today. These methods of attaining salvation are karma marga (method), which is the way of disinterested action; bhakti marga the way of devotion; and jnana marga, which is the path of knowledge or mystical insight. Those who hold to the monistic philosophy of Vedanta use jnana as a means of achieving their self-realization through intuitive awareness. Those who are theistic (or henotheistic) and believe that
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While Vedanta has been the most influential philosophy among the intellectuals of India, the majority of common Hindu men and women are henotheistic or theistic, and worship incarnations of gods and local deities. There are three basic groups into which the various Hindu sects can be classified:
1. The abstract monists, who are followers of Advaita monism, and are few in number; they refuse to personify Brahma.
2. The Vishnuites, or Vaishnavas, who are devoted to the
3. The Shivaites, or Shaivas, who are devoted to the
Vaishnavas consider Vishnu to have incarnated in the form of his avatars, or manifestations in the flesh. Chief among these are Rama and Krishna.
As we shall see in our later discussions, Transactional Meditation can be loosely aligned with the Advaita monism and ISKCON with the Vishnuites.
The three primary Hindu gods form what is sometimes referred to as the "Hindu trinity:"
• Brahma is "the Creator"
• Shiva is "the Destroyer"
• Vishnu is "the Preserver"
Rama, Krishna, Buddha, Kalkin, and Jesus are all considered avatars or incarnations of Vishnu. In chapter 10 of the Bhagavad-Gita, Krishna declares, "I am the prince of demons." The Bible identifies the "prince of demons" as HaSatan, or Satan. Thus we see that the Hare Krishna cult, along with all of the other forms of Hinduism, is in reality the worship of Satan.
Shiva's consort Shakti is manifest as Kali, who is depicted in Hindu idolatry as standing on a beheaded body, wearing a necklace of human skulls. It is estimated by authorities in India that even today there are approximately 100 reported human sacrifices to Kali every year, as one might expect from Satan-worship.
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1. The ideas of transmigration and reincarnation are slightly different, in that reincarnation is generally associated only with humans, whereas transmigration includes all living things. When Westerners become involved in the Eastern religions, most find past and future human lives as acceptable, but are repulsed by the idea that they may be forced to return to earth as a cockroach or even as a toadstool. Thus they choose to profess a belief in reincarnation rather than the philosophy of transmigration as it is actually taught in the religions the seek to embrace. [RETURN]
Most of the documents in this section of our site are compiled from a series of lectures on the cults and world religions delivered by Prof. Rickard L. Sawyer, ThM, ThD, DMin (Ari Levitt) and Prof. Grady L. Davis, BD, MCM, PhD in the Department of Comparative Religion on the Alameda, California, campus of Golden Gate School of Theology from 1983 to 1985, and in numerous churches in California and Tennessee from 1980 to 1995. Some minor editorial changes have been made to present a more Messianic Jewish viewpoint than that of the original Baptist-oriented presentation.

