| |
The Symphony of Religion
Speech at the Interfaith Dialogue Association, Grand
Rapids, Michigan
Good evening. Thank you for giving me this opportunity to
speak to you and to be with old friends once again. I have mixed
feelings about your city. In 1990 when the Ganges Monastery was
looking for a printer in Grand Rapids, our publication was refused,
on the grounds that the printing company did not believe what
was said about God in the material! But at the same time our
Interfaith Dialogue Association was being born here, and you
are seeing tonight the fine results of that!
My title is, the symphony of religion. Sri Ramakrishna used to
say, "Why should I be monotonous? A flute has many holes;
shall I go on playing one note over and over? Why not sound all
the notes, using all the holes to play a merry tune?" He
wanted to enjoy God through the many ways in which He has been
found. And he reported that he discovered the same truth at the
summit of each religious path.. It was my fascination with this
man and his extraordinary life that drew me into the orbit of
Hinduism, or as I prefer to call it, Vedanta. Ramakrishna, you
know, was the most wonderful combination of spiritual profundity
and spontaneous joy.
So tonight I want to talk to you about three things: conversion,
organization and mutual irradiation.
Conversion
First, conversion. Huston Smith, whom you very well know,
announced in his first interview with Bill Moyers that he was
a member of the Methodist Church, and he came from missionary
parents.. I have to tell you that my name is still on the rolls
of the Presbyterian Church and my parents too were missionaries.
By my definition, I am still a Christian and will continue
to be so. Who defines what is a Christian? And a convert? Do
you realize that the entire concept of conversion arises only
in the context of Western religions with their labels and their
membership rolls? It is not universally applicable.
Scholars give us two meanings for this word. One is that upheaval,
usually sudden, in which a life is turned away from "worldliness"
and in the direction of holiness. As Buddha said, "from
self-seeking to self-sacrifice." "Make me a clean heart,
O God, and renew a right spirit within me," sings the psalmist.
In this sense I cannot be called a convert because yearning for
the holy came to me in early childhood and has been a long continuous
process -- one little conversion after another, if you like..
The other meaning of conversion is to migrate from one religious
framework to another, as if changing ones citizenship and entering
another closed circle. Nor am I a convert in this sense. What
did I turn away from, or against? Of what did I repent? How was
I reformed? As Seneca said, when accosted for his new views,
"I am not reformed, I am transfigured." I suggest to
you that we are faced here with augmentation, not conversion.
How wonderful it is, my friends, to be able to celebrate the
ceremonies and sympathize with the sacredness, of Buddhists,
Muslims, Christians and Jews, Sikhs and Hindus and the Bahai!
Don't you agree?
Organization
Conversion also implies organization, and I must remind you
that Hinduism does not have a centralized power, nor pope, nor
dogma nor a closed canon of scripture. It is not an organized
religion. Let me tell you a story. When Swami Vivekananda was
staying in Chicago he once confided to his hostess that in America
he faced the greatest temptation of his life. Smiling, she asked
him "Who was she, Swami?" He burst out laughing. "Oh,
it wasn't a lady," he replied, "It was Organization."
And surely you know that other tale about the devil being asked
what he would do with Truth, if he ever got hold of it. "Why,"
he answered, "I would organize it!" In India
it is often regarded it as the devil's own work.
Organization can mean strength. It is necessary to provide structure,
for spreading a message, for the stability and permanence of
any movement. Sri Ramakrishna said that all spiritual paths lead
to the same summit, but this does not mean that it makes
no difference which path we tread. It is vital that we remain
on a path suitable to our nature and our experience. But organization
can also bind us fast. Now our first encounter in life with an
organization, is the family, and great as this is, it must not
be allowed to infringe upon our spiritual quest. I was fortunate.
Mine was a liberal family, and yet they tried to prevent me from
taking these steps. (Such were the Protestant-Catholic antipathies
in those days, I do believe my mother was less distressed by
my becoming a Hindu monk than she would have been if I had become
a Catholic one!)
Schools are the next organized institution we come to. Fortunately
we are graduated, as we say, from schools. Another is the church,
or denomination, cult or sect, or, in my case an order. Sometimes
we have to be graduated from these. As Swami Vivekananda reminds
us, religious organizations are the golden chain which, however
beautiful, is not less strong to bind. "It is good to be
born in a church," he said, "but not to die in one."
Every one of us needs to outgrow the organization if it
holds us back from that for which it solely exists: discovery
of the deeper reality within us and without, the Universal Spirit.
Again let me say, freeing oneself from a limiting organization
does not mean to decry it: it means expanding oneself into a
larger fellowship. We never come to truth from outright untruth
; we always go from truth to truth.
Mutual Irradiation
You must have heard the buzz-words of our current crop of
theologians: they talk of exclusivism, inclusivism and religious
pluralism. I do not think I have to define those for you. The
Quaker seer Douglas Steere provided us with a better term: "mutual
irradiation," he called it. Not tolerance, nor co-existence,
but benefiting from one another. Look at Christianity itself:
how internecine warfare has robbed us of this benefit. Freud
used to speak of the "narcissism of minor differences."
You know it all too well: Reformed and Christian Reformed! Catholic-Protestant
conflict has blinded both sides to the greatness in the other.
Steere tells the story of a Methodist pastor who wired his bishop
for permission to bury a local Baptist. The reply came: "Permission
granted. Bury as many Baptists as you can." Mutual irradiation
means to practice our own religion intensively and to
radiate, to share our experiences with each other in celebratory
ways; it does not mean some monolithic synthetic structure. Transfers
may occasionally take place but "conversion" is not
sought. We should also engage in projects together (like Habitat
for Humanity) where, by working side by side, we come into mutual
irradiation. Thus we approach others with love and respect, suspend
preconceptions in order to listen, postpone value judgments,
then witness to our own experience. We acknowledge that differences
exist and differences matter.
Christianity itself has depths unexplored by people of our time.
What happens is this: rational persons, becoming skeptical of
spiritual truth when idols and ideals reveal their feet of clay,
disheartened, sink into materialism. They do not know how to
use their skepticism to their advantage. Sri Ramakrishna knew
how. He plunged into a depth-investigation, asking if there were
any divine reality behind the image made of stone. No one doubts
that he found it. Here is a quotation from Fr. Bede Griffiths,
"The West," he says, "stands in danger of neglecting
the life of contemplation and it is important for it to have
contact with the revitalized life of contemplation in Hinduism
which some of the l9th and 20th century figures like Ramakrishna
and Vivekananda have done so much to further."
The deeper we search the more radiance we find. Look, for example,
at the sacrifice and heroic life of the Buddha, and the ideals
of non-violence and compassion in both Buddhism and Jainism.
In Judaism see the value given to family, to the race, the stability
of a society in covenant with its God, yet the transcendence
of that God. Look at Islam: unfairly criticized, the Muslim stands
as a monument to the equality of brotherhood, fidelity to prayer
and scripture; note the literary quality of the Kor'an and the
faith's cultural contributions to civilization. Christianity
gives us the beautiful life of Jesus, the grace and Fatherhood
of God, loving charity and social service. Hinduism's beauty
lies in its high philosophy, its breadth and depth, and hopefulness,
and the Motherhood of God. Do not tell me you can look upon all
this and still be a religious philistine!
How have Hinduism and Western culture radiated one another? Hinduism
has become more organized and more self-conscious; it has altered
its focus to include the nation, not the individual alone. But
is it religion that is responsible for this? It is more likely
that it is the effect of all the trends of modern industrial
society. On the other hand, influences of Hinduism on the West
are obvious: it has brought us yoga, meditation and other mental
and spiritual disciplines, a greater variety of relationships
to the Divine, and opened the possibility of a science of religion.
Many have found in Vedanta a deeper understanding of their own
faiths and a larger framework for throwing light on religious
conflict. Of course this has also brought on a "backlash"
from the fundamentalists and evangelicals who never seem to understand
how a person may integrate two or more faiths in the same life.
Thomas Merton, Bede Griffiths, Huston Smith and many others have
been able to do this. It is a matter not of conversion, but of
convergence. In my case I found it essential for the fulfillment
and expression of my own inner nature.
Think of this planet of ours; what once were isolated tribes
living on different continents have learned the languages of
one another and become communicating communities. Why not evolve
further and become participating partners in the work of the
Spirit? Friends, I made a migration to greater openness of mind
and heart, enabling me to enjoy the playing of all these notes
on the flute of spirituality. I ask you similarly to listen to
and enjoy all the sounds of the world's great faiths. Yet, sharing
one another's culture or "ethnicity" is only an overture:
it is by grasping the core, the essence , of faith and
practice, that we will ultimately hear the symphony our religions
are already playing.
Swami Yogeshananda
Aum
| About | Calendar
| Articles | Stories
| On-line books
Bulletin board | Books
& tapes | Links | Search
| Contact
|