Archive for the ‘Religion’ Category

Q:Is Adi Da Teaching Exclusivity-One Way or Path to God

Sunday, August 15th, 2010

A relative asked me this question some time ago, and feel it needs addressing, below is one way of viewing it.

Is Adi Da teaching one exclusive means to God or The Divine, through him and the institution-Adidam-alone, or are a multiplicity of paths and religions all leading to God?

Here the question itself is the problem (or creates a dilemma) where there need be none. To start with, Adi Da does not teach any sort of path to God (no matter how contradictory this statement may appear) and secondarily, Adi Da does not use or define God in the usual manner (and again this is not a mere language device ) Adi Da uses the terms Real God or Reality (and many other more literal terms) to point to what is actually “Really God”; rather than a believers God, a creator God, a personal God, God the parent( mother or father ) or any form of illusion that is considered God or a god. The point he makes over and over is that God actually is Real and it does not require belief-illusions and the bondage (that comes with it) to make that the case.

Adidam (which can mean the institution itself, and the practice of Adidam) is based on a most radical assumption- that all beings already are even now completely one with Real God, clearly then no one is ever separated from Real God or can ever be damned or denied that same condition so in that sense there can be no exclusive means or path to the Divine including any religious means because none are necessary, since the condition sought can never be attained or to put it another way “can never be lost or found ” or to put it even more realistically, all traditional paths and religious means are doomed to fail in there quest for Ultimate Realization, that is not to dispute all the traditional states of realization, samadhi or enlightenment, they certainly are attainable, that is not doubted and there have always been and will always remain great and lesser Realizers of these most honorable traditions (Including Christianity, Judaism, Sufism, Hinduism, Buddhism and all the other major and minor genuine traditions) By the same token (and Adi Da has stated this many times) if Adidam is practiced incorrectly it becomes another seeking means to God , Realization and Liberation and therefore cannot be and will not be fruitful and must fail in the individuals case for the same reasons as above (unless graceful influence can make a difference)

So no, in the sense outlined above Adi Da and Adidam do not represent an “exclusive” path or means to God, Adi Da absolutely champions what is great in the religious traditions and absolutely criticizes what is illusionary and binding in those same traditions (as a compassionate, Avataric voice in the midst of often great confusion)

In considering this question it is so important to remember genuine spiritual traditions are greatly honored and respected by Adi Da and Adidam, great compassion, tolerance and universal co-operation are part of his teaching and I have found this to be the case. A devotee of Adi Da can freely go to any religious figure, temple, holy site or institution and honor what is great there in a sensitive and tolerant manner. In fact I have found a deepening of my appreciation of many spiritual traditions and Realizers and Teachers within those Traditions as I study the works of Adi Da Samraj. There is a universal thread that is honored, enjoyed and respected via these agencies, that underlying universal thread could be said to link Adidam to all other Divine Honoring traditions whatever form they take.

However having said all of that, there is only One means to the Divine Realization and the Absolute Freedom that is the Seventh Stage Realization of Reality Itself or Real God and that is through the means of Avatar Adi Da Samraj and His Agency: Adidam. So yes it is “exclusive” in that sense and there is no use saying it is otherwise. Adi Da Samraj makes it abundantly clear, overwhelmingly clear that this is exactly the case. An example is the constant use of the “Only-By-Me-Given”. It is constant and the devotee or regular reader of Adi Da’s Work may get a little immune to it, but it remains a blunt reminder for anyone who starts getting too universalistic, egalitarian and idealistic about the process (as is my own tendency).

As with many others my own tendency is to dilute that aspect of Adidam, in my own case because it smacks so much of the hideous “One Way” messages of Christianity and many other (if not all) exoteric religions. To date I have tended to deny this reality of Adidam and be almost an apologist for its possibility, but I clearly note this is an internal conflict of mine, and many others have no problem with it all, and are very clear on the matter as is Avatar Adi Da.

The Restoration & Descent of Faith

Wednesday, June 16th, 2010

If you read my post here, you will see the extent of “doubt” as a specific culturally imbibed mental & emotional state in my case (and if you look closely, perhaps in your own case)

I wrote : Faith was lost or nebulous, that doubt always outweighed it. Well, lately Faith as a tangible force has again begun to become ascendant, incarnate (or bodily felt)

It appears to be the single most effective quality of real change in my life, it appears to descend down through the front of my being and into the vital center.

Its effect is transforming, and actually changes “reality”.This is clearly seen. The world takes on more of a fluid character, less solid and immovable. It becomes “psychic” or more like the psyche itself.

It has something of a strange and “freaky” nature from the conventional point of view. The universe starts to talk back to you (in effect) A lot of fear may arise, naturally, because the basis of security the solid, dependable–real world–starts to be seen as just as undependable as a dream or subjective state.

Faith changes the world view. I am just writing about what  I am actually feeling or seeing. Adi Da often wrote about what He called “Conversion”; well it’s of this nature. Faith is felt as a joyous fullness that changes everything, you can clearly see how an adherent of any particular religion would see various saints, deities and spirit forms. In Adidam there are none. The psyche is empty, unless you want to pursue various forms that appear, fleetingly. The form of The Guru is utterly sufficient, nothing needs to be added or embellished.

Faith becomes the asana or position we view all things from, rather than the common, modern and culturally informed one of doubt.

By observing it closely you can see it needs to be protected, nurtured and allowed to grow otherwise the mood of doubt returns. The discriminative facility (normally associated with doubt) can be freely used without the burden of negative emotional content. So it’s not the naive and vulnerable faith of childhood but the maturing Faith of adulthood.

“And the world is a psychic phenomenon. In other words, we never experience the world except psychically. We never experience it except as knowledge and perception. We never experience it except as a condition that includes us. We are not separate from it. What we are at the level of the psyche and at the level of consciousness is just as much an inherent part of the world as the so-called material, objective forms. When we associate with the world on the basis of the totality of all the conditions of our existence, we participate in the world of forms as a psychic process. By participating psychically in the psychic phenomena of the world, we learn the laws whereby we can influence the phenomena of the waking state. We generate a process wherein we can become sensitive to the phenomena of the waking state so that we can observe unusual coincidences of form and psychic significances that our verbal mind tends to exclude from what we are observing” ~Adi Da Samraj

Further Reading : The Bridge To God

The Emergence of Free Religion

Saturday, December 12th, 2009

Such religion is free. It is native religion, it is God-made religion. Those who enter in such a religious process may live with one another, create a structure or an institution for association with one another and the communication of the Teaching but their religion itself is free and immediate.

It is a process that is always intimate, that one can practice in every moment of existence, that one must practice in every moment of existence. It is not a practice to be engaged only sometimes in meditation or weekly church gatherings….. It is a kind of renegade Teaching. It is not smiled upon by religionists and worldly people.”

This remarkable text was taken from a book written by Adi Da called – The Fire Gospel- published in 1982. The particular talk is- “A Birthday Message from Jesus and Me”.

The concept of Free Religion has often been used by Adi Da, examples are “The Free Communion Church” and later “Free Daism”. I often wondered why He used this term “Free” so often, in particular related to Adidam (whatever form it was conceived of in the past). Now I get it, it’s the complete reversal of how religion is perceived – by me at least, perhaps everyone already has this astonishingly liberal view !

Religion is generally seen as an imposition from without, it requires something of you by an institution or organisation outside of self.

This is crucial point and a most liberating one. Quite astounding in its direct emancipation from what I call “catechism” (1) something I endured with at best fortitude, as a child attending catholic school- in short, rote, unbelievably boring ritual, and feelingless liturgy. Adi Da calls it “mummery”.

“Such religion is free. It is native religion, it is God-made religion.”

It must come from your own free response, not imposed on you from without !

“Those who enter in such a religious process may live with one another, create a structure or an institution for association with one another and the communication of the Teaching “

So the structure and institution is based on the practice of a religious process, it comes from that process-freely.

“but their religion itself is free and immediate.”

How cool is that, the almost universal complaint about “organized religion” ends here, because you the practitioner create and maintain this religion, freely. This inherent religious process (understood in this most expansive manner) precedes the structure of religion itself, in any form, nor can it be ever subservient to the institution itself. It must stand prior to any external form, though the form  and institution is its free expression and natural form (again understood from this most radical point of view)

It’s a revolutionary point of view and one all the Great Adept Masters of the past have gestured at (in this talk Adi Da equates Jesus to this primary attempt to establish Free Religion), previous to the formation of “religion” in its far lesser or exoteric (2) mode, after the death of The Master.

There is no need for naive idealism though, it is far more gritty than that, in how it actually works out. Adidam is thus described in the best case scenario, there is already something of this quality there, at particular times it is very clear. As time goes on this will become more the case. It’s a wonderful vision. Should inspire the Free Heart in all, just in its mere contemplation.

Listen to the talk (or MP3 download) “A Birthday Message from Jesus and Me

(1) catechism (; κατηχισμός from kata = “down” + echein = “to sound”, literally “to sound down” (into the ears), i.e. to indoctrinate) is a summary or exposition of doctrine, traditionally used in Christian religious teaching from New Testament times to the present

(2) exoteric & esoteric religion

The Restoration of Faith(1)

Sunday, December 6th, 2009

Introduction

“Science has thus found how to make doubt into a tool of conventional knowledge. And, rightly used, that tool has its place. But as a psychological state that defines our existence and that is developed into a view of the universe, doubt is a form of affliction, something to be understood and transcended. In the course of real spiritual practice, doubt is encountered in its purity. It is not regarded to have philosophical content. It is regarded to be simply a sign of the contraction of being” (1) Adi Da Samraj

As a modern man born in the 20Th century, my primary mood is doubt, not faith, my first response to anything of an even slightly spiritual nature is disbelief, more as an underlying and characteristic feeling response than a conscious, thinking one.

Along with my peers I have inherited an ingrained world view that is generally uninspected and unnoticed, accepted as natural, rather than one acquired culturally. That view is non-faith or the tacit denial of God, Truth, Love and Happiness as our primary state and primary knowledge.

This apparently inherited mood of doubt was not the case in my early childhood, thus I say my faith was lost and was previous to doubt, the mood of faith seems unreal and ephemeral compared to this deeply conditioned doubt response that clearly came from cultural and educational sources.

Part 1: Doubt and Faith

Doubt used in this context is mostly seen as the opposite of faith, faith is generally defined as belief in religious or spiritual doctrine or deity, doubt is a sense of denial in relation to doctrine or belief in a doctrine, Adi Da treats doubt as primarily an emotional state or mood (2) (a form of self-contraction) at the root of all doubt.

 Anyone who takes the trouble to “feel” doubt, may notice it is has a characteristic emotional component, no matter what the particular subject of the doubt. To doubt is felt as a negative state of self . In contrast to this, one can use objective analysis or discriminative reflection without the addition of doubt (as a negative psycho-physical state), that is, the analytical discriminative faculty  need not carry the emotive component that is the mood of doubt.

To me the constant arising of doubt is not something to be concerned about, it does not mean what it appears to, because I see it (when this insight is active) as a condition of myself, rather than a reflection of what is true or external to me.

It is also notable that the conflict between doubt and faith is overwhelming in Western theology, not an overriding consideration in Hindu thought, but perhaps more considered in some schools of Buddhism.

Since doubt is easily known, the use of the term faith needs clarification :

Faith used here, is a natural heart felt openness, that seems to be strong in childhood and quickly recedes as our education in conventional doctrines and world concepts overwhelms it. It is a state of mind and emotion, it naturally presumes a happy, joyous source to all things. Not  merely the belief in doctrine but a disposition that assumes eternal life via feeling rather than thought. It stands in opposition to the mood of doubt  but shares the demonstrable quality of being also a state of self, but felt as a positivity, joy and connection to all life and its inherent mystery.

To clarify further then, faith in Adi Da’s specific idiom (as I understand it), means not a particular set of beliefs or a response to specific dogma or concepts but an opening of the being, that would then allow conceptualization to follow. It is not belief in a particular God concept, or a particular religion, but is previous to any particular concept, God or religious idea, rather it is  rooted in the visceral source of faith as response prior to conceptualizations

I am not suggesting that a return to the mere naivety of childhood is the desired outcome but rather the manifesting of faith in a fully adult manner, with the full capacity to use discriminative insight. Adi Da postulates that God, Truth or Divine Reality is obvious(3), not the usual modern point of view that starts with the apparent (at least as a feeling sense) absence of anything remotely Divine in nature. 

Doubt and faith in religious traditions

Consider the Christian (Catholic) concept of doubt :

“The faith demanded by the Christian Revelation stands on a different footing from the belief claimed by any other religion. Since it rests on divine authority, it implies an obligation to believe on the part of all to whom it is proposed; and faith being an act of the will as well as of the intellect, its refusal involves not merely intellectual error, but also some degree of moral perversity. It follows that doubt in regard to the Christian religion is equivalent to its total rejection, the ground of its acceptance being necessarily in every case the authority on which it is proposed, and not, as with philosophical or scientific doctrines, its intrinsic demonstrability in detail. Thus, whereas a philosophical or scientific opinion may be held provisionally and subject to an unresolved doubt, no such position can be held towards the doctrines of Christianity; their authority must be either accepted or rejected. The unconditional, interior assent which the Church demands to the Divine authority of revelation is incompatible with any doubt as to its validity. Gregory XVI. ” (4)

The Demon of Doubt

Clearly then to doubt Christian doctrine, is a conscious choice and always a sinful one, whether practicing Christians actually hold this view consciously is unlikely, but something of it may be be present.

From the Christian viewpoint (at least as expressed above very dogmatically), someone like myself who confesses doubt as a primary sensation, must be forced to suppress this and instead apply a mental discipline to believe prescribed concepts, this is often the common view of what faith is, or what a man or woman “of faith” would demonstrate. By applying a counter effort to suppress all that is doubt, or doubting of religious doctrine, I show or express my faith. Which makes faith thus defined always at war with doubt.

Another example of the faith/doubt dynamic is expressed here, in a more expansive manner by Sri Aurobindo (5)

“There is one kind of faith demanded as indispensable by the integral Yoga and that may be described as faith in God and the Shakti, faith in the presence and power of the Divine in us and the world, a faith that all in the world is the working of one divine Shakti, that all the steps of the Yoga, its strivings and sufferings and failures as well as its successes and satisfactions and victories are utilities and necessities of her workings and that by a firm and strong dependence on and a total self-surrender to the Divine and to his Shakti in us we can attain to oneness and freedom and victory and perfection”

“The enemy of faith is doubt, and yet doubt too is an utility and necessity, because man in his ignorance and in his progressive labour towards knowledge needs to be visited by doubt, otherwise he would remain obstinate in an ignorant belief and limited knowledge and unable to escape from his errors. This utility and necessity of doubt does not altogether disappear when we enter on the path of Yoga. The integral Yoga aims at a knowledge not merely of some fundamental principle, but a knowing, a gnosis which will apply itself to and cover all life and the world action, and in this search for knowledge we enter on the way and are accompanied for many miles upon it by the mind’s unregenerated activities before these are purified and transformed by a greater light: we carry with us a number of intellectual beliefs and ideas which are by no means all of them correct and perfect and a host of new ideas and suggestions meet us afterwards demanding our credence which it would be fatal to seize on and always cling to in the shape in which they come without regard to their possible error, limitation or imperfection.”

Sogyal Rinpoche a Tibetan Lama of the Nyingma tradition writing  on doubt (6) :

“Our minds, however, are riddled with confusion and doubt. I sometimes think that doubt is an even greater block to human evolution than is desire or attachment. Our society promotes cleverness instead of wisdom, and celebrates the most superficial, harsh, and least useful aspects of our intelligence. We have become so falsely “sophisticated” and neurotic that we take doubt itself for truth, and the doubt that is nothing more than ego’s desperate attempt to defend itself from wisdom is deified as the goal and fruit of true knowledge. This form of mean-spirited doubt is the shabby emperor of samsara, served by a flock of “experts” who teach us not the open-souled and generous doubt that Buddha assured us was necessary for testing and proving the worth of the teachings, but a destructive form of doubt that leaves us nothing to believe in, nothing to hope for, and nothing to live by.”

“Doubts demand from us a real skillfulness in dealing with them, and I notice how few people have any idea how to pursue doubts or to use them. It seems ironic that in a civilization that so worships the power of deflation and doubt, hardly anyone has the courage to deflate the claims of doubt itself-to do as one Hindu master said: ‘turn the dogs of doubt on doubt itself, to unmask cynicism, and to uncover what fear, despair, hopelessness, and tired conditioning it springs from’. Then doubt would no longer be an obstacle, but a door to realization, and whenever doubt appeared in the mind, a seeker would welcome it as a means of going deeper into the truth.”

notes
(1) The Transmission of Doubt pp 149- (Da Free John) Adi Da Samraj
(2) ” You are always “capable” of doubt, because doubt is a condition of yourself. It is a form of contraction” Adi Da Samraj – God and Doubt.
(3)Adi Da Samraj – God and Doubt
(4) http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/05141a.htm
(5)Yoga of Self-Perfection by Sri Aurobindo Chapter XVIII Faith and Shakti
(6) Quoted from viewonbuddhism.org

Audio : The Great Tradition

Monday, October 12th, 2009

Adi Da talks with great wisdom and insight on the religious traditions of mankind, which he calls in total “The Great Tradition”, he mentions one of the services he performed as Adept Realizer in service to humanity, which was to review the very best spiritual literature and media available called at the time of this talk “The 7 Schools of God Talk”, this list and its eloquent reviews, later became called. “The Basket Of Tolerance”, which may appear in book form in the future.
Adi Da’s scheme or map of Seven Stages of life, based on His personal exploration of the esoteric anatomy of man is explained here. This talk may be of interest to anyone with a passion for religion, esoteric traditions, eastern religions, religious philosophy & comparative religion.