Rites of Sacrifice in Hinduism and Western Religion

Posted by Andreasen McCulloch on April 22nd, 2021

The rite of sacrifice, which in the simple form of an offering said to be agreeable to the deity is the principal ceremony in the first stages of all religions, persists within their later stages but gives rise to clouds of theory and mystical interpretations. Thus in Christianity, the Jewish sacrifices are regarded as prototypes of the death of Christ and that death itself as a sacrifice to the Almighty, an offering of himself to himself, which in some way acts as an expiation for the sins of the world. And by a further development the sacrifice of the mass, that is, the offering of portions of bread and wine which are held to be miraculously transformed into the body and blood of Christ by the manipulations of a qualified priest, is believed to repeat every day the tragedy of Calvary. The prevalence of this view in Europe should make us chary of stigmatizing Hindu ideas about sacrifice as mental aberrations. They represent the fancies of acute intellects dealing with ancient ceremonies which they cannot abandon but which they transform into something more congenial with their own transitional mode of thought. Although Br�hmaGas and check here mix up ritual with physical and metaphysical theories in the most extraordinary fashion, their main motive deserves sympathy and respect. Their weakness lies in their inability to detach themselves (as the Buddha succeeded in doing) from a ritual which though elaborate was neither edifying nor artistic: they seem unable to see the great problems of existence except through the mists of altar smoke. Their merit is their evident conviction that formalism is inadequate. Their wish isn't to distort and cramp nature by bringing it within the limits of the ritual, but to enlarge and expand the ritual until it becomes cosmic. If they regard the complete universe as you long act of prayer and sacrifice, the theory is grandiose rather than pedantic, though the details might not always be to our taste. And the Upanishads pass from ritual and theology to real speculation in ways unknown to Christian thought. We have been told that the gods obtained immortality and heaven by sacrifice, that they created the universe by sacrifice, that Praj�pati, the creator, is the sacrifice. Although some writers are disposed to tell apart magic sharply from religion, both are not separated in the Vedas. Sacrifice isn't merely a means of pleasing the gods: this can be a system of authorized magic or sacred science controlling all worlds, if properly understood. It is a mysterious cosmic force like electricity and this can be utilized by an adequately trained priest but is dangerous in unskilful hands, for the rites, if wrongly performed, bring disaster and even death on bunglers. Although Vedic sacrifices fell an increasing number of out of general use, this notion of the energy of rites and formulae did not fade with them but has deeply infected modern Hinduism and also Buddhism, in both of which the lore of spells and gestures assumes monstrous proportions. The Vedic and modern tantric rituals are different but they are based on the same supposition that the universe (including the gods which are part of it) is regulated by some permeating principle, and that this principle could be apprehended by sacred science and controlled through proper methods. As far as these systems express the theory that the human mind can grasp the universe by knowledge, they offer an example of the bold sweep of the Hindu intellect, however the methods prescribed are often fatuou

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Andreasen McCulloch

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Andreasen McCulloch
Joined: April 22nd, 2021
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