Hinduism: Details about 'Dharmic Religion'

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Dharmic religions are a family of religions whose theology and philosophy centers around the concept of dharma, a Sanskrit term for "Truth" and duty based on truth. All Dharmic religions were born in India, and are mostly influential across the Indian subcontinent and South East Asia with influence felt throughout the world. Some followers of Dharmic faiths will have no hesitation to pay reverance to different religions: unlike in many religions, a Hindu feel free to visit Buddhist and Jain temples, and vice versa.

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The Dharmic faiths

Dharmic faiths have a close and irreversible influence with the history, society and cultures of India and every South East Asian nation it has proliferated into. It also has a very diverse and large body of mythology whose roots stretch to pre-Dharmic times.

The Dharmic religions are:

Hinduism

Major article: Hinduism

Hinduism is a very old religion and the Sanskrit name of the religion (हिन्दू धर्म; – Sanātana Dharma or eternal dharma) suggests its dharmic roots might trace back 7,000 years. Hinduism represents a microcosm for the complex and diverse body of theology and philosophy indicated by the term 'Dharmic faiths'.

While Hinduism is strongest in India and Nepal, it, along with the Dharmic religions described here, has many missionaries in South East Asian nations such as Cambodia, Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam, Malaysia and Laos. And, like Christianity, Judaism, and Islam, Dharmic faiths are also gaining popularity in North America, Western Europe and Africa.

In Indonesia, Balinese Hinduism and Agama Hindu Dharma are the two main schools of Hinduism practiced.

Ayyavazhi is considered a rich and complex Hindu system of theology. It is a growing religion centered in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu.

Jainism

Perhaps the smallest, Jainism is also the second-oldest. It is a religious system that does not recognize a Godhead, and firmly rejects the Vedas, but strongly adhere to dharma, moksha and nirvana.

Buddhism

Buddhism is the second-largest Dharmic religion, with over 350 million adherents across South East Asia. It has deeply affected the synthesis of societies across Asia, and has been the most popular symbolic of eastern philosophy to Western civilization.

Sikhism

Sikhism is the religion that perhaps best unites many distinguished principles of Dharmic faiths. The founders of Sikhism were



Hindu Punjabi Khatris who were well versed in and admired the Hindu scriptures. The Gurus rejected the practice of reading the scriptures without truly understanding their meaning. Sikhism carries forward the Hindu philosophy of Vedanta, which is composed of the Upanishads and the Bhagavad Gita. These texts stated that Hindus must go above and beyond the Vedas for final spiritual enlightenment. The Vedantic texts, like the Sikh scriptures also focus on a single formless supreme God. Sikhism also rejects caste, just as the ancient Hindu texts did. In the early Hindu texts, caste was simply occupation, taken on by a person by their ability. Later, this idea became corrupted. Thus, Sikhism in many ways was an effort to reform medieval Hinduism which was corrupted, in order to return it to Vedantic Hinduism. It is the strongest in the Indian state of Punjab, India, but is widely spread across Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom and East Africa thanks to a large and growing expatriate community. See Also: 1919 in India

What is Dharma?

Main Article: Dharma


The word Dharma (Sanskrit; "धर्म" in the Devanagari script) or dhamma (Pali) is used in most or all philosophies and religions of Indian origin, the dharmic faiths, namely Hinduism (Sanatana Dharma), Buddhism, Jainism and Sikhism. Dharma also is practiced in the Surat Shabda Yoga traditions. In its oldest form, dharman, it first appears in the Vedas.

It is difficult to provide a single concise definition for Dharma (life fails to convey its connoted complexity). The word has a long and varied history and complex set of meanings and interpretations. Certain Westerners and Orientalists have proposed a number of possible translations, from "justice" to "religion", however these definitions have evolved with their associated usage in Western culture.

"Dharma" derives from the verbal root dhri, which simply means "manner of being." The term must therefore be understood in its original (i.e. metaphysical) context, that of a conformity to a divine or creative principle at work in an individual and in nature. It represents the individual's internal law, to which obedience must be given if that individual life is to live in accordance with a Divine Will. This is what Hindus consider the sole or primary purpose of life. It explains how justice finds its place among the many modern definitions of the word dharma.

Rene Guenon, father of the 20th century school of Perennial Philosophy, defines it as such:

It is, so to speak, the essential nature of a being, comprising the sum of its particular qualities or characteristics, and determining, by virtue of the tendencies or dispositions it



implies, the manner in which this being will conduct itself, either in a general way or in relation to each particular circumstance. The same idea may be applied, not only to a single being, but also to an organized collectivity, to a species, to all the beings included in a cosmic cycle or state of existence, or even to the whole order of the Universe; it then, at one level or another, signifies conformity with the essential nature of beings… (from Guenon's "Introduction to the Study of Hindu Doctrines")

This said, certain Western definitions of the word must be considered in the light of this original definition—that is, as branches from a single root. Monier Monier-Williams, for example (while covering the entire scope it would seem), gives its primary definition as:

that which is established or firm, steadfast decree, statute, ordinance, law; usage, practice, customary observance or prescribed conduct, duty; right, justice (often as a synonym of punishment); virtue, morality, religion, religious merit, good works,

of which the first, "that which is established or firm" seems to be the most ancient and etymological. Dharma is cognate with the Latin firmus, the origin of the word firm. Meanings related to law, morality, scripture, and teachings were probably acquired through analogy, by being regarded as firm and called as such. For the phenomenological or psychological meaning, see below.

Dr. David Frawley, an expert on Hindu philosophy and religion, describes Dharma as:

a universal tradition has room for all faiths and all religious and spiritual practices regardless of the time or country of their origin. Yet it places religious and spiritual teachings in their appropriate place relative to the ultimate goal of Self-realization, to which secondary practices are subordinated. Sanatan Dharma also recognizes that the greater portion of human religious aspirations has always been unknown, undefined and outside of any institutionalized belief. Sanatan Dharma thereby gives reverence to individual spiritual experience over any formal religious doctrine. Wherever the Universal Truth is manifest; there is Sanatan Dharma—whether it is in a field of religion, art or science, or in the life of a person or community. Whereever the Universal Truth is not recognized, or is scaled down or limited to a particular group, book or person, even if done so in the name of God, there Sanatan Dharma ceases to function, whatever the activity is called.

According to the Natchintanai Scripture:

By the laws of Dharma that govern body and mind, you must fear sin and act righteously. Wise men by thinking and behaving in this way become worthy to gain bliss both here and hereafter.

Yama, the lord of death, is also known as Dharma, since he works within the laws of karma and morality, regulated by divine principles. More familiar is the embodiment of Dharma in Lord Rama, an avatar of Vishnu. The eldest Pandava, Yudhishthira was referred to as DharmaRaj owing to his steadfastness to Truth & Dharma.

The teachings, doctrines, philosophies and practices associated with furthering Dharma are also referred to as such. Sometimes, specific qualifiers are used - viz. Bauddha-Dharma and Jain-Dharma to distinguish them from Sanatana_Dharma.

For many Buddhists, the Dharma most often means the body of teachings expounded by the Buddha. The word is also used in Buddhist phenomenology as a term roughly equivalent to phenomenon, a basic unit of existence and/or experience.

In scripture translations dharma is often best left untranslated, as it has acquired a lively life of its own in English that is more expressive than any simplistic translation. Common translations and glosses include "right way of living," Divine Law, Path of Righteousness, order, faith, "natural harmony," rule, fundamental, and duty. Dharma may be used to refer to rules of the operation of the mind or universe in a metaphysical system, or to rules of comportment in an ethical system.

Birth and history

See Also: History of Early Hinduism, Vedic civilization

The earliest ancestor of Dharmic religions was the Vedic religion of the ancient Vedic civilization in ancient India. It is considered most probable that these religious and spiritual influences arrived in India over 7,000 years ago, brought by Indo-Aryan migrants from Central Asia.

Common modern practices

See also: Dharmic rituals after death

Dharmic religions share a variety of theological, philosophical and ceremonial similarities.

Exchanges with Abrahamic religions

Dharmic religions and Abrahamic religions were conceived over 7,000 years ago in the two opposite parts of Asia, and share a complex and conflicting dynamic. Possible connections between Indo-Aryan traditions and Hebrew culuture may date back to Abraham himself, since the Mitanni influenced areas associated with him, notably Haran. More direct connections would have followed the absorbtion of Judea into the Persian empire in which Zoroastrianism was the dominant faith.

Some speculative writers have claimed that Jesus visited India and learned spiritual practices there from Buddhist and Hindu monks. The ancient Hindu texts, the Puranas, indicate exchanges with a man named Essa, from the Middle East, that have been used to this theory.

In Indonesia, many Javanese Muslims practice a version of Islam deeply influenced by the Agama Hindu Dharma, known as Abangan.

See also

  • Abrahamic religion
  • Vedic religion Дхармические религии

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Dharmic_religion". A list of the wikipedia authors can be found here.