Search
All Interfaith Heroes Stories
« 2nd Annual Interfaith Heroes Month Hero No. 8: Hazrat Inayat Khan | 2nd Annual Interfaith Heroes Month Hero No. 6: David Rosen »
Tuesday
Jan062009

2nd Annual Interfaith Heroes Month Hero No. 7: Sri Ramakrishna

Welcome back!
    This celebration of 31 stories about men and women who risked crossing
religious boundaries to help heal the world began on January 1 with a story about John Paul II.HERE IS THE 7th OF OUR 31 STORIES THIS YEAR:

SRI RAMAKRISHNA
PARMAHAMSA
(1836-1886)

Sri Ramakrishna Parmahamsa was a Hindu sage and mystic who never wrote any articles or books. He was known for practices and experiences that many considered bizarre, but also for a “god-consciousness” that drew people to him from many religious traditions.
    Raised in a poor Brahmin family (the priestly caste), the boy, known then as Gadadhar, evidenced a great love for nature and a passion for religious matters. He challenged customs by taking his first alms from a low-caste woman in his village rather than from another Brahmin. He followed his older brother into the Hindu priesthood, serving in a temple for the goddess Kali.
    While expressing his frustration in prayer about whether Kali was a piece of stone or a living goddess, he had a life-changing religious experience he described as having waves of light coming from the deity that overwhelmed him. This experience led him to a journey of opening himself up to many expressions of divinity first within Hinduism, then extending to Islam and Christianity.
    He diligently practiced spiritual disciplines from these various traditions, seeking what they might teach from their faithful practice. In all these traditions he felt he could open himself up to God and have some sort of merging with the divine being.
    Out of these experiences his teaching developed. He thought that revelation of God can take place at all times. “Godrealization” is not monopolized by any era, country, people or religion. When religious traditions slip away from their center of passionate “god-consciousness,” they become oppressive and dogmatic and lose their transformative power. All religions can be a channel for God’s revelation, and therefore they are not competitive but complementary, giving visions of truth from different angles.


    Religions should be seen and embraced in harmony, he taught. They were not to be blended or fused into uniformity, but were diverse ways of pursing a common goal, namely communion with God. He taught, “As many faiths, so many paths.” The harmony of religions was not  found in uniformity but in diversity.
    People of many religious traditions sought out Ramakrishna for his teaching, including Hindus, Muslims, Christians, and even atheists and humanists. His small room at the Dakshineswar temple on the edge of Calcutt a became a gathering place for people of various creeds, castes, races and ages, both men and women. He didn’t seek conversion but called people to deeper connection to God within the fullness of each faith.
    The legacy of Ramakrishna is a mixed one. Many scholars have commented on the complex ways that his religious journey took him though forms of sexual experimentation and reflection. Some of these spiritual-sexual connections linked Ramakrishna with long-standing Hindu traditions; others led to sharp criticism from opponents and concern about his wellbeing even among his own supporters. For example, he developed an intense devotion to a female deity that, on one occasion, nearly led him to kill himself. Later, he regarded his wife as a deity.
    He taught about the female nature of deity in an era when this seemed shocking to some critics. On the other hand, his fearless and almost overwhelming passion for “God-consciousness” inspired great thinkers from Tolstoy to Gandhi.

    Ramakrishna’s closest disciple was Vivekananda, who took his master’s teaching to the Western world, opening up a new era of East-West religious interaction. Vivekananda participated in the Parliament of the World’s Religions in 1893, introducing Ramakrishna’s version of Hinduism to the larger world. Vivekananda also established a monastic order based upon the teachings of Ramakrishna.


CARE TO READ MORE?

    The Wikipedia page for Sri Ramakrishna is a good starting place online.
    Or, visit the homepage for the continuing movement founded by Sri Ramakrishna.
    Time Magazine still provides an online copy of the 1942 story, “Prophet of All Gods,” written on the English publication of “The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna.

    To read more about Vivekananda and others who followed in this East-West movement, read our ReadTheSpirit stories on Brother Chidananda and Deepak Chopra.

PLEASE, Tell us what you think by leaving a Comment.

    Not only do we welcome your notes, ideas, suggestions and personal
reflections—but our readers enjoy them as well. Your short Comment may make someone else’s day.
    (Originally published at http://www.ReadTheSpirit.com/)

EmailEmail Article to Friend

Reader Comments (1)

Namaste:

Well, thank you for including Sri Ramakrishna on this august list, BUT, let me ensure you that he was continent His entire 50-year life - so the word "sexual" has no place in an accurate discussion of Him. His devotees, which I am one, know Him as an Avatar, as was Jesus, Who also was sexually continent His entire 33-year life span - in spite of contemporary fiction. Avatars may be viewed as 'special emissaries' sent by God, as we learn in the Hindu bible: “Whenever dharma (i.e., truth) declines and the purpose of life is forgotten, I manifest myself on earth. I am born in every age to protect the good, to destroy evil and to re-establish dharma.” Bhagavad Gita 4: 7-8. Part of their mission is to demonstrate that man/woman does not "live by bread alone," and therefore may sublimate sexual/worldly desire into a desire for God. "Earth has nothing I desire besides You." Psalm 73:25.

Peace,
Brad
OMaha, Nebraska

May 1, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterBrad Stephan

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
All HTML will be escaped. Hyperlinks will be created for URLs automatically.