8.10 ROADS TO RIGHTEOUS LIFE:
ATTANGA YOGA: SOCIAL DIRECTIONS AND PERSONAL LIFE(அட்டாங்கயோகம்)
The beauty of saivasiddhantham is, it preaches a life style which is common for all. A life
that does not disturb others. It gives very clear guidelines to a
way of daily routines that is physically, mentally and socially healthy. It is
a complete guide to one’s day to day
life style.
They are not to be meant as the popular yoga that is
portrayed in the western media and by the corporate gurus. They are about a
holistic life which is for the society at large.
They are not just some postures, some concentration
exercises, a set of bhajans or a
brand cult following. It is a
prescription for a perfect living. A social philosophy that helps humanity as a whole to live at peace with its
surroundings.
If these have been practiced all along there would not
have been slavery, colonialism,world
wars, global warming or conflicts.
The saiva life style is for the whole world. They aim
at a simple small harmless human society.
Sometimes it
may be questioned whether it is correct to follow such a social or personal
norm in the era of Darwinian model of world and survival oriented economy. It is difficult to answer that. Whenever
mankind goes into complete madness it is only these prescriptions that come to
rescue!
The SARIYA, KIRIYA & ATTANGA-YOGA (eight life style steps) deals with these social issues.
They are,
i.Sariyai: duties to the temple
ii.Kiriyai: duties to the lingam
iii. Attanga yogam(eight steps)
1. iayamai: avoidance of bad habits
2. niyamai: following the rules of ethics as in the
scriptures
3. asanam : care of body through exercises
4. pranayamam: care of the breathing
5. prathyaharam: thinking about duties
6. dharanai: concentrating the mind
7. dhyanam: thinking of god
8. Samadhi: union with god within the mind
These ten steps are
described in detail in the siva-agama texts. They are also called as SADHANA
(EFFORTS). The efforts we take in this direction lead us to the fruit of our
birth or the final benefits of our birth-in the metaphysical sense. These yoga
steps are commonly emphasised in the yoga
philosophy and in the yoga based schools.
The yogas are a beginning step in saivism. Then the soul
progress into the malaparibaham. These “mala” advances are not seen in the yoga
systems. Even though yoga is popular in india and western countries the malam
concept is not followed in that. “The malam concept” is preserved and unique to
tamil saiva siddhantham only.
It is to be noted here that the sakthinibatham
which is detailed in sadhasiva agamam ( thirumandhiram) has no further emphasis
in later saiva books. This sakthi worship, chakras,tantra.,yantras and mandalas
becomes more obvious in saktha cult[i]
and Buddhism ( especially in Tibetan schools and east asian systems)[ii].
[i]
What Are the Tantras and Their Significance? by Arthur Avalon
(Sir John Woodroffe),[1918]
A VERY common
expression in English writings is "The Tantra"; but its use is often
due to a misconception and leads to others. For what does Tantra mean? The word
denotes injunction (Vidhi), regulation (Niyama), Shastra generally or treatise.
Thus Shamkara calls the Samkhya a Tantra. A secular writing may be called
Tantra. For the following note I am indebted to Professor Surendranath Das
Gupta. "The word 'Tantra' has been derived in the Kashika-Vritti (7-2-9)
from the root 'Tan' 'to spread' by the Aunadika rule Sarvadhatubhyah tran, with
the addition of the suffix 'tran'. Vacaspati, Anandagiri, and Govindananda,
however, derive the word from the root 'Tatri' of 'Tantri' in the sense of
Vyutpadana, origination or knowledge. In Ganapatha, however, 'Tantri'
has the same meaning as 'Tan' 'to spread' and it is probable that the former
root is a modification of the latter. The meaning Vyutpadana is also probably
derived by narrowing the general sense of Vistara which is the meaning of the
root 'Tan'."
According
to the derivation of 'Tantra' from Tan, to spread, Tantra is that
(Scripture) by which knowledge (Jñana) is spread (Tanyate, vistaryate jñanam
anena, iti Tantram). The Suffix Tra is from the root 'to save'. That
knowledge is spread which saves. What is that but religious knowledge?
Therefore, as here and generally used, Tantra means a particular kind of
religious scripture. The Kamika Agama of the Shaiva Siddhanta (Tantrantara
Patala) says: (It is called Tantra because it promulgates great knowledge
concerning Tattva and Mantra and because it saves.)
It is
a common misconception that Tantra is the name only of the Scripture of the
Shaktas or worshippers of Shakti. This is not so. There are Tantras of other
sects of the Agama, Tantras of Shaivas, Vaishnavas and so forth. We cannot
speak of "The Treatise" nor of "The Tantra" any more than
we can or do speak of the Purana, the Samhita. We can speak of "the
Tantras" as we do of "the Puranas". These Tantras are Shastras
of what is called the Agama. In a review of one of my works it was suggested
that the Agama is a class of Scriptures dealing with the worship of Saguna
Ishvara which was revealed at the close of the age of the Upanishads, and
introduced partly because of the falling into desuetude of the Vaidika Acara,
and partly because of the increasing numbers of persons entering the Hindu fold
who were not competent (Adhikari) for that Acara. I will not however deal with
this historical question beyond noting the fact that the Agama is open to all
persons of all castes and both sexes, and is not subject to the restrictions of
the Vaidika Acara. This last term is a common one and comes from the verbal
root char, which means to move or to act, the prefix 3 being probably
used in the sense of restriction. Acara thus means practice, way, rule of life
governing a Sadhaka, or one who does Sadhana or practice for some desired end
(Siddhi).
The
Agamas are divided into three main groups according as the Ishtadevata
worshipped is Shakti, Shiva or Vishnu. The first is the Shakta Agama, the
second the Shaivagama, and the third the Vaishnava Agama or Pancaratra.
Some
Agamas are called Vaidik (Vaidika Agama) and some non-Vaidik (Avaidika). The Kurma
Purana (XVI.1) mentions as belonging to the latter, Kapala, Lakula, Vama,
Bhairava, Purva, Pashcima, Pañcaratra, Pashupata and many others. Pashupata
again is said to be both Vaidika and Avaidika such as Lakula. Kurma Purana (Uttarabhaga,
Ch. 38) says "By Me was first composed, for the attainment of Liberation,
Shrauta (Vaidika) Pashupata which is excellent, subtle, and secret, the essence
of Veda (Vedasara). The learned devoted to Veda should meditate on Shiva
Pashupati. This is Pashupata Yoga to be practiced by seekers of Liberation. By
Me also have been spoken Pashupata, Soma, Lakula and Bhairava opposed to Veda
(Vedavadaviruddhani). These should not be practiced. They are outside
Veda."
(Shaivagama is of two kinds, Shrauta and
Ashrauta. Shrauta is Shrautisaramaya and of two kinds, Svatantra and Itara.
Svatantra is first of ten kinds and then Siddhanta of eighteen kinds. (This is
the Shaivasiddhanta Agama with 28 Mula Agamas and 207 Upagamas. It is Shuddhadvaita
because in it there is no Visheshana). Itara is Shrutisara with numerous
varieties. Into this mass of sects I do not attempt here to enter, except in a
general way. My subject is the doctrine and ritual of the Shaktas. There are
said to be Shaiva, Vaishnava, and Shakta Upanishads favoring one or another
doctrine.
We
must, however, in all cases distinguish between what a School says of itself
and what others say of it. So far as I am aware all Agamas, whatever be their
origin, claim now to be based on Shruti, though of course as different
interpretations are put on Shruti, those who accept one interpretation are apt
to speak of differing Schools as heretical. These main divisions again have
subdivisions. Thus there are several Schools of Shaivas; and there are Shaktas
with their nine Amnayas, four Sampradayas (Kerala, Kashmira, Gauda and Vilasa)
each divided into two-fold division of inner and outer worship (Sammohana
Tantra, Ch. V). There is for instance the Northern Shaiva School called
Trika of Kashmir, in which country at one time Tantra Shastras were very
prevalent. There is again the Southern Shaiva School called Shaivasiddhanta.
The Shaktas who are to be found throughout India are largely prevalent in
Bengal and Assam. The Shaktas are rather allied with the Northern Advaita
Shaiva than with the others, though in them also there is worship of Shakti.
Shiva and Shakti are one and he who worships one necessarily worships the
other. But whereas the Shaiva predominantly worships Shiva, the Shakta
predominantly worships the Shakti side of the Ardhanarishvara Murti, which is
both Shiva and Shakti.
Mahavishnu
and Sadashiva are also one. As the Sammohana Tantra (Ch. VIII) says,
"Without Prakriti the Samsara (World) cannot be. Without Purusha true
knowledge cannot be attained. Therefore should both be worshipped; with
Mahakali, Mahakala." Some, it says, speak of Shiva, some of Shakti, some
of Narayana (Vishnu). But the supreme Narayana (Adinarayana) is supreme Shiva
(Parashambhu), the Nirguna Brahman, pure as crystal. The two aspects of the
Supreme reflect the one in the other. The Reflection (Pratibimba) is Maya
whence the World-Lords (Lokapalas) and the Worlds are born. The Adya Lalita
(Mahashakti) at one time assumed the male form of Krishna and at another that
of Rama (Ch. IX). For all aspects are in Mahakali, one with Bhairava Mahakala,
who is Mahavishnu. "It is only a fool" it says, "who sees any
difference between Rama and Shiva." This is of course to look at the matter
from the high Vedantik standpoint of Shakta doctrine. Nevertheless separate
worship and rituals exist among the Sects. A common philosophical basis of the
Shaivas and those of Shaktas, who are Agamavadins, is the doctrine of the
Thirty-six Tantras. These are referred to in the Tantra (Ch. VII) so well known
in Bengal which is called Kularnava. They are also referred to in other
Shakta works and their commentaries such as the Anandalahari. The Sharada
Tilaka, a great authority amongst the Bengal Shaktas, is the work of Lakshmanacarya,
an author of the Kashmir Shaiva school. The latter school as also the Shaktas
are Advaitins. The Shaiva Siddhanta and Pancaratra are Shuddhadvaita and
Vishishtadvaita respectively. There is also a great body of Buddhist Tantras of
differing schools. (I have published one -- the Shricakra Sambhara Tantra as
Vol. VII of Tantrik Texts.) Now all these schools have Tantras of their own.
The original connection of the Shaiva schools is said to be shown amongst other
things, by the fact that some Tantras arc common, such as Mrigendra and Matanga
Tantras. It has been asserted that the Shakta school is not historically
connected with the Shaivas. No grounds were given for this statement. Whatever
be the historical origins of the former, the two appear to be in several
respects allied at present, as any one who knows Shakta literature may find out
for himself. In fact Shakta literature is in parts unintelligible to one
unacquainted with some features of what is called the Shaiva Darshana. How
otherwise is it that the 36 Tattvas and Shadadhva (see my Garland of
Letters) are common to both?
The
Shaktas have again been divided into three groups. Thus the esteemed Pandit R.
Ananta Shastri in the Introduction to his edition of Anandalahari speaks
of the Kaula or Shakta Shastras with sixty-four Tantras; the Mishra with eight
Tantras; and the Samaya group which are said to be the most important of the
Shakta Agamas, of which five are mentioned. This classification purports to be
based on the nature of the object pursued, according as it belongs to one or
the other of the Purusharthas. Pancaratra literature is very considerable, one
hundred and eight works being mentioned by the same Pandit in Vol. XIII, pp.
357-363 of The Theosophist. I would refer the reader also to the very
valuable edition of the Ahirbudhnya Samhita by my friend Dr. Otto
Schrader, with an Introduction by the learned Doctor on the Pancaratra system
where many Vaishnava Tantras and Samhitas are cited. The Trika school has many
Tantras of which the leading one is Malinivijaya. The Svacchanda Tantra comes
next. Jagadisha Chandra Chattopadhyaya Vidyavaridhi has written with learning
and lucidity on this school. The Shaivasiddhanta has twenty-eight leading
Tantras and a large number of Upagamas, such as Taraka Tantra, Vama Tantra and
others, which will be found enumerated in Schomerus' Der Shaiva-siddhanta, Nallasvami
Pillai's Studies in Shaivasiddhanta (p. 294), and Shivajñanasiddihiyar
(p. 211). The Sammohana Tantra (Ch. VI) mentions 64 Tantras, 327
Upatantras, as also Yamalas, Damaras, Samhitas and other Scriptures of the
Shaiva class; 75 Tantras, 205 Upatantras, also Yamalas, Damaras, Samhitas of
the Vaishnava class; numerous Tantras and other scriptures of the Ganapatya and
Saura classes, and a number of Puranas, Upapuranas and other variously named
Scriptures of the Bauddha class. It then (Ch. VII) mentions over 500 Tantras
and nearly the same number of Upatantras, of some 22 Agamas, Cinagama (see Ch.
VI post), Buddhagama, Jaina, Pashupata, Kapalika, Pancaratra, Bhairava
and others. There is thus a vast mass of Tantras in the Agamas belonging to
differing schools of doctrine and practice, all of which must be studied before
we can speak with certainty as to what the mighty Agama as a whole is. In this book
I briefly deal with one section of it only. Nevertheless when these Agamas have
been examined and are better known, it will, I think, be found that they are
largely variant aspects of the same general ideas and practices.
As
instances of general ideas I may cite the following: the conception of Deity as
a supreme Personality (Parahanta) and of the double aspect of God in one of
which He really is or becomes the Universe; a true emanation from Him in His
creative aspect; successive emanations (Abhasa, Vyuha) as of "fire from
fire" from subtle to gross; doctrine of Shakti; pure and impure creation;
the denial of unconscious Maya, such as Shamkara teaches; doctrine of Maya
Kosha and the Kañcukas (the six Shaiva Kañcukas being, as Dr. Schrader says,
represented by the possibly earlier classification in the Pancaratra of the
three Samkocas); the carrying of the origin of things up and beyond
Purusha-Prakriti; acceptance at a later stage of Purusha-Prakriti, the Samkhyan
Gunas, and evolution of Tattvas as applied to the doctrine of Shakti;
affirmance of the reality of the Universe; emphasis on devotion (Bhakti);
provision for all castes and both sexes.
Instances
of common practice are for example Mantra, Bija, Yantra, Mudra, Nyasa,
Bhutashuddhi, Kundaliyoga, construction and consecration of temples and images
(Kriya), religious and social observances (Carya) such as Ahnika,
Varnashramadharma, Utsava; and practical magic (Maya-yoga). Where there is
Mantra, Yantra, Nyasa, Diksha, Guru and the like, there is Tantra Shastra. In
fact one of the names of the latter is Mantra Shastra. With these similarities
there are certain variations of doctrines and practice between the schools.
Necessarily also, even on points of common similarity, there is some variance
in terminology and exposition which is unessential. Thus when looking at their
broad features, it is of no account whether with the Pancaratra we speak of
Lakshmi, Shakti, Vyuha, Samkoca; or whether in terms of other schools we speak
of Tripurasundari and Mahakali, Tattvas and Kañcukas. Again there are some
differences in ritual which are not of great moment except in one and that a
notable instance. I refer to the well-known division of worshippers into
Dakshinacara and Vamacara. The secret Sadhana of some of the latter (which I
may here say is not usually understood) has acquired such notoriety that to
most the term "The Tantra" connotes this particular worship and its
abuses and nothing else. I may here also observe that it is a mistake to
suppose that aberrations in doctrine and practice are peculiar to India. A
Missionary wrote to me some years ago that this country was "a
demon-haunted land". There are demons here, but they are not the only
inhabitants; and tendencies to be found here have existed elsewhere. The West
has produced many a doctrine and practice of an antinomian character. Some of
the most extreme are to be found there. Moreover, though this does not seem to
be recognized, it is nevertheless the fact that these Kaula rites are
philosophically based on monistic doctrine. Now it is this Kaula doctrine and
practice, limited probably, as being a secret doctrine, at all times to
comparatively few, which has come to be known as "The Tantra".
Nothing is more incorrect. This is but one division of worshippers who again
are but one section of the numerous followers of the Agamas, Shaiva, Shakta and
Vaishnava. Though there are certain common features which may be called Tantrik
yet one cannot speak of "The Tantra" as though it were one entirely
homogeneous doctrine and practice. Still less can we identify it with the
particular practices and theories of one division of worshippers only. Further
the Tantras are concerned with Science, Law, Medicine and a variety of subjects
other than spiritual doctrine or worship. Thus Indian chemistry and medicine
are largely indebted to the Tantrikas.
According
to a common notion the word "Tantra" is (to use the language of a
well-known work) "restricted to the necromantic books of the latter
Shivaic or Shakti mysticism" (Waddell's Buddhism of Tibet, p, 164).
As charity covers many sins, so "mystic" and "mysticism"
are words which cover much ignorance. "Necromancy" too looms
unnecessarily large in writers of this school. It is, however, the fact that
Western authors generally so understand the term "Tantra". They are,
however, in error in so doing as previously explained. Here I shortly deal with
the significance of the Tantra Shastra, which is of course also misunderstood,
being generally spoken of as a jumble of "black magic," and
"erotic mysticism," cemented together by a ritual which is
"meaningless mummery". A large number of persons who talk in this
strain have never had a Tantra in their hands, and such Orientalists as have
read some portions of these Scriptures have not generally understood them,
otherwise they would not have found them to be so "meaningless". They
may be bad, or they may be good, but they have a meaning. Men are not such
fools as to believe for ages in what is meaningless. The use of this term implies
that their content had no meaning to them. Very likely; for to define as they
do Mantra as "mystical words," Mudra as "mystical gestures"
and Yantra as "mystical diagrams" does not imply knowledge. These
erroneous notions as to the nature of the Agama are of course due to the
mistaken identification of the whole body of the Scripture with one section of
it. Further this last is only known through the abuses to which its dangerous
practices as carried out by inferior persons have given rise. It is stated in
the Shastra itself in which they are prescribed that the path is full of
difficulty and peril and he who fails upon it goes to Hell. That there are
those who have so failed, and others who have been guilty of evil magic, is
well known. I am not in this Chapter concerned with this special ritual or
magic but with the practices which govern the life of the vast mass of the
Indian people to be found in the Tantras of the Agamas of the different schools
which I have mentioned.
A
Western writer in a review of one of my books has expressed the opinion that
the Tantra Shastra (I think he meant the Shakta) was, at least in its origin,
alien and indeed hostile to the Veda. He said: "We are strongly of opinion
that in their essence the two principles are fundamentally opposed and that the
Tantra only used Vedic forms to mask its essential opposition." I will not
discuss this question here. It is, however, the fact now, as it has been for
centuries past, that the Agamavadins claim to base their doctrine on Veda. The
Vedanta is the final authority and basis for the doctrines set forth in the
Tantras, though the latter interpret the Vedanta in various ways. The real
meaning of Vedanta is Upanishad and nothing else. Many persons, however, speak
of Vedanta as though it meant the philosophy of Shamkara or whatever other
philosopher they follow. This of course is incorrect. Vedanta is Shruti.
Shamkara's philosophy is merely one interpretation of Shruti just as Ramanuja's
is another and that of the Shaivagama or Kaulagama is a third. There is no
question of competition between Vedanta as Shruti and Tantra Shastra. It is,
however, the fact that each of the followers of the different schools of Agama
contend that their interpretation of the Shruti texts is the true one and
superior to that of other schools. As a stranger to all these sects, I am not
here concerned to show that one system is better than the other. Each will
adopt that, which most suits him. I am only stating the facts. As the Ahirbudhnya
Samhita of the Pañcaratra Agama says, the aspects of God are infinite, and
no philosopher can seize and duly express more than one aspect. This is
perfectly true. All systems of interpretation have some merits as they have
defects, that of Shamkara included. The latter by his Mayavada is able to
preserve more completely than any other interpretation the changelessness and
stainlessness of Brahman. It does this, however, at the cost of certain
defects, which do not exist in other schools, which have also their own
peculiar merits and shortcomings. The basis and seat of authority is Shruti or
experience and the Agama interprets Shruti in its own way. Thus the
Shaiva-Shakta doctrines are specific solutions of the Vedantic theme which
differ in several respects from that of Shamkara, though as they agree (I speak
of the Northern Shaiva School) with him on the fundamental question of the
unity of Jivatma and Paramatma, they are therefore Advaita.
The
next question is how the experience of which the Agama speaks may be gained.
This is also prescribed in the Shastra in the form of peculiar Sadhanas or
disciplines. In the first place there must be a healthy physical and moral
life. To know a thing in its ultimate sense is to be that thing. To know
Brahman is, according to Advaita, to be Brahman. One cannot realize
Brahman the Pure except by being oneself pure (Shuddhacitta). But to attain and
keep this state, as well as progress therein, certain specific means,
practices, rituals or disciplines are necessary. The result cannot be got by
mere philosophical talk about Brahman. Religion is a practical activity. Just
as the body requires exercise, training and gymnastic, so does the mind. This
may be of a merely intellectual or spiritual kind. The means employed are
called Sadhana which comes from the root "Sadh," to exert.
Sadhana is that which leads to Siddhi. Sadhana is the development of Shakti.
Man is Consciousness (Atma) vehicled by Shakti in the form of mind and body.
But this Shakti is at base Pure Consciousness, just as Atma is; for Atma and
Shakti are one. Man is thus a vast magazine of both latent and expressed power.
The object of Sadhana is to develop man's Shakti, whether for temporal or
spiritual purposes. But where is Sadhana to be found P Seeing that the Vaidika
Acara has fallen in practical desuetude we can find it nowhere but in the
Agamas and in the Puranas which are replete with Tantrik rituals. The Tantras
of these Agamas therefore contain both a practical exposition of'
spiritual doctrine and the means by which the truth it teaches may be realized.
Their authority does not depend, as Western writers and some of their
Eastern followers suppose, on the date when they were revealed but on the
question whether Siddhi is gained thereby. This too is the proof of Ayurveda.
The test of medicine is that it cures. If Siddhi is not obtained, the fact it
is written "Shiva uvaca" (Shiva speaks) or the like counts for
nothing. The Agama therefore is a practical exposition and application
of Doctrine varying according to its different schools.
The
latest tendency in modern Western philosophy is to rest upon intuition, as it
was formerly the tendency to glorify dialectic. Intuition has, however, to be
led into higher and higher possibilities by means of Sadhana. This term means
work or practice, which in its result is the gradual unfolding of the Spirit's
vast latent magazine of power (Shakti), enjoyment and vision which everyone
possesses in himself. The philosophy of the Agama is, as a friend and
collaborator of mine, Professor Pramathanatha Mukhyo-padhyaya, very well put
it, a practical philosophy, adding, that what the intellectual world wants
to-day is this sort of philosophy; a philosophy which not merely argues but
experiments. The form which Sadhana takes is a secondary matter. One
goal may be reached by many paths. What is the path in any particular case
depends on considerations of personal capacity and temperament, race and faith.
For the Hindu there is the Agama which contains forms of discipline which his
race has evolved and are therefore prima facie suitable for him. This is
not to say that these forms are unalterable or acceptable to all. Others will
adopt other forms of Sadhana suitable to them. Thus, amongst Christians, the
Catholic Church prescribes a full and powerful Sadhana in its Sacraments
(Samskara) and Worship (Puja, Upasana), Meditation (Dhyana), Rosary (Japa) and
the like. But any system to be fruitful must experiment to gain experience,
The significance of the Tantra Shastra lies in this that it claims to
afford a means available to all, of whatever caste and of either sex,
whereby the truths taught may be practically realized.
The
Tantras both in India and Tibet are the expression of principles which are of
universal application. The mere statement of religious truths avails not. What
is necessary for all is a practical method of realization. This too the
occultist needs. Further the ordinary run of mankind can neither apprehend, nor
do they derive satisfaction from mere metaphysical concepts. They accept them
only when presented in personal form. They care not for Shunyata, the Void, nor
Saccidananda in the sense of mere Consciousness -- Being -- Bliss. They appeal
to personal Bodhisattvas, Buddhas, Shiva, Vishnu, Devi who will hear their
prayer, and grant them aid. Next they cannot stand by themselves. They need the
counsel and guidance of priest and Guru and the fortifying virtues of the
sacraments. They need a definite picture of their object of worship, such as is
detailed in the Dhyana of the Devatas, an image, a Yantra, a Mandala and so
forth, a developed ritual and pictorial religion. This is not to say that they
are wrong. These natural tendencies, however, become accentuated in course of
time to a point where "superstition," mechanical devotion and
lifeless formalism and other abuses are produced. There then takes place what
is called a "Reform," in the direction of a more spiritual religion.
This too is accentuated to the point of barrenness. Religion becomes sterile to
produce practical result and ritual and pictorial religion recurs. So Buddhism,
which in its origin has been represented to be a reaction against excessive and
barren ritualism, could not rest with a mere statement of the noble truths and
the eightfold path. Something practical was needed. The Mahayana (Thegpa
Chhenpo) was produced. Nagarjuna in the second century A.D. (?) is said to have
promulgated ideas to be found in the Tantras. In order to realize the desired end,
use was made of all the powers of man, physical and mental. Theistic notions as
also Yoga came again to the fore in the Yogacarya and other Buddhist systems.
The worship of images and an elaborate ritual was introduced. The worship of
the Shaktis spread. The Mantrayana and Vajrayana found acceptance with, what an
English writer (The Buddhism of Tibet by L. Waddell) describes in
the usual style as its "silly mummery of unmeaning jargon and
gibberish," the latter being said to be "the most depraved form of
Buddhist doctrine." So-called Tantrik Buddhism became thus fully
developed. A Tantrik reformer in the person of Tsongkhapa arose, who codified
the Tantras in his work Lam-rim Chhen-mo. The great code, the Kah-gyur,
contains in one of its sections the Tantras (Rgyud) containing ritual, worship
of the Divine Mothers, theology, astrology and natural science, as do their
Indian counterparts. These are of four classes, the Kriya, Carya, Yoga,
Anuttara Tantras, the latter comprising Maha, Anu and Ati-Yoga Tantras. The
Tan-ghur similarly contains many volumes of Tantras (Rgyud). Then, at length,
Buddhism was driven from out of India. Brahmanism and its rituals survived and
increased, until both in our day and the nearer past we see in the so-called
reformed sects a movement towards what is claimed to be a more spiritual
religion. Throughout the ages the same movements of action and reaction
manifest. What is right here lies in the middle course. Some practical method
and ritual is necessary if religion is not to be barren of result. The nature
of the method and ritual will vary according to the capacity and development of
men. On the other hand, the "crooked influence of time" tends to
overlay the essential spiritual truths with unintelligent and dead formalism.
The Tantra Shastra stands for a principle of high value though, like other
things admittedly good, it is capable of, and has suffered, abuse. An important
point in this connection should be noted. In Europe we see extreme puritan
reaction with the result that the religious movements which embody them become
one-sided and without provision for ordinary human needs. Brahmanism has ever
been all-inclusive, producing a Sadhana of varying kinds, material and mental,
for the different stages of spiritual advancement and exempting from further
ritual those for whom, by reason of their attainment, it is no longer
necessary. http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas03.htm
[ii]
[ii] http://www.kheper.net/topics/Buddhism/Vajrayana.htm
Vajrayana, or Tantric Buddhism, has been described as the
latest phase in the development and evolution of Buddhist thought.
For a long time, Western scholars dismissed Vajrayana as the final
"degenerate phase" of Buddhist thought. This attitude was due
to the fact that these materialistic scholars had only a Christian or a secular
way of seeing the world. They could appreciate ordinary Buddhism (Theravada, etc),
seeing the Buddha as the Christ of the East teaching an essentially moral
message, or as a sort of spiritual humanist; but when faced with a system of
knowledge and practice that embraced all the magical and occult elements that
Western rationalism
had rejected centuries ago, could only explain it as some sort of degenerate
end phase.
Fortunately, in more recent times other
Westerners have studied Tantric Buddhism first hand, at the feet of actual
Tibetan Masters, and so have a more mature appreciation and respect for that
noble tradition. Indeed, if anything good has come out of the terrible
Chinese invasion and oppression of the Tibetan homeland in the 2nd half of the
20th century, it has been that this has driven Tibetan lamas and teachers to
the West, and encouraged them to spread their tradition among sympathetic
Westerners.Vajrayana metaphysics is, like Indian Tantra, a hybrid affair: a coming together of Indian Tantrism, Mahayana Buddhism, and the original aboriginal shamanism - the Bon tradition - of Tibet itself. Like the Nathas, Shaktas, and Shaivites, the Vajrayanists postulated a subtle or iconographic body, made up of chakras, nadis, and subtle winds (vayu). And like their Indian counterparts they worked on manipulating the forces of this subtle body through yoga in order to attain spiritual enlightenment. But Vajrayana tantra diverged very early from Indian tantra. Instead of the later seven-chakra model, they retain an earlier four chak-ra schema of navel, heart, throat, and head centres. Starting from this four-chakra foundation, the Vajrayanists - like the Indian tantics - built up a very elaborate system of correspondences.
There are a number of other important differences to Indian (Shakta) Tantra as well. In Indian tantra one starts form the base chakra and progresses up. In Tibetan tantra one starts from the head, which is the "lowest" level of consciousness (body, waking consciousness, wrathful deities), and progresses down to the heart, which is the highest level of consciousness.
With Indian Tantra the kundalini is awakened through specific breathing practices and yoga-postures. The prana or vital-force of the subtle body is thus manipulated through the breath and the physical body; through an extension of Hatha yoga which, the reader will recall, was associated from the beginning with Indian Tantra. In contrast, Vajrayana practice involves manipulating the vital force through the mind and concentration. Through intense visualisation of deities and so on, one activates the inner "winds" (= prana = ch'i) and "drops".
The Instead of the Kundalini-Shakti or "Serpent Fire" of Shakta Tantrism, Vajrayana has the Tumo (literally "fierce woman"). Through intense visualisation of deities and concentration upon the "lower tip" (the minor chakra at the tip of the sex-organ), the winds (prana) are drawn into the lower opening of the central channel (sushumna), producing an intense heat, called tumo [Daniel Cozort, Highest Yoga Tantra, p.71]. In her fascinating book, Magic and Mystery in Tibet Alexandra David-Neel popularised stories of Tibetan yogis drying icy sheets with their naked bodies outside in the middle of winter. That is a showy exhibition of tumo. Real tumo of course is the tantric meditation itself.
As a result of the tumo-heat, the drops melt and enter the central channel. The red "female" drops in the navel chakra ascends to the heart chakra, while the white drops in the crown chakra descend to the same chakra. The bliss of the drops flowing in the central channel is said to be a hundred times greater than that of orgasm [p.71]. The drops, moving up or down the central channel, finally enter the "indestructable drop" in the heart chakra, so called because it is said to be drop that passes from life-time to life-time, taking with it the "very subtle mind" and "very subtle wind" [p.72].
The entire visualisation or meditation stage itself is called the stage of Generation, as its purpose of is to construct or generate an actual enlightenment or buddha-body, the stage of Completion. The result of all this is that one rises in an "illusory body", so called because it is a spirit body rather than a physical body, and at death, rather than be caught up by the bardo and reincarnation, one remains in full consciousness in the illusory body, so attaining Buddhahood.
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