Welcome Thoughts
From the Bhakti List Archives
• June 3, 1997
> Dear Ms Manjula Sriram, > > Yr message of to-day. There is no need to ask for 'forgiveness' or > anything for yr entering the discussions. I think you have made some > very valid points about the responsibility of the elder generation to > convince the younger members of the community that the SrIvaishNava > religion is a source of genuine consolation and joyful living, and that our oral traditions and recorded literature constitute the best gifts available to humanity. Owing to the several distractions of historic (and partly unwholesome) changes of the last half a century, this responsibility has not been discharged; this is why your note is quite valid, even though your point could register with a little practice. > I myself plan to write on the point touched by you. It is in fact an > issue of 'generation gap' which is bandied about as a cliche, but stands for a serious breakdown which, however, can be remedied. > A feedback from the younger ones of yr age-group is important, as > without it all the abstruse discussions on our network would become > meaningless. > > Best wishes from T.S. Sundara Rajan, at Memphis. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ SUPPLEMENTARY NOTE. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ As for the propriety of asking questions, please remember that two of our upanishad (viz. kEna and praSna) are actually named after this necessary spiritual exercise of asking questions. The praSna starts with the anecdote of the group of rshi seeking out bhagavan pippalAda, who sets the right mood for the ensuing dialogue, by saying, "yathA-kAmam praSnAn prcchatha, yadi vijnAsyAmah, sarvam ha vo vakshyAma" ("Do ask your questions as you please and we shall tell you all, if we [ourselves] understand them!") The venerated dialogue of SrImad-bhagavad-GItA occurred as a consequence of a simple question put by arjuna in frustration: "kim nO rAjyEna GOvinda, kim bhOgair- jIvitEna vA?" ("What if I gain the kingdom, oh Govinda, or the pleasures; or What of living itself?") ~~ a fundamental question which pushed the entire run of nineteenth century existentialists (right down to Jean Paul Sartre) disconsolate. The Book of Isaiah (in Old Testament) contains a call in the same spirit of invitation to a dialogue, asking and considering and answering and again considering and ingesting: "Come, let us reason together! If your sins be red as scarlet, they shall be washed white as snow!" No restraints, therefore, on questioning! We have only to remember pippalAda's three preconditions for the questioning: "tapasA, brahmacharyENa, SraddhayA!" (It just won't do to translate these terms into English!) aDiyen rAmAnujadAsan, T.S. Sundara Rajan.
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