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Eastern Spirituality

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 August 2024

Extract

Paganism, that is ethnic religions, can only be understood historically. They are the precipitate of a tribe's, a people's, group-experiences during its process of formation. They are passed on from generation to generation by way of tradition and are expressed either as customs, as mythology or as cult—the distinction between these three kinds of thoughts, words and deeds always remaining pretty vague. Moreover, all these group-expressions are in a constant flux; new experiences are added, modifying and perhaps logically contradicting, the previous forms of expression, possibly superseding them altogether.

Nothing, therefore, could be more misleading than wanting to explain a pagan ideology, an ethnic religion, in the same manner as that of a religion based on a depositum fidei, from which everything can be logically deduced. An ethnic religion never starts as a system, though in the end, at a certain point of intellectual development, systematisers arise that try to arrest the growth of amorphous agglomerations of group-experiences in the rigid moulds of a static ideology.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1951 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

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References

1 Such popular devotions, as those to Ganeca and Râma for instance, are quite recent developments, continuing to the beginning of this twentieth century, when they produced the novelty of political propaganda.

2 For details of the three primary types of civilisation, Venatorial, Agriculturist and Pastoralist, may I refer to my ‘Protohistory’ (St Louis, 1947).

3 = ‘the Great God', later called Civa; Mahâdevî = ‘the Great Goddess becoming later Durga ('the inaccessible one’) and Pârvatî ('the mountain dweller’), as well as Ambilâ ('the mother’).

4 The Vedas consist of collections of hymns chanted by different priestly families during sacrifice. They constitute the most ancient extant Indo-European literature and date from c. 1500 B.C.

5 Composed c. 750-700 B.C.

6 As for instance the nirvâna of the Buddhists which is explained as neither ‘being’ nor ‘not-being'.

7 Hîna = ‘deficient', mahâ = ‘great', yâna = ‘ vehicle', scil, to convey man to motça. Names of the two schools of Buddhism, the Hinayana prevailing in Ceylon and Indo-China, the Mahayana in China and Japan.