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Hindu's Perspective on Christ and Christianity
A new book compiled from the works of a guru who died 52 years ago
offers thoughts on Jesus' teachings and their unity with yoga.
By Teresa Watanabe, L.A. Times Staff Writer
December 11, 2004
The Three Wise Men who came to worship the Christ child hailed from
India and named him Isa, or "Lord," in Sanskrit - a name
that became Jesus in the Bible.
The star they followed to find the infant Jesus was not a physical
celestial body. It was the omniscient "wisdom star of infinite
perception" in the spiritual eye, located between the eyebrows,
which the wise men accessed through deep meditation.
Later, Jesus traveled to India, where he practiced yoga meditation
with the great sages there some time during his "lost years"
from age 13 to 30, a time of his life scarcely mentioned in the
New Testament.
As Christians immerse themselves in the Advent season to prepare
for Christmas, such assertions might sound like blasphemy or pure
fantasy. But they come from a renowned Indian guru, the late Paramahansa
Yogananda, in a newly published work that is being praised as the
first detailed interpretation of the four Gospels by a Hindu.
Compiled from decades of Yogananda's speeches and writings, the
book is being published by his Los Angeles-based Self-Realization
Fellowship 52 years after his death.
"The Second Coming of Christ: The Resurrection of Christ Within
You," offers startling ideas about the deeper meaning of Jesus'
teachings and their essential unity with yoga, one of the world's
oldest and most systematic religious paths to achieving oneness
with God.
According to fellowship senior editor Brother Chidananda, the book
aims to recover what Yogananda believed were major teachings lost
to institutional Christianity. Among them was the idea that every
seeker can know God not through mere belief but by direct experience
via yoga meditation.
"This gives a way to enter the kingdom of heaven within through
the science of meditation and gives a vision of the oneness of religion,"
he said in an interview at the fellowship's headquarters in the
Mount Washington neighborhood. "I can't think of anything more
timely, with all that's happening in the Mideast and other places."
At two volumes and 1,642 pages of intricate discourse on various
Gospel passages, the book (listed at $58 and available for about
$41 at some major bookstores) is not expected to be a bestseller.
But it has been praised as a groundbreaking work by comparative
religion scholars.
Robert Ellwood, a USC professor emeritus and specialist in world
religions, called it a "rare bridge-building book" that
could change the way people see Jesus. Arvind Sharma, a professor
of comparative religion at McGill University in Montreal, said the
book represented a "path-breaking" effort of a Hindu in
claiming the right to interpret the Christian Gospels.
"More and more people will draw understandings from religious
texts that are not their own," Sharma said. "We have to
let go of the attitude that only Christians have the right to interpret
the Bible, that a religion belongs only to its followers. What Yogananda
was saying is that Jesus did not preach to Christians; he preached
to humanity."
Christopher Chappel, a professor of theological studies and an
expert on the religious traditions of India at Loyola Marymount
University in Los Angeles, said many of Yogananda's assertions would
enhance Christian faith, because they affirm the resurrection and
other accounts of Jesus' experiences.
But other assertions, such as Jesus' purported sojourn in India,
are impossible to judge, Chappel said, because they have not been
thoroughly researched in the West, even though a minority of people
in certain Hindu and Muslim traditions have long claimed that Jesus
traveled to India, Kashmir, Tibet and elsewhere.
Yogananda came to the United States in 1920 and, five years later,
moved to Los Angeles to establish an international headquarters
for his Self-Realization Fellowship. The organization, which disseminates
his teachings on yoga and meditation, now has more than 500 temples
and meditation centers, with members in 178 countries.
Followers say Yogananda's mission, bequeathed to him by his gurus,
was to present to the West actual techniques to commune with God
and show the underlying harmony between the original teachings of
yoga and Christianity. The new book, Chidananda says, represents
a milestone in that mission.
Believers in the Bible's literal truth, however, are certain to
reject Yogananda's explanations that many biblical stories are metaphorical
and metaphysical, rather than actual fact - beginning with the book's
title, "The Second Coming of Christ."
The guru did not focus on a literal return of Jesus. Rather, he
said, the significant Second Coming involved a return of the "Christ
consciousness" of divine intelligence, wisdom and perception
that was incarnate in Jesus and other masters, such as Krishna of
India. As it spreads among seekers, it will bring peace and harmony,
he said.
Yogananda also says that John's puzzling Book of Revelation is
not a treatise on Armageddon and the final days before Christ's
Second Coming, as perceived by many Christians. He says John, whom
he described as the most deeply mystical of Jesus' disciples, was
providing a road map to divine union using yoga techniques.
Hank Hanegraaff, president of the Christian Research Institute
International in Rancho Santa Margarita, criticized Yogananda's
belief in a unity between yoga and Christianity. He said the fellowship
belief that God is present in all creation was pantheistic, while
Christians were monotheists. "The idea that a unifying theme
underlies all religions is nice to say, but it makes little sense,"
he said.
If the book confounds or offends traditionalists, however, Chappel
and Sharma say it might not surprise mystics. The path to God or
enlightenment through meditation is found in Sufism of Islam and
cabala of Judaism, monastic Buddhism and contemplative Christianity.
Chidananda says such Christian mystics as Teresa of Avila, Meister
Eckhart and John of the Cross have described experiences of divine
union that uncannily resemble the yoga experience. In many accounts,
Chidananda says, deep meditators report hearing a "cosmic hum,"
then perceiving a light in their brains' frontal lobe and experiencing
a blissful, expanded sense of self.
Yogananda draws parallels between the Christian trinity of Father,
Son and Holy Spirit and the yoga concept of Sat, Tat and Aum. Both
traditions use the trinity to distinguish among the transcendent,
divine reality; its immanence in creation; and a sacred, cosmic
vibration that sustains the universe, he says.
And he asserts that Bible passages used to exclude non-Christians
from salvation have been misconstrued.
Some Christians believe, for instance, that Jesus' saying that
"no one comes to the Father except through me" requires
a belief in Jesus the man as God and personal savior. Yogananda,
however, asserts that Jesus was referring to the need to achieve
the same "Christ consciousness" he personified as a way
to achieve oneness with God.
"Christ has been much misinterpreted by the world," Yogananda
wrote. "Even the most elementary principles of his teachings
have been desecrated, and their esoteric depths have been forgotten."
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