Religion and I

 

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As the new academic year begins today in Kerala’s schools, I’m reminded of the fact that it’s a year since I stopped teaching and took to retired life, the third stage of Vanaprastha in the Hindu vision of life. According to this view, I’m supposed to pass on household duties to younger generation and focus more on spiritual contemplation.

Since Maggie and I are the only two members of our family, I can’t pass on duties to any youngster. But I decided to do some serious exploration of religion and spirituality. That’s how I started writing a book which was tentatively titled The Simplest Guide to Religion.

I’m not religious. I was unable to find meaning in prayers and rituals though I like visiting religious places. My countless visits to such places as well as my observations of people who practise religion earnestly made me want to learn why religion appeals to so many people though it appears absurd to me. That’s how I started working on this book.

I hope to complete it in a few weeks. The book has 6 parts: the pre-religious human, early religious forms, psychological and cognitive roots, from myth to theology, religion and power, and modernity and beyond. I did some fairly extensive studies before writing this. The more and I delved into the topics, the greater was my realisation that religion was here to stay as long as humanity existed. The concluding chapter is titled: Will Religion Ever End? It won’t obviously.

So I needed to understand it and writing this book gave me a lot of revelations and epiphanies. This is not a promotional post. The thought that I’m completing one year of my Vanaprastha made me look at what I’ve done with the year. It’s a question I hear almost every day: “How do you pass time?” When I tell people that I don’t pass time but time flies for me, they don’t believe. When I tell them that I read and write most of the time, they seem to doubt my sanity.

The final stage in the Hindu vision is Sannyasa or Renunciation. One is expected to sever all worldly ties and live a life of total devotion, meditation, and serenity, completely dedicating oneself to the divine. I don’t think I’ll ever reach that stage because the divine is still an intellectual exercise for me, not spiritual. Not experiential, so to say.

In spite of learning quite much about religion and its inevitability in human affairs, I still find it hard to make sense of people who claim to be deep believers in the divine but lack basic human compassion. Writing this book is helping me understand them better. But has it helped to make me more spiritual? No.

The starting point of my book is that religion is “at its most elemental level ... a narrative solution to the problem of chaos…. Gods do not explain the world in the scientific sense; they render it intelligible enough to be endured.” My mind hankers after explanations that appeal to my intellect. And I understand that religion is more of the heart than of the intellect. Maybe someday the stage of Sannyasa will begin to stir my heart.

Until then, let my explorations go on. The monsoon used to usher in the new academic year in Kerala usually. This year seems to be different, thanks to El Nino. But the monsoon has always been a unique drenching experience. I long for divinity to be one such experience.

What else but divinity can be the ultimate climax of human yearnings?

Comments

  1. For most around my area my spiritual path is clearly way out there.

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  2. You never told me that the book was in the making... I wish you all the best and expect some streaks of the off beat and out of the box, in your autobiographically and biographically tinged discoveries... Beyond the beaten track.. In case your readings on religion, not covered Clifford Geertz, Max Weber and Karl Marx, a foray into them, might be of help.. I am sure you have met Freud on religion. I am into the last week of preparation for my AIBE XXI - 2026 - part of my Vanaprastha. Vsnaprastha is not only withdrawal but also a launching into the public sphere... Which you are also engaged in.. Awaiting your distillations and interpretations of Religion.

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    Replies
    1. When I started writing it, i wasn't sure whether I'd complete it. So I didn't tell anyone, even Maggie.

      As I move towards the final part, Weber and Marx may enter... But Clifford Geertz, I'm hearing for first time. Will look up.

      Delete
  3. Your school year is starting? Ours is ending. Fascinating. Good luck with your book. It sounds like something you need to write.

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    Replies
    1. June is the beginning of school year in Kerala.

      Yes, that book begged to be written.

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  4. In our country, most people don't know what to do with themselves when they retire, they waste time in cafes, chatting over beer, playing billiards and the like. That's why I'm glad to hear that someone decides to write a book, especially such an interesting book. I wish you to work patiently on it and finish and publish it! Best regards, Jasna

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  5. Hari Om
    It is important to maintain intellectual engagement in retirement, and not just to fall into a heap, as so many do who have not built up interests external to their work careers. There's no question at all that you are keeping your brain active! YAM xx

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  6. It's always interesting with you...let today’s Monday be the same...Hug, Andreja

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  7. maybe have a look to Byung-Chul Han

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    Replies
    1. Had a look. Seems more of psychology than religion.

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    2. in particular, this book: Speaking about God: A Dialogue with Simone Weil

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    3. "God is not dead. The man to whom God revealed Himself is dead." - That does sound inviting. Let me check it out.

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  8. Replies
    1. The first draft is ready. Now it needs editing and perfecting. I've requested my scholar-friend Rev Dr Maliekal, professor of philosophy and religion, to read and assess it. You will have your copy in a couple of months. Thanks for the interest.

      Delete

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