What is Scripture?
What are the sacred writings of Hinduism? This question begs a more basic question, namely, what
are sacred writings? In other words, before we can discuss
the sacred writings of Hinduism, we should first come to an
understanding of scripture. When we use the terms "sacred
writings" or "scripture," this implies written texts. As we
have noted earlier, written texts are a part of a cumulative
religious tradition, the "stuff" of religion. In many cases,
and particularly in the case of India, the original sacred
texts were not texts at all; they were oral transmissions
passed down from teacher to student through memorization.
But even these transmissions are part of a cumulative religious
tradition, and though it was considered profane to put
these sacred dialogues into writing, today, virtually all
sacred writings of all major religions are in the form of
written documents, scripture. Given this fact, one could argue
that what scripture actually is are voice sounds and words
on paper, or more likely today, digital code and marks on
a computer screen. In this sense, scripture is not different
from any common dialogue or piece of writing. But we know
there is a world of difference between scripture and a common
newspaper or a novel. Scripture is sacred. Newspapers and
common novels are secular. It is therefore, the quality of "sacredness" that
creates the difference between scripture and an ordinary
piece of writing.
What is the source of such sacredness? Is it something within the voice of the teacher or the text itself that creates sacredness? The answer to this question is the same as what lays at the heart of religion; namely, faith. It is the faith of the reader that gives sacredness to the written text. A person reads a common newspaper with a certain mental state; he interacts with the newspaper in a certain way; the same reader, when he reads a religious text, also enters a certain mental state, but in this case he perceives the religious text as sacred. When reading the religious document his mental state is one of "scripturalizing." Through his faith, he scriptualizes the religious document. Another reader, without the element of religious faith, reads the same religious document simply as a literary or an historical document and so may not perceive the scriptural aspect of the text. What is scripture, therefore, is determined by the mental state of the reader; and when enough readers agree that a certain document deserves the stature of sacredness, the document attains the collective status of "sacred writing," scripture.
This is how scripture is created. One may also argue that
it is the word of God or even of saints that create sacredness,
but we know that one person's God may be another person's
demi-god or even a demon, and that one person's saint can
also be another person's terrorist. It always comes down to
individual and collective faith. All aspects of a cumulative
religious tradition are predicated upon faith.
The Shruti Vedas
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The Four Vedas |
There is good evidence that the ancient Indian, Zoroastrian,
Greek, Roman, and pre-Christian European religions all share
a common Aryan heritage. They are of the same religious type,
even though they have been processed differently. The great
contribution of these Aryans in India was primarily their
language, Sanskrit, and their sacred writings, the early Vedas.
The word veda comes
from the Sanskrit root vid, "to know." So the Vedas
are literally what was known by the ancient Aryans, in other
words, their sacred knowledge. As we have noted, the reference
to writings is not strictly correct because the early Aryan
traditions in India were oral. The sacred traditions
of early Hinduism inform us that their seers, known as risis, "heard" the
Vedas. By "heard" we mean that a kernel of these Vedas appeared
in the hearts of these seers, who then elaborated upon this
kernel to produce the oral tradition of the Vedas. The early
Vedic tradition is consequently called shruti,
"what is heard." This shruti tradition
was also known as an apaurusheya tradition.
Purusha means man, paurusheya means
composed by man and
apaurusheya means not composed
by man, i.e., made by God. Today, this shruti tradition
appears as the four Vedas: Rig, Sama, Yajur and Atharva.
These four Vedas comprise what is often called the Shruti
Vedas. These four Vedas were then each divided into four divisions
known as branches:
Samhitas,
Brahmanas,
Aranyakas and
Upanishads
The Samhitas are hymns praising
various Vedic Deities. These Deities, for the most part, do
not include the common Deities of modern Hinduism: Krishna,
Rama, Shiva and Hanuman for example. Instead, the primary Deities of the
Shruti Vedas are Agni, Indra, Varuna, Mitra,
Soma, the Rudras, the Vasus, and a whole host of Deities that
are barely known in modern Hinduism. The Deities of the Shruti
Vedas are primarily "nature" Gods and these Samhita hymns were
used to call upon these Deities for rain, food and other necessities
of life. These hymns formed the substance of the rituals used
to propitiate these Deities. The Brahmanas are works
detailing these rituals. They may be compared to the
Book of Leviticus in the Bible. They are technical books describing
the details of the Agni Hotra or fire and other rituals. They
elaborately describe the articles to be used in these ceremonies
as well as the cosmic significance of these rituals to the
universe. The Brahmanas are the beginnings of Hindu
theological reflections. The next branch of the Vedas are
the Aranyakas.
Aranya means forest and aranyaka means "in the forest."
These forest works
continue the theological speculations of early Hinduism, but
they go beyond the rituals and start to develop the theology
of the early Aryans that eventually takes mature form in the Upanishads
which, today, are the most well known part of the Shruti Vedas.
The Upanishads are the premier
theological discussions of early Hinduism and they appear
mainly in the form of dialogues between students and teachers
asking such question as, What is soul? What is God? What is
the nature of reality? What is death? and so forth. The number
of Upanishads varies
with the highest number being over a hundred. Today, the most
popular number of Upanishads are between 10 and 13.
The famous teacher, Shankara commented on 10 Upanishads. Later
Madhva and others followed his example. These works are well
worth reading for they are some of the most profound theological
discussions of humankind.
Interestingly, these four Shruti Vedas appear in a version of the Sanskrit language that is considerably different than the Sanskrit of modern Hinduism. This early Sanskrit is generally called Vedic Sanskrit as opposed to the more common classical Sanskrit of modern Hinduism. In addition to these four Vedas, there are a set of works collectively called the Vedangas, supplementary works. In order to read and perform the rituals of the Shruti Vedas, one needed a knowledge of grammar, meter, pronunciation, astronomy/astrology, and so forth. These are the Vedangas, which are traditionally six in number. For the most part these four Vedas, along with all their divisions and the Vedangas, comprise the Shruti Vedas.
The Smriti Vedas
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Bhagavata Purana |
Hinduism views
time in great cyclic periods known as yugas. There are four such yugas and today we
live in the time period known as Kali Yuga. This is the period
of spiritual darkness, ignorance and destruction. At the beginning
of this Kali Yuga, it is described how the great sage,
Vyasa, looked into the future and saw mankind in a fallen
condition with decreased mental abilities and a shortened
life span; and so, to mitigate the suffering of mankind, he
codified and put the Shruti Veda into writing. He also saw
the need for a simplified form of the Shruti Vedas that could
be understood by the fallen people of Kali Yuga, so he created
what is sometimes called the "fifth Veda." This
fifth Veda is a catch-all term that refers to all subsequent
developments after the four original Vedas. This new phase
of the tradition is called the Smriti Vedas and it is described
as a paurusheya, man-made tradition. Literally,
smriti means "remembered," but a better
way to think of this later Vedic tradition is in terms of
what has been made by man and written down from the outset.
Thus the Smriti Vedas are the Vedas for Kali Yuga and they
include the two epics poems, the Mahabharata and
the Ramayana,
and the numerous Puranas that, all together, form
the basis of modern Hinduism. The compiler of this fifth Veda
is known to be Veda Vyasa, but he word vyasa simply means
compiler and debate continues whether there is one Vyasa or
many vyasas. Popular tradition informs us that there was only one
Vyasa.
The Mahabharata is
the history of ancient India from the beginning of Kali Yuga
and the famous Bhagavad
Gita (The Song of God) appears within this great epic.
The other major epic of ancient India is the Ramayana composed
by the sage Valmiki. The Ramayana is said to predate
the Mahabharata, but it is also included within the
compass of the Smriti Vedas. The Ramayana is the story
of Rama and Hanuman, two of the most popular Divinities of modern
Hinduism.
As far as the Puranas are concerned, they are collections
of ancient stories. The word purana means
old and so they are compilations of old stories about gods,
sages, and kings, along with the genealogies of famous royal
families. The Puranas include stories of creation,
destruction, and stories taken from different yugas and even
different parts of creation such as the various heavens and
hells. Tradition mentions eighteen Puranas, the most
common of which are: the Bhagavata, the Vishnu,
the Shiva, the Skanda and the Garuda
Puranas. There is even a set of smaller Puranas known
as upapuranas that are also eighteen in number. Most people, however,
do not know all these works. In general, the two epics and the
Puranas comprise the bulk of modern-day Hinduism.
Of all these books, theologically the Bhagavad
Gita is the most prominent book within the Smriti tradition.
If the Upanishads are the most prominent works of
the Shruti tradition, it is safe to say that modern
Hinduism is mainly based on the works of the Ramayana,
the Bhagavata
Purana and the Bhagavad
Gita. The Mahabharata is well known, but
it is so vast, over ten times the size of the Iliad and
the Odyssey combined, and therefore so overwhelming,
that it is almost unreadable. Many people are even afraid to
keep a Mahabharata in
their homes since it describes the story of a devastating war
that almost ended humanity. People do not want war in their
homes.
There are also many other works that are not written in Sanskrit,
but which also play a major role in modern Hinduism. The most
common of these works is the "Hindi Ramayana" known as the
Ramcharit Manas, by Tulsi Das. It is a devotional
reworking of the original Sanskrit Ramayana composed
in Hindi about 500 years ago. The famous Hanuman Chalisa,
forty verses in praise of Hanuman, is taken from this Hindi Ramayana and
is still commonly recited today. Another set of books that
are not in Sanskrit, but which also inspire the lives of millions
of Hindus today in South India are the works of the twelve
Alwars. This is the Divya Prabhanda, which is a collection
of beautiful devotional and theological prayers written in
Tamil. These are ancient works and they are also considered to be "Vedic." In
addition, there are many secular works also included within
the general category of being Vedic. These are works on medicine,
Ayur Veda; law, the Dharma Shastra; architecture, Vastu
Shastra;
political science, Artha Shastra; morality, Niti
Shastra;
and of course, love and pleasure, the Kama Shastra. So all of these, the Shruti and Smriti Vedas,
comprise the shastra or sacred writings of Hinduism.