Nigel,
I have been doing some thinking along the lines
of your post for the last few days, and from the
feedback so have others who post here. There is
definitely something hanging in the air, so to
speak.
I have spoken to some friends and acquaintances
about this whole thing and have gotten some very
different reponses. Shock was an obvious response
from some people.
There were a very few who came back to me with a
surprising response. They said in their opinion, a
teacher of the esoteric leading to higher
consciousness can have all sorts of worldly and
screwed up problems, just like everyone else. One
teacher was cited whose name I cannot recall. I was
told this guy did many drugs, had a drinking
problem, was bisexual, had AIDS, but had guided
hundreds of thousands of students from around the
world to a higher consciousness.
Personally, I don't get it. Consciousness to me
is about living, not separate from day to day life.
To say that someone can be very screwed up and
still be focussed on what's important in the
universe, this idea seems like a contradiction to
me. But I have seen and heard stranger things than
that, and so did Shakespeare.
I have a hard time buying into that scenario, but
something tells me (not fear or anything like that)
it's entirely possible in a world that has
hurricanes blowing over some of the most beautiful
inhabited islands on earth, regularly destroying
human life, in a world that is inhabited by the
duck-billed platypus and the scorpion, in a world
that seems to be up for grabs to the bully with the
biggest wallet, the most firepower and the best PR,
in a world where everything seems to be upside
down. This would fit the Kali-yuga scenario...what
it must be like to live in an age of truth, where
all is right side up!
You said:
'When we hear someone referred to as a
Master, we assume they have mastered
something, that they have an expertise to share
with lesser practitioners of their respective
crafts. As with a master butcher, so with a master
musician; as with a schoolmaster, so with a Kung Fu
master etc.'
I agree.
'And when, by chance, some dewy-eyed friend or
stranger tells us in a hushed whisper: Maharaji is
a master - The Master we accept on trust an
assumption of spiritual authority because we like
what we are hearing and our naïve, uncynical
hearts still have trust to invest. And when we
learn He is the Living Master for The Age, come to
save the planet, instead of counting his Rolls
Royces, we count our blessings...'
Yes, we did.
'It is interesting to now watch premies
wrestling with some uncomfortable facts and
weighing new information against their concepts of
what a Master might be.'
Interesting isn't the word.
'In a thread lower down an anonymous premie
suggests that if Prem Rawat is a Perfect Master,
then anyone who dares criticise is guilty of
megalomania. Presumably because they criticized
Jesus too, blah, blah
Absurd, of course, but
almost understandable, remembering the scale of my
own indoctrination and that of
fellow-followers.'
The anonymous premie begins his/her suggestion
with 'If'.
'If' is the word that the Great Illusionist used on
Jesus in the wilderness to introduce his
temptations. That anonymous premie should just go
on and enjoy their life and not judge anyone
else.
If that premie has a rock-solid faith, good for
them.
'The belief that such thing as a
Master exists (by means unproven,
possessing skills untested) stacks a heap of
unearned credit into the account of anybody
claiming the title. We give them the benefit of the
doubt, just as Cambridge Professors gave Uri Geller
the benefit of the doubt when he appeared to bend
spoons with his mind. Worse, even when the doubts
creep in, we have no yardstick of divinity for
reassessing the Masters worth, so we carry on
giving the benefit of the doubt. (I can no more
prove Maharaji isnt the Lord than I can prove
the non-existence of unicorns or Santa Claus.)'
'And for those of us brought up with the
Beatles, the Mararishi and associated hippie shit,
and progressing to Hess, Leary, Yogananda and
others on the spiritual smorgasbord, giving benefit
of the doubt to self-styled masters becomes
pretty-well
automatic. If a guy can sit lotus-legged in
loincloth for twelve hours at a stretch without
twitching a muscle, well who am I to insist his
inner self hasnt passed through the internal
gates and merged with the infinite, or that his
heart doesnt dwell in Samadhi?'
Or at least his butt's asleep, or one or both of
his legs...
Seriously, I understand and can relate to what you
are saying here.
'(Actually, sitting still in a lotus pose is no
big deal among the poor in Asian countries, nor is
wearing few clothes. I wonder how convinced
wed be by a well-dressed, white-skinned yogi
who lay motionless in bed for similarly long
time-stretch?)'
The family of the well-dressed white skinned
yogi would be calling doctors and specialists to
come over and do all sorts of tests on him/her.
Something must obviously be wrong.
'But Maharaji never even affected these poses of
oriental mysticism. His assurances of his special
status were sufficient. And from the moment of
placing him on that Krishna throne we downgraded
our self-worth in inverse proportion.'
Maybe that is how you see it now. But when we
did that years ago we actually raised ourselves to
a level of higher self-worth, either from his
really being the Man or from our own Quixotic
missionary zeal, which made us all fellow finders
of truth.
The beauty of the moment was pure, and if we were
fooled into it, then that is another moment to deal
with. If someone has faith and is fooled, shame on
the trickster, not on the believer.
But as always, buyer beware.
'Yet it is impossible to prove Maharaji
isnt the Lord, in spite of it all. So
lets, for arguments sake, assume he is
God in human form, and see where it goes. What kind
of God are we dealing with?'
This is where I was at when I ran across your
post. I was thinking of all the things that God
'allows' to happen which contribute to the pain and
suffering of men, women and children all over the
world. I mean, why make a beautiful string of
tropical islands with great beaches and then have
sharks and hurricanes come around and kill
unsuspecting people? Why make beauty and underline
it with danger and death?
'In a recent radio interview Kurt Vonnegut
outlined his best advice for would-be novelists,
summing up his points in a short-list of
essentials. One tip he offered was this:
Make bad things happen to your characters. In
fact, he insisted, you should make terrible things
happen to them, no matter how sweet, charming or
lovable you have otherwise portrayed them. Because
that is the only way see what they are made of.
Simple as that. And hes right.'
'And as true for God in Human Form as for anyone
else
So never mind that God drinks, smokes or takes
drugs and shits in a golden pan. Never mind that
his addresses are rambling and incoherent
that he cant even finish a grammatical
sentence. These may be off-putting factors for
some, or merely foibles and
eccentricities (Jesus spent time among thieves and
prostitutes, remember). Lifestyle choices
dont necessarily get to the essential
character of a man or woman, as evidenced by the
number of premies fully aware of the above facts
but who are happy to continue as devotees as
I was whilst still practicing back in the
eighties.
No, lets take Vonneguts advice and
look at how our main character deals with the bad
stuff so we can really see what hes made
of
Only recently have I learned how Maharaji
handles the slings and arrows and have to say that
even from this distance I
have been almost shocked by what Ive heard.
Four examples will suffice:
1. Gods hand-picked devotee and instructor
turns out to be serial child abuser
God removes offender from scene, but continues to
employ him. Fails to notify police either in the
States or in India, effectively leaving him free to
abuse. Fails to contact victims or offer apology or
explanation.
2. Gods marriage hits a rough
patch
God asks devotee to arrange a series of discreet
hotel-room introductions with female
devotees where he can show them Gods etchings
before dumping them.
3. Gods wife appears to be flirting with
somebody who isnt God in a
restaurant
God dismisses chauffeur, storms out and drives home
drunk, his car weaving all over the road,
Gods children in the back.
4. Cyclist pulls out in front of Gods
limousine whilst God is driving.
Cyclist dies
God switches drivers and flees
the scene.
Ok, since I cant prove a negative, let
Prem be God in Human Form, if thats who he
says he is - but if thats God then God is an
arsehole. If he came to me in a vision and revealed
his powers and divine plan so that I had to
believe, I would nonetheless spit in his face.'
I would not spit in his face. But I would
definitely be having some very strong feelings.
Your thesis that Maharaji could still be the Master
of Knowledge and the one who's mission it is to
mainstream it to humanity ('attention K-Mart
shopper's, we have an instructor of Maharaji's on
aisle 3 today from 10 am to noon')
I also happen to agree with that possibility,
despite all the bad news and events in which he is
involved.
The world is changing. It's going to hell in a
handbasket politically, environmentally,
spiritually, culturally, and pretty much in all
other ways too. At the same time there are forces
at work in most of these realms trying desparately
to shore up the floodgates. Perhaps the 'Master of
the Age' is just as screwed up as so many other
people are, and in this 'all bets are off'
atmosphere on earth now, most people don't give a
shit. In the long run, what will most likely be
remembered about Maharaji is his work to spread
Knowledge, whatever else happens.
When I read about the kings and demigods of
antiquity in different cultures, many of them had
soap-opera lives, with lovers and jealousies and
murderous plots and the whole nine yards. And they
also had their duties and missions to perform,
which they seemed to also do.
How I feel about it? Unnerved and tired right
now. Maharaji's actions or lack thereof in the
examples you gave above shake my hard fought and
won Judeo-Christian value systems of right and
wrong, good and bad to the point of feeling like I
have to completely let go of either those values or
Maharaji to stop the vibrations that are driving
cracks into my thinking/feeling components. Talk to
ya later.
Sandy
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