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His Divine Grace A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada
The conclusion that the
ritvik system is unprecedented follows from an analysis of its
properties, i.e. that it appears to be unique. However such an
analysis is totally unrelated to the central question- was such a
system ordered by Srila Prabhupada?
Thus if we
used historical precedent as a guide we would need to discount many of
the initiations conducted by Srila Prabhupada as being bogus.
Srila Prabhupada teaches us that THIS is the
parampara, without any additional clarification regarding 'siksa/diksa',
'gaps' or the need for 'living diksa'. Rather he calls it a 'clear line
of disciplic succession'
Unless you can
find other examples of how initiations were conducted in a *worldwide*
religious *institution* during some previous Kali yuga just after the
appearance of the Golden Avatar, you do not even have a basis for
comparison.
10) The
very objection itself is unprecedented, and thus by it's own internal
logic should be rejected.
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THE
'UNPRECEDENTED' OBJECTION
One of the
most common objections to the ritvik system of initiation being
re-instituted within ISKCON is that it is not in line with historical
tradition. It is often pointed out that to operate such a system is
completely unprecedented, and thus cannot be what Srila Prabhupada had
intended. The most obvious problem with this objection is that it is in
itself unprecedented. Nowhere in sastra is it ever stated that a guru's
order can be ignored if it is unprecedented, or that lack of historical
precedent somehow invalidates a direct instruction from a guru to his
followers. Neither is there any mention in Srila Prabhupada's books of any
previous acarya who taught such a principle. Therefore the objection
itself is unprecedented, and thus by its own logic self-defeating and
contradictory.
The
following points can be used to defeat this objection:
- The conclusion that the
ritvik system is unprecedented follows from an analysis of its
properties, i.e. that it appears to be unique. However such an
analysis is totally unrelated to the central question- was such a
system ordered by Srila Prabhupada? Just because the ritvik system may
have been previously unheard of, does not in itself prove that Srila
Prabhupada did not sanction its continued application within ISKCON.
This 'central question' can only be properly addressed by analysing
Srila Prabhupada's actual instructions in this regard. These
instructions, along with their analysis, have been presented in the "Final
Order" wherein it has been clearly demonstrated that
Srila Prabhupada DID order such a system. As disciples it is only such
orders that have any relevance. Srila Prabhupada did not train up his
disciples to evaluate his orders on the basis of historical
considerations, nor did he ever teach that such considerations could
be used to evaluate the validity of such orders, what to speak of
terminate them.
- Srila Prabhupada taught
that our guide is sastric injunctions, NOT historical tradition. There
are NO sastric injunctions preventing a diksa guru from initiating
just because he is not physically present on the same planet as his
prospective disciple.
- It is just plain
historical fact that Srila Prabhupada did many things which were
unprecedented, such as giving the Gayatri Mantra by having a female
disciple administer it to her husband, giving initiation through the
mail, etc. Every acarya in our line set his own precedents, albeit in
harmony with sastric injunctions. If an acarya never set a precedent,
then logically nothing could ever be UN-precedented, since no
precedents would exist in the first place to act as a comparative
standard. Thus to reject something based on lack of precedence is a
self-contradictory argument, since something can only be unprecedented
if you assume that there already exist precedents set by someone, at
some time previous, to act as a standard. But in accepting this
possibility we are admitting that an acarya can set precedents!
- Certainly there is no
mention in his books that any type of PHYSICAL barrier or
consideration can obstruct the transcendental process of diksa between
guru and disciple. In fact the OPPOSITE is stated:
"Just like
Krsna can be present simultaneously in millions of places. Similarly,
the Spiritual Master can be present wherever the disciple wants. A
Spiritual Master is the principle, not the body. Just like a television
can be seen in thousands of places by the principle of relay
monitoring."
"Physical
presence is immaterial"
"So we should
associate by vibration, and not by the physical presence. That is real
association."
Etc. - Please see
appendices to The
Final Order.
- One could argue that
there is no mention in Srila Prabhupada's books of a ritvik system
being used when the Guru is still on the same planet as the
prospective disciple. Yet we know that such a system was used by Srila
Prabhupada to initiate the vast majority of his disciples. Thus if we
used historical precedent as a guide we would need to discount many of
the initiations conducted by Srila Prabhupada as being bogus. This is
a clear example of Srila Prabhupada sanctioning the use of a
previously unprecedented system. The very same system in fact which is
now being objected to on the basis of lack of precedent!
- Furthermore, what we DO
know about the parampara supports the ritvik system. The most famous
example of diksa transmission in our parampara is given in the
Bhagavada Gita 4:1:
"The Blessed
Lord said: I instructed this imperishable science of yoga to the
sun-god, Vivasvan, and Vivasvan instructed it to Manu, the father of
mankind, and Manu in turn instructed it to Iksvaku."
And
yet Srila Prabhupada describes this primary example of the parampara
system as involving inter-planetary diksa:
"So there was
no difficulty in communicating with Manu or Manu's son Iksvaku. The
communication was there, or the radio system was so nice that
communication could be transferred from one planet to another."
(BG lecture 1968).
The
fact that diksa can be transmitted from one planet to another proves the
viability of the ritvik system, since we know Srila Prabhupada is still
present in the universe:
"You have
asked if it is true that the spiritual master remains in the universe
until all his disciples are transferred to the spiritual sky. The answer
is yes, this is the rule". (SPL
Jayapataka 11.7.69).
We
also know that as a mahabhagavat Srila Prabhupada is at least as
powerful as demigods such as Iksvaku. So transferring or transmitting
diksa to receptive disciples should present him no difficulty at all,
from whichever planet he may presently reside.
- Also in the Gaudiya
parampara coming from Lord Caitanya, Srila Prabhupada always presents:
Narottama
Dasa Thakura > Visvanatha Cakravati > Jagganatha Dasa Babaji
as
the record of the parampara, yet there would appear to be hundreds of
years separating them. Srila Prabhupada teaches us that THIS is the
parampara, without any additional clarification regarding 'siksa/diksa',
'gaps' or the need for 'living diksa'. Rather he calls it a 'clear line
of disciplic succession' (Lecture 11/6/69). Why would Srila Prabhupada
do this if he wanted to emphasize the need for 'living diksa'? One may
go and research other books not authored by Srila Prabhupada to present
an alternative explanation, but only the above is what Srila
Prabhupada taught us.
- Also it does not make
sense to use 'tradition' as a benchmark by which to evaluate our
parampara since it is difficult to identify for our parampara, a
package of 'traditional' standards from which nothing must deviate.
For example, a few hundred years ago Madhavendra Puri introduced
something completely new - Radha-Krishna worship. Srila Prabhupada
states that up until then Krishna had been worshipped on His own. Lord
Caitanya then appeared to completely change vaisnava philosophy. Until
then the philosophy of our parampara had been pure dualism - not
simultaneous oneness and difference. With all this in mind it seems
odd we should worry unduly about Srila Prabhupada using ceremonial
priests in seemingly novel ways. After all, he is not changing any
principle of philosophy merely by using priests to give names and
accept disciples on his behalf. He is only installing a relatively
minor procedural detail with regards to a ceremony which is itself
merely a formality, not an essential aspect of diksa initiation. The
key overriding principle that a disciple should always get initiated
by a maha-bhagavata who is in the parampara, remains intact. This is
the system Srila Prabhupada left us, whereby potentially unlimited
numbers of people in the future can be initiated into the parampara,
using the same system that was used to initiate large numbers of new
disciples when Srila Prabhupada was physically present.
- Sometimes people bring
in books not authored by Srila Prabhupada to prove that the ritvik
system is a deviation from tradition. This desperate tactic is
employed since there is no mention of these so-called vital
'traditional' principles in Srila Prabhupada's books. The very fact
that outside books need to be consulted prove that Srila Prabhupada's
books were not intended to be guidebooks for evaluating how
'traditional' a particular practice maybe. This fact alone should tell
us that tradition cannot be an issue. If tradition was supposed to be
a vital tool by which to evaluate the validity of any particular
practice then Srila Prabhupada would have provided us with the
necessary information about 'traditional' practices with which to make
these judgements. We would not need to consult other books, since
Srila Prabhupada's teachings are not 'deficient' in any area of
spiritual life. Obviously if we are sincerely trying to follow and
understand what Srila Prabhupada wanted we should stick solely to his
teachings. If there is some so-called principle of tradition that
Srila Prabhupada did not mention, we are not interested in it. Such
principles can not be important to our spiritual lives if Srila
Prabhupada did not mention them.
- Finally, the whole
process of trying to draw comparisons with the past is entirely
meaningless unless you are comparing like with like. Srila Prabhupada
was a totally unique acarya who came in unique circumstances, and
achieved unique results. No previous acarya can compare with Srila
Prabhupada. Even Jesus Christ only preached to his own local people
during his manifest appearance. No-one before has left their own land
and spread Krishna Consciousness all over the world. Unless you can
find other examples of how initiations were conducted in a *worldwide*
religious *institution* during some previous Kali yuga just after the
appearance of the Golden Avatar, you do not even have a basis for
comparison.
Thus
in summary:
The
July 9th order proves that Srila Prabhupada definitely set up a ritvik
system of initiation. We also know that he issued no countermanding order
for it to be terminated. Therefore it should still be running. This system
may not marry up with our speculations about how we think Srila Prabhupada
SHOULD have done things, or what we might have *expected* him to do; but
this is Srila Prabhupada's final order on how initiations were to run
within ISKCON. Thus we have no choice but to follow it if we want to
follow Srila Prabhupada. That's the bottom line. Therefore, the burden is
on the GBC to show why the system that Srila Prabhupada's set up for
initiations was supposed to be drastically altered immediately after his
passing away.
Furthermore:
-
The ritvik system as used by Srila Prabhupada himself when he was present
is unprecedented.
-
Historical precedent is in itself no basis for determining truth.
-
We
follow sastra, which does not give any injunctions against the ritvik
system.
-
Srila
Prabhupada did many things which were unprecedented.
-
Previous
acaryas all set their own precedents.
-
Parampara examples and teachings support lack of physicality in guru
disciple relationships.
-
The
parampara has no standard pattern to be followed.
-
We do
not have enough authorised information to evaluate if the system is
'untraditional'.
-
The
whole situation is too unique to make any valid comparisons.
-
The
very objection itself is unprecedented, and thus by it's own internal
logic should be rejected.
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