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________________ MAHĀVĪRA HIS PHILOSOPHY OF LIFE 15. The Priest and the Recluse The quest for the Higher on an intellectual or metaphysical plane has been all along, in India, the privilege or province of some outstanding individual or individuals, while the mass of the population, generally steeped in ignorance and poverty, was devoted to crude deification and ancestor-worship. The power of a religious leader lay in his ability to win over to his creed the people around him. In India there have been two types of religious leaders: the priest and the ascetic The priest was a champion of ritualism. He 'vigorously claimed that the welfare and indeed the very existence of the world, including even the gods, depended upon the maintenance of their systems of sacrifice, which grew to immense size and complexity. The cults popularised by him were polytheistic; the deities were very often forces of nature; and man was put at their utter mercy, the priest alone being capable of saving him by seeking the favour of the deities through sacrificial rites. This is the line of thought of the Vedic religion and its coustodians. It came into India from outside, from the NorthWest. And, thanks to the mesmeric power exerted by elaborate ritual, it gradually spread towards the East and the South, catching handfuls of followers here and there. 16. Thought-ferment in Eastern India As distinguished from this, in the East, along the fertile banks of the Ganges and Jumna, there flourished in India a 50 Jain Education International For Private & Personal Use Only www.jainelibrary.org
SR No.006504
Book TitleMahavira his Times and his Philosophy of Life
Original Sutra AuthorN/A
AuthorHarilal Jain, A N Upadhye
PublisherBharatiya Gyanpith
Publication Year1977
Total Pages70
LanguageEnglish
ClassificationBook_English, History, & Philosophy
File Size4 MB
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