2020/03/06

God's Politics - Wikipedia



God's Politics - Wikipedia



God's Politics
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God's Politics: Why the Right Gets It Wrong and the Left Doesn't Get It is a 2005 book by author Jim Wallis. The book focuses on the role of religious hypocrisy in politics, and critiques both the so-called "religious right" and the "secular left" while noting that the vast majority on the "left" have families who embrace both family values and religion. His criticism includes quotations from the Bible, as he accuses U.S. President George W. Bush and many at Fox News such as Bill O'Reilly and Sean Hannity of practicing bad theology, noting that Jesus was strictly nonviolent particularly when it comes to invading other countries such as Iraq where over 600,000 civilians are estimated to have been killed due to the U.S. invasion, while Jesus said more about social justice while he never said anything against homosexuality

He defends religion in general, and challenges organizations such as the American Civil Liberties Union for overreacting to public displays of religion, although the Founding Fathers of the U.S. clearly intended separation of church and State.



Righteous Anger

By Steven Waldman,
editor in chief and co-founder of Beliefnet, a multifaith spirituality and religion Web site
Tuesday, February 15, 2005; Page C04

GOD'S POLITICS
Why the Right Gets It Wrong and the Left Doesn't Get It
By Jim Wallis
Rayo. 384 pp. $24.95

Jim Wallis requests that he not be called a leader of the "religious left." When I first read this plea, I figured that Wallis -- who is religious and on the left -- was making a tactical decision: The term "religious right" has become pejorative and he doesn't want the same thing to happen to his team.
As it happens, Wallis has a more interesting explanation for why he doesn't like the term. He has lots of problems with his fellow liberals. He rails against "secular fundamentalists" and New Age gurus, hard-line pro-choicers and lefties who pursue "innocuous spiritualities" while attending "Zen/Christian retreats."


It's Wallis's critique of the secular left as well as the religious right that makes this such an important book. After toiling as an anti-poverty crusader and magazine editor for many years, Wallis hit his stride in the 2004 campaign by challenging the religious conservative monopoly on political God-talk. Now there is a debate over the nature and role of the religious left, and "God's Politics" is a seminal contribution to the timely discussion.

The most thrilling parts of the book for Democrats will be Wallis's attacks on Bush and conservatives -- because his sound bites come from the Bible. Instead of quoting Paul Krugman or the Children's Defense Fund, he quotes Jesus and the Old Testament prophets. The problem with religious conservatives is not that they invoke religion too much, but that they practice "bad theology," he argues. He notes that although religious conservatives focus on homosexuality and abstinence, Jesus and Isaiah and Micah had much more to say about poverty and economic justice than sexual impropriety. Therefore, he writes, the Bush administration's tax policies reflect a "religious failure." And also: "An enormous public misrepresentation of Christianity has taken place. . . . [M]any people around the world now think Christian faith stands for political commitments that are almost the opposite of its true meaning. How did the faith of Jesus come to be known as pro-rich, pro-war and only pro-American?"

His attack on the Iraq war goes beyond making the obvious but often forgotten point that Jesus preached nonviolence. Reflecting on prison torture, Wallis challenges religious conservatives to view Abu Ghraib through the lens of their own views about the sinful nature of man: "The Christian view of human nature and of sin suggests that we are fallible creatures and thus not good at empire. We cannot be trusted with domination, becoming too easily corrupted by its power and too often succumbing to repression in defending it." In other words, good Christians should be wary not only of war but of imperialism as well.
But those liberals expecting to find Al Franken with a clerical collar may be disappointed -- or challenged -- by Wallis's critique of the left. He firmly rejects the idea that Bush invokes religion too much. "From the Anti-Defamation League, to Americans United for the Separation of Church and State, to the ACLU and some of the political Left's most religion-fearing publications, a cry of alarm has gone up in response to anyone who has the audacity to be religious in public. These secular skeptics often display an amazing lapse of historical memory when they suggest that religious language in politics is contrary to the 'American ideal.' The truth is just the opposite. . . . [M]any of the most progressive social movements in American history -- anti-slavery, women's suffrage, the fight for child labor laws and the civil rights movement -- had overt religious roots and motivations."
He also criticizes the antiwar activists for not showing enough concern about evil tyranny, Democratic Party officials for excluding anti-abortion views, anti-poverty activists for denying the ruinous role of family breakdown and civil libertarians for remaining mum about cultural pollution.

There are some serious divisions on the liberal side over social issues. White liberal Protestants, for example, tend to be for abortion rights and gay rights, while African Americans and Hispanics are more conservative on abortion and generally oppose gay marriage. Wallis, who personally opposes abortion and the gay marriage ban, seeks to bridge these gaps; for example, he suggests that both groups could support efforts to reduce the number of abortions not by legal restrictions but by policies aimed at preventing teen pregnancies -- a proposal that seems obvious and yet never quite happens because of the polarizing politics of abortion.
In a way, Wallis's rhetoric ends up being less Jesse Jackson than President Bill Clinton. On nearly every issue, he triangulates a theologically grounded New Democrat philosophy.

The chief disappointment of this book is that although Wallis pledges to be a "prophetic voice" willing to criticize friends and enemies alike, he fails to honestly grapple with why the religious left has been so impotent.
He deals effectively with the left's failures on two of the defining moral issues of our time -- war and cultural decline. "It must be admitted that the peace movement sometimes does underestimate the problem of evil,'' he writes, "and in doing so weakens its authority and message." And his angry attacks on Hollywood for the sex and violence on TV would make William Bennett beam.
But on an equally important issue -- poverty -- he fails to tell an important part of the story. He has a nice "third way" riff about how liberals have been too lax and conservatives too strict, but he writes as if this were a new concept -- rather than one at the heart of the 1990s battle over welfare reform. A Republican Congress and a Democratic president in fact agreed to put aside that false choice between compassion and toughness and pass welfare reform -- and Wallis and most of the religious left opposed it.
I don't particularly blame him for being wrong about welfare. Lots of people were, and he and others had a legitimate concern about the plight of the neediest. But he doesn't even mention the fight or show any self-awareness about the misguided approach of religious progressives.

Despite that flaw, "God's Politics" is an important political book and an important spiritual book. Religious conservatives love doing battle with a comparatively easy mark like the ACLU or some atheist who's trying to take "under God" out of the pledge of allegiance. Wallis poses a more substantial threat -- a battle not between religion and secularism but between two different visions of faith.

Evangelicalism Is Dead. We Need a New Label for Our Faith | Sojourners



Evangelicalism Is Dead. We Need a New Label for Our Faith | Sojourners




EVANGELICALISM IS DEAD. WE NEED A NEW LABEL FOR OUR FAITH
BY RANDALL BALMER

JAN 24, 2020
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Following the death of evangelicalism on Nov. 8, 2016, those of us who number ourselves among the followers of Jesus in the evangelical tradition have struggled for a new way to identify ourselves on the religious landscape of North America. I suggest we adopt the moniker "Sojourners Christians."

I don’t give up on evangelicalism lightly or willingly. Evangelicalism is in my DNA, and I’ll put my credentials as an evangelical up against anyone: evangelical parents, a preacher’s kid, gave my heart to Jesus at age three (and many times thereafter), youth group, Bible camp, graduated from Trinity College and Trinity Evangelical Divinity School. My father was a distinguished pastor in the Evangelical Free Church for 40 years; I honor his ministry and his memory.

But evangelicalism contracted a terminal disease in 1980 when evangelicals turned their backs on one of their own, Jimmy Carter, a born-again Southern Baptist Sunday school teacher, in favor of a divorced and remarried former Hollywood actor. In so doing, evangelicals cast their lot with the far-right fringes of the Republican Party and began systematically to disregard the teachings of Jesus as well as the noble legacy of 19th-century evangelicals, who advocated for those on the margins of society: the poor, prisoners, minorities, and women.

READ: Evangelicals Love Trump's Praise More Than God's

Evangelicals in the 19th century were far from perfect. Many evangelicals in the South defended slavery, and some evangelicals aligned themselves with nativists. But evangelicals also fought against slavery. They were involved in peace crusades and advocated prison reform. They supported public education, known then as common schools, because they believed that education would allow the children of the less affluent to toe the ladder of upward mobility. Evangelicals supported women’s equality, including voting rights, which was considered a radical notion at the time. In the course of my research, I’ve even discovered an evangelical crusade for gun control in the 19th century.

I have spent much of my career trying to call evangelicals back to their own heritage and to their better selves. I’ve spilled more ink than I care to tally on books and op-ed pieces in places like the Los Angeles Times, the Washington Post, and the Des Moines Register, not to mention Christianity Today (where I served as editor-at-large until they disowned me for breaking with the orthodoxy of the Religious Right).

All for naught. In the 2016 presidential election, 81 percent of white evangelicals voted for a thrice-married, self-confessed sexual predator and former casino operator who cannot even feign religious literacy. According to independent sources, Donald Trump has told more than 16,000 lies or misleading statements since his inauguration, yet he continues to bask in the lavish praise of Franklin Graham, Jerry Falwell Jr., and other evangelical leaders.

The 2016 election finally laid bare the fiction that the Religious Right was concerned with “family values.” It also allowed the Religious Right to circle back to its charter principles, which are embedded in racism, not, as commonly supposed, in opposition to abortion. (Prominent evangelicals initially praised the Roe v. Wade ruling; they mobilized politically later in the 1970s to defend racial segregation at places like Bob Jones University.)

Since the 2016 election stripped evangelicalism of all claims to moral credibility, what are those of us who formerly claimed that label to do? Some have suggested Followers of Jesus, which has the virtue of simplicity. Others favor exvangelicals, which may be a tad too cute; besides, I resist defining myself in negative terms. Red Letter Christians is a worthy choice (and, if memory serves, I’m a charter member), but it’s a term that needs explanation these days, and there’s a perception that, however loosely configured, it’s an organization, not a movement.


I propose instead Sojourners Christians, which is a bit more generic. This is not an attempt to elevate or to reify this magazine, but since its earliest days as the Post-American, Sojourners has taken seriously Jesus’ mandate to be peacemakers, to welcome the stranger and care for the least of these. In addition, Sojourners has matured to take into its orbit Catholic spirituality, Eastern Orthodoxy, and the best of the peace church and the black church tradition. Even mainline Protestantism finds a place in the Sojourners spectrum, although many of us remain properly wary of its vanilla, anything-goes ethic.

If I were younger, more ambitious, and technologically savvy, I’d set up a Facebook page and a Twitter account for Sojourners Christians. If this idea has any merit, I’ll leave that to others. In the meantime, and for the foreseeable future, I shall refer to myself as a Sojourners Christian.

Randall Balmer


Randall Balmer, an Episcopal priest, is the John Phillips Professor in Religion at Dartmouth College. He is the author of more than a dozen books, including Mine Eyes Have Seen the Glory: A Journey into the Evangelical Subculture in America, now in its fifth edition, and Redeemer: The Life of Jimmy Carter.

Fiona Gardner to present 2020 Backhouse Lecture | Australia Yearly Meeting

Fiona Gardner to present 2020 Backhouse Lecture | Australia Yearly Meeting



Fiona Gardner to present 2020 Backhouse Lecture

THE 55th ANNUAL JAMES BACKHOUSE LECTURE
Seeking Union with Spirit: Experiences of Spiritual Journeys by Fiona Gardner
to be presented Monday 6 July 2020 at 7.15pm on the campus of Avondale College, Cooranbong NSW
 
Although originally daunted at being asked to present the 2020 James Backhouse Lecture to Australian Friends, Fiona Gardner came to find that the opportunity encouraged her to reflect more deeply on her own journey and what might usefully be shared with others, For over twenty years, Fiona has participate in facilitating the Meeting for Learning (a year-long program for spiritual nurture, designed to explore Spirit and Quaker ways), and lives with her partner in a small intentional community that has been a place of spiritual growth and learning. She has worked as a social worker for many years and now as a university teacher, particularly in the areas of fostering critical reflection and sprituality  for pastoral care workers. A continuing challenge in her own spiritual life has been how to integrate her spiritual being in all of these aspects of her life.
“Why seek to live life in union with Spirit?  Such a life, in my experience and that of many others, is a fuller, richer, meaning filled and deeper life, connected to that which is eternal. It means moving from what is often called the ‘divided life’, beyond opposing forces to a place of wholeness, to integrating all of who we are in all that we do. To do this means holding together these opposites.” 
Fiona Gardner came to the Religious Society of Friends in her mid-thirties, convinced by the depth and power of silent worship, the warmth and welcome of Quaker community and social commitment.  She is a longstanding member of Victoria Regional Meeting, and is based within the Bendigo Worshiping Group, a small worshipping group in rural Victoria. She has also played a significant role nationally in the development of Meeting for Learning over the years and feels fortunate to have been a facilitator of Meeting for Learning since its beginning in 1996. 
Fiona’s professional work is as a social worker primarily in rural areas, and for the last ten years she has been coordinator of the Department of Social Work at La Trobe University Rural Health School, and researching and writing related to the place of spirituality in social work and allied health. She also teaches a unit in critical spirituality at Stirling Theological College with pastoral care workers and ministers, mainly from a variety of Christian traditions.
Copies of the Lecture publication will be available for purchase on the night of Lecture.

The James Backhouse Lectures are public lectures on contemporary issues delivered at the national gathering of Quakers in Australia. They were initiated by Australia Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) on its establishment in 1964. To learn more about the James Backhouse Lectures visit here.
 

2020/03/05

Indian Culture from a Mystic's View: Why we do What we do | Udemy

Indian Culture from a Mystic's View: Why we do What we do | Udemy

Indian Culture from a Mystic's View: Why we do What we do
Explore the Immensity & Sophistication of a Culture soaked in Spirituality| From Rituals & Festivals to Science & Wisdom
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What you'll learn
Learn the historical context and current relevance of various aspects of Indian culture.
Have a comprehensive understanding about the people of India and their life-values.
Know the lore and science behind some of India's main rituals.
Get an understanding of the various methods this culture developed to evolve a person into his ultimate nature.
Get to know about the nature of 'consecration' and what makes this life-transforming science so relevant to humanity.
Learn the science and significance behind the age old practices of this tradition.
Know how for millennia, Indian temples have been instruments for raising human consciousness.
Get a brief idea of the nature of geometry and architecture in ancient India.
Learn about powerful spaces energized by thousands of mystics and yogis over the ages.
Learn how the yogic and spiritual processes were made an integral part of everyone's life.
Know the Various Festivals we celebrate and understand how 'celebration' can be a passageway to the most profound aspects of life.
See India in an entirely new light. Here's Bharat as you have never known it!See more

Requirements

No Prerequisites. Anyone with an interest in the topic can effortlessly understand and follow the course.
Headphones are recommended for a truly immersive experience

Description


Indian culture is incredibly complex and resembles a chaos of mind-boggling proportions. But beneath this seeming chaos is a scientific foundation that is thousands of years old.




Yogi and mystic, Sadhguru, looks at the basis behind the various elements of Indian culture and customs, and explains how every detail in this tradition was geared towards a human being’s immediate and ultimate wellbeing.



The most significant aspect of 'Bharat' (the cultural name of India) is that this is a land of Seekers , and not Believers of any particular religious doctrine( although we have over 33 million Gods and Goddesses in this country).



In this Culture, 'Mukti' or ultimate liberation from the cycles of life and death has been seen as the highest goal that one can aspire for. It is because of that, this culture created a variety of Tools for the Ultimate Well-being of a Person. No other culture on the planet has looked at a human being with as much depth and understanding as this culture has. No other culture has looked at it as a science and created methods to evolve a person into his ultimate nature.

Sadhguru goes on to say that we have the technologies as to how to manufacture an enlightened being.




Every culture is valuable to that particular population largely for emotional and territorial reasons. But the significance of Indian culture is that it is a scientific process towards human liberation and well-being and hence can offer a beautiful future for all of humanity. So, creating the necessary ambience for spiritual growth of a human being, is what you see as this culture.



In India, the way people look, their language, food, way of dressing, music and dance, everything is different every 50 or 100 kilometers in the country. Everything about people who live in this country is different, but a common cultural thread has held us together. This culture of what India has been, which cannot be quantified, is simply there. Wherever you go in the world, if you see an Indian, the very way he sits and walks, you know he is an Indian!



Here we say that whatever is happening to you is your karma. That means it is your making. You are the maker of your life and hence can craft your life whichever way you want it to be, if you learn to be conscious of certain aspects.



In this course 'Indian culture from a Mystic's view' Sadhguru explores the various aspects of Indian culture, from the mundane to the profound :




Sadhguru explains the significance of Festivals like Diwali, Holi and Dussehra ; explaining how celebration can be a passageway to the most profound aspects of life.


Sadhguru explains the meaning of the name “Bharat”, and how it wasn’t just a name inherited from India’s first emperor, but a scientific device to find your rhythm with the tune of existence.


Sadhguru describes the nature of consecration and what makes this life-transforming science so relevant to humanity.


India is a land of temples. Sadhguru looks at how for millennia, temples have been energy centers and instruments for raising human consciousness. He also explores the science behind their creation.


Sadhguru speaks about powerful sacred places like Kailash, the great repository of mystical knowledge.


We look at the science and impact of Indian classical music, as Sadhguru interacts with Pandit Jasraj, doyen of Hindustani classical music.


Sadhguru speaks about the science behind the system of gotras and kulas that were established in Indian culture, which show a deep understanding of genetics.


Sadhguru looks at the science and significance behind the Kumbha Mela, the greatest gathering of people in the world.


With India fast becoming a truly global environment in terms of economy, food and culture, what does it take to make sure our youth do not forget the richness of being Indian?







It would take thousands of years to set up such a complex scientific mechanism that constantly drives you towards your liberation. In this culture, the way you sit, stand, or do anything else, it is structured in a way that leads to your wellbeing. Be it Music, Arts or Dance-forms – everything – is oriented towards making you free. People who get deeply involved in these aspects naturally turn spiritual.





"Wherever I travel, whatever kinds of groups of people I meet, I have spoken to top-level scientists, academics and students at very prestigious universities, and various other kinds of people, but I always find that the groups I meet in India are far sharper and smarter than most people anywhere in the world. The country is so effortlessly going ahead in the information technology age while everyone else is struggling essentially because the spiritual ethos in the culture has sharpened the intellect in a certain way."

--Sadhguru
Who this course is for:
And, If you are interested in knowing the reason why this complex chaos of a Nation continues to outshine all others.
Featured review

Daniel Simpson ( 8 courses, 7 reviews )

10 months ago
Great mini lectures on various aspects of Indian culture from Sadhguru. I love the wisdom of Sadhguru, and I am enjoying this course, so I give it 5 stars, however much of this material I have seen previously on YouTube.
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Course content
Expand all 59 lectures05:29:19

–Introduction
03:06

An Introduction to Sadhguru
Preview03:06

+Indian Culture- An Overview
5 lectures17:11

+Bha-Ra-Ta! A Culture beyond parallel
2 lectures06:03

+Rituals and Why we do What we do
10 lectures56:35

+Mystic India
11 lectures01:29:02

+Festivals in Indian Culture and their Importance
5 lectures19:18

+Manifestations of the Divine
5 lectures31:45

+Sacred Places: Glimpses and Significance
4 lectures17:18

+A Few Contributions from India
7 lectures34:14

+Stories from India
2 lectures21:34

+Present Dynamics
2 lectures13:43

+Making of a Nation : Challenges and Opportunities
4 lectures18:47

+Bonus Section
1 lecture00:43

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4.5 Instructor Rating
958 Reviews
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18 Courses

Sadhguru : Insights and Wisdom
Yogi, Mystic, Visionary, Spiritual Guide


*Account managed by Volunteers

“This life for me is an endeavor to help people experience and express their divinity. May you know the bliss of the Divine.” - Sadhguru

A realized yogi, visionary and a profound mystic of our times, Sadhguru, has dedicated himself to the physical, mental, and spiritual wellbeing of all people. Though Yoga and meditation are at the core of his teachings, he is also a sought after opinion maker who is regularly invited to speak at leading international forums and many prestigious global conferences such as The World Peace Summit at the United Nations and the World Economic Forum as well as countless Educational Institutions including Oxford, Yale and Harvard.




A multi-faceted personality, he is also a bestselling author and poet, an adventurer by heart, a consultant, an architect and a philanthropist along with being a mystic of unfathomable proportions and a spiritual master with a difference. In a manner that is candid, audacious and unpretentious, he shatters conventional definitions of morality, religion and spirituality.




At home in loincloth as much as he is in blue jeans, barefoot through the mighty Himalayas, or straddling a BMW motorcycle on the expressway, Sadhguru is the most unusual mystic that one can encounter. Marking a clear departure from mere customs and rituals, Sadhguru's scientific methods for self-transformation are both direct and powerful. He is often described as a 'Contemporary Guru', since he belongs to no particular tradition and incorporates aspects of yogic sciences that are most relevant for modern-day life into his teachings and practices. His scientific methods for self-transformation have universal appeal.




Sadhguru’s insights into the mechanisms of life are an outcome of his profound experience of the Self, and serve as a guide to exploring the deeper dimensions of life. His life and work serve as reminders that the inner science of yoga is not esoteric philosophy from an outdated past, but is absolutely relevant and applicable to our lives today.





His fundamental vision is to offer the Science of Inner Wellbeing to every human being – a science that helps a person realize the ultimate potential within. From this vision stem a multitude of projects, programs and methods, all towards the same aim: to raise every human being to the peak of their potential, so that they are exuberant, all-inclusive, and in harmony within themselves and the world. Sadhguru has often said that, “(Today) Society is overripe for a Spiritual Process.”








Achievements at a Glance





Absolute clarity of perception places Sadhguru in a unique space, not only in matters spiritual but in business, environmental and international affairs, and opens a new door on all that he touches. Probing and passionate, insightful, logical and unfailingly witty, Sadhguru's talks have earned him the reputation of a speaker and opinion-maker of international renown. He has been a lead speaker at the United Nations General Assembly, a regular at the World Economic Forum, and a special invitee at the Australian Leadership Retreat, Indian Economic Summit and TED. His astute and incisive grasp of world affairs, as well as his unerringly scientific approach to human well-being have had a transformative influence at establishments such as the World Bank, House of Lords (UK), the World Presidents’ Organization, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the London Business School, Google, and Microsoft, to name a few. With a celebratory engagement with life on all levels, Sadhguru's areas of active involvement encompass fields as diverse as architecture and visual design, poetry and painting, ecology and horticulture, sports and music. He is the designer of several unique buildings and consecrated spaces at the Isha Yoga Center, which have received wide attention for their combination of intense sacred power with strikingly innovative Eco-friendly aesthetics. He is also among the top 50 most influential people in India. Sadhguru's vision and understanding of modern social and economic issues have led to countless interviews with BBC, Bloomberg, CNBC, CNNfn,Newsweek International and so on. His insights are regularly featured in India's leading national newspapers. A well-known public figure, he regularly draws crowds of more than 300,000 people for his public talks and "sathsangs" (group meditation).


Sadhguru established the Isha Foundation, a volunteer-run, international, nonprofit organization dedicated to cultivating human potential for the past three decades. It does not promote any particular ideology, religion, or race, but transmits inner sciences of universal appeal. The Foundation is headquartered at Isha Yoga Center in southern India and at Isha Institute of Inner-sciences in the United States. Under the guidance of Sadhguru and driven by a sense of oneness, love, and a deep longing to reach out and share, the Isha Foundation has also implemented several large-scale human service projects for rural upliftment , education reform, environmental stewardship, as well as holistic and healthy living. Isha Foundation has been recently invited by Clinton foundation to join its Clinton Global Initiative CGI. Thanks to the scientific approach, Isha's flagship program, called "Inner Engineering" has received international recognition and approval from leading corporations, universities and global forums such as Google, General Electric, the World Bank and others. To date, "Inner Engineering" has entered the lives of more than 100 million people.




Above all, Sadhguru is a living master whose voice is a distinct one: frank, bold, hard-hitting, funny and provocative. Above all it is a voice that refuses to perpetuate the cliches of archetypal Holy Man Discourse. Here is a voice that speaks with an authority that could strike you as arrogant but never sanctimonious, unfaltering but never unconsidered.




Student feedback

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This is a mind blowing must have course that can inspire and enlighten all who take it. Absolutely amazing! I loved it.
Alvin S. Enfinger
a month ago

Sadhguru : Insights and Wisdom (Instructor), 3 weeks ago


We are glad you like it ❤
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Great mini lectures on various aspects of Indian culture from Sadhguru. I love the wisdom of Sadhguru, and I am enjoying this course, so I give it 5 stars, however much of this material I have seen previously on YouTube.
Daniel Simpson
10 months ago
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As the title suggests, this course focuses on Indian Culture. It includes a wealth of information on spiritual aspects of this culture as well as social issues. For a non-Indian (such as an American like me), this is an enjoyable way to learn more about the culture that gave us Yoga, Hinduism, Buddhism, etc. You also learn a bit about Indian daily life, about cultural aspects that are becoming lost due to western influences, & certain critical social issues facing India today. You might think these are just of interest as a cultural travelogue, but many of these same social issues are part of our own society (i.e.child hunger, the ways economics have taken over our ideas of human success & the destruction of so much of the human potential). The segments are short so you can easily go through them as you have time. Overall, a fine way to learn more about our human spiritual roots and potential as well as get outside our constant focus on our own culture.
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Deborah Kay
a year ago

Sadhguru : Insights and Wisdom (Instructor), a year ago


Namaskaram Deborah,

We are ever so grateful for your words of appreciation. Indian Culture is a complex amalgamation of spirituality, responsibility, knowledge and sciences. You cannot fail to appreciate it once you get a taste of what it has to offer.
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This is essentially a compilation of Sadhguru's talks about various aspects of India. I'm pretty sure all of this stuff is available on YT but then you wouldn't get the nice certificate saying you watched it :-D
Michael Wheeler
a year ago

Sadhguru : Insights and Wisdom (Instructor), a year ago


Yes a few of the videos have been uploaded to yt. We will upload more.
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This course is enlightening - I have learnt so much about Indian culture from a perspective I had never considered before.

I would recommend this to anyone that wishes to gain a deeper understanding of India, its history, heritage and practices.

Hugely inspiring - thank you Sadhguru!
Sophie A (SuperSoph)
a year ago

Sadhguru : Insights and Wisdom (Instructor), a year ago


I am glad you found this enlightening. In fact that is all the Indian Culture is all about. Every aspect of it is designed in such a way that it takes you to your ultimate goal- liberation.
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People of Bharata - Hindus - What a rich and scientific culture!!

Let us bring back the glory which was lost by the invaders for many centuries.
Dr G Thimmaraya Gowda
a year ago

Sadhguru : Insights and Wisdom (Instructor), a year ago


Indeed. This is the time to revive our glorious traditions.
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Good course which teaches so many things in Indian Culture.
Pawan Babbar
a year ago

Sadhguru : Insights and Wisdom (Instructor), a year ago


Thank you for the review, Pawan.
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Haven't finished the course yet, but thus far I am finding it very intriguing, and I am looking forward to continuing with the video lectures.
Jose M Maisog
a year ago

Sadhguru : Insights and Wisdom (Instructor), a year ago


Hello Jose,

India has a lot to offer to every individual on the planet, in terms of inner wellbeing, peace and ultimate fulfillment. Allow it to touch you and you'll soon find yourself on the path to self-realization if not just wellbeing.
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Very Interesting approach
John Robert Cawelti
a year ago

Sadhguru : Insights and Wisdom (Instructor), a year ago


Thank you for commending.
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Good
Prashant Tiwari
a year ago
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Bha-ra-ta: The Rhythm of a Nation by Sadhguru | Goodreads

Bha-ra-ta: The Rhythm of a Nation by Sadhguru | Goodreads



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Bha-ra-ta: The Rhythm of a Nation

by
Sadhguru (Goodreads Author)
4.19 · Rating details · 37 ratings · 8 reviews


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ebook, First, 85 pages
Published January 2015 by Isha Foundation
Original Title
Bharatha: The rhythm of a nation
Edition Language
E
COMMUNITY REVIEWS
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Average rating4.19 ·
Rating details
· 37 ratings · 8 reviews


Jan 25, 2016Vaishali rated it liked it
Shelves: indian-authorsself-improvementyogis
First off, I adore Sadhguru. Secondly, however, I found this book surprisingly arrogant, with plenty of badly-researched nation-pandering.

But Sadhguru being Sadhguru nailed some solid, lucid points:
---------------

"This is a nation where a large population will give up everything a person normally aspires for – all pleasures of life, all comforts, all rights – to simply live in pursuit of what is ultimately right."

"Right now, we do not have enough space in the country to be too disorganized. If it was just one person per square kilometer, you could act crazy. But when there are this many people, how you keep every step matters."

"What kept us together longer than any other nation on the planet is essentially that we have always been a land of seekers – seekers of truth and liberation."

"A successful human being means you are complete in every way."

"It is very important to nurture an aspiration and to create the possibility that you can get there within your lifespan."

"Right now if the western countries open up their visa policy, eighty percent of Indians will swim across the oceans and go away! That is not the way to run a nation. People should want to be here."

"Between a possibility and a reality, there is a distance. Do you have the courage, the commitment and the conviction to walk the distance?"

"If we do not organize, if we do not focus this natural exuberance and free-wheeling intelligence, you will have a very chaotic situation that seems to be going somewhere but will not go anywhere."

"We don’t like any kind of authority. We would like to go all over the place. Just see – driving on the street is a clear demo."

"There are 600 million people in this country who hardly have a human existence."

"It is only by default that people became Prime Ministers in this country. We are a democracy on paper but our mindset is essentially feudalistic."

"We must, and we do, have a strong military, because human beings are still not in such a level of consciousness that we can simply live without protection."

"I would like to suggest to the government that they take these six hundred crores, and instead of buying a hundred airplanes, set up one hundred power stations in Pakistan. If you invest your money there, you are not going to bomb them. If they invest their money here, they are not going to bomb you."

"You can eliminate the enemy only when you eliminate your enmity."

"We have land that produces food twelve months of the year, which is a phenomenon. Very few countries in the world can do that. Food and water must be secured 100%. Otherwise, other nations will not attack you with bombs, they will control your food and you will fall at their feet."

"This was a very cosmogenic culture, never a god-oriented culture."

"Creation … is consciously created. Anyone who pays a little attention will clearly know that it is not happening haphazardly; it is in a process of genesis or evolution always, from within itself."

"I am one of the few who is continuing to create gods. ... everyone is supposed to create his own Ishta Devata, and worship their own favorite god."

"A spiritual process can take shape in any culture only after material needs are taken care of. That is an advantage that only the Indian culture had in the past. All other cultures were in strife, warfare, and in search of conquest most of the time. This culture had a long phase of established social and cultural situations where naturally, people looked beyond material comfort towards their inner wellbeing."

"India has always been known as the spiritual capital of the world, simply because no other culture has looked at the inner sciences with as much depth and understanding as this culture has."

"Nature is functioning around us. It is not fired by passion, greed or anger. It is simply on at its fullest capability all the time."

"Every life upon this planet, from a worm to an insect to a tree – if the necessary opportunity is there – they do their life at the fullest. You think anyone is doing 92% ? They are all doing 100% life because there is a certain equanimity."

"Your body and mind function at their best only when you are in a certain state of peacefulness and joyfulness."

"Equanimity brings you to ease. Ease allows you the adventure of being exuberant with life. Exuberance of the body, exuberance of the intellect, exuberance of the life energies, brings you to wellbeing in life."

"Samskriti focused essentially on developing a human being to his fullest capability. It is just to develop the body and mind to the highest possible capability, and allowing the system to rise to its highest possible peak."

"The immensity of being human is being completely missed because we are too engaged with other things. If we pay enough attention to the human mechanism, the things we want to do in the world are just a play."

"Language is a conspiracy between two people."

"The moment you pay substantial attention to what you call 'myself,' there is nothing that will not yield to you in the existence, because that which you refer to as the source of creation – whatever that is – is functioning within you."

"Human consciousness is such: if you pay enough attention, the whole existence has to yield. There is no other way."

"If you are in a place like (a pitch dark tunnel), your attention becomes really heightened. If you can keep your attention like this every moment of your life, then you will glow. You will really glow."

"Every product, no matter what, can be a contribution to someone’s life. You don’t have to worry about how big it gets. If you are doing your best and enjoy doing your best, what’s the problem with life?"

"Today, with the tools of science and technology, we have brought ourselves to a self-threatening situation that everyone in the society needs to turn spiritual, otherwise there is no survival for this world."

"Superpowers are ugly and too full of themselves."

"Our aspiration should be to become a sensible, gentle nation, which is for wellbeing for itself and, as far as possible, wellbeing for everyone in the world."


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Sep 24, 2019Aishwary Mehta (The_Fugitive_Biker) rated it really liked it
Shelves: 2019-readsspirituality
32nd book of 2019 (116th book overall)

Quote from the Book I Liked - 'The people who occupied us for so long somehow managed to bring a certain sense of shame about our roots, which has to go.' (Loc. 183)

Rating - 3.5 Stars

My Review - The book is divided into 2 parts. In the first half, Sadhguru is in an Interview with Kiran Bedi, who asks the questions regarding our nation Bharata. The interview took place in 2015 and talks a lot about the actual meaning of Bharata and why people and mainly youngsters prefer to go abroad rather than feeling proud and staying in our own Country. In the second half, Sadhguru goes deeper into the question of what made us, Bharatvasi, detached from our roots. What was the cause that now we see west for authentification of what is already known here for thousands of years? The book is a must-read to every citizen to know what this nation is and what actually lies in its heritage and knowledge which if not preserved or felt proud of may lead this ancient land to a much worse place.

Conclusion - A very important and essential read for every Hindustani.

Full Review on Blog.
Link to Blog - The Tales of Fugitive Biker (less)
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Sep 19, 2016Idyll rated it did not like it
You know that know-it-all uncle you bump into at family reunions who says exceptionable things that you want to take issue with but don't because he has long left Planet Logic for Outer Specious? So you just nod your head and bear it, not understanding what's making you stay in that conversation. Why aren't you leaving?

Of all the existentialist questions there are in the world, one that begs to be asked is "What keeps us fastened to the seat next to that nettlesome uncle, when we can excuse ourselves to the bathroom?"

"Love, Harry, Love."

In the case of Sadhguru, I think I was holding on very tightly to the hope that this will end soon. It's only 85 pages long. Once I got past the hopeless interview, the second half had some anecdotes, myth-based conjectures and questionable platitudes that were engaging enough to pull me through to the end. Also, thankfully, he was digressive and vague, like that faint headache that you can feel but can't exactly place, except when he used words like 'science' and caused my temples to throb like a subwoofer. And then, it was over before I needed to reach for an Advil.

(If you find yourself agreeing with Sadhguru's general mentations about India's rich heritage, and the need for models for inclusive social and economic development for all citizens, I suggest starting with Amartya Sen's Development as Freedom and The Argumentative Indian. Sen's type of academic knowledge may also be supplemented with spiritual meditation. The two are not mutually exclusive. I also recommend Pema Chodron's How to Meditate, a practical, no-frills, instructional guide that welcomes anyone in the world wanting to live a life of true joy and deep compassion to try it.

In general, one can't go wrong with books written by development economists or academic historians who don't confuse facts with opinions, and provide lots of data pulled from many reputable sources and proper back-of-the-book indexes. Similarly, good spiritual gurus share wisdom drawn from knowledge and awareness, through instructional training that is open to everyone.

The credibility of both good academic and spiritual books is in their ability to remain nonjudgmental (especially in their critiques) and accessible to all. This is unlike Sadhuguru's book which plays up Indian culture by putting down the West (especially America). That's uncool and unspiritual! It messed up my Bhava. (less)
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Mar 05, 2018Niranjan rated it it was amazing
I’m not writing any review of this book, but want to comment on few assholes who ignorantly bashed the Sadhguru. This class of Protestant breed has ruined the whole world, they can’t digest the fact that someone could be different from this ducking Semitic monsters. And the funny thing was that some one suggesting Amartya Sen over Sadhguru, Sen was a corrupt bastard who doesn’t even know the ABCD of this culture he was a living example for the moronic bastards sons of Macaulay. Let me tell to you Protestant monsters spirituality is not something which you get by reading some scriptures and by doing some yoga. It’s needs a great Sandana And prajna bhava, you would not attain it in your fucking life’s because your attached to an external agency. I don’t know how the fuck one can attain the spirituality which is innermost experience when your fucking mind was on some fucking external being. I doubt if your breeds can be even called as religion from the eastern sense. (less)
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Oct 14, 2018Rinkan Rohit Jena rated it really liked it
This book started with a conversation between sadguru and Kiran ,and again with his intelligence he answered those difficult questions which will help in making a nation . In this book sadguru not putted the same things again (quite different ) he wrote a lot of new possibilities which he sees in Bharat . And specially he is taking about and above identity and identification . You need to identify yourself you get your identity . And specially he is asking to change the wrong rhythm into right one . He is clearly saying now our goal is to make this a happier country first and they we may evolve as a superpower . He is talking about the correct rhythms and also as guru dakhyina he asked to practice Isha kriya .. simple awesome book must read it if you are a Bharatiya . (less)
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Apr 22, 2016Chetan Hemaraju rated it really liked it
Bha-ra-ta: The Rhythm of a Nation

Talk about a Nation in a Spiritual way and yet convey that to a modern society and objectify the why's & If's! Valid points# Ponder over it# Research on it# Fact or not but its completely logical#
I do agree for the name change to Bha-ra-ta#

Sadguru always has the right answers! I would recommend to any Indian#
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Sep 28, 2015Vyas Prateek rated it it was amazing
Found my answers. thanx Sadhguru sir _/\_ hope we'll have the option under country section everywhere as "भारत".
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Jan 28, 2016Abhinav Yadav added it
bha – ra – ta

Bhava - Raag - Taal

We are not a manicured garden. We are like a forest.

I don’t believe it is the government or the law or the infrastructure. Somewhere, there is something in people which still keeps things rolling. We know how to create a very organized chaos. That is what this country is.

People who think in a structured manner cannot understand the possibility of the chaos.

If you want to be totally disorganized, if it was just one person per square kilometer, you could act crazy. But when there are this many people, how you keep every step matters.

What we do to enjoy the mess we have created, but also to make the mess work. It is a mess only for those who look at it with a simplistic mindset. Otherwise, it is a tremendous possibility.

we have always been a land of seekers – seekers of truth and liberation. In this seeking, we found oneness. When we look for sameness, we try to become a land of believers.

once their survival is taken care of, they always want to know the nature of their existence, and of
everything around them.

I have driven across the country on my motorcycle and sat in dhabas and teashops so much, and one thing I have seen is – the guy who is making the tea there will be telling you how Tendulkar
should have played the right shot, how his technique is not good, how he is going for a wrong approach. He will be talking about how the Prime Minister should have run the country differently.
The only problem with this guy is he does not know how to make good tea!