Śāstra fails to be taken seriously because of 2 reasons:
1. Where it does contain precious teachings, it fails to be taken seriously because of arrogance on part of a small-minded reader.+++
+++ 2. There is an undeniable bit of genuinely uninspired, over-the-top frivolity, which cannot be taken seriously but unfairly offers a justification for some to not take seriously the śāstravākyas in No.1. Such tripe should have been tempered, done away with or explained away.
We did have a culture of auditing Śāstras, although this is not a free-for-all exercise but an authority reserved for only Śiṣṭas.
Unfortunately, we reserved our audit for the best of texts - ones discussing high-level metaphysics or subjects such as Dāna (See Dānasāgara of Ballālasena). These “audits” are not perfect but at least embody piety with a critical thinking element.
However, we completely sat out on the Ācāra/Nibandha/Āhāraniyama texts, which started ballooning out of control. Many traditionalists will not like these tweets & don’t want to engage this as they think this will open a Pandora’s box but this is a short-sighted approach.
What they have to do is to act in their capacity as Śiṣṭas, with the authority vested in them by the Śruti itself (Taittirīya-Upaniṣat). Śabarasvāmī opposed the popular conception of women having no property based on Śrutivākyas in Brāhmaṇa texts.
Other Smṛtivākyas (including from the hallowed Baudhāyana-Smṛti) were critiqued by Śābarasvāmī on the basis of the Mīmāmsā concept of Hetu (literally, “cause” i.e. ulterior motive). Kumārila critiqued this critique.
So, again, the earlier “audit” of the Smṛtivākya may or may not have been perfect but that’s irrelevant. But if competent Śiṣṭas don’t bother to do it anymore, many things will come back to bite the Dharma.
There is a legitimate consideration as to whether we should pre-empt problems & publish our “audits”, thus uncovering problems which are not yet known to the public at large.
It has to be a case-by-case exercise of discretion & these “audits” can be published for private consumption (till they have to be “declassified”) or publicly but in Sam̐skṛta.
The concept of Hetu (ulterior motive) screams loud in your face when you read certain stories, which I will not refer to here. But I have discussed them with like-minded people who agree with my assessment.
But it may be a matter of time before some hateful miscreant decides to use a tiny portion of our texts to undermine the Dharma. If you are skeptical about this, recall that certain Drāviḍāsuras dug up tamizh translations of Taittirīya-Kāṭhaka mantras for Śrāddham to attack us.
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Those who belong to Satsampradāyas which have Paśubali-krama & defend it in SM, you owe it to your Sampradāya to defend it eloquently with deep Śāstra/Tattva-jñāna at your disposal & avoid the “if you don’t do this, He/She will get angry” line of argument. +++
You belong to the larger world of Śaiva-Śākta mantramārga (36-Tattva system) & your Devata is non-different from the same Nirmala Cidghana-Paramaśiva & His Parāśakti. Portraying that Nirmala-Cidghana as “vengeful”is doctrinally wrong & you end up making Him/Her look like a Paśu.
The dangerous consequences of not doing bali in line with Vidhi can be easily & properly explained, without having to resort to the “angry/vengeful deity” approach. There are good, stimulating explanations. Focus on the Śāstra & Tattvas & try to come up with them.
Prior to Schomerus, see G U Pope, who tried to present Tamizh Siddhānta through a Pretamata lens in his translation of the great Śaiva hymn, “Tiruvācakam”. Such efforts became possible due to Tamizh Śaiva texts being cut off from its root, the Sam̐skṛta Āgama textual tradition.
Like it or not, it’s predominantly & sadly “Mleccha-led” research that has completely overturned the myth of Siddhānta’s tamizh origin (the position taken by likes of Pope, Schomerus & others) & has established, once & for all, the pan- Bhāratīya & SE-Asian presence of Siddhānta.
This has served to undermine the use of Siddhānta as a “prefiguration” of Xtianity at least in Western Academic circles, where the sheer competitiveness-fueled rigour will shut off any such output.
Religion needs common worship & ritual but a competing concern is that young gens across the world increasingly have a “standardised” sense of what they want from a religion & find it important to obtain a “profound/sophisticated” basis for popular rituals, lore/myths, etc.+++
A case in point is the situation of folkish Daoism in Sim̐hapurī (Daoism has a remarkably sophisticated cosmology, metaphysics & ritual but the way it is articulated & experienced in SG is what matters) vs that of Buddhism.++
Among all non-Abrahamic religions, in a very materialistic & increasingly “godless” generation of Chinese youth, Daoism as it is currently practiced - Stands zero chance of survival unless it attempts something drastic.
A common misconception many Hindus have about the Siddhānta, including many Śaiva-s but also others, is that the Siddhānta is centered on the supremacy of a "particular deity". Yes, Siddhānta upholds Śiva-paratvam but how to understand this?
In the Siddhánta, every Ātmā (sentient) is Cidghana (a pure mass of consciousness) whose inseparable Cicchakti consists of knowledge & power. These two are obscured by mala for all sentients except one, who is eternally unlimited & pure & beyond name & form.
It is the case that the names & forms associated with that one, for the purposes of visualization & worship, happen to be the names & bodies actually possessed by deities we will call Śaiva or Raudra.
A lot of people have asked this question on various forums: "Why are there navagrahas only in Śiva temples governed by siddhānta-āgama-s?"
The answer hit me a while ago when I realized that the navagrahas worshiped by Śaiva-s are not the ones we know in this Brahmāṇḍa (which consists of this entire material universe, svarga, naraka-s, asura, rākṣasa, yakṣa, gandharva worlds, etc), which is in Pṛthivī-tattva.
From Pṛthivī-tattva (lowest of 36 tattva-s) to Puruṣa-tattva is the Aśuddhādhvan ("impure" pathway of the cosmos made of Aśuddhamāyā.
Above Aśuddhamāyā is the Śuddhādhvan (the pure pathway), which consists of Śuddhavidyā, Īśvara, Sadāśiva, Śakti and Śiva-tattvas.
In this thread, we have looked at a number of incidents from the Mahābhārata. We take 2 of them & see how Sañjaya describes or narrates them. What are the 2 incidents?
1. The battle between Arjuna & Śrīkaṇṭharudra in the form of a Kirata; and
2. The final battle between Arjuna & Karṇa, where Aśvasena manages to break Arjuna’s kirīṭa.
What does this have to do with the Śaiva view? The subject matter is Jñāna gained through Pati-Śāstra & Pati-mata (the scriptures & religion approved by Paramaśiva for our highest good) versus Jñāna gained through Paśu-Śāstra & Paśu-mata (scriptures & religions given by Paśus).