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India, Its Life and Thought

Chapter 8: PREFACE
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About This Book

The book surveys the religious, social, and cultural life of India and neighboring Burma, tracing the sources and expressions of recent unrest and the complex web of caste, ritual, and home customs. It analyzes Hindu scripture and belief—doctrines of soul, incarnation, and liberation—and describes popular practices, asceticism, and pessimistic cyclic time-concepts. Chapters examine Islam and Buddhism in the region, offer comparative reflections on Christ and the Buddha, and review modern reform movements, theosophical currents, and missionary activity. Combining descriptive observation with theological and sociological commentary, the work highlights tensions between enduring traditions and forces of change.

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Title: India, Its Life and Thought

Author: John P. Jones

Release date: February 18, 2009 [eBook #28117]

Language: English

Credits: Produced by Sankar Viswanathan, Juliet Sutherland, and the
Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net

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INDIA
ITS LIFE AND THOUGHT

 

 

BY

JOHN P. JONES, D.D.

SOUTH INDIA

AUTHOR OF "INDIA'S PROBLEM, KRISHNA OR CHRIST,"
ETC., ETC.

 

 

 

 

New York

THE MACMILLAN COMPANY

1908

 

 

 

Copyright, 1908,

By THE MACMILLAN COMPANY.


Dedicated

TO MY DEAR CHILDREN

WHO HAVE

BRAVELY AND CHEERFULLY ENDURED

THE SEPARATION AND THE LOSS OF HOME

FOR THE SAKE OF INDIA


PREFACE

To the people of the West, the inhabitants of India are the least understood and the most easily misunderstood of all men.

It is partly because they are antipodal to the West—the farthest removed in thought and life. They are also the most secretive, and find perennial delight in concealment and evasion.

According to Hindu teaching, the Supreme Spirit forever sports in illusion. It continuously manifests itself through unreal and false forms, which delude and lead astray ignorant man. In harmony with this philosophy of the Divine—and may it not be as a result of it?—the people of India too often delight in unreal and deceptive exhibitions of themselves. At any rate, it is exceedingly difficult for a man of the West, especially he of the Anglo-Saxon type, to apprehend the full significance and the correct drift of life and thought of this land.

It is amusing, when not discouraging, to witness travellers, who have rushed through India in a winter tour, publish volumes of their misconceptions and ill-digested theories about the people with an oracular emphasis which is equalled only by their ignorance.

The author of this book makes no claim to a right to speak ex cathedra upon this subject. Nevertheless, thirty years of matured experience in this land, living in constant touch with the people and studying with eagerness their life and thought, gives him an humble claim to speak once more upon the subject.

Even now, however, his pride of knowledge is chastened by the oft-recurring surprises which the Oriental nature and life still bring to him. And he does not cease to pray, with a western saint, who, at the end of a half century of work for the people of India, daily cried out,—

"O Lord, help me to know these people and to come into intimate relations of life with them!"

If, in these pages, he can help others of the West to come face to face with the immense and intricate problems which confront all who desire to know, to help, and to bless India, and shall enable them to understand better the conditions and characteristics of life in the Land of the Vedas, he will feel amply repaid for his labours.

I express my deep gratitude to the Rev. J. L. Barton, D.D., for his kind encouragement in the publishing of this book; and also to the Rev. W. W. Wallace, M.A., for his generous aid in the proof-reading.

J. P. JONES.


CONTENTS

CHAPTER PAGES
I. India's Unrest 1-29
i. Extent of the Movement 1
ii. Causes of Unrest 5
iii. Conditions of Unrest 13
iv. Results 18
v. How shall the Unrest be Removed 21
II. The Home of Many Faiths 30-71
Hinduism—Madura and Benares 32
Demonolatry—Madura 33
Christianity—Travancore and Cochin 34
Judaism—Cochin 38
Parseeism—Bombay 40
Jainism—Bombay 41
Mohammedanism—Agra and Delhi 42
Buddhism—Delhi, Sarnath 53
Sikhism—Amritsar 61
III. Burma, the Beautiful 72-90
The Extent of the British Empire 72
Burma's Triple Produce 73
The Land of Pagodas 73
Mandalay 78
A Land where Woman is Honoured 80
A Land where Caste is Unknown 84
The American Baptist Mission 84
The Karens and their Conversion 85
Ko San Ye 87
IV. The Hindu Caste System 91-122
 What is Caste 91
i. Origin of Caste 93
(a) Religious Theory 95
(b) Tribal Theory 96
(c) Social Theory 97
(d) Occupational Theory 98
(e) Crossing Theory 100
ii. Characteristics of Caste 102
Intermarriage 105
Inter-dining 107
Contact 109
Occupation 112
iii. Penalties of Caste 115
Boycott 116
Caste Servants Interdicted 118
Domestic Isolation 119
Prayaschitta. (Travelling) 119
V. The Hindu Caste System (Continued) 123-151
iv. Occasions of Punishment 123
Change of Faith 124
Marrying a Widow 126
Beef-eating 126
Officiating as Priest to Outcasts 127
Marrying outside of One's Caste 128
v. The Results of the Caste System 129
Possibilities of Good 131
It arrays Caste against Caste 132
It narrows the Sympathies 132
It degrades Manual Labour 133
It opposes Commerce 134
A Foe to Nationality 135
A Foe to Individualism 135
It is Unethical 137
vi. The Dominance of Caste 138
Seen even among Christians 140
Roman Catholicism and Protestantism 143
Signs of its Decadence 144
Opposed by Western Progress 147
Government Opposition 148
Christianity its Foe 149
VI. The Bhagavad Gita—The Hindu Bible 152-189
i. What is this Song 153
ii. What are its Purposes and Contents 156
1. Its Teaching concerning God 160
Incarnation 163
2. The Doctrine of the Living Soul 167
3. The Doctrine of Liberation 169
(1) Through Knowledge 169
(2) Through Asceticism 171
(3) Through Works 174
Caste 177
Detachment 179
Bhakti 181
(4) Altruism. 183
4. The Doctrine of Salvation 184
Reincarnation 185
iii. Conclusion 187
VII. Popular Hinduism 190-219
i. The Higher Faith 190
The Evolution of Faith 196
ii. Popular Hinduism 198
1. Caste 198
2. Polytheism 199
3. Idolatry 200
4. Devil-worship 206
5. Fetichism 209
6. Immorality 210
7. Treatment of Woman 213
8. The Hindu Ascetic 215
9. Hindu Pessimism 217
10. Astrology 217
VIII. Hindu Religious Ideals 220-241
i. The Ideal of God 223
ii. Ideal of Incarnation 225
iii. Ideals of Life 227
Asceticism 227
Ceremonialism 231
Quietism 233
iv. Ultimate Salvation 235
Transmigration 236
Absorption 237
IX. The Home Life of Hindus 242-275
The Home Sanctuary 242
The Building of the House 243
The Joint Family System 246
Priest and Astrologer 251
Place of Woman in the Home 252
The Devotion of Woman 254
The Influence of Woman 258
Marriage in the Home 260
The Hindu Widow 263
Mother-in-law and Daughter-in-law 264
Love of Jewellery 265
Clothing and Cuisine 268
Sickness and Death 270
Funeral Obsequies 272
Shradda 273
X. Kali Yuga—India's Pessimism 276-301
i. The Astounding Length of the Chronological System 277
History and Legend in India 281
ii. The Cyclic Character of Hindu Chronology 286
No Progress in Time 287
The Source of Pessimism 288
iii. The Moral Characteristics of the Time System 290
Every Yuga has its Own Character 290
The Evil Character of Kali 293
Cui Bono 298
Astrology 299
Lucky Days 299
XI. Islam in India 302-337
i. The History of Islam in India 305
ii. The Present Condition of this Faith in India 307
Ill-adapted to India 308
Its Conception of Deity 309
Intolerance and Tolerance 310
Contact with Hinduism 312
Compromise 319
Islam's Attempt at Reform 322
Islam's Redeeming Qualities 323
Muslim Sects 327
iii. The Mohammedan Population 328
iv. Christian Effort for the Mussulman 333
XII. The Christ and the Buddha 338-373
i. The Conditions of their Lives 341
ii. The Common Principles which controlled Them 345
Sincerity 345
Ethics 345
Universal Charity 349
iii. The Teachings which differentiate Them 352
1. Teaching concerning God 353
2. Their Conceptions of Human Life 356
3. Their Ideals of Life 367
Character and Wisdom 368
Final Consummation 370
XIII. Modern Religious Movement 374-411
Hindu Reformers 374
i. Hindu Sects 376
ii. Modern Movements 378
Ram Mohan Roy 379
Brahmo Somaj 380
Chunder Sen 382
Âthi Somaj 383
Sâdhârna Somaj 385
New Dispensation 385
iii. Progress of the Movement 387
Weak in Numbers 387
Indian Spirit 388
Christian Basis 389
"The Oriental Christ" 391
Chunder Sen's Words. 391
Other Testimony 396
The New Dispensation 396
iv. The Arya Somaj 400
Its Progress 402
Its Principles 402
Its Antagonism to Christianity 403
v. The Theosophical Society 404
Its Reactionary Spirit 406
Mrs. Besant 406
The "Masters" 408
XIV. The Progress of Christianity in India 412-443
i. Early History of Christianity 412
Converts 417
The Character of the Christian Community 418
Influence of Christianity 419
"Swadesha" 420
Protestant Effort 422
ii. Ultimate Triumph of Christianity 425
Not the Western Type 425
The Kingdom of God 429
iii. A Conquest of the Spirit 430
1. Conquest of Principles 430
2. Conquest of the Christ Ideal 434
3. Conquest of the Incarnation of Christ 437
4. Conquest of the Cross of Christ 439
5. Conquest of the Christian Conception of Sin 441
Index 445

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

A Holy Man of India Frontispiece
PAGE
The Golden Lily Tank in the Madura Temple 35
Taj Mahal, Agra 43
Marble Screen in Taj Mahal 47
Shah Jehan's Fort, Agra 51
Akbar's Tomb 55
Kutab-minar, Delhi 59
Cashmere Gate, Delhi 63
Schwey Dagon Pagoda, Rangoon 75
Theebaw's Palace, Mandalay 81
Jungle People of India 141
A Dravidian Shrine, South India 191
Two Hindu Idols, South India 203
Humayan's Tomb, Delhi 303
The Greatest Image of Buddha 339
A Christian Village School in South India 415

INDIA: ITS LIFE AND THOUGHT


CHAPTER I

INDIA'S UNREST

India has been called the land of quiet repose, content to remain anchored to the hoary past, and proud of her immobility. Invasion after invasion has swept over her; but—