Indo-European Mythology and Religion

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by Alexander Jacob


  these Indian rituals in Tibet and the Orient. The primal

  deity in the homa is indeed the god of fire, Agni. The

  Tantric Shaiva Siddhānta sacrificial ritual envisages a

  symbolic birth of the deity into the ritual enclosure. As

  Richard Payne has pointed out,

  344 In John Woodroffe, op.cit. , ‘Note to Ch.IV’.

  345 Ibid.

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  This involves the full range of sexual imagery, that

  is, impregnation, gestation, and birth, as well as the

  other rituals of childhood: Two deities (identified as

  Brahmā and Sarasvati) are installed in the hearth altar,

  and burning coals identified as Śiva’s semen are then

  poured in while the practitioner visualizes the act of

  impregnation. By these ritual actions, Agni is born as

  the ritual fire in the hearth-altar.346

  The identification of the forms of Agni, or Agni

  Vaishvānara, with the three sacrificial fires used in the

  Kālachakra Tantric rituals of Vajrayāna Buddhism—just as

  they are in the Vedic—has been noted by Vesna Wal ace:

  The first is the southern fire (dakshinagni), identified

  with lightning that resides in a bow-shaped firepit

  in the heart cakra. The second is the domestic fire

  (garhyapatya), which is identified with the sun that

  dwel s in a circular firepit within the throat cakra; the

  third is the consecrated fire taken from the perpetual

  domestic fire (ahavaniya), or the flesh-consuming fire

  (kravyada), which is located in a quadrangular firepit

  within the navel cakra. Above these three fires, at the

  edge of darkness, where neither the light of lightning,

  the sun, the moon, or the planets shine, there is an

  additional fire, the fire of gnosis (jnanagni). This

  fourth fire is of the nature of joy (ananda) located in

  the secret and forehead cakras, and it has been there

  since beginningless time.347

  346 See R. Payne, ‘Homa: Tantric Fire Ritual’, Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Religion, p.7.

  347 Vesna Wal ace, ‘Homa Rituals in the Indian Kālacakra Tradition’, in R.K. Payne and M. Witzel (ed.), Homa Variations: Ritual Change across the Longue Durée. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015, p.260.

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  We see that the sacrificial fires are simultaneously

  identified with the thermal energies located within the

  chakras of the human body. The internal homa of the

  Tantric Tibetans is even more il ustrative of the movement

  of Agni or termal energy within the chakras of the human

  body in such a way that the practitioner transforms his

  sexual energy into a source of enlightenment. For example,

  in the Tibetan yoga of the subtle body (linga sharīra),

  inner heat (gtum-mo) is generated in the navel (or in

  the junction of the central channel with the ro-ma and

  rkyang-ma below the navel) and blazes up through the

  central channel. As a result of the bodhicitta, the white

  drop located at the head’s center, melts and meets

  with the red drop, the gtum-mo fire. The practice

  culminates in the realization of supreme nondual

  enlightened wisdom.348

  In Tantric worship, the virtual creation of Agni in the

  fire-altar and the worship of Agni through oblations

  and entreaties are accompanied by the divinisation of

  the priest. This aspect of Tantric worship will be observed

  also in the adjunct to the homa, the pūja, where the

  sādhaka is divinised before he can venerate the deity

  manifest in temple idols. The fire that is created in the fire-

  altar is in fact created by the priest from within his own

  heart. This is evident especial y in the Kālachakra Tantra

  rituals studied by Vesna Wal ace.349 Grether too has noted

  that

  Vedic priests may identify parts of their bodies with

  a variety of gods, but “there is no unified nor even

  consistent parallel of worshipper and god” … Tantric

  rites, on the other hand, tend to focus on a direct

  348 See Y. Bentor, op.cit., p.597.

  349 See V. Wal ace, op.cit.

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  correlation between a singular divine being—who

  becomes present in the fire—and the worshipper.350

  Thus we may agree with Bentor that ‘Tantric rituals,

  external rituals included, are in fact ritualized meditations’.351

  Indeed, the entire office of the brahman priest in the Vedic

  ritual stresses the internal significance of the external fire-

  rituals:

  The role of the brahman priest in vedic rituals also

  points to the importance of the mental aspect in

  outer vedic sacrifices. While the other priests, such

  as the adhvaryu and hotr, perform the ritual actions

  and recite, the brahman follows the ritual mental y.

  Whenever an error in the performance occurs he

  corrects it not by ritual actions, but through his mental

  powers.352

  Heesterman’s conjecture that yogic asceticism was an

  “internalisation” of the Vedic sacrifices is thus clearly

  inaccurate in its suggestion of the priority of sacrifice.353 The fire-rituals of the brāhmans may more likely have been an

  externalisation of the thermal disciplines of yoga since

  the Rgveda (X,154,2) itself mentions [yogic] tapas as that by which “one attains the light of the sun”.

  As regards the use of mantras in these various rituals,

  Grether points out that the recitation of Vedic mantras

  merely narrates the defeat of evil while the tantric mantras,

  on the other hand, actual y effect the destruction. Another

  indication that the Vedic fire-rituals were not prior to

  350 See H. Grether, op.cit. , p.21.

  351 See Y. Bentor, op.cit., p.605.

  352 Ibid. , p.605.

  353 See J.C. Heesterman, Broken world: An Essay on Ancient Indian Ritual, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1993, p.186.

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  alexander jacob

  yogic practices among the earliest Indo-Europeans is

  that the implements used in the latter often have a sexual

  significance, as when the ladle symbolises a penis and the

  hearth a vagina. This significance is derived from Tantric

  symbolism, as Wheelock reminds us:

  [In the Tantric ritual] not only the worshipper is

  made identical to the central deity … but all of the

  components of the ritual as wel .354

  Wheelock also notes that, in the system of correspondences

  between the external objects of the ritual and their cosmic

  referents, the Vedic practice is not so comprehensive as

  the Tantric:

  the transformations of objects in the Vedic ritual arena

  does not generate a precisely ordered mandala that

  replicates the divine powers in a one-to-one fashion.

  Rather, one finds a more variegated and constantly

  changing amalgam of divine resonances.355

  Whereas

  The Tantric ritual in an even more systematic fashion

  transforms a mundane setting into a precisely and

  minutely conceived replica of a sacred cosmos. The

&
nbsp; purification and cosmicisation of ritual components

  covers everything from the individual worshipper

  (sadhaka), whose body becomes an image of the deity

  in both transcendent and manifest form, to the altar

  on which the offerings are made, which is changed

  into a mandala housing the entire retinue of divine

  beings, the manifold body of the supreme deity.

  354 See Wade T. Wheelock, ‘The Mantra in Vedic and Tantric Ritual’, in H.P. Alper (ed.), Understanding Mantras, Albany, NY: SUNY Press, 1989, p.108.

  355 Ibid., p.105.

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  ***

  The imprecision in the correspondences noted above is

  further highlighted by a comparison of the Tantric ‘pūja’,

  which is, apart from ‘homa’, the other common form of

  Tantric worship, with the Vedic fire-ritual. As Wheelock

  states:

  One noteworthy difference from the Tantric ritual is

  that the Vedic priest … identifies parts of his body with

  parts of a variety of different gods. There is no unified

  nor even consistent parallel of worshipper and god.356

  In the ‘pūja’, on the other hand, there proceeds a process

  of divinisation of the worshipper that follows a series of

  steps that steadily recall the macrocosmic dimensions of

  the human microcosm. These steps have been well studied

  by Wheelock,357 whom I shall cite here. The first step is

  ‘bhūtashuddhi’:

  Bhutashuddhi, as the name implies (purification

  of the elements) involves visualising the refining of

  the worshipper’s own body by a process inwardly

  re-enacting the destruction of the cosmos and the

  reabsorption of the basic elements into primal,

  undifferentiated matter … With some variation in

  different texts, the worshipper proceeds to visualise

  the cosmic fire being extinguished with earth and the

  resulting ashes final y being washed away with wáter,

  completing the process of purification.

  Bhūtashuddhi is followed by the recreation of the

  worshipper’s body, now as an image of the cosmos. This

  is accomplished through the process of ‘nyāsa’ (placing):

  356 Ibid.

  357 Wheelock,

  op.cit., p.102ff.

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  Like bhutashuddhi, nyāsa involves the use of

  nonsentence mantras but with an accompanying

  physical act, touching various parts of the body. The

  mantras, in effect, are applied to the body manual y.

  Two basic types of mantras are used. First, the letters

  of the Sanskrit alphabet are placed in order on

  different parts of the body (matrka-nyasa) providing

  the worshipper’s body with the fifty basic elements of

  the Tantric cosmogony.

  Next, a series of essential y reverential mantras are offered

  to the parts of the body (anga-nyāsa) to consecrate them

  as implicitly identical to those of the supreme deity. The

  mantras of the anga-nyasa then transmute the purified

  body of the worshipper into the ful y manifest form of the

  supreme deity.

  The entire Tantric ritual is thus viewed ‘as god offering

  worship to god’.

  In the idol-worship section of Tantra, the liturgy

  begins with an invocation of the deity and moves to

  providing the deity with a detailed manifest form.358 This

  begins with the establishment of the life breaths in the

  image (yantra, statue) that the invoked deity has just

  entered. This is the rite of ‘prāna pratishtha’. However, as

  Wheelock points out:

  the deity is not descending from the distant heaven of

  the Vedic cosmology but is drawn out from the very

  heart of the worshipper and asked to become manifest

  in some concrete object in the ritual. For example,

  Siva is invoked into the temple’s lingam.

  358 For a further account of the divinisation of idols in the Tantric tradition, see A. Jacob, Brahman: A Study of the Solar Rituals of the Indo-Europeans, Hildesheim: G. Olms, 2012, Ch.XV.

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  In the deity’s acquisition of a manifest form, the worship

  of the limbs of the divine body is conducted using a set

  of mantras employed in the Tantric worshipper’s rite of

  nyāsa. As with the rite of nyāsa, the point of these mantras

  is to identify parts of the mandala with parts of the deity’s

  body. This focus on the physical aspect of the deity is

  different from the Vedic ritual, as Wheelock points out:

  that an important part of the homage expressed in the

  Tantric puja concerns the physical traits of the deity.

  This is certainly not the case in the Vedic ritual, where

  one mentions the deeds and functions of the god with

  almost no mention of his physical appearance.

  Further, the fact that the idol-worship prescribed as part

  of Tantric worship corresponds closely to the original

  yogic meditation is made clear in the description of such

  worship in the Mandalabrāhmana Upanishad II:

  Not being troubled by any thoughts (of the world)

  then constitutes the hyāna. The abandoning of all

  karmas constitutes

  āvāhana

  (invocation of god).

  Being firm in the unshaken (spiritual) wisdom

  constitutes āsana (posture). Being in the state of

  unmanī constitutes the

  pāya

  (offering of water

  for washing the feet of god). Preserving the state

  of amanaska (when manas is offered as sacrifice)

  constitutes the arghya (offering of water as oblation

  general y). Being in state of eternal brightness

  and shoreless nectar constitutes

  snāna

  (bathing).

  The contemplation of Āṭmā as present in all

  constitutes (the application to the idol of) sandal.

  The remaining in the real state of the ḍṛk (spiritual

  eye) is (the worshipping with) akshaa;(non-broken

  rice). The attaining of Chiṭ (consciousness) is

  (the worshipping with) flower. The real state of agni

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  (fire) of Chiṭ is the hūpa (burning of incense). The

  state of the sun of Chiṭ is the īpa (light waved before

  the image). The union of oneself with the nectar of

  full moon is the naivēya (offering of food, etc.). The

  immobility in that state (of the ego being one with all)

  is praakshia (going round the image). The conception

  of ‘I am He’ is namaskāra (prostration). The silence

  (then) is the sui (praise). The all-contentment (or

  serenity then) is the visarjana (giving leave to god or

  finishing worship). (This is the worship of Āṭmā by all

  Raja-yogins). He who knows this knows al .

  Another index of the original quality of Tantric ritual

  is the importance of mantras in it. Every god is indeed

  represented by a ‘bīja’ or seminal mantra which embodies

  the essence of the god. Thus the syl able ‘ram’ betokens

  Agni, ‘dam’ Vishnu, ‘horum’ Shiva, etc. A connected series

 
; of bīja mantras in the form of a mūla, or root, mantra of

  the deity is used in the climactic rite of ‘japa’ at the end

  of the pūja in such a way that the multiple repetitions of

  the mūla-mantra serve as a means of producing a concrete

  sonic manifestation of the deity. As Wheelock points out:

  In the Tantric ritual] the deity becomes manifest as

  the world first by taking on Sonic form, the concrete

  objects or referents (artha) of those primordial words

  following afterward in the course of cosmic evolution.

  By contrast,

  the orthodox formulation of the Vedic tradition,

  the Purva-Mimamsa, virtual y ignores mantras. Its

  key task is to determine a valid means (pramana)

  for ascertaining dharma … Only the set of explicit

  injunctions to action (vidhi) found in the brahmana

  section of sruti are to be counted as relevant to

  defining dharma.

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  ***

  We see therefore that Tantric worship is much more

  detailed in its divinisation of the worshipper than the

  Vedic. Tantric Āgama indeed considers the universe

  as a whole whose every single part bears an influence

  on the others. Thus a system of sympathetic magic was

  developed out of it in which the final aim of the spiritual

  adept (sādhaka) is to transform, within his consciousness,

  his own person as well as cult-objects and rites into that

  which these phenomena essential y are. And the ultimate

  aim of Tantra, called ‘siddhi’ or spiritual perfection, is a

  practical realisation of the Upanishadic equation of the

  individual ātman with Brahman (“tat tvam asi”/that art

  thou).

  Thus it is not surprising that, although drawing on

  the Vedic tradition, Āgama claims to supersede it. As

  Flood points out, “The mainstream tantric texts of the

  Pancharatra and Shaiva Siddhanta maintain a close

  proximity to the vedic tradition and prescribe a whole way

  of life that incorporates vedic rites of passage [samskaras]

  … along with the supererogatory tantric rites of their

  tradition”.359 Kul uka Bhatta, the celebrated commentator

  on Manu, for instance, says that Shruti is of two kinds,

  Vaidik and Tantrik, while the Niruttara Tantra also cal s

  Tantra the Fifth Veda.

  We have noted that the Vedic fire-rituals do not exhibit

  the correspondences between the elements of the external

 

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