Avatar? No Thanks I've Already had One!
Many spiritual teachers
in the modern age have been hailed as “avatars,” a word which has come to mean
a person who is a divine incarnation, messiah, or world teacher of the highest
order. Since Ramakrishna—whose disciples first claimed that he was an avatar
at the end of the last century—a number of the spiritual teachers of India have
been called avatars by their followers. Perhaps the two best known in this regard
are Meher Baba and Satya Sai Baba, but other groups have conferred avatar status
on their gurus as well. Nor is this claim limited to those in the Hindu tradition.
We find mention of it among the Theosophists, who in the early twentieth century
claimed that J. Krishnamurti was the avatar. Abdul Bahai of Persia in the Bahai
movement is another avatar figure. In fact, there are now so many people who
have been labeled “avatar” that it’s no longer clear what the word really means.
The extent to which the word “avatar” has been devalued is best revealed by
a new organization in the United States that trains people to become “avatars,”
giving them their own “avatar number” when they complete a course. This group
has additional training to turn people into avatar masters, who are then certified
to train other people to become avatars. Exactly what “avatar” means to them
is best revealed by a third training course, which claims to turn avatar masters
into wizards. Thus, an avatar is only an understudy for a wizard! While this
can be dismissed as advertising hype, it does show how much confusion abounds
around the concept of avatar.
The Classical Concept
“Avatar” is a Sanskrit word meaning a “descent.” In general, it can refer to
a new, unexpected, or revolutionary person or event. Specifically, it has been
used to refer to the appearance of a deity on earth, whether in human form or
as an apparition. As a descent of the Divine into animal or human form, “avatar”
primarily refers to descents of Vishnu, the divine power which preserves and
maintains the universe. There were traditionally said to be ten avatars of Vishnu,
although some texts list twenty-six. The ten are: Fish (Matsya); Turtle (Kurma);
Boar (Varaha); Man-lion (Narasingha); Dwarf (Vamana); Parashurama; Rama; Krishna;
Buddha; and Kalki, who is yet to appear.
This short list covers all human history and apparently the animal world as
well. Three of the ten avatars are animals and one is a mythological figure.
The fish and turtle are common mystical symbols, and the man-lion incarnation
also appears in Egypt as the sphinx. Only the last five avatars are human and
between each of them are periods of hundreds, if not thousands, of years. Thus,
if all those who have been called avatars in the modern age actually are avatars,
there have been more avatars in the last hundred years than in all of history.
In the ancient tradition of yoga, avatars are seen as symbols. The demons they
defeat represent obstacles that the aspirant encounters in his spiritual practices.
This list of avatars does not include the most famous sages in the Indian tradition,
such as the seven rishis of the Vedas; Yajnavalkya, the foremost of the Upanishadic
sages; the great philosopher Shankaracharya; Kapila, the founder of the Sankhya
system; or Patanjali, the compiler of the Yoga Sutras. Thus, it is obviously
not intended to encompass all the great teachers of India.
In fact, the worship of avatars is not seen as essential in yogic and meditative
traditions, which emphasize Self-knowledge rather than outer worship. In the
Vedantic tradition, those seeking Self-realization are not encouraged to worship
an avatar any more than they are required to worship a particular deity, though
they can do so if the avatar or deity is seen as a form of the Self.
Today, when people use the term “avatar,” they generally mean a direct divine
incarnation—a being who does not take birth out of any personal karma, but who
is the Divine itself, manifesting to take care of the needs of humanity. The
founders of religions—particularly Christ, Buddha, and Mohammed—are regarded
by many as avatars. This is a departure from the classic concept, as none of
the avatars of Vishnu ever founded a new religion. The Buddha is regarded an
avatar of Vishnu by the Hindus not because he founded a religion but because
he propounded the ancient teaching of dharma or natural law.
Just as the focus on avatars is not a part of yoga, so is it also in contrast
to many streams of religious thought, which do not believe in divine incarnations.
Islam does not recognize divine incarnations but only prophets who bring historical
revelations. Mohammed is considered to be the final prophet—Muslims expect no
other. To make Mohammed into an avatar is contrary to the doctrines of Islam,
which hold that the divine should never be worshiped as a human. Most Jews have
a similar idea and do not believe that an individual can become God, much less
that God can be born as a person. Historically, Judaism and Islam rejected Christianity
on the ground that Christ could not be the son of God because God cannot assume
human form.
Buddhism does not recognize any divine creator or Ishvara but holds that the
world comes into being through karma alone. Instead of divine incarnations,
Buddhists have great enlightened teachers (Buddhas) who have had previous lives,
attain liberation, and continue in the world for the benefit of others. They
also have bodhisattvas, beings who, having already achieved their liberation
from the cycle of karma, take birth purely to help others, not out of any karmic
need of their own, having already achieved their liberation from the cycle of
karma.
Many Shaivites (worshipers of Shiva) do not believe that the Divine can directly
incarnate through a person, though Shaivism does recognize that portions or
aspects of the Divine (amsas) can work through different individuals and that
individuals can attain Self- or God-realization.
To many Hindus, great siddhas, yogis, and jnanis are more important than avatars.
Such great beings exist beyond the world and its religious identities. Although
they may never become known, these teachers may be more important than the few
who have become known, including the so-called avatars. The greatest teachers
may never reveal themselves to the outer world but do their work in anonymity,
silence, and seclusion. To have contact with such great beings, which is possible
for seekers who are firmly committed to the path of spirituality, is considered
to be the highest form of blessing.
In the Vedantic tradition, the attainment of a Self-realized sage is more important
than that of a single divine incarnation whom everyone must worship. The Self-realized
sage is one who has realized that Brahman or God alone exists. Such a sage is
not bound by ideas of bondage and liberation, ignorance and enlightenment, avatars
and non-avatars. He or she directs us to the inner truth, the nature of consciousness.
By contrast, an avatar is generally a popular figure of the outer religion,
a devotional image.
The yogic tradition emphasizes sanatana dharma, a tradition of eternal and universal
truth, not a religion focused on a particular incarnation or avatar. From this
point of view, all the religions of the world—to the extent that they claim
exclusive ownership of truth—are a fall from sanatana dharma or the universal
truth, while religious identities that separate human beings into believers
and non-believers deny the unity of God and man.
The Long-Awaited Avatar
Today in the West, the concept of the avatar is often associated with the second
coming of Christ, an idea which has been dominant in the European psyche for
the past two thousand years. It can be seen in the concept of the Jewish messiah;
in Maitreya, the next Buddha; in Kalki, the tenth incarnation of Vishnu; and
in the Mahdi of the Muslims—all of which are different names for the divine
incarnation who is expected to unite the world’s religions into a new global
religion under his name.
This idea has been part of a syncretic trend in modern thought. To consider
the founders of all religions as avatars brings them into a single family. Conceptualizing
the next avatar as a figure common to all religions is a way of uniting their
influence. However, such attempts at unification work on the level of names
and personalities, seeking an external figure to bring people together. This
popular notion ignores the fact that authentic unification must come from the
realm beyond names, forms, and identities. Any true unification of religion
can arise only through a recognition of the One Self in all human beings and
the unitary nature of all life. It comes from direct inner experience and cannot
be brought about merely through a new religious leader.
This modern notion of the avatar requires scrutiny. Even in the highly improbable
event that all religions could be united under the aegis of a single individual,
would this be desirable? There is one Truth which is the basis of all true religion,
but that does not mean that this truth is equally represented by all religions
as they exist today. All food is one in the sense that its goal is nourishing
the body, but this does not mean that all food is the same or that all food
is good. Religion is a phenomenon as diverse as food and requires as much discrimination
in the taking. To throw all the religions together to arrive at a superfaith
is like mixing all the foods of different countries together—the result is likely
to be indigestion.
To look for one great teacher to represent the unity of all religions may result
only in creating another sectarian belief. While the idea of a universal avatar
does reflect the aspiration of humanity for a new global spiritual culture,
it is not a new religion that we need so much as freedom from religious sectarianism,
which will allow us to freely explore all spiritual paths. The search for a
new avatar or messiah to save us, individually or globally, may be only another
immature attempt at finding an external savior. What we need is to outgrow this
phase of emotional neediness and come to recognize that Truth transcends all
personalities.
This is not to say that all modern figures who have been called avatars are
questionable as teachers or leaders. A number of them have a greatness which
cannot be disputed, but debating whether or not they are avatars misses the
point. Often overzealous devotees find it necessary to declare their teacher
the greatest of all teachers or a direct divine incarnation. Calling the teacher
an avatar has become one way to do this. Many of these teachers never considered
themselves to be avatars and should not be blamed for the excessive adulation
of their followers. Some of those who have allowed the term to be applied to
them did not mean that they themselves were a divine incarnation but only that
an important new teaching or descent of grace came through them.
Ramana Maharshi’s View of Avatars
Ramana
Maharshi, one of the great sages of modern India, gained his Self-realization
at the age of seventeen after only twenty minutes of inquiry. After this experience,
he never departed from the Absolute and demonstrated a life of the highest character
and knowledge. The lives of the founders of the world’s main religions contained
more struggle and human error than his did, yet Maharshi did not claim to be
an avatar and did not place much importance on the term.
When Maharshi was asked who the avatar was, he said that for him everyone is
an avatar. He said that from the standpoint of jnana yoga, or the yoga of knowledge,
there are no avatars, but only the One Self or One Reality in all the beings
of the universe.
According to this line of thought, we should not let the avatar idea obscure
the greater truth that all is God and that one who realizes the Self becomes
one with everything, including all the avatars, whoever they may be. Self-realization
rests upon our own sadhana, which is a matter of daily practice, not on seeking
for a magical avatar whom we may never find.
Yet worship of an avatar can be an aid to the path of Self-knowledge, as can
the worship of a deity. Avatars represent one way to direct our devotion to
the Divine. However, this path is only one way to the direct experience. One
may direct devotion to any form of the Divine, any great teacher, to the Divine
without form, or to the inner Self. But on the path of Self-knowledge, none
of these forms of devotion is essential, because a seeker can directly experience
the Self.
It is good for us to acknowledge divine qualities wherever we find them, but
it is not necessary that we standardize this process by insisting on only one
teacher or one set of teachers as the ultimate solution for all humanity. It
is not another avatar that we need so much as a living tradition of Self-knowledge
which is not dependent on a particular personality. We may never know whether
our teacher—or any teacher—is an avatar, but we can know ourselves and, as the
Vedas say, one who knows the Self knows all.
David Frawley is the author of a number of books on the spiritual traditions
of India, including Tantric Yoga and the Wisdom Goddesses and Beyond the Mind.
He is the director of the American Institute of Vedic Studies, P.O. Box 8357,
Santa Fe, NM 87504.
UNSUNG HEROES
The greatest people in the world have passed away unknown. Hundreds of these
unknown heroes have lived in every country, working silently. Silently they
live and silently they pass away, and in time their thoughts find expression
in Buddhas or Christs; and it is these latter that become known to us.
The highest people do not seek to get any name or fame from their knowledge.
They leave their ideas to the world; they put forth no claims for themselves
and establish no schools or systems in their name. Their whole nature shrinks
from such a thing . . . the highest are calm, silent, and unknown. They really
know the power of thought; they are sure that even if they go into a cave and
close the door and simply think five true thoughts and then pass away, these
five thoughts of theirs will live throughout eternity. Indeed, such thoughts
of theirs will penetrate through the mountains, cross the oceans, and travel
through the world. They will enter deep into human hearts and brains and raise
up men and women who will give them practical expression in the workings of
human life.
—Swami Vivekananda
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