Author: Sita Ram Goel
Publisher: Voice of India
Year: 1996
Language: English
Pages: 530
ISBN/UPC (if available): 8185990352
Description
There is no connected account of how Hindu thinkers, saints and sages have viewed Christianity and its exclusive claims. This enlarged and updated study is an attempt to fill that gap, and seeks to cover some of the high spots in this prolonged encounter.
Hindus from seventeenth century Pandits of Tamil Nadu to Mahatma Gandhi have wasted no end of breath to demolish the dogma of Christianity. But it has hardly made any difference to the arrogance of Christian theologians and missionaries. That is because the dogma was never meant for discussion. It is an axiom of logic that that which has not been proved cannot and need not be disproved. Who has ever proved that the non-descript few who was crucified by a Roman governor of Judaea in 33 AD atoned for the sins of mankind for all time to come? Who has ever proved that those who accept that man as the only savior will ascend to a heaven of everlasting bliss and those who do not will burn for ever in the blazing fire of hell? Nor can the proclamation of the promise of the threat be disproved. High-sounding theological blah blah notwithstanding, the fact remains that the dogma is no more than a subterfuge for forging and wielding an organizational weapon for aggression against other people. It is high time for Hindus to dismiss the dogma of Christianity with the contempt it deserves, and pay attention to the Christian missionary apparatus planted in their midst.
The sole aim of this apparatus is to ruin Hindu society and culture, and take over the Hindu homeland. It goes on devising strategies for every situation, favorable and unfavorable. It trains and employs a large number of intellectual criminals ready to prostitute their talent in the service of their paymasters and adept at dressing up dark designs in high-sounding language. The fact that every design is advertised as a theology in the Indian context and every criminal euphemized as an Indian theologian should not hoodwink Hindus about the real intentions.
Hindus are committing a great mistake in regarding the encounter between Hinduism and Christianity as a dialogue between two religions. Christianity has never been a religion; it has always been predatory imperialism par excellence. The encounter, therefore, should be viewed as battle between two totally opposed and mutually exclusive ways of thought and behavior. In the language of the Gita (chapter 16), it is war between ‘daivi’ (divine) and ‘asuri’ (demonic) ‘sampads’ (propensities). In the larger context of history, it can also be described as war between the Vedic and the Biblical traditions.
The Vedic tradition have practiced peace among their Sanatana Dharma which have practiced peace among their own followers as well as towards the followers of other paths. On the other hand, the Biblical tradition has spawned cults such as Christianity, Islam, Communism, and Nazism which have always produced violent conflicts as much within their own camps as with each other.
Contents
Preface to the Second Edition
Preface to the First Edition
Encounter on the Euphrates
Encounter in Malabar
Hallucination of the davil’s Devotees
Pirates in Priest’s Clothing
From Monologue to Dialogue
Encounter in Tamil Nadu
Encounter at Pondicherry
Encounter with Raja Ram Mohun Roy
Encounter in Maharashtra
Encounter with Sanskrit Pandits
Encounters with Maharshi Dayananda
Second Encounter in Tamil Nadu
Encounter with Swami Vivekananda
Encounter with Swami Vivekananda
Encounter with Mahatma Gandhi
The Hoax of Human Rights
Debate in the constituent Assembly
Missions since Independence
Dethroning Monotheism
Sannyasins or Swindlers?
A Hornet’s Nest
Exploding a Mischievous Myth
Plea for Rejecting Jesus as Junk
Encounter with Arun Shourie
Fixing a Christian Windbag
Calling the Pope’s Bluff
Bibliography
Index