harbans ji,
thank you your interest.
Your confidence in Zakir Naik seems to be great. I too think he is a good orator. But why do you think he is such an effective orator?
One reason is because Hindus have difficulty in defining ourselves, understandably so, and thus others take advantage of this ambiguity, lack of clarity and complexity to give their own spin and start defining and thus maligning us.
So even though the freedom, the individuality, the multiplicity of options, multi-level semantics, cultural richness is a strength of Sanatan Dharma, there is an urgent need for
rhetorical clarity when dealing with the detractors of Hindus.
Rhetorical clarity requires a concise definition of the central theme of one's beliefs and at the same time a hard demarcation from the others. If one can claim implicit superiority over the other based on this central theme, all the better.
harbans wrote:Intermediary: 2. something that acts as a medium or means
Isn't it disingenuous of you to pick one word out of the definition and simply use that at the total. It is an established pattern that you like to use terms out of context. Why don't you qualify the term with context?!
The context is created by words like
"access", "requirement", "intervention", "self-proclaimed", etc.
"self-proclaimed":
The intermediary has to be a conscious being (e.g. human) for it to be able to 'self-proclaim'.
- Is a Murti a conscious being (if it is being considered as an idol)?
- I also can't get my head around to understanding how a Guru can be an intermediary?
- Does the Guru provide you with any guarantee of access to the Supreme, were one to follow his guidance?
- Does the Guru provide you with any communication channel to the Supreme?
- Does the Guru ever claim to know the opinion of the Supreme on any given matter at any given time?
- Does the Guru ever claim any privileged access to the Supreme for himself?
One could say, a Guru is perhaps an intermediary between you and your potential to activate your intrinsic capacity and realize its full potential, and that too if the Shishya is willing to invest in this process.
There is also no requirement of having a Guru in order to realize one's intrinsic capacity.
harbans ji,
you always believe what you want to believe, logic be damned. And if you want to believe that you don't like the definition, because you don't want to push out Christians from Dharmic identity and this is the way to go about it, then please continue to believe what you want.
I think you are more interested in ameliorating any potential for hurt Christian sensitivities for being called
Adharmic (not meaning
adharmic), than you are interested in demarcating Dharmics from the Islamics and if that requires you to rubbish a good definition for "Dharmics" then why not?
Zakir Naiks and so on are all straw-man arguments!