What is the History of Preaching in Gaudiya Vaishnavism?
That was a question put to me recently. So I did another of my lists. I invite readers to write to me with their suggestions of what I’ve missed out.
Preaching is the compassionate activity of reaching out to others with wisdom and guidance, in order to help them advance further along the path of spiritual life. The first objective is to help someone come to the point of choosing to walk the path of spiritual life; the second is to help them stay on the path they’ve chosen.
Vaishnavas throughout history have almost always been preachers. They have visited villages and towns, urging all they met to hear about God and to chant His many names. They have empowered their followers to create fellowships and ashrams, places where people could come to listen and be inspired. In more modern times they have used every modern invention to broadcast their message of love to as many as possible.
Here is a short synopsis of the history of those innovations, the means by which the Vaishnavas delivered their message and preserved the spiritual strength of their followers.
First the Traditional Ways Spiritual Life Begins:
After the visit of a saint to one’s home or village
During a public address or talk on some holy topics
While at a festival to celebrate some holy day
After a visit to a holy place and experiencing the atmosphere of devotion there
After experiencing a mystical dream or personal revelation
Inspiration upon reading a holy text
And How Spiritual Life is Traditionally Maintained:
Small temple in the village
Periodic visit from a teacher or a group of wandering sadhus
Supportive community of spiritually progressive people
Songs
Literature
Theatre performances
Religious observances in the home
Collective scripture recital or story telling
Temple building
Our Greatest Preachers:
Lord Nityananda Prabhu
Toured northern India under the orders of Sri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu
Took many Vaishnavas with him, under the leadership of twelve who settled in different regions and established ashrams there, providing local inspiration, guidance and support
Emissaries sent further off to different places
The Six Goswamis of Vrindavan (16th Century)
The immediate followers of Sri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu
They wrote books of his teachings under his order in Sanskrit, the language of the scholars of the day
Those books went on to become the standard texts of the new movement
They held vigorous debates with the famous philosophers of the day
They recovered the lost holy places of Lord Krishna in Vrindavan
They built temples for people to visit
They organised a society with various departments and areas of responsibility—known as the Vishva Vaishnava Raja Sabha
They left behind them a huge community of Gaudiya Vaishnavas
Srila Bhaktivinode Thakura (19th Century)
Travelled as a magistrate for the British Raj in eastern India
On his travels, met up with associates and held large sankirtan celebrations in the villages
Created 500 'Nama-hatta' groups in those villages, many of which still meet today.
Wrote new songs to old tunes, and printed and distributed those songs
Wrote many books of philosophy carefully outlining what was—and wasn’t—pure devotional service to Krishna
Used the Bengali language to attract local people to his message
Wrote in English to share the teachings with the British and the Bengali intelligentsia.
Personally defeated the pseudo-Vaishnavas of his day, and others who threatened the devotee community
Created a regular magazine—The Sajana Tosani
Revived the publishing of Caitanya Caritamrita—the life of the Lord.
Followed Bhaktivinode Thakura’s example in his vigorous teaching and writing
Created and guided an organisation expressly for the purpose of preaching
Set up a pyramid-shaped care system for all his 10,000 disciples
Preached in Burma, the furthest the message of Chaitanya Mahaprabhu had been
Sent preachers to Germany and London
Started 64 ashrams
Wrote books in English, Bengali and had them translated into various Indian languages and scripts
Started both a daily newspaper and a monthly magazine
Used a travelling show of diorama ‘waxworks’ to preach at community shows
Was the first to take kirtan onto the radio
Employed a steamship for preaching
Recreated an order of saffron-clad sannyasa monks for disciplined preaching to the public
Srila A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada (20th Century)
Although Srila Prabhupada’s techniques of preaching are well documented and will be known to readers, it might be worth summarising them here. He brought with him not only the practises of the Gaudiya Math, but also his own ideas. He also accepted some innovations from his disciples and welcomed some aspects of modern technology.
Srila Prabhupada's Early Preaching
Correspondence
Writing and personal distribution of Back to Godhead newspaper—a newspaper offering spiritual commentary on the news of the day
Kirtans and public speaking in homes and halls
League of Devotees organization and a membership scheme
Personal writing for greater authority in preaching
His ISKCON Preaching—the Early Years
Public classes three times weekly in publicly accessible premises
Daily sacred meals for all
Sales of Srimad Bhagavatam to bookshops
Personal conversations
Kirtan and public address in local parks
Compilation of new version of Back to Godhead magazine sold by first students and disciples
Sending out disciples to new locations
Establishment of Deity worship
Rathayatra and large hall events
Regular chanting parties in public places
Later Years
Illustrated literature profusely distributed in hundreds of millions
Gaudiya Vaishnavism established worldwide
Chanting parties in major cities
Sunday Feasts and Festivals
Rapid proliferation of new centres in all parts of the world
More colourful festivals developed, with profuse distribution of sacred food
Modern musical recordings
Stage plays
Films and slide shows
Systematic training of new devotees
Annual India pilgrimage
World headquarters established in the birthplace of Chaitanya Mahaprabhu
How he Maintained his Followers' Spiritual Lives
Devotees in small communities, often in same building
'Temple president' given responsibility for ensuring spiritual standards
Stretched his disciples to their maximum potential, thus facilitating their spiritual experiences
Creation of GBC to supervise spiritual standards and temple administration standards
Made himself accessible by correspondence for philosophical questions and service instruction
Handbook on Deity standards, Educational System, and Marriage ceremonies compiled
Schools for children developed
Personally attended GBC meetings and occasionally corrected 'mission drift'
Conflicts repeatedly resolved
Fashioned policies that would remain after his physical disappearance.
Established himself as the acarya – the head of the institution
Ensured that Sannyasis remained travelling
From this list we can see that the ISKCON of the 21st century has more than enough information to conduct its preaching activities. Most things we do will never change; how we do them might. Information technology has given us access to digitisation and rapid transit of the message of Krishna, to film, satellite television, and to the Internet. But it also means that atheism uses the same techniques. Ultimately, it will not be our means of transmitting information that will help the mission in the 21st century, but the oldest technique of all: making friends.
The current demographics of ISKCON tell the story that we now have many more people and many more centres in countries where ISKCON’s presence would have been unimaginable before. But out of the quarter million more people that ISKCON has since the day that Srila Prabhupada stood under a tree in a New York park, hardly 5% of them live in the communal way that he envisaged as being most helpful for spiritual life.
What this means for ISKCON today is that new forms of community are required. Devotees do not conveniently live in one suburb of one city. Half of them don’t live in cities at all. So perhaps maintenance of spiritual community for ISKCON in the 21st century means exactly what it meant for Bhaktivinode Thakur: travelling, establishing in each village a network of Vaishnavas who agree to have weekly or fortnightly kirtan and readings, offering support and guidance and safeguarding the correct understanding of Krishna consciousness by vigorous discussion of what is, and what is not, progressive spiritual life.
"The idea is that provocation and misunderstanding may remain between one man and another. But our staunch faith in Krishna Consciousness may not allow any material disruption. Please therefore try to be sympathetic with any person even if they differ. The only qualification we have to scrutinize is if one is acting in Krishna Consciousness as far as one is able to do it.)"
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