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	<title>Ananda Sangha Worldwide &#187; Glossary</title>
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		<title>Avatar</title>
		<link>http://www.ananda.org/glossary/avatar/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 15 May 2011 19:28:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>dmitri</dc:creator>
		
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		<description><![CDATA[The Sanskrit word avatar literally means “descent.”  It refers to the descent of divinity from heaven to earth, and is typically used to describe an incarnation of God. Paramhansa Yogananda explained that the term avatar refers to a soul who has been freed from maya (delusion) and is sent by the will of God back into manifested [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Sanskrit word <strong>avatar</strong> literally means “descent.” </p>
<p>It refers to the descent of divinity from heaven to earth, and is typically used to describe an incarnation of God.<span class='footnote-reference'><a href='#footnote-ay33' id='footnote-reference-ay33-1'>(1)</a></span></p>
<p>Paramhansa Yogananda explained that the term <em>avatar</em> refers to a soul who has been freed from maya (delusion) and is sent by the will of God back into manifested existence to help others.</p>
<p>Examples include the founders of major world religions, such as Jesus Christ, Buddha, and Krishna. Yogananda said that an avatar “is born not to show us how great<em> he</em> was, but to give us hope that the state of consciousness he had attained, we too can attain.”<span class='footnote-reference'><a href='#footnote-BlissAvatar' id='footnote-reference-BlissAvatar-1'>(2)</a></span></p>
<h2>Orthodox Hindu Beliefs</h2>
<p>More traditional Hindus believe an avatar to be a direct manifestation of God, rather than a re-incarnation or re-appearance on earth of a soul that has been liberated. This is comparable to the understanding that many Christians have of Jesus Christ, who they consider as having never been in human form before he was Jesus Christ.</p>
<p>Traditionally, the word <em>avatar </em>is sometimes limited to the different incarnations of Vishnu. In modern times, it is one of many Sanskrit terms that have been applied to everything from online computer identities to “avatar training,” as if one could simply take a class and become an avatar!<span class='footnote-reference'><a href='#footnote-HinduWay' id='footnote-reference-HinduWay-1'>(3)</a></span></p>
<h2><em>Is</em> an Avatar a Direct Manifestation of God?</h2>
<p>Paramhansa Yogananda stated that these traditional beliefs are incorrect. He wrote that God would not send help to humanity by sending one who had never gone through the very real challenges that humans face. He asked “What sort of lesson would that be for humanity? God wouldn’t simply<em> pretend</em> to be going through the hardship and pain that, from the human point of view, are so real.”<span class='footnote-reference'><a href='#footnote-HinduWay' id='footnote-reference-HinduWay-2'>(3)</a></span></p>
<p>In <em>The Hindu Way of Awakening</em>, Swami Kriyananda writes that:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>The meaning of <em>avatara</em>, Yogananda stated, is not that Divine Consciousness, which has never known imperfection, appears in human form to show us a reality completely alien to our own. Krishna, Jesus Christ, and all other avatars are not only<em> manifestations</em> of Spirit. They are descents also in the sense of knowing, from experience, what it is to be human beings who attained oneness with the Divine.<em> Their example shows us our own divine potential</em>.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Krishna, who some Hindus consider to be a full incarnation (<em>purna avatar</em>) of Vishnu, stated to Arjuna in the Bhagavad Gita that “You and I, Arjuna, have passed through many births. I know them all, even if you do not.” <span class='footnote-reference'><a href='#footnote-4' id='footnote-reference-4-1'>(4)</a></span> Thus Krishna himself declared that he had incarnated previously.</p>
<p>Similarly, Yogananda wrote in his <em><em>Autobiography of a Yogi</em></em> that &#8220;<span class="copy">There are numerous passages in the Bible which infer that John and Jesus in their last incarnations were, respectively, Elijah and his disciple Elisha.&#8221;</span><span class='footnote-reference'><a href='#footnote-AY35' id='footnote-reference-AY35-1'>(5)</a></span></p>
<p>Swami Kriyananda, recounting a discussion that he had with Yogananda, wrote that any fully liberated soul who returns in human form to help mankind is an avatar. He described the various levels of divine freedom in this way:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>If, as rarely happens, he returns to earth, it is as a full manifestation of God — an<em> avatar</em> — with divine power to shower blessings, generally, on all mankind. Those who still have some past karma of their own to work out, return primarily to help their own disciples. These saints, called<em> jivan muktas</em> (“freed while living”), are able to uplift a few, but cannot carry innumerable disciples to God. Those, on the other hand, who return without any karma of their own, having become<em> param muktas</em> (“fully liberated”) in a former life, come as<em> avatars</em>.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Kriyananda asked Yogananda, “What is it, Master, that draws a soul back to earth after he has attained final liberation?”</p>
<p>Yogananda replied, <span class="PYSPEECH">“He still keeps the ‘desireless desire’ to help others.”<br /></span></p>
<p>When Yogananda was asked if he himself was an avatar, he quietly replied, “It would take such a one, to bring a mission of this importance.&#8221;<span class='footnote-reference'><a href='#footnote-Conversations' id='footnote-reference-Conversations-1'>(6)</a></span></p>
<p>He stated at other times that the Ananda line of Gurus are all avatars. He described Babaji as a <em><em>Mahavatar</em></em>, or great avatar; Lahiri Mahasaya as a <em><em>Yogavatar</em></em>, or incarnation of Yoga; his own guru, Swami Sri Yukteswar as a <em>Gyanavatar</em>, or incarnation of wisdom.<span class='footnote-reference'><a href='#footnote-AY35' id='footnote-reference-AY35-2'>(5)</a></span> Paramhansa Yogananda has been described variously as a <em>Premavatar</em> (by his disciple Rajarshi Janakananda) and a bliss-avatar by Swami Kriyananda, due to Yogananda himself stating that “I myself got there [to divine freedom] through bliss.”<span class='footnote-reference'><a href='#footnote-BlissAvatar' id='footnote-reference-BlissAvatar-2'>(2)</a></span></p>
<h2><strong>List of Avatars</strong></h2>
<h3><strong>Traditional, Orthodox Belief</strong></h3>
<p>For some Hindus, the concept of avatar is associated mostly with Vishnu, who represents the aspect of God as preserver in the Hindu <em>trimurti</em>. The other two aspects of <em>trimurti</em> are <em>Brahma</em> as the creator and <em>Shiva</em> as the destroyer, or dissolver of creation. Various <em>Puranas</em> (religious texts from ancient times) describe the different avatars of Vishnu, numbering as many as forty in the<em> Bhagavata Purana</em>. Other <em>Puranas</em> describe the ten main avatars of Vishnu: Matsya, Kurma, Varaha, Narasimha, Vamana, Parashurama, Rama, Krishna, Buddha (replaced with Balarama, Krishna’s brother, in some versions), and Kalki (a future avatar).<span class='footnote-reference'><a href='#footnote-7' id='footnote-reference-7-1'>(7)</a></span></p>
<p>There are also avatars of other Hindu deities in the Puranas, including avatars of Shiva, Devi (or Divine Mother), and Ganesha. The <em>Linga Purana</em> describes twenty-eight avatars of Shiva. The <em>Devi Bhagavata Purana</em> tells of the avatars of Devi, and the <em>Ganesha Purana</em> describes the avatars of Ganesha.<span class='footnote-reference'><a href='#footnote-8' id='footnote-reference-8-1'>(8)</a></span></p>
<h3><strong>Avatars According to Paramhansa Yogananda</strong></h3>
<p><strong></strong>Avatars described by Yogananda include Patanjali, and Agastya, a South Indian saint. As stated earlier, they also include:</p>
<ul>
<li>Jesus Christ</li>
<li>The Buddha</li>
<li>Krishna</li>
<li>Mahavatar Babaji</li>
<li>Lahiri Mahasaya</li>
<li>Swami Sri Yukteswar</li>
<li>Paramhansa Yogananda himself</li>
</ul>
<div>By no means are the avatars limited to this list. As Krishna said in the Bhagavad Gita,</div>
<blockquote>
<div>Whenever righteousness wanes and unrighteousness increases I send myself forth.<br />For the protection of the good and for the destruction of evil,<br />and for the establishment of righteousness,<br />I come into being age after age.<span class='footnote-reference'><a href='#footnote-9' id='footnote-reference-9-1'>(9)</a></span></div>
</blockquote>
<h2><strong>Further Reading</strong></h2>
<ul>
<li><em><a href="http://www.crystalclarity.com/product.php?code=BRINA">Religion in the New Age</a></em>, Part Three: “Bliss-Avatar?”</li>
<li><a href="http://www.ananda.org/autobiography/#chap33"><em>Autobiography of a Yogi</em></a><a>, Chapter 33</a></li>
</ul>
<div class='footnotes'><h2>References</h2><ol start='1'><li id="footnote-ay33">
	<span class="instances"> <a href='#footnote-reference-ay33-1'>&#x21A9;</a></span>
	<a href="http://www.ananda.org/autobiography/"><em>Autobiography of a Yogi</em></a>, Paramhansa Yogananda. <a href="http://www.ananda.org/autobiography/#chap33">Chapter 33</a>, “Babaji, the Yogi-Christ of Modern India.”
</li><li id="footnote-BlissAvatar">
	<span class="instances"> <a href='#footnote-reference-BlissAvatar-1'>a</a> <a href='#footnote-reference-BlissAvatar-2'>b</a></span>
	Religion in the New Age, by Swami Kriyananda. Part Three, Bliss Avatar.
</li><li id="footnote-HinduWay">
	<span class="instances"> <a href='#footnote-reference-HinduWay-1'>a</a> <a href='#footnote-reference-HinduWay-2'>b</a></span>
	<em><a href="http://www.crystalclarity.com/product.php?code=BHWA">The Hindu Way of Awakening</a></em>, by Swami Kriyananda. Chapter Sixteen, The Avatara: Revelation or Return Voyage?
</li><li id="footnote-4">
	<span class="instances"> <a href='#footnote-reference-4-1'>&#x21A9;</a></span>
	Bhagavad Gita, 4:5
</li><li id="footnote-AY35">
	<span class="instances"> <a href='#footnote-reference-AY35-1'>a</a> <a href='#footnote-reference-AY35-2'>b</a></span>
	<em><a href="http://www.ananda.org/autobiography/"><em>Autobiography of a Yogi</em></a></em>, by Paramhansa Yogananda. <a href="http://www.ananda.org/autobiography/#chap35">Chapter 35</a>.
</li><li id="footnote-Conversations">
	<span class="instances"> <a href='#footnote-reference-Conversations-1'>&#x21A9;</a></span>
	<em>Conversations with Yogananda</em>, by Swami Kriyananda. Chapter 4.
</li><li id="footnote-7">
	<span class="instances"> <a href='#footnote-reference-7-1'>&#x21A9;</a></span>
	<a href="http://books.google.com/?id=1oqTYiPeAxMC&pg=PA4" rel="nofollow"><em>Krishna, Lord or Avatara?: the relationship between Krishna and Vishnu</em></a>, by Freda Matchett, Freda (2001). 9780700712816. p. 4.
</li><li id="footnote-8">
	<span class="instances"> <a href='#footnote-reference-8-1'>&#x21A9;</a></span>
	&#8220;Hindu Avatāra and Christian Incarnation: A Comparison&#8221;, by Noel Sheth. <em>Philosophy East and West</em> (University of Hawai&#8217;i Press) <strong>52</strong> (1 (Jan. 2002)): 98–125.
</li><li id="footnote-9">
	<span class="instances"> <a href='#footnote-reference-9-1'>&#x21A9;</a></span>
	Bhagavad Gita, 4:7–8
</li></ol></div>]]></content:encoded>
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