Hey, People,
I have not read most of the thread, but from what Iāve read, everyone seems to have a point/two. From my previous interactions with Sufjon, this is what I can say from the Catholic view point, as best as I understand it (limited, of course) about Hindu-Catholic differences and similarities.
Hindu and Catholic
Metaphysics (understanding of reality) are obviously very different, and these differences affect the whole prism of our respective spiritualities, and the way we approach it.
Hindu and Catholic
Spirituality/Mysticism is strikingly similar in many way - But not all.
Thereās a strong emphasis in devotion and service in both and a certain sense of deification in both, and the lower/higher natures distinction, and self-denial.
In Hinduism, thereās ultimately only one reality, The Absolute reality manifests itself in what we catholics call āthe Cosmosā (Sufjon, if youāre reading this please correct me where Iām off) or the changing realm- The Absolute Reality itself remains eternal and unchanging. The underlying Principle is that, ultimately, all creation is a manifestation of God (The unchanging Absolute being), we are all one true self that we must each realize spiritually. Obviously this afects the spirituality. If everyone is a manifestation of God, then you must love them like yourself, and seeking the good of others cannot in reality be separated from God or the self.
Catholic metaphysics holds a true distinction between all beings- To us, each reality, creation is a true distinct reality of its own, though it gets its being from God who is absolute existence without limit.To us, you canāt be me and I canāt be you, and neither of us can be God, and God is not us, or there is no true self-gift. Our spirituality/mysticism is therefore entirely relational- There must be a true āotherā who is not ultimately still āmeā. Even in God, there is āotherā in the three persons and therefore self-giving.
So Sufjon sees the NT passages from the first prism (lenses) and we and the Jews and the culture of Christ from the second. If we donāt understand the differences, we can argue forever over things we canāt agree on, and fail even to recognize those we can.
In Catholicism, certainly, there is no question of anyone of us other than Christ being God. Thereās also no question of anyone saving themselves either. Christ being the God-man has performed an act of love (true self-giving by oblation/sacrifice) to the Father, who has in turn poured his own love on him (The divine life or even God the Holy Spirit)- Remember itās all about relationship, and mutual self-giving. Adam severed our āumbilical cordā to the life of God by sin and nothing and nobody can
earn the life of God/intimate relationship. This severing of his introduced a dis-order to our nature and our world, and now we are not in perfect harmony with the Divine will. Before, our bodies, our passions, our ālower natureā yielded perfectly to the higher nature, and our higher nature, which is the will and intellect (indeed our whole being) yielded perfectly to the Divine will- The world similarly yielded to man and God. There was no āLaw of the membersā or ego/id/higher-self split in us. Our world and our whole nature was like a flower wholly oriented to the Sun (God) as the highest good, but after sin, itās oriented inward to the self. (PS- To Hindus, the true self is God, to us, itās the highest part of the soul but not God)
So the re-establishment of that severed cord cannot be done by us, itās Godās life- how can we give it to ourselves? We are not God and heās not us. Itās done only by Christ and we co-operate, but the life itself is Divinity- How can we give ourselves Godās own life? No- It must be given to us as a gift.
Sanctity is conformity/union of our own will to the Divine will- simple. Is it necessary? Ask yourself if it is necessary to be conformed to the will of God? To want/desire/do as he wills? Of course! Justification is nothing other than a re-establishment of grace/spiritual communion with the Blessed Trinity (the umbilical cord we have to God) and the introduction of unearned/unmerited divine life in our souls- The grace gradually transforms you with your co-operation, re-orients your whole being and will to God, and when itās all done, we say youāre a Saint.