ECK master
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ECK Masters, or the Order of Vairagi Adepts, are spiritual figures who assume spiritual leadership of the ECKANKAR religion, according to Eckankar doctrine. The current Living Eck Master is Sri Harold Klemp.
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[edit] Overview of ECK Masters
ECKANKAR emphasizes spiritual liberation, and how this relates to the ECK (Holy Spirit). The Living ECK Master is the one who aids followers in contacting the ECK as Soul (individual, eternal spiritual beings).
The ECK Master "does what he pleases, has what he wants, comes and goes absolutely at his own will... He bows only to God."[1] It is the role of "translated" (deceased) ECK Masters to aid the Living ECK Master in carrying out his duties. Followers of ECKANKAR, or ECKists, often speak of have had contact with ECK Masters who have translated. [2]
The spirits of these leaders are associated with guardian angels, dreams, and invisible friends, and always with positive life changes. ECKists state that the masters go back thousands of years,[3] although ECKANKAR itself is a new religious movement that was established in the present, modern-day world in 1965. Its founder, Paul Twitchell, or Sri Paul Twitchell, whose spiritual name is Peddar Zaskq, was considered an ECK Master both in his lifetime and after his death in 1971. He was the 971st Living ECK Master in an unbroken line to hold the position.[4] The current leader of ECKANKAR is Sri Harold Klemp, or Wah Z, also an ECK Master, who, by virtue of still being alive on the physical plane, also holds the title the Living ECK Master.
Eckankar, also called The Religion of the Light and Sound, draws attention to ten ECK Masters, namely Harold Klemp, Paul Twitchell, as well as ECK Masters before 1965, including: Kata Daki, Gopal Das, Fubbi Quantz, Towart Managi, Rami Nuri, Yaubl Sacabi, Lai Tsi, and Rebazar Tarzs. It is noted that outside of ECKANKAR, the existence of ECK Masters predating 1965 is sometimes disputed. Sri Harold Klemp once wrote that some people believed these ECK masters "must have been figments of Paul Twitchell's imagination".[5]
Ford Johnson, a former Eckist, is an author and founder of his own new religious movement. He is a critic of ECKANKAR, but observed the ECK Masters tremendous importance to that movement, writing that they constitute "the foundation of the doctrine."[6]
[edit] Important ECK Masters
[edit] Rami Nuri
Rami Nuri is from an unspecified time in the past. He now lives in a city called Retz on the planet Venus. Rami Nuri is the guardian of the section of the holy book of ECKANKAR called the Shariyat-Ki-Sugmad or Way of the Eternal kept in the third Temple of Golden Wisdom on Venus known as the House of Moksha.[7]
[edit] Lai Tsi
Lai Tsi is from a time unspecified on either the website or in Paul Twitchell's 1969 "A Glossary of ECKANKAR Words and Terms" from his book ECKANKAR: The Key to Secret Worlds). Lai Tsi was based in China, but now lives on the Etheric Plane, the fourth level beyond the physical world, where he keeps watch over another section of the Shariyat-Ki-Sugmad in the Temple of Golden Wisdom there, of which he is in charge.[8]
[edit] Gopal Das
Gopal Das was the Living ECK Master in 3000 B.C., in Egypt near Luxor. He is distinguished by his long, straight, blonde hair. He assisted with the Reu nu pert em hru, known as The Egyptian Book of the Dead, established mystery cults for the Egyptian deities Osiris and Isis [9], aided the impoverished, and participated in discussions with the agents of the Pharaoh; "A Glossary of ECKANKAR Words and Terms" also lists his having been the Living ECK Master during the twelfth century B.C. under Ramses II (who ruled from 1290 B.C. to 1224 B.C.). Because of the state-established religious climate that developed, ECKANKAR became a hidden art during Gopal Das' life, albeit one that he continued to teach others. (It remained so until 1965, when re-introduced in its modern form by Paul Twitchell.)[10]
Gopal Das now resides on the Astral Plane, a psychic realm which is the second and adjacent level beyond the physical. He is in charge of the fourth section of the Shariyat-Ki-Sugmad housed in the Temple of Golden Wisdom there; the ECKANKAR website has collected and published essays by modern followers who state they have been contacted by him. These include one man who reported that visits by Gopal Das inspired him to break free from a "black magician," [11], and another person who told of Gopal Das's having foretold their mother's death.[12]
Paul Twitchell has written that chanting the name "Gopal" can actually transport one's inner, true self, i.e., Soul - to this Temple of Golden Wisdom, where one can hear Gopal Das give lectures.[13]
[edit] Yaubl Sacabi
Yaubl Sacabi was a Living ECK Master of the Mycenaeans, c.2000 B.C. to c.1700 B.C.. In his lifetime, he is said to have played a pivotal role within ancient Greek cults.[14]
There are modern-day followers who tell of having met Yaubl Sacabi, including one who said that when he was five years old and an automobile crushed his foot and that Yaubl Sacabi appeared and healed it; allowing the five-year-old to walk home. Yaubl Sacabi appeared again to help heal the foot after a well-meaning family member dumped tincture of iodine on it, causing still more pain.[15]
[edit] Fubbi Quantz
Fubbi Quantz was an ECK Master based in Persia at Tabriz, a contemporary of Buddha c.500 B.C.[16] and also a tenth century figure.[17] He personally taught the tenth-century poet Firdusi as ECK Master, and is also credited as having had contact with Christopher Columbus through King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella. Fubbi Quantz is said to have believed the discovery of America would be beneficial for Europeans, who needed nutrients to aid in their collective recovery from plague, famine, and the generally poor state of the average person's diet, and thus helped to inspire Columbus's voyage. He is in charge of the Katsupari Monastery in Tibet, and guardian of the first section of the Shariyat-Ki-Sugmad kept there.[18]
Despite the powers of ECK Masters, Fubbi Quantz taught that worshipping ECK Masters as gods is a fatal error, and on this point Paul Twitchell quotes him with evident approval: "I am but a servant of God, and whoever shall regard me as the Lord shall meet with destruction."[19]
Twitchell also relates that in modern times, Fubbi Quantz once appeared on a highway along the Mediterranean coast and stopped an automobile driven by some of his followers to save it from plunging off a washed-out bridge ahead.[20]
[edit] Rebazar Tarzs
Rebazar Tarzs, typically described as wearing maroon robes, is credited as the first ECK Master to transform ECKANKAR from a hidden art into an "open" religion, in the fifteenth century. Paul Twitchell gave Rebazar Tarzs the credit of being the ECK Master who introduced ECKANKAR to him. Afterwards, Rebazar Tarz visited Twitchell's home many times to aid in the writing of spiritual texts.
Rebazar Tarzs presently resides in the Hindu Kush mountains, and, given that he is "the emissary of ECKANKAR in the physical universe,"[21] there are several essays available, by ECKANKAR followers who report having met him, including one who describes Rebazar Tarzs's guiding him to herbs that cured his heart condition [22], and one who tells of receiving a gift from Rebazar Tarzs during the Korean War, the gift later being traded for desperately needed food. [23]
There is a story of a taxicab driver who picked up Rebazar Tarzs in Milwaukee, Wisconsin in around 1952, and during the ride, Rebazar Tarzs was able, among other things, to read the driver's "secret prayers." In a second incident, Rebazar Tarzs miraculously repaired the driver's automobile.[24]
Rebazar Tarzs is said to preach "love and humility" [2] and has taught that "It is better to give than to receive."[25]
[edit] Others
[edit] Adi Mahanta
According to Paul Twitchell, the first Living ECK Master was a Tibetan. The word "Adi", in ECKANKAR doctrine, means "The beginning; the unknown Deity."[26]
[edit] Shamus-i-Tabiz
Shamus-i-Tabiz is an ECK Master on the Causal Plane, the second level of existence beyond the physical, specifically in charge of another Temple of Golden Wisdom.[27]
[edit] Sato Kuray
In his "A Glossary of ECKANKAR Words and Terms", Paul Twitchell merely refers to Sato Kuray as "An ECK Master."[28]
[edit] Towart Managi
Towart Managi is an ECK Master not listed in Paul Twitchell's 1969 glossary, but who is noted in the website. He was a Living ECK Master in ancient Abyssinia, and is now in charge of another Temple of Golden Wisdom, on the "Mental Plane,". He is also called the Koji Chanda.[29]
[edit] Sudar Singh
Sudar Singh was a contemporary and trainer of Paul Twitchell, and his predecessor as Living ECK Master.[30] Paul stated that Sudar Singh taught the religion in at least two places, namely the cities of Paris and Allahabad, India. [31]
[edit] Darwin Gross
Darwin Gross succeeded Paul Twitchell to become the Living ECK Master in 1971. In 1981 he passed on the leadership of ECKANKAR to the current Living ECK Master Harold Klemp. Gross then became entangled in various legal disputes, regarding the copyright status of various facets of ECKANKAR.
As of 2006 the ECKANKAR website's overview of ECK Masters does not mention him, since he is no longer recognized as an ECK Master. [32] [33]
[edit] Women as ECK Masters
One essay written on ECKANKAR from the Warren Wilson College, citing sources as recent as 1998, states that women can never be Living ECK Masters. The reason for this is that in life on the physical plane, women are "negatively charged, being receivers, not senders of light." In other words, they are physically incapable of holding the position while currently incarnated in a female body. (It is, however, possible for a woman to become the Living ECK Master if first, she translates, and is later reincarnated as a man). [34]
The website does point out one female ECK Master, Kata Daki. While she is not found in Paul Twitchell's 1969 glossary, the website notes that she particularly aids people in repairing their lives after troubled times. She is ancient but does not appear so, and the website does not specify when she served as an ECK Master [35].
One ECKist reported seeing her in Arizona posing as a nurse from Kansas, who blessed the ECKist, at that time a patient.[36]
When asked if Kata Daki was the only woman ECK Master, Harold Klemp replied in the negative and gave a second name, that of Simha, the "Lady of ECK". He also speculated that since certain ECK Masters have been unknown but are still having their names revealed, more women ECK Masters might come to light later.[37]
[edit] Historical figures as ECK Masters
Some other individuals identified by Paul Twitchell as ECK Masters have a noted historical presence and reputation. These include:
- Pythagoras of [[Samos}} (569 B.C.-475 B.C.), mathematician, astronomer, music theorist, philosopher, and teacher at Crotona in Sicily
- Phidias or Pheidias, fifth century B.C. Living ECK Master during the rule of Pericles in Athens, designer, architect and sculptor of the Parthenon and its renowned statue of Athena, widely considered the greatest sculptor of ancient Greece
- Aristocles, known as Plato, ancient Greek philosopher and teacher (c.427 B.C.-c.347 B.C.), who was student of Socrates and teacher of Aristotle, founder of the Academy in Athens, best known for his Dialogues
- ancient Roman senator Priscus Hevidius who seems to have been the historical senator Hevidius Priscus
- Francis of Assisi (1181 A.D.-1226 A.D.)
- Taoist leader Chuang Tzu
[edit] Origins of the ECK Masters
ECKists, state they see the Living ECK Master as the embodiment of the Mahanta Consciousness. The Mahanta originates outside the boundaries of matter, energy, space, and time; Harold Klemp refers to this aspect (not the physical) as being "eternal". He also wrote that it is based in the "Ocean of Love and Mercy."[38]
Ford Johnson, who believes Twitchell invented the religion, claims that the true origin of the ECK Master can be found in various other spiritual theories or religions. Johnson feels Twitchell adapted these in 1965, lifting the word "Mahanta" from the Hindi and Pali cultures, where it means "head of a monastic establishment" and "big" respectively.
According to Johnson, the concept of the ECK Master's Rod of Power, meanwhile, likely came from theosophy (Johnson notes that a Rod of Power is an idea that existed in Egyptian culture and Christianity).[39]
Many ECK Masters predated the establishment of ECKANKAR as a movement. In January 1964, Orion Magazine published a piece by Paul Twitchell that mentioned Sudar Singh, placing him in Allahabad, India and describing him as a teacher of Shabda Yoga. There was a spiritual leader named Sudarshan Singh, in Allahabad, and some believe Sudar Singh is this figure. Additionally, Rebazar Tarzs' name was first published in 1964.[40]
An ECK Master who has charge of a Temple of Golden Wisdom, Asanga Kaya, may have been named for Asanga, a fourth or fifth century Indian Buddhist leader.[41]
The name Gopal Das, meanwhile, could be related to Gopal, a synonym for Krishna, and Dasa, which means "disciple."[42]
The first ECK Master is said to have appeared at the dawn of humanity, as well as ECKANKAR being the modern version of the oldest religion in existence, so it can be seen that claims of some for its derivativeness would stand out as an example of hysteron proteron, the logical reversal of the natural order of occurrence (such as the Cartesian declaration found in the Discourse on Method "Cogito, ergo sum," or, "I think, therefore I am".)
[edit] References and notes
- ^ Twitchell, 73.
- ^ http://www.eckankar.org/Masters/whoaremasters.html
- ^ http://www.eckankar.org/Masters/
- ^ http://www.religioustolerance.org/eck.htm
- ^ http://www.eckankar.org/Masters/Rebazar/Story02.html
- ^ Johnson, 175.
- ^ http://www.eckankar.org/Masters/Rami/
- ^ Twitchell, 244.
- ^ http://www.eckankar.org/Masters/Gopal/
- ^ Twitchell, 240.
- ^ http://www.eckankar.org/Masters/Gopal/Story02.html
- ^ http://www.eckankar.org/Masters/Gopal/Story07.html
- ^ Twitchell, 58.
- ^ http://www.eckankar.org/Masters/Yaubl/
- ^ http://www.eckankar.org/Masters/Yaubl/Story02.html
- ^ http://www.eckankar.org/Masters/Fubbi/
- ^ Twitchell, 239.
- ^ http://www.eckankar.org/Masters/Fubbi/
- ^ Twitchell, 219.
- ^ Twitchell, 136.
- ^ Twitchell, 22, 24, 136, 249.
- ^ http://www.eckankar.org/Masters/Rebazar/Story12.html
- ^ http://www.eckankar.org/Masters/Rebazar/Story06.html
- ^ http://www.eckankar.org/Masters/Rebazar/Story03.html
- ^ Twitchell, 159.
- ^ Twitchell, 229.
- ^ Twitchell, 250.
- ^ Twitchell, 251.
- ^ http://www.eckankar.org/Masters/Towart/
- ^ Twitchell, 251.
- ^ http://www.religioustolerance.org/eck.htm
- ^ http://www.eckankar.org/Masters/
- ^ Olson, Roger E. America's Alternative Religions . 366. [1]
- ^ http://www.warren-wilson.edu/~religion/newifo/religions/alternative/index/eckankar/essay.shtml
- ^ http://www.eckankar.org/Masters/Kata/
- ^ http://www.eckankar.org/Masters/Kata/Story02.html
- ^ Klemp, 195.
- ^ Klemp, 186-187.
- ^ Johnson, 175, 177.
- ^ Johnson, 133.
- ^ Johnson, 135-136.
- ^ Johnson, 135-136.
[edit] Bibliography
- Twitchell, Paul. ECKANKAR: The Key to Secret Worlds. With a forward by Brad Steiger. San Diego: Illuminated Way Press, 1969, ISBN 1-57043-154-X.
- Klemp, Harold. Ask the Master: Book 1. Minneapolis, MN: ECKANKAR, 1993, ISBN 0-88155-127-9.
- Johnson, Ford. Confessions of a God Seeker: A Journey to Higher Consciousness. "One" Publishing, Inc., 2003, ISBN 0-9728835-8-4.
[edit] External links
- ECKANKAR: Religion of the Light and Sound of God Official website Retrieved 13 August 2005.
- Morris, Peter. "ECKANKAR." InterFaith Online Retrieved 1 September 2005.
- Ontario Consultants on Religious Tolerance. ECKANKAR: Religion of the Light and Sound of God. (1998-2005) Retrieved 1 September 2005.
- The Religious Movements Homepage Project @The University of Virginia (22 May 2005) Retrieved 14 August 2005.