Tuesday, November 25, 2025

Jesus and the Goddess (part 3)



The third part of the blog post "Jesus and the Goddess" (yes, I decided to split it into three). 

How did Neo-Vedanta later softened the explicitly Tantric interpretation?

Neo-Vedānta intentionally softened the Śākta-Tantric interpretation of Ramakrishna’s vision of Jesus — partly for universalistic reasons, partly for respectability, and partly to distance the movement from the “tantric stigma” that was very real in 19th–20th century India.

Here is an accurate, careful breakdown of how and why this happened.


1. Ramakrishna’s original context was deeply Śākta and Tantric

Historical Ramakrishna:

  • lived in a Kālī temple

  • practiced numerous Tantric sādhanas

  • was initiated by a Tantric nun (Bhairavī Brāhmaṇī)

  • entered samādhi through Śakti-bhāva

  • interpreted all visions through the language of Kālī and Śakti

  • treated Jesus, Krishna, Rama, and all deities as forms of the Mother

In his own language:

“It is all Mother. Jesus is also a form of the Mother.”

This is a Śākta metaphysics:
Śakti appears in whichever form is needed.


2. Neo-Vedānta (late 19th–early 20th century) wanted to de-emphasize Tantra

The people shaping Ramakrishna’s public legacy — Vivekananda, Mahendranath Gupta (M), and later Ramakrishna Mission writers — operated under:

  • colonial sensitivity

  • Victorian moral codes

  • Brahmo and Protestant influence

  • intellectual elite culture in Calcutta

They wanted to present Hinduism as:

  • philosophical

  • ethical

  • respectable

  • “high religion,” not esoteric ritualism

Therefore they played down:

  • Tantra

  • goddess possession

  • ecstatic states

  • erotic imagery

  • ritual practices from Kaula/Śākta traditions

  • visions interpreted through Śakti metaphysics

This included softening how Jesus fit into Ramakrishna’s Śākta framework.


3. How the softening was done

**a) Replacing “Śakti revealing Herself as Jesus”

with
“Ramakrishna realized the unity of all religions.”**

This is a classic Neo-Vedāntic move.

Ramakrishna himself didn’t talk like a Unitarian harmonizer.
He talked like a Śākta mystic:

  • Kālī appeared as Jesus

  • All deities are “faces of the Mother”

  • Jesus merged into his heart like other deities had

  • Forms come and go; only the Mother/Brahman remains

Neo-Vedānta reframed this as:

“Ramakrishna practiced Christianity and discovered that all religions lead to the same truth.”

This is true at a high level — but it omits the Tantric mechanism.


**b) The Jesus vision is reinterpreted as

“proof of harmony between religions,”
not
“Śakti taking a Christian form.”**

Ramakrishna’s own explanation:

“The Mother is the one who is Jesus.”

Neo-Vedānta’s explanation:

“Ramakrishna saw Jesus because all religions are equal paths.”

The original is mystical/ontological.
The reconstruction is theological/ethical.


c) Removing references to Tantric initiations in public presentations

Many early biographies downplayed or left out:

  • 64 Tantric sādhanas

  • sexual yoga symbolism

  • wine offerings

  • the role of the Tantric nun

  • experiences of spirit possession by Śakti

All of this formed the framework within which Jesus appeared.

Softening that context makes the Jesus vision look less Tantric and more “interfaith.”


d) Vivekananda and others reinterpreted Ramakrishna through Advaita Vedānta

Vivekananda, though he respected Tantra privately, strongly publicly emphasized:

  • nirguṇa Brahman

  • nondual Vedānta

  • rational spirituality

  • moral strength

  • global ethical universalism

This recasts Ramakrishna’s vision of Jesus as:

“The nondual Truth appearing in Christian form.”

This is different from:

“Mother Kālī showing Herself as Jesus.”

Advaita universalism replaced Śākta universalism.


4. Why Neo-Vedānta did this (practical reasons)

a) To protect Ramakrishna’s reputation

Victorian missionaries and Indian social reformers attacked Tantra as:

  • immoral

  • barbaric

  • superstitious

  • sexual

  • anti-rational

If Ramakrishna’s legacy was tied too closely to Tantra, it risked:

  • ridicule

  • suppression

  • scandal

So the Ramakrishna Mission presented him as primarily:

  • a saint

  • an Advaitin

  • an ethical teacher

  • a universalist

Not as a Tantric ecstatic in the Śākta tradition —

even though that is historically accurate.


b) To spread Hinduism in the West

The West in the 1890s was receptive to:

  • Vedanta

  • mysticism

  • universal religion

It was not receptive to Tantra.

Thus the Jesus vision was reframed as:

  • interfaith

  • benign

  • rationally ethical

instead of:

  • a Tantric heart-vision amidst Kālī-bhakti samādhi.


c) To create a national, modern Hinduism

Neo-Vedānta shaped a pan-Indian identity that:

  • avoided goddess possession

  • avoided esoteric rituals

  • avoided folk religion

  • aligned with modernist values

The Tantric interpretation of the Jesus vision didn’t fit.


5. What scholars now say (the modern reassessment)

Current scholarship (Urban, McDaniel, Sil, Kripal, Clarke) concludes that:

  • Ramakrishna was unmistakably a Śākta-Tantric mystic

  • His Christ vision must be understood within that context

  • Neo-Vedānta consciously edited or reframed elements of his life

  • The Tantric reading (Mother appears in many forms) is more faithful to his own words

Kripal’s controversial but influential work argues:

“Ramakrishna did not teach a doctrine of universal religion;
he experienced a Tantric universalism where all deities are masks of Śakti.”

The Jesus vision is a prime example.


6. In summary

Ramakrishna’s original interpretation:

  • Kālī/Śakti appeared as Jesus

  • All forms are Her forms

  • Jesus entering the heart = merging into Brahman through Śakti

  • A Tantric, Śākta mystical experience

Neo-Vedānta’s reinterpretation:

  • Ramakrishna practiced Christianity

  • He realized all religions are equal

  • Jesus appeared as confirmation of religious harmony

  • A universalist, interfaith message

Both are beautiful, but they are not the same.

The historical Ramakrishna was far more Tantric than the public Neo-Vedānta image.


If you want, I can go deeper into:

  • Exactly which Tantric practices Ramakrishna did

  • How his Śākta metaphysics interprets Christian symbols

  • Differences between Śākta universalism and Neo-Vedānta universalism

  • How scholars reconstruct Ramakrishna’s inner world

Just tell me what aspect you’d like next.

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