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Ancient Indian thought divides time into
four different periods. These durations are referred to as the
Krta; Treta; Dvapara; and Kali.
The first of these divisions (Krta), is
also known as satya-yuga, or the Age of Truth. This was a golden
age without envy, malice or deceit, characterized by righteousness.
All people belonged to one caste, and there was only one god
who lived amongst the humans as one of them.
In the next span (Treta-yuga), the righteousness
of the previous age decreased by one fourth. The chief virtue
of this age was knowledge. The presence of gods was scarce and
they descended to earth only when men invoked them in rituals
and sacrifices. These deities were recognizable by all.
In the third great division of time, righteousness
existed only in half measure of that in the first division.
Disease, misery and the castes came into existence in this age.
The gods multiplied. Men made their own images, worshipped them,
and the divinities would come down in disguised forms. But these
disguised deities were recognizable only by that specific worshipper.
Kali-yuga is the present age of mankind
in which we live, the first three ages having already elapsed.
It is believed that this age began at midnight between February
17 and 18, 3102 B.C. Righteousness is now one-tenth of that
in the first age. True worship and sacrifice are now lost. It
is a time of anger, lust, passion, pride, and discord. There
is an excessive preoccupation with things material and sexual.

Temples appeared on the horizon only in
the Kali-yuga. During this existing last phase, temples (as
public shrines), began to be built and icons installed. But
the gods ceased to come down and appear in their own or disguised
forms. However, their presence could be felt when the icons
were properly enshrined, and the temples correctly built. In
contrast to the previous periods when the gods were available
to all equally, now it is only the priests, belonging to a traditional
hierarchy of professional worshippers, who are the competent
individuals to compel this presence.
From the contemporary point of view, temples
act as safe haven where ordinary mortals like us can feel themselves
free from the constant vagaries of everyday existence, and communicate
personally with god. But our age is individualistic if nothing
else. Each of us requires our own conception of the deity based
on our individual cultural rooting. In this context it is interesting
to observe that the word ‘temple,’ and ‘contemplate’ both share
the same origin from the Roman word ‘templum,’ which means a
sacred enclosure. Indeed, strictly speaking, where there is
no contemplation, there is no temple. It is an irony of our
age that this individualistic contemplative factor, associated
with a temple, is taken to be its highest positive virtue, while
according to the fact of legend it is but a limitation which
arose due to our continuous spiritual impoverishment over the
ages. We have lost the divine who resided amongst us (Krta Yuga),
which is the same as saying that once man was divine himself.
But this is not to belittle the importance
of the temple as a center for spiritual nourishment in our present
context, rather an affirmation of their invaluable significance
in providing succour to the modern man in an environment and
manner that suits the typical requirements of the age in which
we exist.
Making of the Temple
The first step towards the construction
of a temple is the selection of land. Even though any land may
be considered suitable provided the necessary rituals are performed
for its sanctification, the ancient texts nevertheless have
the following to say in this matter: “The gods always play where
groves, rivers, mountains and springs are near, and in towns
with pleasure gardens.” Not surprisingly thus, many of India’s
ancient surviving temples can be seen to have been built in
lush valleys or groves, where the environment is thought to
be particularly suitable for building a residence for the gods.
No matter where it is situated, one essential
factor for the existence of a temple is water. Water is considered
a purifying element in all major traditions of the world, and
if not available in reality, it must be present in at least
a symbolic representation in the Hindu temple. Water, the purifying,
fertilizing element being present, its current, which is the
river of life, can be forded into inner realization and the
pilgrim can cross over to the other shore (metaphysical).
The practical preparations for building
a temple are invested with great ritual significance and magical
fertility symbolism. The prospective site is first inspected
for the ‘type,’ of the soil it contains. This includes determining
its color and smell. Each of these defining characteristics
is divided into four categories, which are then further associated
with one of the four castes:
- White Soil: Brahmin
- Red Soil: Kshatriya (warrior caste)
- Yellow Soil: Vaishya
- Black Soil: Shudra
Similarly for the smell and taste:
- Sweet: Brahmin
- Sour: Kshatriya
- Bitter: Vaishya
- Astringent: Shudra (a reminder perhaps of the raw-deal which
they have often been given in life)
The color and taste of the soil determines
the “caste” of the temple, i.e., the social group to which it
will be particularly favourable. Thus the patron of the temple
can choose an auspicious site specifically favourable to himself
and his social environment.
After these preliminary investigations,
the selected ground needs to be tilled and levelled:
Tilling: When the ground is tilled
and ploughed, the past ceases to count; new life is entrusted
to the soil and another cycle of production begins, an assurance
that the rhythm of nature has not been interfered with. Before
laying of the actual foundation, the Earth Goddess herself is
impregnated in a symbolic process known as ankura-arpana, ankura
meaning seed and arpana signifying offering. In this process,
a seed is planted at the selected site on an auspicious day
and its germination is observed after a few days. If the growth
is satisfactory, the land is deemed suitable for the temple.
The germination of the seed is a metaphor for the fulfilment
of the inherent potentialities which lie hidden in Mother Earth,
and which by extension are now transferred to the sacred structure
destined to come over it.
Levelling: It is extremely important
that the ground from which the temple is to rise is regarded
as being throughout an equal intellectual plane, which is the
significance behind the levelling of the land. It is also an
indication that order has been established in a wild, unruly,
and errant world.
Now that the earth has been ploughed, tilled
and levelled, it is ready for the drawing of the vastu-purusha
mandala, the metaphysical plan of the temple.
The Metaphysical Architecture of the Temple
The
basic plan of a Hindu temple is an expression of sacred geometry
where the temple is visualized as a grand mandala. By sacred
geometry we mean a science which has as its purpose the accurate
laying out of the temple ground plan in relation to the cardinal
directions and the heavens. Characteristically, a mandala is
a sacred shape consisting of the intersection of a circle and
a square.
The square shape is symbolic of earth,
signifying the four directions which bind and define it. Indeed,
in Hindu thought whatever concerns terrestrial life is governed
by the number four (four castes; the four Vedas etc.). Similarly,
the circle is logically the perfect metaphor for heaven since
it is a perfect shape, without beginning or end, signifying
timelessness and eternity, a characteristically divine attribute.
Thus a mandala (and by extension the temple) is the meeting
ground of heaven and earth.
These considerations make the actual preparation
of the site and laying of the foundation doubly important. Understandably,
the whole process is heavily immersed in rituals right from
the selection of the site to the actual beginning of construction.
Indeed, it continues to be a custom in India that whenever a
building is sought to be constructed, the area on which it first
comes up is ceremonially propitiated. The idea being that the
extent of the earth necessary for such construction must be
reclaimed from the gods and goblins that own and inhabit that
area. This ritual is known as the ‘pacification of the site.’
There is an interesting legend behind it:
Once
when Shiva was engaged in a fierce battle with the demon Andhaka,
a drop of sweat fell from Shiva’s forehead to the ground, accompanied
by a loud thunder. This drop transformed into a ravenously hungry
monster, who attempted to destroy the three worlds. The gods
and divine spirits, however, rushed at once on to him and held
him down. When the demon fell on the ground face downwards,
the deities lodged themselves on to the different parts of his
body and pressed him down. It is because of this reason that
the recumbent individual came to be known as ‘Vastu,’ which
means the lodgement of the gods. He is pictured as lying down
inside the mandala with his arms and legs so folded as to cover
the whole area, and his head pushed into the north-eastern corner
of the square. As many as forty-five gods are lodged on his
body directly on the limbs and joints.
This vastu-purusha is the spirit in mother-earth
which needs to be pacified and is regarded as a demon whose
permission is necessary before any construction can come up
on the site. At the same time, care is taken to propitiate the
deities that hold him down, for it is important that he should
not get up. To facilitate the task of the temple-architect,
the vastu-mandala is divided into square grids with the lodging
of the respective deities clearly marked. It also has represented
on it the thirty-two nakshatras, the constellations that the
moon passes through on its monthly course. In an ideal temple,
these deities should be situated exactly as delineated in the
mandala.

Sanctum of a Hindu Temple
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In the central grid of the vastu-mandala
sits Brahma, the archetypal creator, endowed with four faces
looking simultaneously in all directions. He is thus conceived
as the ever-present superintending genius of the site. At this
exact central point is established the most important structure
of the sacred complex, where the patron deity of the temple
is installed. Paradoxically this area is the most unadorned
and least decorated part of the temple, almost as if it is created
in an inverse proportion to its spiritual importance. Referred
to as the sanctum sanctorum, it is the most auspicious region
in the whole complex. It has no pillars, windows or ventilators.
In addition to a metaphysical aspect, this shutting off of air
and light has a practical side to it too. It was meant to preserve
the icon, which, in olden days, was often made of wood. Also,
besides preventing the ill effects of weathering, the dark interior
adds to the mystery of the divine presence.
Throughout all subsequent developments
in temple architecture, however spectacular and grandiose, this
main shrine room remains the small, dark cave that it has been
from the beginning. Indeed it has been postulated (both by archaeology
and legend), that the temple developed from the cave-shrine
of the extremely remote past. This is another instance in Hinduism
where the primitive and the modern, along with all the developments
in-between, can be seen to co-exist remarkably and peacefully.

Dilwara Temple, Mount Abu,
Rajasthan
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When the devotee enters a temple, he is
actually entering into a mandala and therefore participating
in a power-field. The field enclosures and pavilions through
which he must pass to reach the sanctum are symbolic. They represent
the phases of progress in a man’s journey towards divine beatitude.
In accordance with this scheme of transition, architectural
and sculptural details vary from phase to phase in the devotee’s
onward movement, gradually preparing him for the ultimate, awesome
experience, which awaits him in the shrine.
This process mirrors the four-phased spiritual
evolution envisaged in yoga, namely the waking state (jagrat);
dream state (swapna); the state of deep sleep (sushupti); and
finally the Highest state of awareness known in Sanskrit as
turiya. This evolution takes place as follows:
On reaching the main gateway, the worshipper
first bends down and touches the threshold before crossing it.
This marks for him the fact that the transition from the way
of the world to the way of god has been initiated. Entering
the gateway, he or she is greeted by a host of secular figures
on the outer walls. These secular images are the mortal, outward
and diverse manifestations of the divinity enshrined inside.
In this lies a partial explanation behind the often explicit
erotic imagery carved on the outer walls of temples like those
at Khajuraho, where the deity inside remains untouched by these
sensuous occurrences. Such images awaken the devotee to his
mortal state of existence (wakefulness). The process of contemplation
has already begun.

As he proceeds, carvings of mythological
themes, legendary subjects, mythical animals and unusual motifs
abound. They are designed to take one away from the dull and
commonplace reality, and uplift the worshipper to the dreamy
state.

Chhapri Temple, Central
India
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The immediate pavilion and vestibule before
the icon are restrained in sculptural decorations, and the prevailing
darkness of these areas are suggestive of sleep-like conditions.
Finally the shrine, devoid of any ornamentation,
and with its plainly adorned entrance, leads the devotee further
to the highest achievable state of consciousness, that of semi-tranquillity
(turiya), where all boundaries vanish and the universe stands
forth in its primordial glory. It signifies the coming to rest
of all differentiated, relative existence. This utterly quiet,
peaceful and blissful state is the ultimate aim of all spiritual
activity. The devotee is now fully-absorbed in the beauty and
serenity of the icon. He or she is now in the inner square of
Brahma in the vastu- mandala, and in direct communion with the
chief source of power in the temple.
The thought behind the design of a temple
is a continuation of Upanishadic analogy, in which the atman
(soul or the divine aspect in each of us) is likened to an embryo
within a womb or to something hidden in a cave. Also says the
Mundaka Upanishad: ‘The atman lives where our arteries meet
(in the heart), as the spokes of the wheel meet at the hub.’
Hence, it is at the heart center that the main deity is enshrined.
Befittingly thus, this sanctum sanctorum is technically known
as the garba-griha (womb-house).
The garbhagriha is almost always surrounded
by a circumambulatory path, around which the devotee walks in
a clockwise direction. In Hindu and Buddhist thought, this represents
an encircling of the universe itself.

Kandariya Temple Khajuraho
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No description of the Hindu temple can
be complete without a mention of the tall, often pyramid-like
structure shooting up the landscape and dominating the skyline.

Temple of Minakshi, Madurai
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This element of temple architecture is
known as ‘shikhara,’ meaning peak (mountain). It marks the location
of the shrine room and rises directly above it. This is an expression
of the ancient ideal believing the gods to reside in the mountains.
Indeed, in South India the temple spire is frequently carved
with images of gods, the shikhara being conceived as mount Meru,
the mythical mountain-axis of the universe, on the slopes of
which the gods reside.

Temple of Mahabodhi, Bodhgaya
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In North India too, it is worthwhile here
to note, most goddess shrines are located on mountain tops.
Since it rises just above the central shrine, the shikhara is
both the physical and spiritual axis of the temple, symbolizing
the upward aspiration of the devotee, a potent metaphor for
his ascent to enlightenment.
Conclusion
Man lost the divinity within himself. His
intuition, which is nothing but a state of primordial alertness,
continues to strive towards the archetypal perfect state where
there is no distinction between man and god (or woman and goddess).
The Hindu Temple sets out to resolve this deficiency in our
lives by dissolving the boundaries between man and divinity.
This is achieved by putting into practice the belief that the
temple, the human body, and the sacred mountain and cave, represent
aspects of the same divine symmetry.
Truly, the most modern man can survive
only because the most ancient traditions are alive in him. The
solution to man’s problems is always archaic. The architecture
of the Hindu temple recreates the archetypal environment of
an era when there was no need for such an architecture.
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