Sunday, July 15, 2012

‘Mannat’ or Votive Offering


‘Mannat’


Mannat’  is a type of votive offering.  Outside Mount Mary’s Church at Bandra, and many other religious places where miracles are said to occur, there are a number of vendors selling figurines of sundry designs and sizes – of  body parts, children, houses, cars, and even currency notes. These are offered either in anticipation of the fulfillment of a wish or after achieving a particular wish.

Going a step further, there are people who promise to proffer something or to do something for God in exchange for granting a wish. For instance, people promise to break a hundred coconuts for Lord Ganesha, if  he/she passes an exam or obtains a contract. Having obtained the favour the individual will go to any extent to fulfill his part of the contract lest retribution follow his ingratitude. The magnitude of the promised offering varies in proportion to the severity or urgency of the need or problem.

Last month, before the conclusion of a ‘Satsang’ an announcement was made by one of the speakers, urging the participants to abstain from consuming non-vegetarian food for at least three days prior to the next meeting to be held on 8th July 2012. Similar thoughts had been expressed umpteen times during the whole morning, in different ways and manners by different people to the effect that people should give up something prized by them for God so that God might look kindly upon them. That God would be touched by their sacrifice and penance and would certainly grant their wish.

At another prayer meeting, the preacher, adducing references from Holy Scriptures, pounded upon the listeners to offer their supplications ‘with weeping and wailing’. For their tears would  draw out God’s sympathy and He would wipe out their every tear. Within minutes every eye in that spacious hall became cloudy as on a monsoon evening and the lachrymal glands turned into gargoyles spewing their saline  produce profusely. The frenzied populace were literally sniveling and begging for God to open His sympathetic ears and listen to their entreaties.

The whole thing was nothing but melodramatic. The Omniscient and Omnipotent was reduced to a sadist awaiting sobsters so that He could, with a sleight of His hands, wipe out all their tears along with their agonies and pains.

Alas! Does the Almighty lack anything so much so that He needs to wait for devotees to submit some votive offering before doing their bidding? Does it make sense to penalize one’s taste buds so that the Omnipresent can be outreached? Perhaps the preacher above would have made better sense if he had exhorted the people to refrain from speaking untruth or gossip or getting angry or doing anything that would cause harm to others. This would have required more effort than mere abstinence from indulging in gastronomic pleasures.
Some sermonizers are so insistent upon such petty acts that they make you feel guilty, first of all, if you do not make a commitment to chastise yourself, and, secondly, if and when you are tempted to break such an oath made under obvious duress or reneged on some sort of mannat.

May all those who are hoodwinked by such smooth tongued sophists be aware of their guile and not fall prey to their eccentric and fallacious logic. For, the Almighty lacks nothing that necessitates supplementary  inputs from us mortals, nor is He a sadist drawing pleasure from broken hearts or a judge awaiting with a crosier to mete out judgment.

Dominic A Mathias

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