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Brahma, Vishnu, Shiva, Indra and other devas pray to Durga (Facebook)
Whether such a progressive evolution is consistent with Darwinian evolution is another question. But that the Hindu scholarship of that time could approach religion with what Vinoda Swami himself called ‘Adunika Vada’ or modern approach is what is important.
Again, two important savants of Hindu dharma in modern context, Swami Vivekananda and Sri Aurobindo had no problem with evolution. In fact, Sri Aurobindo could sing it in his Savitri.
Knocking down of Brahma, humbling of Indra – the conceited creator god and the angry-jealous sky god is known to every child of Hinduism. As Swami Vivekananda says, it is manifestation not creation – and a Hindu child knows this truth. So, when science speaks of the random mutation and natural selection ushering in the infinite variety of life, the Hindu child can say with Darwin, ‘there is grandeur in this view of life…’
Sri Aurobindo in his commentary on the Kena Upanishad explains:
The gods, devas, are hence just movements in the Infinite Consciousness that is She.
In fact, the names from 256 to 262 in the Sri Lalita Sahasranama speak of Her as doing the five functional archetypes of creation, sustenance, dissolution, veiling and liberation as the five gods themselves – Brahma, Vishnu, Rudra, Eswara and Sadasiva (Names: 264 to 273).
So, for the Hindu, evolution being the work of a blind watchmaker creates no problem. The creator-god is not the supreme power. He is not infallible. He is but a form of Her.
In Gnostic tradition, the creator of the material universe was not the ultimate God but a deity by name Yaltaboath who was actually a creation of the Wisdom Mother Goddess, Sophia. However, having forgotten Sophia, Yaltaboath, who thinks he had out of his own power created humanity in his image, declares that he is the jealous god and that there is no other god besides him. Through a heavenly voice, Sophia reminded him who he really was and called him Samuel – the blind god. Gnostic Christianity even tried to structure a mytho-theological universe with a break from the literalist textual traditions – the creator god and a higher God whose wisdom was Sophia.
Unfortunately, Sophia went into exile as Christianity became more institutionalised. Had Christianity not been a separate religion but a mere sect of Judaism—incorporating the mythology of Sophia as its theological basis—one wonders how the Western common religious mind would have responded to the science of evolution.
The Goddess tradition in India is such that it makes us a child look upto the Devi as the Mother Universe and then approach material science with the same awe and veneration.