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November 2007

November 08, 2007

Book Review by Georg Feuerstein, Ph.D

I was both surprised and delighted when I received this book. Surprised, because I had not expected Marshall Govindan, a teacher of Kriya Yoga, to be a Jesus scholar.

Delighted, because I share Govindan’s fascination with Jesus and because the book offers an excellent overview of what are now considered reasonably established facts about Jesus and his teachings.

Govindan’s clear exposition of the tangled web of New Testament scholarship in itself commends this book to a Christian or Christian-connected readership.

But The Wisdom of Jesus and the Yoga Siddhas does more than rehearse the scholarly evidence. As the title suggests, it uniquely relates the teachings of Jesus to those of the Siddhas of South India. This may seem like a rather large intellectual leap, but Govindan has substantially succeeded in making this comparison work. His book is systematic and answers all the key questions one might have. Readers will not only acquire a much richer understanding of the figure of the God-man Jesus but will also gain a valuable glimpse into the extraordinary spiritual realizations and thoughts of the great Siddhas of Tamil Nadu.

This book will be of particular interest to Yoga-practicing Christians, who will discover a Jesus (based on New Testament scholarship) who is far more plausible and appealing than the re-modeled Jesus of conventional Christianity.

This is possibly Govindan’s most engaged and engaging work yet.

Copyright © 2007 by Georg Feuerstein, Ph.D. All rights reserved.
The publisher of this book may freely use this review. Otherwise, reproduction in any form requires prior permission from Traditional Yoga Studies.

Review and Article by John Francis

Dear Sri Govindan,

I read your "Wisdom of Jesus" with great interest. It provides a big service to those seeking the original meanings of the Gospels.

I agree with you that the attempts of Eastern Gurus to interpret the Gospels fall short.

Furthermore, I would add two reasons to that which you wrote about. One, they fail to recognize the metaphorical way that numbers are used in the parables. Two, they fail to place the parables and Vedic text side-by-side those forming a "rosetta stone."

Please find my contribution to remedying these shortcomings.

Download keys-to-the-parables.pdf (33.9K)

Om Shanti,
John Francis