Abstract: Every major tradition
within Sanatana Dharma teaches through stories. The Upanishads teach through
conversations. The Gita is a story about a conversation before a battle. The
Ramayana and Mahabharata are the tradition's two great narrative transmissions
of its moral and spiritual understanding. The Puranas are almost entirely
composed of stories within stories. This is not because the tradition lacked
the capacity for direct philosophical exposition, which it demonstrably
possessed at the highest level. It is because the tradition understood something
about the psychology of spiritual learning that modern pedagogical theory has
only recently begun to articulate: that certain kinds of transformation cannot
be produced by direct instruction, that there is a specific and irreplaceable
role for narrative in the process of genuine human development, and that the
story is not a lesser form of teaching but in some respects the most
sophisticated form available. This article explores the tradition's own
understanding of why it teaches through stories, what specific kinds of
spiritual work stories can do that direct instruction cannot, and what the
specific structural features of the tradition's greatest narratives reveal
about how the tradition understood the learning that leads to liberation.
Keywords: Katha, spiritual
teaching, narrative, Upanishads, Puranas, pedagogy, learning, Sanatana Dharma,
story, transformation, direct instruction, parables
Introduction
There is a moment in the Katha
Upanishad that illuminates the entire tradition's approach to teaching through
story. Nachiketa, a young boy, is sent by his father to the house of Yama, the
god of death, to ask the ultimate question: what happens after death? Yama,
recognising the unusual quality of the questioner and genuinely reluctant to
answer a question so dangerous in its implications, tries three times to buy
Nachiketa off with lesser gifts. Nachiketa refuses each time. Yama then says
something remarkable: he complains that even the gods themselves are not
certain about what lies beyond death, and he begs Nachiketa to choose a
different boon.
Why does Yama need to be persuaded
to give the teaching? Why can he not simply answer the question directly? The
Upanishad's implicit answer is that the answer to the deepest question about
the nature of consciousness and its relationship to death is not information
that can be transferred from one mind to another like a fact. It requires
preparation in the student that even Yama cannot guarantee from looking at
Nachiketa. The structure of the story, the boy's refusals, the god's
reluctance, the testing and the eventual yielding, is not decoration. It is the
teaching's necessary preparation. Yama's resistance is part of the pedagogy.
The Story as
Preparation: Creating the Conditions for Recognition
The most fundamental pedagogical
function of spiritual stories is the creation of conditions in which genuine
recognition becomes possible. Recognition, as distinct from intellectual
understanding, is the direct apprehension of a truth that the intellect can
describe but cannot produce directly. The story creates conditions for
recognition by engaging the full person: the emotions, the imagination, the
memory, the identification with characters, the felt sense of situations that
are humanly familiar even when their cosmic scale is unfamiliar.
श्रेयश्च प्रेयश्च मनुष्यमेतः तौ सम्परीत्य विविनक्ति धीरः। श्रेयो हि धीरोऽभिप्रेयसो वृणीते प्रेयो मन्दो योगक्षेमाद् वृणीते॥
Shreyash ca
preyash ca manushyam etah tau samparitya vivinakti dhirah, Shreyo hi dhiro 'bhi
preyaso vrinite preyo mando yoga-kshemad vrinite.
(Both the good and
the pleasant approach a human being. The wise person, examining both,
distinguishes between them. The wise prefers the good over the pleasant; the
dull person, for the sake of welfare and security, chooses the pleasant.)
Katha Upanishad,
1.2.2
Nachiketa, who chose the teaching
about death over all the pleasant alternatives Yama offered, is the story's
primary demonstration of the discrimination this verse describes. He is not
just an example. He is the reader's invitation to identify with him, to feel
what it would be like to refuse a god's most lavish offerings in favour of the
hardest and most dangerous question. The story works because it produces that
identification, and through identification, the rehearsal of the choice itself.
The reader who has genuinely entered the story and felt Nachiketa's refusals
has, in a small but real sense, practiced the discrimination between shreya and
preya. The story is the exercise.
The Parable as
Cognitive Indirection
Spiritual stories often work
through a specific technique that might be called cognitive indirection: they
approach the truth they want to convey through a displacement that allows the
listener to receive it without the ego's defensive response that direct
confrontation would trigger. The parable of the prodigal son is a classic
example from another tradition: it conveys the nature of divine forgiveness in
a form that the listener can receive without feeling judged, through
identification with a character whose situation is clearly human rather than
metaphysical.
The Puranic tradition uses this
technique with great sophistication. The stories of Prahlada, Dhruva, and
Ahalya, for instance, are not primarily historical accounts. They are
structured explorations of specific spiritual truths, told through characters
whose situations allow the listener to enter the experience from the inside.
Prahlada's story is a teaching about the nature and power of absolute devotion.
But the teaching arrives through a child's impossible fidelity in the face of
his own father's murderous opposition, which engages the listener emotionally
at a depth that a philosophical argument for the power of bhakti cannot reach.
श्रुत्वा धर्माञ्शुभान् राजन्नयं धर्मे मनः कुरु। धर्माद् अर्थश्च कामश्च धर्मे च निहितं जगत्॥
Shrutva dharman
shubhan rajan ayam dharme manah kuru, Dharmad arthash ca kamash ca dharme ca
nihitam jagat.
(Having heard
these auspicious dharmic teachings, O king, fix your mind on dharma. From
dharma come artha and kama; in dharma the world is established.)
Mahabharata,
Shanti Parva, 232.48
Shrutva dharman: having heard the
dharmic teachings. The tradition is explicit that the hearing comes first. The
stories are the form in which the dharmic teachings are delivered to the ear
and through the ear to the mind and heart, before the formal philosophical
reflection that manana requires. The hearing is not preliminary to the real
teaching. The hearing is the teaching, in its initial and perhaps most
important form: the form that goes in through the ear and takes root before the
intellect has time to evaluate and resist.
The Story Within
the Story: Structural Sophistication
One of the most distinctive
features of the major Puranic and epic narratives is their practice of
embedding stories within stories to depths that can sometimes reach five or six
levels of embedding. The Mahabharata is the outer frame, within which
Vaisampayana tells Janamejaya the story, within which Sauti tells the sages the
story, within which specific episodes contain their own embedded narratives,
each of which may contain further embedded stories. This is not confusion or
poor literary organisation. It is a deliberately chosen structural technique.
Each level of embedding creates a
different quality of relationship between the reader and the material. The
outermost frame establishes the cosmic context: these stories are being told at
a snake sacrifice in the aftermath of the Mahabharata war, which means the
listener is receiving them at a specific moment in the cosmic order when their
meaning is particularly relevant. The embedded stories carry their specific
teachings into specific characters' and situations' context. The deepest
embedded stories often carry the most concentrated philosophical content,
because by the time the reader has entered the deepest level of embedding, they
have passed through all the contextual preparation that allows the concentrated
content to be received without distortion.
Conclusion
The tradition's insistence on
teaching through stories is not a concession to the limitations of its
audience. It is a sophisticated recognition of the nature of the transformation
that spiritual teaching aims to produce. This transformation is not the
addition of new information to an existing database. It is the development of a
different quality of consciousness, a different way of being in and relating to
the world, that cannot be produced by information transfer alone.
Stories work because they engage
the whole person, not only the intellect. They create conditions for
recognition by producing the emotional and imaginative resonance that allows
truths to be apprehended directly rather than merely understood abstractly.
They work through time: the story that is heard at one point in a life yields
one layer of meaning, and the same story heard at a different point yields a
completely different layer, because the person who hears it has changed. The
Puranas and the Itihasas are designed to keep teaching across a lifetime because
they are deeper than any single life can exhaust. That is the tradition's final
statement about the purpose of stories in spiritual teaching: the story is not
complete when it is understood. It is complete when it has no more to teach.
And the greatest stories never reach that point.
व्यासोच्छिष्टं जगत् सर्वं।
Vyasocchishtam
jagat sarvam.
(The entire world
is the remnant left over from Vyasa's feast.)
Traditional saying
Vyasa's feast: the tradition's most
affectionate and most precise description of what the great narratives contain.
Everything of human significance has already been told by Vyasa. The world we
inhabit is, in a sense, what remains after he finished. The story does not
describe the world from outside. The world is the story, and the story is the
world, and the purpose of the story is to remind those who live in the world
what the story is about and how to live in it with understanding. This is the
final purpose of stories in spiritual teaching, and the reason the tradition
never stopped telling them.
References and
Suggested Reading
Katha Upanishad
Mahabharata, Adi Parva (on the
purpose of the text)
Bhagavata Purana, Canto 1
Wendy Doniger, The Implied Spider:
Politics and Theology in Myth (1998)
Devdutt Pattanaik, Myth = Mithya: A
Handbook of Hindu Mythology (2006)
A.K. Ramanujan, 'Where Mirrors Are
Windows' in The Collected Essays of A.K. Ramanujan (2004)




