History, asked by soumensaha123, 6 months ago

in his essay " A Theist Confession of Faith ", attempted to give the Parthana Samaj something more than a Theology​

Answers

Answered by deepikaarya
0

Explanation:

Ranade was also an early member of the Prarthana Samaj ( Prayer Society), which attempted to revise

Answered by aryansuts01
0

Answer:

Concept:

A small group of friends, led by Dr. Atmaram Panderung (1823–98), founded the Prarthana Samaj (Prayer Society). Since several of these people had connections to the Paramahansa Mandali, both personnel and doctrine came from the wreckage of that group. The members of this group, with the exception of the Panderung brothers, were Chitpavan and Saraswat Brahmans with an education in English. Additionally, Gujarati businessmen and people from the Parsi community supported the Samaj. All of the actual members were from Maharashtra.

Given:

aimed to provide the Parthana Samaj more than a theology in his essay "A Theist Confession of Faith."

Find:

find the answer for the given question

Answer:

Later, Atmarang endeavoured to establish an ideological foundation for the Prarthana Samaj in his book A Theist's Confession of Faith. In it, he emphasised the existence of a single, merciful, omnipotent God, akin to the heavenly persona depicted in the works of the Maratha bhakti saints.

When Keshub Chandra Sen visited Maharashtra on March 31, 1867, Atmaram Pandurang created the Prarthana Samaj organisation with the goal of converting people to monotheism and one-god worship. After Mahadev Govind Ranade joined, it gained popularity.

The society's primary objectives are the promotion of theistic worship and social reform, while its early objectives included fighting against the caste system, legalising widow remarriage, promoting female education, and outlawing child marriage.

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