It is difficult to recognize a system in Hinduism. Many variations have developed from over the years, and many religious movements patterned themselves after Hinduism, besides the fact no religion remains unchanged through the centuries.
      The aste system of Hinduism is as much social as religious. According to Hindu teaching, there are five castes, or social classes. Each caste has its own rules and obligation for living. The elite caste is the Brahman, or priest caste. Second are the Kshatriyas, or warriors and rulers. Third are the Vaisyas, or merchants and farmers. The fourth caste is the Shudras, or laborers. The fifth are the untouchables or no-bodies. You might compare them with the bums, the drunks, the drug addicts, the reprobates, the babblers, the crippled, and the destitute of American society. Just as we do not consider their kind as functioning members of society, Hindu culture apparently came to recognize the children of those kind of people as untouchable also so there was no hope for them.
      The untouchables are the outcasts of Hindu society. Outlawed in India in the 1940s, the untouchables are still a part of Indian society. One does not decide their caste. They are born into it.
      Hindu's believe in a three-in-one god known as “Brahman,” which is composed of: Brahma (the creator), Vishnu (the Preserver), and Shiva (the Destroyer).
      Hindu's believe in karma. They say good conceives good. Bad conceives bad. Every action, thought, or decision one makes has consequences – good or bad – returning in the present life, or in one yet to come.
      Reincarnation is understood as the “transmigration of souls,” or “Samsara.” This is supposedly a journey in the “circle of life,” where each person experiences a series of physical births, deaths, and rebirths.
      With good karma, a person can be reborn into a higher caste, or even to godhood. Bad karma can relegate one to a lower caste, or even to life as an animal in their next life. And so the untouchables are seen as those humans whose bad karma has landed them in the destitution they deserve; so their must be no mercy for their kind lest the gods be displeased.
      Hindu's think Nirvana is the release of the soul from the seemingly endless cycle of rebirths. So Nirvana is the Hindu paradise where they hope to become one with God in perfect bliss.
      Hindu's suppose there are three gods composing Brahman – Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva, and they worship the “wives” of Shiva or one of Vishnu’s ten incarnations (avatars).
      The most famous incarnations are collectively known as the Dashavatara. This list is included in the Garuda Purana (1.86.10-11)
      Just as adherents to Judaism are looking for their Messiah and Muslims are looking for their Caliphate, so Hindu's are looking for the tenth incarnation, or godlike man to lead them.
      According to the Vishnu Purana and Bhagavata Purana, the Kali-yuga will end with the apparition of Kalki-avatara, who will defeat the wicked, liberate the virtuous, and initiate a new Satya Yuga. (Yuga = Age) This Kalki-Avatar will be one of THE SEVEN RELIGIOUS HEADS of MYSTERY BABYLON, the Final World Empire.
      There are endless gods in Hinduism.
      Hindu's say all living things are God in their core. They say all living things are Brahman or god. Hinduism is pantheistic. To them God is in all things. So they are afraid to kill their sacred cows or rats eating up their grain if if they die of starvation.
      They think enlightenment is attained by becoming tuned in to the Brahman they say is already within the individual. Only then can a Hindu hope for Nirvana. The release from the wheel of life that allows access to Nirvana is known as “moksha.” Once released, they expect to become one with God perpetually.
      Hindus recognize three possible paths to moksha, or salvation. The first is the way of works or KARMA YOGA. This is a very popular way of salvation and lays emphasis on the idea that liberation may be obtained by fulfilling one’s family and social duties thereby overcoming the weight of bad karma one has accrued in this lifetime and from past lives.
      The second way of salvation is the way of knowledge, or JNANA YOGA.
      They say the basic premise of the way of knowledge is ignorance causing our bondage to the cycle of rebirths. Hindu's say human ignorance consists of the mistaken belief we are individuals, and not one with the ultimate divine reality – Brahman.
      Hindu teachers say perceiving ourselves to be self centered individuals gives rise to errors resulting in bad Karma. Salvation is achieved through attaining a state of consciousness in which we realize our identity with Brahman. This is supposedly achieved through deep meditation, often as a part of the discipline of Yoga.
      They say the third way of salvation is the way of devotion, or BHAKTI YOGA. This is the way most favored by the common people of India. It satisfies the longing for a more emotional and personal approach to religion. It involves the self-surrender to one of the many personal gods and goddesses of Hinduism.
      Such devotion is expressed through acts of worship, temple rituals, and pilgrimages. Some Hindus conceive of ultimate salvation as absorption into the one divine reality, with all loss of individual existence. Other Hindu's seem to be content with improving upon their Karma in some way so they can graduate to a higher caste in the next life.
      One of the most well-known Hindu sayings about religion is: "Truth is one even though Sages call it by different names." In other words, there are many ways to God, but one truth. So Hinduism is a perfect fit for the coming ONE WORLD RELGION with seven antichrists claiming to be Christ incarnate.
      Demographically Hinduism is the world's third largest religion, after Christianity and Islam, with more than a billion adherents, most of whom live in India; so it is probably safe to say one of THE SEVEN RELIGIOUS HEADS OF MYSTERY BABYLON will be an Indian Kalki-Avatar.
      Hinduism has a large body of religious texts divided into Sruti ("revealed") and Smriti ("remembered") texts. These texts discuss theology, philosophy and mythology, and provide information on the practice of dharma (religious living). The Vedas are the most respected of their texts but other scriptures include the Upanishads, Puranas, the Mahabharata and Ramayana. (The Bhagavad Gita is a treatise from the Mahabharata.)
      You can anticipate the world's foremost Hindu Avatar or Guru to be one of the RELIGIOUS HEADS of the final one world government known in the prophesies as Mystery Babylon, and the SEVEN RELIGIOUS HEADS will sit on seven hills of Rome ruling the world from behind the scenes after crowning the kings of the earth.
     
Meanwhile, stay far from Yoga of any kind. It is not just a physical exercise regimen.
Hindu's chant the names of their favorite gods to invite them into their bodies, and
when they become demon possessed; they hope to become free from self and enter
into the oneness of God spoken of as Nirvana in their religion.