Book Review by Andrew Foss

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The Spiritual Dimensions of Vedic Astrology, by Robert A.

Koch

(Review by Andrew Foss)

When I heard Robert Koch was publishing a book I knew it would be good but I
wasn’t prepared for the extraordinary volume that arrived at my door. You can
tell Robert’s book is substantial before you open it up, it is a big book, the same
dimensions as regular paper and thick. Before you think Robert might be
verbose, he isn’t. Every paragraph in this book contains profound principles and
if you aren’t a close follower of Pandit Sanjay Rath, many of these will be new.
There’s more in this book than most correspondence courses. Work through it
carefully and it will take quite a time but you will learn a very great deal.

From the title one might also think that it might be only ‘spiritual’ but there are
a lot of important methods here which have a wider application. However, this
is a very deep look at the spiritual side. Robert comes from a Vaishnava
background. A Vaishnava is a worshipper of Vishnu which can mean the avatars
Rama and Krishna. Buddhists are also technically Vaishnava and it could be
argued that Christianity has an element of the Vaishnava. That’s very
controversial but we can certainly see the argument that Vedic Astrology,
Jyotish, has Vaishnava roots. In the beginning of the Brihat Parashara Hora
Shastra, it explains how the universe emerged from Lord Vishnu and how the
ten avataras, Rama, Krishna and others arose from the Navagraha who
emanated from the Lord. Robert explains that the dedication to Sri Narayana
(Lord Vishnu) ‘does not impose a sectarian concept of God upon the reader.
Instead the personal form of a Deity … and His All-pervasiveness by ways of
numerous shaktis, or potencies, underlie a truly universal and spiritual rationale
for creation.’ Robert gives much importance to the Atmakaraka, the graha that
marks our soul and helps to indicate our Ishta devata, the chosen deity of the
soul. He explains the Vedic cosmology and its relationship with the 12 signs of
the zodiac. The great specialty and power of Jyotish is that it can see not only
the mundane but the divine and can help us determine our deity, select mantras
and prescribe for us sadhanas or practices. These can be remedial but are also
the joy and evolution of the soul.

Robert describes the methods propounded by Parashara but emphasized by


Jaimini such as the Arudhas of the houses and the Rashi Drishtis or sign aspects
that are very essential to understanding the Rashi Dasha systems. Robert also
explains in depth the different systems of significators, or Karakas. Thus the
first half of the book develops, explains and illustrates many profound principles
that need to be understood to learn the Drig Dasha that is taught in the second
half.

Drig Dasha, Robert explains, ‘is the most important method of timing the key
spiritual events of life’. He uses many charts of saints, healers and mystics like
Edgar Cayce to illustrate this Dasha. These are in depth analyses covering many
pages. Especially, the author presents the historic charts of Sri Krishna and Sri
Chaitanya Mahaprabhu who founded the Vaishnava lineage from which the
Hare Krishna movement came through their Guru, Srila Prabhupada, whose
chart and life events is also analyzed in great detail. For example, Robert shows
the death or Punya chart of Srila Prabhupada and makes several very interesting
and uplifting observations. He points out, for example, that the presence of
Jupiter in the 8th pardons any sins. From the 8th it aspects the 12th which is
occupied by it’s Lord Venus and the Sun. We know that the 12th is the place of
Moksha or liberation and indicates what happens to the soul after death. This is
clearly a combination for Moksha. At the same time he explains how the chart
indicates the confusion and difficulties that would ensue among the devotees.

Jyotish has a spiritual basis and anyone trying to study must pay serious
attention to this. There is no chance of really understanding a chart unless one
has done ‘the work’ and both understood and practiced the higher Vedic
teachings. Fortunately, the essence of everything is divine simplicity. That is
what we are and that is what we are here to know. Robert has used this book to
teach the spiritual basis of Jyotish with special insight from his tradition and it
will be of great help to us all.

Here is a feast! This is not a casual read but a very deep work with encyclopedic
depth. Anyone could learn a lot from this book.

— Andrew Foss

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