Too many claims and assertions, incoherent. Just picked a part of your prose - time to rip it apart and analyze the problems.
Yah beats having to answer where it states in any Hindu scripture where wife burning is sanctioned and required to be a Hindu.
No one attempted to codify Hindu religion. The term "Hindu" was used for convenience, to refer to the inhabitants east of Persia and Khoarasan (Afg/West Pakistan). Later it was extended to refer to people further beyond Indus, and still further beyond by the British and Peninsular Muslim rulers.
By painting the inhabitants as "pagan" "polytheist" "uncivilized" "devil-worshipper" "nature-worshipper" etc....and any use of singular adjectives for these inhabitants, yes the Abrahamic thought process definitely codifies what Hinduism was and is and will be.... I have seen it too many times in just this forum.
Some of us laugh when you do so, others ignore, some others get angry and even violent. Thats the full extent of human emotion right there....which by the way permeates religion and culture in uniting the human species.
When you say "failed miserably", at doing what? Elaborate.
Failed miserably at getting those external codifications of Hinduism recognized within a critical mass of Hindus itself...with the hope that will cause most of its destruction.
Again like putting your hand in water, most of it just slides off....although your hand will retain a small part as well. Both the fanatical Muslims and snobby British painted themselves as civilisers and it seems some like you have bought that narrative....makes sense since you are part of the water that stuck to the hand. So I laugh at your attempt at comparative religion.
Big words, but please explain to us laymen.
One philosophy enshrines a narrow, prescribed path for salvation...and that being the only type of result juxtaposed with damnation if you don't follow that path. Faith of hard stone.
The other sees multiple paths leading to the same attempted goal within a greater but interpretative/dynamic framework of ethics and morality...and even allows for different interpretations of what that goal is...and that we ultimately have no way of knowing for sure. Faith of fluid water.
It's not large and complex, it's just chaotic because of lack of leadership.
Not large and complex? Definitely compared to any one of your Abrahamic religions it certainly is. None of them contain even 1% of the philosophical network of Hinduism....that contains all forms of theism, agnosticism and atheism....nor do any of them have a multitude of parallel and even contradicting narratives of creation, existence and destruction. Have there been multitudes of arguments and debates in any of the Abrahamic religions about the actual essence of a higher deity, whether such a force exists at all...how exactly such a force manifests in the universe and whether we should care about it at all? Or do they care more about controlling society through a set of instructions and linear narratives of supposed good vs evil (which also are found in Hinduism, but form just one small portion of it, although probably the most accessible to people who are too used to a more Abrahamic religion system) with a reward or punishment depending if you follow or not?
Chaotic because of lack of leadership? Hinduism cannot be led by any one individual or a group of individuals, it is a repository of human history, experience and debate. It will forever remain leaderless and founder-less in its entirety, though such concepts may be found within parts of it.
The very moniker you use "chaos" shows your inherent disparagement and inability to properly understand what it is. An elephant must seem very chaotic to an ant.
That's just the South Asian nature. Our South Asianized Islam too is full of rituals, Sufi stuff, large, chaotic.
Chicken or the egg situation. Did our natural philosophy evolve because of the way we are pre-disposed or are we what we are because of the philosophy we established? I think its a balance between the two, and there is nothing wrong with it. If you want to get rid of rituals, then be so. If you want to have them, keep them. This is the freedom of human existence. What should only control are morality frameworks that thus create law for the society....but having absolute pre-conceived notions about their basis, especially having a religious basis that is set in stone....is quite short-sighted imho. It is why Sharia imho has no basis in the modern day world.
You hold grudge against outsiders for naming all regional rituals collectively as "Hinduism", yet you don't appreciate the influence this had in forging a "modern Hindu identity"?!
Where did I say I have a grudge against the labeling and collectivization from outsiders? Such labeling has also been done internally by various "Indian" empires and large kingdoms in various fashions and formats as well. It is simply a result of human organisation and endeavour.....it is neither good nor bad. The modern Hindu identity is also a very vague statement and phrase....you will have to first define it....otherwise its meaningless. Then I will simply poke holes in your definition, so whats the point?