Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda - Vol-3
CHAPTER III
SPIRITUAL REALISATION, THE AIM OF BHAKTI-YOGA
To the Bhakta these dry details are necessary only to strengthen
his will; beyond that they are of no use to him. For he is
treading on a path which is fitted very soon to lead him beyond
the hazy and turbulent regions of reason, to lead him to the realm
of realisation. He, soon, through the mercy of the Lord, reaches a
plane where pedantic and powerless reason is left far behind, and
the mere intellectual groping through the dark gives place to the
daylight of direct perception. He no more reasons and believes, he
almost perceives. He no more argues, he senses. And is not this
seeing God, and feeling God, and enjoying God higher than
everything else? Nay, Bhaktas have not been wanting who have
maintained that it is higher than even Moksha - liberation. And is
it not also the highest utility? There are people - and a good
many of them too - in the world who are convinced that only that
is of use and utility which brings to man creature-comforts. Even
religion, God, eternity, soul, none of these is of any use to
them, as they do not bring them money or physical comfort. To
such, all those things which do not go to gratify the senses and
appease the appetites are of no utility. In every mind, utility,
however, is conditioned by its own peculiar wants. To men,
therefore, who never rise higher than eating, drinking, begetting
progeny, and dying, the only gain is in sense enjoyments; and they
must wait and go through many more births and reincarnations to
learn to feel even the faintest necessity for anything higher. But
those to whom the eternal interests of the soul are of much higher
value than the fleeting interests of this mundane life, to whom
the gratification of the senses is but like the thoughtless play
of the baby, to them God and the love of God form the highest and
the only utility of human existence. Thank God there are some such
still living in this world of too much worldliness.
Bhakti-Yoga, as we have said, is divided into the Gauni or the
preparatory, and the Parâ or the supreme forms. We shall find, as
we go on, how in the preparatory stage we unavoidably stand in
need of many concrete helps to enable us to get on; and indeed the
mythological and symbolical parts of all religions are natural
growths which early environ the aspiring soul and help it Godward.
It is also a significant fact that spiritual giants have been
produced only in those systems of religion where there is an
exuberant growth of rich mythology and ritualism. The dry
fanatical forms of religion which attempt to eradicate all that is
poetical, all that is beautiful and sublime, all that gives a firm
grasp to the infant mind tottering in its Godward way - the forms
which attempt to break down the very ridge-poles of the spiritual
roof, and in their ignorant and superstitious conceptions of truth
try to drive away all that is life-giving, all that furnishes the
formative material to the spiritual plant growing in the human
soul - such forms of religion too soon find that all that is left
to them is but an empty shell, a contentless frame of words and
sophistry with perhaps a little flavour of a kind of social
scavengering or the so-called spirit of reform.
The vast mass of those whose religion is like this, are conscious
or unconscious materialists - the end and aim of their lives here
and hereafter being enjoyment, which indeed is to them the alpha
and the omega of human life, and which is their Ishtâpurta; work
like street-cleaning and scavengering, intended for the material
comfort of man is, according to them, the be-all and end-all of
human existence; and the sooner the followers of this curious
mixture of ignorance and fanaticism come out in their true colours
and join, as they well deserve to do, the ranks of atheists and
materialists, the better will it be for the world. One ounce of
the practice of righteousness and of spiritual Self-realisation
outweighs tons and tons of frothy talk and nonsensical sentiments.
Show us one, but one gigantic spiritual genius growing out of all
this dry dust of ignorance and fanaticism; and if you cannot,
close your mouths, open the windows of your hearts to the clear
light of truth, and sit like children at the feet of those who
know what they are talking about - the sages of India. Let us then
listen attentively to what they say.
CHAPTER IV
THE NEED OF GURU
Every soul is destined to be perfect, and every being, in the end,
will attain the state of perfection. Whatever we are now is the
result of our acts and thoughts in the past; and whatever we shall
be in the future will be the result of what we think end do now.
But this, the shaping of our own destinies, does not preclude our
receiving help from outside; nay, in the vast majority of cases
such help is absolutely necessary. When it comes, the higher
powers and possibilities of the soul are quickened, spiritual life
is awakened, growth is animated, and man becomes holy and perfect
in the end.
This quickening impulse cannot be derived from books. The soul can
only receive impulses from another soul, and from nothing else. We
may study books all our lives, we may become very intellectual,
but in the end we find that we have not developed at all
spiritually. It is not true that a high order of intellectual
development always goes hand in hand with a proportionate
development of the spiritual side in Man. In studying books we are
sometimes deluded into thinking that thereby we are being
spiritually helped; but if we analyse the effect of the study of
books on ourselves, we shall find that at the utmost it is only
our intellect that derives profit from such studies, and not our
inner spirit. This inadequacy of books to quicken spiritual growth
is the reason why, although almost every one of us can speak most
wonderfully on spiritual matters, when it comes to action and the
living of a truly spiritual life, we find ourselves so awfully
deficient. To quicken the spirit, the impulse must come from
another soul.
The person from whose soul such impulse comes is called the Guru -
the teacher; and the person to whose soul the impulse is conveyed
is called the Shishya - the student. To convey such an impulse to
any soul, in the first place, the soul from which it proceeds must
possess the power of transmitting it, as it were, to another; and
in the second place, the soul to which it is transmitted must be
fit to receive it. The seed must be a living seed, and the field
must be ready ploughed; and when both these conditions are
fulfilled, a wonderful growth of genuine religion takes place.
"The true preacher of religion has to be of wonderful
capabilities, and clever shall his hearer be" - आश्चर्यो वक्ता
कुशलोऽस्य लब्धा; and when both of these are really wonderful and
extraordinary, then will a splendid spiritual awakening result,
and not otherwise. Such alone are the real teachers, and such
alone are also the real students, the real aspirants. All others
are only playing with spirituality. They have just a little
curiosity awakened, just a little intellectual aspiration kindled
in them, but are merely standing on the outward fringe of the
horizon of religion. There is no doubt some value even in that, as
it may in course of time result in the awakening of a real thirst
for religion; and it is a mysterious law of nature that as soon as
the field is ready, the seed must and does come; as soon as the
soul earnestly desires to have religion, the transmitter of the
religious force must and does appear to help that soul. When the
power that attracts the light of religion in the receiving soul is
full and strong, the power which answers to that attraction and
sends in light does come as a matter of course.
There are, however, certain great dangers in the way. There is,
for instance, the danger to the receiving soul of its mistaking
momentary emotions for real religious yearning. We may study that
in ourselves. Many a time in our lives, somebody dies whom we
loved; we receive a blow; we feel that the world is slipping
between our fingers, that we want something surer and higher, and
that we must become religious. In a few days that wave of feeling
has passed away, and we are left stranded just where we were
before. We are all of us often mistaking such impulses for real
thirst after religion; but as long as these momentary emotions are
thus mistaken, that continuous, real craving of the soul for
religion will not come, and we shall not find the true transmitter
of spirituality into our nature. So whenever we are tempted to
complain of our search after the truth that we desire so much,
proving vain, instead of so complaining, our first duty ought to
be to look into our own souls and find whether the craving in the
heart is real. Then in the vast majority of cases it would be
discovered that we were not fit for receiving the truth, that
there was no real thirst for spirituality.
There are still greater dangers in regard to the transmitter, the
Guru. There are many who, though immersed in ignorance, yet, in
the pride of their hearts, fancy they know everything, and not
only do not stop there, but offer to take others on their
shoulders; and thus the blind leading the blind, both fall into
the ditch.
अविद्यायामन्तरे वर्तमानाः स्वयं धीराः पण्डितम्मन्यमानाः ।
दन्द्रम्यमाणाः परियन्ति मूढा अन्धेनैव नीयमाना यथान्धाः ॥
- "Fools dwelling in darkness, wise in their own conceit, and
puffed up with vain knowledge, go round and round staggering to
and fro, like blind men led by the blind." - (Katha Up., I. ii.
5). The world is full of these. Everyone wants to be a teacher,
every beggar wants to make a gift of a million dollars! Just as
these beggars are ridiculous, so are these teachers.
CHAPTER V
QUALIFICATIONS OF THE ASPIRANT AND THE TEACHER
How are we to know a teacher, then? The sun requires no torch to
make him visible, we need not light a candle in order to see him.
When the sun rises, we instinctively become aware of the fact, and
when a teacher of men comes to help us, the soul will
instinctively know that truth has already begun to shine upon it.
Truth stands on its own evidence, it does not require any other
testimony to prove it true, it is self-effulgent. It penetrates
into the innermost corners of our nature, and in its presence the
whole universe stands up and says, "This is truth." The teachers
whose wisdom and truth shine like the light of the sun are the
very greatest the world has known, and they are worshipped as God
by the major portion of mankind. But we may get help from
comparatively lesser ones also; only we ourselves do not possess
intuition enough to judge properly of the man from whom we receive
teaching and guidance; so there ought to be certain tests, certain
conditions, for the teacher to satisfy, as there are also for the
taught.
The conditions necessary for the taught are purity, a real thirst
after knowledge, and perseverance. No impure soul can be really
religious. Purity in thought, speech, and act is absolutely
necessary for anyone to be religious. As to the thirst after
knowledge, it is an old law that we all get whatever we want. None
of us can get anything other than what we fix our hearts upon. To
pant for religion truly is a very difficult thing, not at all so
easy as we generally imagine. Hearing religious talks or reading
religious books is no proof yet of a real want felt in the heart;
there must be a continuous struggle, a constant fight, an
unremitting grappling with our lower nature, till the higher want
is actually felt and the victory is achieved. It is not a question
of one or two days, of years, or of lives; the struggle may have
to go on for hundreds of lifetimes. The success sometimes may come
immediately, but we must be ready to wait patiently even for what
may look like an infinite length of time. The student who sets out
with such a spirit of perseverance will surely find success and
realisation at last.
In regard to the teacher, we must see that he knows the spirit of
the scriptures. The whole world reads Bibles, Vedas, and Korans;
but they are all only words, syntax, etymology, philology, the dry
bones of religion. The teacher who deals too much in words and
allows the mind to be carried away by the force of words loses the
spirit. It is the knowledge of the spirit of the scriptures alone
that constitutes the true religious teacher. The network of the
words of the scriptures is like a huge forest in which the human
mind often loses itself and finds no way out. शब्दजालं महारण्यं
चित्तभ्रमणकारणम्। - "The network of words is a big forest; it is
the cause of a curious wandering of the mind." "The various
methods of joining words, the various methods of speaking in
beautiful language, the various methods of explaining the diction
of the scriptures are only for the disputations and enjoyment of
the learned, they do not conduce to the development of spiritual
perception"
- वाग्वैखरी शब्दझरी शास्त्रव्याख्यानकौशलम्। वैदुष्यं विदुषां
तद्वद् भुक्तये न तु मुक्तये॥
Those who employ such methods to impart religion to others are
only desirous to show off their learning, so that the world may
praise them as great scholars. You will find that no one of the
great teachers of the world ever went into these various
explanations of the text; there is with them no attempt at
"text-torturing", no eternal playing upon the meaning of words and
their roots. Yet they nobly taught, while others who have nothing
to teach have taken up a word sometimes and written a three-volume
book on its origin, on the man who used it first, and on what that
man was accustomed to eat, and how long he slept, and so on.
Bhagavân Ramakrishna used to tell a story of some men who went
into a mango orchard and busied themselves in counting the leaves,
the twigs, and the branches, examining their colour, comparing
their size, and noting down everything most carefully, and then
got up a learned discussion on each of these topics, which were
undoubtedly highly interesting to them. But one of them, more
sensible than the others, did not care for all these things. and
instead thereof, began to eat the mango fruit. And was he not
wise? So leave this counting of leaves and twigs and note-taking
to others. This kind of work has its proper place, but not here in
the spiritual domain. You never see a strong spiritual man among
these "leaf counters". Religion, the highest aim, the highest
glory of man, does not require so much labour. If you want to be a
Bhakta, it is not at all necessary for you to know whether Krishna
was born in Mathurâ or in Vraja, what he was doing, or just the
exact date on which he pronounced the teachings of the Gitâ. You
only require to feel the craving for the beautiful lessons of duty
and love in the Gita. All the other particulars about it and its
author are for the enjoyment of the learned. Let them have what
they desire. Say "Shântih, Shântih" to their learned
controversies, and let us "eat the mangoes".
The second condition necessary in the teacher is - sinlessness.
The question is often asked, "Why should we look into the
character and personality of a teacher? We have only to judge of
what he says, and take that up." This is not right. If a man wants
to teach me something of dynamics, or chemistry, or any other
physical science, he may be anything he likes, because what the
physical sciences require is merely an intellectual equipment; but
in the spiritual sciences it is impossible from first to last that
there can be any spiritual light in the soul that is impure. What
religion can an impure man teach? The sine qua non of acquiring
spiritual truth for one's self or for imparting it to others is
the purity of heart and soul. A vision of God or a glimpse of the
beyond never comes until the soul is pure. Hence with the teacher
of religion we must see first what he is, and then what he says.
He must be perfectly pure, and then alone comes the value of his
words, because he is only then the true "transmitter". What can he
transmit if he has not spiritual power in himself? There must be
the worthy vibration of spirituality in the mind of the teacher,
so that it may be sympathetically conveyed to the mind of the
taught. The function of the teacher is indeed an affair of the
transference of something, and not one of mere stimulation of the
existing intellectual or other faculties in the taught. Something
real and appreciable as an influence comes from the teacher and
goes to the taught. Therefore the teacher must be pure.
The third condition is in regard to the motile. The teacher must
not teach with any ulterior selfish motive - for money, name, or
fame; his work must be simply out of love, out of pure love for
mankind at large. The only medium through which spiritual force
can be transmitted is love. Any selfish motive, such as the desire
for gain or for name, will immediately destroy this conveying
median. God is love, and only he who has known God as love can be
a teacher of godliness and God to man.
When you see that in your teacher these conditions are all
fulfilled, you are safe; if they are not, it is unsafe to allow
yourself to be taught by him, for there is the great danger that,
if he cannot convey goodness to your heart, he may convey
wickedness. This danger must by all means be guarded against.
श्रोत्रियोऽवृजिनोऽकामहतो यो ब्रह्मवित्तमः - "He who is learned in
the scriptures, sinless, unpolluted by lust, and is the greatest
knower of the Brahman" is the real teacher.
From what has been said, it naturally follows that we cannot be
taught to love, appreciate, and assimilate religion everywhere and
by everybody. The "books in the running brooks, sermons in stones,
and good in everything" is all very true as a poetical figure: but
nothing can impart to a man a single grain of truth unless he has
the undeveloped germs of it in himself. To whom do the stones and
brooks preach sermons? To the human soul, the lotus of whose inner
holy shrine is already quick with life. And the light which causes
the beautiful opening out of this lotus comes always from the good
and wise teacher. When the heart has thus been opened, it becomes
fit to receive teaching from the stones or the brooks, the stars,
or the sun, or the moon, or from anything which has its existence
in our divine universe; but the unopened heart will see in them
nothing but mere stones or mere brooks. A blind man may go to a
museum, but he will not profit by it in any way; his eyes must be
opened first, and then alone he will be able to learn what the
things in the museum can teach.
This eye-opener of the aspirant after religion is the teacher.
With the teacher, therefore, our relationship is the same as that
between an ancestor and his descendant. Without faith, humility,
submission, and veneration in our hearts towards our religious
teacher, there cannot be any growth of religion in us; and it is a
significant fact that, where this kind of relation between the
teacher and the taught prevails, there alone gigantic spiritual
men are growing; while in those countries which have neglected to
keep up this kind of relation the religious teacher has become a
mere lecturer, the teacher expecting his five dollars and the
person taught expecting his brain to be filled with the teacher's
words, and each going his own way after this much has been done.
Under such circumstances spirituality becomes almost an unknown
quantity. There is none to transmit it and none to have it
transmitted to. Religion with such people becomes business; they
think they can obtain it with their dollars. Would to God that
religion could be obtained so easily! But unfortunately it cannot
be.
Religion, which is the highest knowledge and the highest wisdom,
cannot be bought, nor can it be acquired from books. You may
thrust your head into all the corners of the world, you may
explore the Himalayas, the Alps, and the Caucasus, you may sound
the bottom of the sea and pry into every nook of Tibet and the
desert of Gobi, you will not find it anywhere until your heart is
ready for receiving it and your teacher has come. And when that
divinely appointed teacher comes, serve him with childlike
confidence and simplicity, freely open your heart to his
influence, and see in him God manifested. Those who come to seek
truth with such a spirit of love and veneration, to them the Lord
of Truth reveals the most wonderful things regarding truth,
goodness, and beauty.
CHAPTER VI
INCARNATE TEACHERS AND INCARNATION
Wherever His name is spoken, that very place is holy. How much
more so is the man who speaks His name, and with what veneration
ought we to approach that man out of whom comes to us spiritual
truth! Such great teachers of spiritual truth are indeed very few
in number in this world, but the world is never altogether without
them. They are always the fairest flowers of human life -
अहेतुकदयासिन्धुः - "the ocean of mercy without any motive". -
आचार्यं मां विजानीयात् - "Know the Guru to be Me", says Shri
Krishna in the Bhagavata. The moment the world is absolutely
bereft of these, it becomes a hideous hell and hastens on to its
destruction.
Higher and nobler than all ordinary ones are another set of
teachers, the Avatâras of Ishvara, in the world. They can transmit
spirituality with a touch, even with a mere wish. The lowest and
the most degraded characters become in one second saints at their
command. They are the Teachers of all teachers, the highest
manifestations of God through man. We cannot see God except
through them. We cannot help worshipping them; and indeed they are
the only ones whom we are bound to worship.
No man can really see God except through these human
manifestations. If we try to see God otherwise, we make for
ourselves a hideous caricature of Him and believe the caricature
to be no worse than the original. There is a story of an ignorant
man who was asked to make an image of the God Shiva, and who,
after days of hard struggle, manufactured only the image of a
monkey. So whenever we try to think of God as He is in His
absolute perfection, we invariably meet with the most miserable
failure, because as long as we are men, we cannot conceive Him as
anything higher than man. The time will come when we shall
transcend our human nature and know Him as He is; but as long as
we are men, we must worship Him in man and as man. Talk as you
may, try as you may, you cannot think of God except as a man. You
may deliver great intellectual discourses on God and on all things
under the sun, become great rationalists and prove to your
satisfaction that all these accounts of the Avataras of God as man
are nonsense. But let us come for a moment to practical common
sense. What is there behind this kind of remarkable intellect?
Zero, nothing, simply so much froth. When next you hear a man
delivering a great intellectual lecture against this worship of
the Avataras of God, get hold of him and ask what his idea of God
is, what he understands by "omnipotence", "omnipresence", and all
similar terms, beyond the spelling of the words. He really means
nothing by them; he cannot formulate as their meaning any idea
unaffected by his own human nature; he is no better off in this
matter than the man in the street who has not read a single book.
That man in the street, however, is quiet and does not disturb the
peace of the world, while this big talker creates disturbance and
misery among mankind. Religion is, after all, realisation, and we
must make the sharpest distinction between talk; and intuitive
experience. What we experience in the depths of our souls is
realisation. Nothing indeed is so uncommon as common sense in
regard to this matter.
By our present constitution we are limited and bound to see God as
man. If, for instance the buffaloes want to worship God, they
will, in keeping with their own nature, see Him as a huge buffalo;
if a fish wants to worship God, it will have to form an Idea of
Him as a big fish, and man has to think of Him as man. And these
various conceptions are not due to morbidly active imagination.
Man, the buffalo, and the fish all may be supposed to represent so
many different vessels, so to say. All these vessels go to the sea
of God to get filled with water, each according to its own shape
and capacity; in the man the water takes the shape of man, in the
buffalo, the shape of a buffalo and in the fish, the shape of a
fish. In each of these vessels there is the same water of the sea
of God. When men see Him, they see Him as man, and the animals, if
they have any conception of God at all, must see Him as animal
each according to its own ideal. So we cannot help seeing God as
man, and, therefore, we are bound to worship Him as man. There is
no other way.
Two kinds of men do not worship God as man - the human brute who
has no religion, and the Paramahamsa who has risen beyond all the
weaknesses of humanity and has transcended the limits of his own
human nature. To him all nature has become his own Self. He alone
can worship God as He is. Here, too, as in all other cases, the
two extremes meet. The extreme of ignorance and the other extreme
of knowledge - neither of these go through acts of worship. The
human brute does not worship because of his ignorance, and the
Jivanmuktas (free souls) do not worship because they have realised
God in themselves. Being between these two poles of existence, if
any one tells you that he is not going to worship God as man, take
kindly care of that man; he is, not to use any harsher term, an
irresponsible talker; his religion is for unsound and empty
brains.
God understands human failings and becomes man to do good to
humanity:
यदा यदा हि धर्मस्य ग्लानिर्भवति भारत। अभ्युत्थानमधर्मस्य तदात्मानं
सृजाम्यहम्॥
परित्राणाय साधूनां विनाशाय च दुष्कृताम्। धर्मसंस्थापनार्थाय
सम्भवामि युगे युगे॥
- "Whenever virtue subsides and wickedness prevails, I manifest
Myself. To establish virtue, to destroy evil, to save the good I
come from Yuga (age) to Yuga."
अवजानन्ति मां मूढा मानुषीं तनुमाश्रितम्।
परं भावमजानन्तो मम भूतमहेश्वरम्॥
- "Fools deride Me who have assumed the human form, without
knowing My real nature as the Lord of the universe." Such is Shri
Krishna's declaration in the Gita on Incarnation. "When a huge
tidal wave comes," says Bhagavan Shri Ramakrishna, "all the little
brooks and ditches become full to the brim without any effort or
consciousness on their own part; so when an Incarnation comes, a
tidal wave of spirituality breaks upon the world, and people feel
spirituality almost full in the air."
CHAPTER VII
THE MANTRA: OM: WORD AND WISDOM
But we are now considering not these Mahâ-purushas, the great
Incarnations, but only the Siddha-Gurus (teachers who have
attained the goal); they, as a rule, have to convey the germs of
spiritual wisdom to the disciple by means of words (Mantras) to be
meditated upon. What are these Mantras? The whole of this universe
has, according to Indian philosophy, both name and form
(Nâma-Rupa) as its conditions of manifestation. In the human
microcosm, there cannot be a single wave in the mind-stuff
(Chittavritti) unconditioned by name and form. If it be true that
nature is built throughout on the same plan, this kind of
conditioning by name and form must also be the plan of the
building of the whole of the cosmos.
यथा एकेन मृत्पिण्डेन सर्वं मृन्मयं विज्ञातं स्यात्
- "As one lump of clay being known, all things of clay are known",
so the knowledge of the microcosm must lead to the knowledge of
the macrocosm. Now form is the outer crust, of which the name or
the idea is the inner essence or kernel. The body is the form, and
the mind or the Antahkarana is the name, and sound-symbols are
universally associated with Nâma (name) in all beings having the
power of speech. In the individual man the thought-waves rising in
the limited Mahat or Chitta (mind-stuff), must manifest
themselves, first as words, and then as the more concrete forms.
In the universe, Brahmâ or Hiranyagarbha or the cosmic Mahat first
manifested himself as name, and then as form, i.e. as this
universe. All this expressed sensible universe is the form, behind
which stands the eternal inexpressible Sphota, the manifester as
Logos or Word. This eternal Sphota, the essential eternal material
of all ideas or names is the power through which the Lord creates
the universe, nay, the Lord first becomes conditioned as the
Sphota, and then evolves Himself out as the yet more concrete
sensible universe. This Sphota has one word as its only possible
symbol, and this is the ओं (Om). And as by no possible means of
analysis can we separate the word from the idea this Om and the
eternal Sphota are inseparable; and therefore, it is out of this
holiest of all holy words, the mother of all names and forms, the
eternal Om, that the whole universe may be supposed to have been
created. But it may be said that, although thought and word are
inseparable, yet as there may be various word-symbols for the same
thought, it is not necessary that this particular word Om should
be the word representative of the thought, out of which the
universe has become manifested. To this objection we reply that
this Om is the only possible symbol which covers the whole ground,
and there is none other like it. The Sphota is the material of all
words, yet it is not any definite word in its fully formed state.
That is to say, if all the peculiarities which distinguish one
word from another be removed, then what remains will be the
Sphota; therefore this Sphota is called the Nâda-Brahma. the
Sound-Brahman.
Now, as every word-symbol, intended to express the inexpressible
Sphota, will so particularise it that it will no longer be the
Sphota, that symbol which particularises it the least and at the
same time most approximately expresses its nature, will be the
truest symbol thereof; and this is the Om, and the Om only;
because these three letters अ उ म (A.U.M.), pronounced in
combination as Om, may well be the generalised symbol of all
possible sounds. The letter A is the least differentiated of all
sounds, therefore Krishna says in the Gita अक्षराणां अकारोऽस्मि -
"I am A among the letters". Again, all articulate sounds are
produced in the space within the mouth beginning with the root of
the tongue and ending in the lips - the throat sound is A, and M
is the last lip sound, and the U exactly represents the rolling
forward of the impulse which begins at the root of the tongue till
it ends in the lips. If properly pronounced, this Om will
represent the whole phenomenon of sound-production, and no other
word can do this; and this, therefore, is the fittest symbol of
the Sphota, which is the real meaning of the Om. And as the symbol
can never be separated from the thing signified, the Om and the
Sphota are one. And as the Sphota, being the finer side of the
manifested universe, is nearer to God and is indeed that first
manifestation of divine wisdom this Om is truly symbolic of God.
Again, just as the "One only" Brahman, the Akhanda-Sachchidânanda,
the undivided Existence-Knowledge-Bliss, can be conceived by
imperfect human souls only from particular standpoints and
associated with particular qualities, so this universe, His body,
has also to be thought of along the line of the thinker's mind.
This direction of the worshipper's mind is guided by its
prevailing elements or Tattvas. The result is that the same God
will be seen in various manifestations as the possessor of various
predominant qualities, and the same universe will appear as full
of manifold forms. Even as in the case of the least differentiated
and the most universal symbol Om, thought and sound-symbol are
seen to be inseparably associated with each other, so also this
law of their inseparable association applies to the many
differentiated views of God and the universe: each of them
therefore must have a particular word-symbol to express it. These
word-symbols, evolved out of the deepest spiritual perception of
sages, symbolise and express, as nearly as possible the particular
view of God and the universe they stand for. And as the Om
represents the Akhanda, the undifferentiated Brahman, the others
represent the Khanda or the differentiated views of the same
Being; and they are all helpful to divine meditation and the
acquisition of true knowledge.
CHAPTER VIII
WORSHIP OF SUBSTITUTES AND IMAGES
The next points to be considered are the worship of Pratikas or of
things more or less satisfactory as substitutes for God, and the
worship of Pratimâs or images. What is the worship of God through
a Pratika? It is अब्रह्मणि ब्रह्मदृष्ट्याऽनुसन्धानम् - Joining the
mind with devotion to that which is not Brahman, taking it to be
Brahman" - says Bhagavân Râmânuja. "Worship the mind as Brahman
this is internal; and the Âkâsha as Brahman, this is with regard
to the Devas", says Shankara. The mind is an internal Pratika, the
Akasha is an external one, and both have to be worshipped as
substitutes of God. He continues, "Similarly - 'the Sun is
Brahman, this is the command', 'He who worships Name as Brahman' -
in all such passages the doubt arises as to the worship of
Pratikas." The word Pratika means going towards; and worshipping a
Pratika is worshipping something as a substitute which is, in some
one or more respects, like Brahman more and more, but is not
Brahman. Along with the Pratikas mentioned in the Shrutis there
are various others to be found in the Purânas and the Tantras. In
this kind of Pratika-worship may be included all the various forms
of Pitri-worship and Deva-worship.
Now worshipping Ishvara and Him alone is Bhakti; the worship of
anything else - Deva, or Pitri, or any other being - cannot be
Bhakti. The various kinds of worship of the various Devas are all
to be included in ritualistic Karma, which gives to the worshipper
only a particular result in the form of some celestial enjoyment,
but can neither give rise to Bhakti nor lead to Mukti. One thing,
therefore, has to be carefully borne in mind. If, as it may happen
in some cases, the highly philosophic ideal, the supreme Brahman,
is dragged down by Pratika-worship to the level of the Pratika,
and the Pratika itself is taken to be the Atman of the worshipper
or his Antaryâmin (Inner Ruler), the worshipper gets entirely
misled, as no Pratika can really be the Atman of the worshipper.
But where Brahman Himself is the object of worship, and the
Pratika stands only as a substitute or a suggestion thereof, that
is to say, where, through the Pratika the omnipresent Brahman is
worshipped - the Pratika itself being idealised into the cause of
all, Brahman - the worship is positively beneficial; nay, it is
absolutely necessary for all mankind until they have all got
beyond the primary or preparatory state of the mind in regard to
worship. When, therefore, any gods or other beings are worshipped
in and for themselves, such worship is only a ritualistic Karma;
and as a Vidyâ (science) it gives us only the fruit belonging to
that particular Vidya; but when the Devas or any other beings are
looked upon as Brahman and worshipped, the result obtained is the
same as by the worshipping of Ishvara. This explains how, in many
cases, both in the Shrutis and the Smritis, a god, or a sage, or
some other extraordinary being is taken up and lifted, as it were,
out of his own nature and idealised into Brahman, and is then
worshipped. Says the Advaitin, "Is not everything Brahman when the
name and the form have been removed from it?" "Is not He, the
Lord, the innermost Self of every one?" says the Vishishtâdvaitin.
फलम् आदित्याद्युपासनेषु ब्रह्मैव दास्यति सर्वाध्यक्षत्वात् - "The
fruition of even the worship of Adityas etc. Brahman Himself
bestows, because He is the Ruler of all." Says Shankara in his
Brahma-Sutra-Bhâsya - ईदृशं चात्र ब्रह्मण उपास्यत्वं यतः प्रतीकेषु
तत्दृष्ट्याध्यारोपणं प्रतिमादिषु इव विष्ण्वादीनाम्। "Here in this
way does Brahman become the object of worship, because He, as
Brahman, is superimposed on the Pratikas, just as Vishnu etc. are
superimposed upon images etc."
The same ideas apply to the worship of the Pratimas as to that of
the Pratikas; that is to say, if the image stands for a god or a
saint, the worship is not the result of Bhakti, and does not lead
lo liberation; but if it stands for the one God, the worship
thereof will bring both Bhakti and Mukti. Of the principal
religions of the world we see Vedantism, Buddhism, and certain
forms of Christianity freely using images; only two religions,
Mohammedanism and Protestantism, refuse such help. Yet the
Mohammedans use the grave of their saints and martyrs almost in
the place of images; and the Protestants, in rejecting all
concrete helps to religion, are drifting away every year farther
and farther from spirituality till at present there is scarcely
any difference between the advanced Protestants and the followers
of August Comte, or agnostics who preach ethics alone. Again, in
Christianity and Mohammedanism whatever exists of image worship is
made to fall under that category in which the Pratika or the
Pratima is worshipped in itself, but not as a "help to the vision"
(Drishtisaukaryam) of God; therefore it is at best only of the
nature of ritualistic Karmas and cannot produce either Bhakti or
Mukti. In this form of image-worship, the allegiance of the soul
is given to other things than Ishvara, and, therefore, such use of
images, or graves, or temples, or tombs, is real idolatry; it is
in itself neither sinful nor wicked - it is a rite - a Karma, and
worshippers must and will get the fruit thereof.
CHAPTER IX
THE CHOSEN IDEAL
The next thing to be considered is what we know as Ishta-Nishthâ.
One who aspires to be a Bhakta must know that "so many opinions
are so many ways". He must know that all the various sects of the
various religions are the various manifestations of the glory of
the same Lord. "They call You by so many names; they divide You,
as it were, by different names, yet in each one of these is to be
found Your omnipotence....You reach the worshipper through all of
these, neither is there any special time so long as the soul has
intense love for You. You are so easy of approach; it is my
misfortune that I cannot love You." Not only this, the Bhakta must
take care not to hate, nor even to criticise those radiant sons of
light who are the founders of various sects; he must not even hear
them spoken ill of. Very few indeed are those who are at once the
possessors of an extensive sympathy and power of appreciation, as
well as an intensity of love. We find, as a rule, that liberal and
sympathetic sects lose the intensity of religious feeling, and in
their hands, religion is apt to degenerate into a kind of
politico-social club life. On the other hand, intensely narrow
sectaries, whilst displaying a very commendable love of their own
ideals, are seen to have acquired every particle of that love by
hating everyone who is not of exactly the same opinions as
themselves. Would to God that this world was full of men who were
as intense in their love as worldwide in their sympathies! But
such are only few and far between. Yet we know that it is
practicable to educate large numbers of human beings into the
ideal of a wonderful blending of both the width and the intensity
of love; and the way to do that is by this path of the
Istha-Nishtha or "steadfast devotion to the chosen ideal". Every
sect of every religion presents only one ideal of its own to
mankind, but the eternal Vedantic religion opens to mankind an
infinite number of doors for ingress into the inner shrine of
divinity, and places before humanity an almost inexhaustible array
of ideals, there being in each of them a manifestation of the
Eternal One. With the kindest solicitude, the Vedanta points out
to aspiring men and women the numerous roads, hewn out of the
solid rock of the realities of human life, by the glorious sons,
or human manifestations, of God, in the past and in the present,
and stands with outstretched arms to welcome all - to welcome even
those that are yet to be - to that Home of Truth and that Ocean of
Bliss, wherein the human soul, liberated from the net of Mâyâ, may
transport itself with perfect freedom and with eternal joy.
Bhakti-Yoga, therefore, lays on us the imperative command not to
hate or deny any one of the various paths that lead to salvation.
Yet the growing plant must be hedged round to protect it until it
has grown into a tree. The tender plant of spirituality will die
if exposed too early to the action of a constant change of ideas
and ideals. Many people, in the name of what may be called
religious liberalism, may be seen feeding their idle curiosity
with a continuous succession of different ideals. With them,
hearing new things grows into a kind of disease, a sort of
religious drink-mania. They want to hear new things just by way of
getting a temporary nervous excitement, and when one such exciting
influence has had its effect on them, they are ready for another.
Religion is with these people a sort of intellectual opium-eating,
and there it ends. "There is another sort of man", says Bhagavan
Ramakrishna, "who is like the pearl-oyster of the story. The
pearl-oyster leaves its bed at the bottom of the sea, and comes up
to the surface to catch the rain-water when the star Svâti is in
the ascendant. It floats about on the surface of the sea with its
shell wide open, until it has succeeded in catching a drop of the
rain-water, and then it dives deep down to its sea-bed, and there
rests until it has succeeded in fashioning a beautiful pearl out
of that rain-drop."
This is indeed the most poetical and forcible way in which the
theory of Ishta-Nishtha has ever been put. This Eka-Nishtha or
devotion to one ideal is absolutely necessary for the beginner in
the practice of religious devotion. He must say with Hanuman in
the Râmâyana, "Though I know that the Lord of Shri and the Lord of
Jânaki are both manifestations of the same Supreme Being, yet my
all in all is the lotus-eyed Râma." Or, as was said by the sage
Tulasidâsa, he must say, "Take the sweetness of all, sit with all,
take the name of all, say yea, yea, but keep your seat firm."
Then, if the devotional aspirant is sincere, out of this little
seed will come a gigantic tree like the Indian banyan, sending out
branch after branch and root after root to all sides, till it
covers the entire field of religion. Thus will the true devotee
realise that He who was his own ideal in life is worshipped in all
ideals by all sects, under all names, and through all forms.
CHAPTER X
THE METHOD AND THE MEANS
In regard to the method and the means of Bhakti-Yoga we read in
the commentary of Bhagavan Ramanuja on the Vedanta-Sutras: "The
attaining of That comes through discrimination, controlling the
passions, practice, sacrificial work, purity, strength, and
suppression of excessive joy." Viveka or discrimination is,
according to Ramanuja, discriminating, among other things, the
pure food from the impure. According to him, food becomes impure
from three causes: (1) by the nature of the food itself, as in the
case of garlic etc.; (2) owing to its coming from wicked and
accursed persons; and (3) from physical impurities, such as dirt,
or hair, etc. The Shrutis say, When the food is pure, the Sattva
element gets purified, and the memory becomes unwavering", and
Ramanuja quotes this from the Chhândogya Upanishad.
The question of food has always been one of the most vital with
the Bhaktas. Apart from the extravagance into which some of the
Bhakti sects have run, there is a great truth underlying this
question of food. We must remember that, according to the Sankhya
philosophy, the Sattva, Rajas, and Tamas, which in the state of
homogeneous equilibrium form the Prakriti, and in the
heterogeneous disturbed condition form the universe - are both the
substance and the quality of Prakriti. As such they are the
materials out of which every human form has been manufactured, and
the predominance of the Sattva material is what is absolutely
necessary for spiritual development. The materials which we
receive through our food into our body-structure go a great way to
determine our mental constitution; therefore the food we eat has
to be particularly taken care of. However, in this matter, as in
others, the fanaticism into which the disciples invariably fall is
not to be laid at the door of the masters.
And this discrimination of food is, after all, of secondary
importance. The very same passage quoted above is explained by
Shankara in his Bhâshya on the Upanishads in a different way by
giving an entirely different meaning to the word Âhâra, translated
generally as food. According to him, "That which is gathered in is
Ahara. The knowledge of the sensations, such as sound etc., is
gathered in for the enjoyment of the enjoyer (self); the
purification of the knowledge which gathers in the perception of
the senses is the purifying of the food (Ahara). The word
'purification-of-food' means the acquiring of the knowledge of
sensations untouched by the defects of attachment, aversion, and
delusion; such is the meaning. Therefore such knowledge or Ahara
being purified, the Sattva material of the possessor it - the
internal organ - will become purified, and the Sattva being
purified, an unbroken memory of the Infinite One, who has been
known in His real nature from scriptures, will result."
These two explanations are apparently conflicting, yet both are
true and necessary. The manipulating and controlling of what may
be called the finer body, viz the mood, are no doubt higher
functions than the controlling of the grosser body of flesh. But
the control of the grosser is absolutely necessary to enable one
to arrive at the control of the finer. The beginner, therefore,
must pay particular attention to all such dietetic rules as have
come down from the line of his accredited teachers; but the
extravagant, meaningless fanaticism, which has driven religion
entirely to the kitchen, as may be noticed in the case of many of
our sects, without any hope of the noble truth of that religion
ever coming out to the sunlight of spirituality, is a peculiar
sort of pure and simple materialism. It is neither Jnâna, nor
Bhakti, nor Karma; it is a special kind of lunacy, and those who
pin their souls to it are more likely to go to lunatic asylums
than to Brahmaloka. So it stands to reason that discrimination in
the choice of food is necessary for the attainment of this higher
state of mental composition which cannot be easily obtained
otherwise.
Controlling the passions is the next thing to be attended to. To
restrain the Indriyas (organs) from going towards the objects of
the senses, to control them and bring them under the guidance of
the will, is the very central virtue in religious culture. Then
comes the practice of self-restraint and self-denial. All the
immense possibilities of divine realisation in the soul cannot get
actualised without struggle and without such practice on the part
of the aspiring devotee. "The mind must always think of the Lord."
It is very hard at first to compel the mind to think of the Lord
always, but with every new effort the power to do so grows
stronger in us. "By practice, O son of Kunti, and by
non-attachment is it attained", says Shri Krishna in the Gita. And
then as to sacrificial work, it is understood that the five great
sacrificed (To gods, sages, manes, guests, and all creatures.)
(Panchamahâyajna) have to be performed as usual.
Purity is absolutely the basic work, the bed-rock upon which the
whole Bhakti-building rests. Cleansing the external body and
discriminating the food are both easy, but without internal
cleanliness and purity, these external observances are of no value
whatsoever. In the list of qualities conducive to purity, as given
by Ramanuja, there are enumerated, Satya, truthfulness; Ârjava,
sincerity; Dayâ, doing good to others without any gain to one's
self; Ahimsâ, not injuring others by thought, word, or deed;
Anabhidhyâ, not coveting others' goods, not thinking vain
thoughts, and not brooding over injuries received from another. In
this list, the one idea that deserves special notice is Ahimsa,
non-injury to others. This duty of non-injury is, so to speak,
obligatory on us in relation to all beings. As with some, it does
not simply mean the non-injuring of human beings and mercilessness
towards the lower animals; nor, as with some others, does it mean
the protecting of cats and dogs and feeding of ants with sugar -
with liberty to injure brother-man in every horrible way! It is
remarkable that almost every good idea in this world can be
carried to a disgusting extreme. A good practice carried to an
extreme and worked in accordance with the letter of the law
becomes a positive evil. The stinking monks of certain religious
sects, who do not bathe lest the vermin on their bodies should be
killed, never think of the discomfort and disease they bring to
their fellow human beings. They do not, however, belong to the
religion of the Vedas!
The test of Ahimsa is absence of jealousy. Any man may do a good
deed or make a good gift on the spur of the moment or under the
pressure of some superstition or priest craft; but the real lover
of mankind is he who is jealous of none. The so-called great men
of the world may all be seen to become jealous of each other for a
small name, for a little fame, and for a few bits of gold. So long
as this jealousy exists in a heart, it is far away from the
perfection of Ahimsa. The cow does not eat meat, nor does the
sheep. Are they great Yogis, great non-injurers (Ahimsakas)? Any
fool may abstain from eating this or that; surely that gives him
no more distinction than to herbivorous animals. The man who will
mercilessly cheat widows and orphans and do the vilest deeds for
money is worse than any brute even if he lives entirely on grass.
The man whose heart never cherishes even the thought of injury to
any one, who rejoices at the prosperity of even his greatest
enemy, that man is the Bhakta, he is the Yogi, he is the Guru of
all, even though he lives every day of his life on the flesh of
swine. Therefore we must always remember that external practices
have value only as helps to develop internal purity. It is better
to have internal purity alone when minute attention to external
observances is not practicable. But woe unto the man and woe unto
the nation that forgets the real, internal, spiritual essentials
of religion and mechanically clutches with death-like grasp at all
external forms and never lets them go. The forms have value only
so far as they are expressions of the life within. If they have
ceased to express life, crush them out without mercy.
The next means to the attainment of Bhakti-Yoga is strength
(Anavasâda). "This Atman is not to be attained by the weak", says
the Shruti. Both physical weakness and mental weakness are meant
here. "The strong, the hardy" are the only fit students. What can
puny, little, decrepit things do? They will break to pieces
whenever the mysterious forces of the body and mind are even
slightly awakened by the practice of any of the Yogas. It is "the
young, the healthy, the strong" that can score success. Physical
strength, therefore, is absolutely necessary. It is the strong
body alone that can bear the shock of reaction resulting from the
attempt to control the organs. He who wants to become a Bhakta
must be strong, must be healthy. When the miserably weak attempt
any of the Yogas, they are likely to get some incurable malady, or
they weaken their minds. Voluntarily weakening the body is really
no prescription for spiritual enlightenment.
The mentally weak also cannot succeed in attaining the Atman. The
person who aspires to be a Bhakta must be cheerful. In the Western
world the idea of a religious man is that he never smiles, that a
dark cloud must always hang over his face, which, again, must be
long drawn with the jaws almost collapsed. People with emaciated
bodies and long faces are fit subjects for the physician, they are
not Yogis. It is the cheerful mind that is persevering. It is the
strong mind that hews its way through a thousand difficulties. And
this, the hardest task of all, the cutting of our way out of the
net of Maya, is the work reserved only for giant wills.
Yet at the same time excessive mirth should be avoided
(Anuddharsha). Excessive mirth makes us unfit for serious thought.
It also fritters away the energies of the mind in vain. The
stronger the will, the less the yielding to the sway of the
emotions. Excessive hilarity is quite as objectionable as too much
of sad seriousness, and all religious realisation is possible only
when the mind is in a steady, peaceful condition of harmonious
equilibrium.
It is thus that one may begin to learn how to love the Lord.
Para-Bhakti or Supreme Devotion
CHAPTER I
THE PREPARATORY RENUNCIATION
We have now finished the consideration of what may be called the
preparatory Bhakti, and are entering on the study of the
Parâ-Bhakti or supreme devotion. We have to speak of a preparation
to the practice of this Para-Bhakti. All such preparations are
intended only for the purification of the soul. The repetition of
names, the rituals, the forms, and the symbols, all these various
things are for the purification of the soul. The greatest purifier
among all such things, a purifier without which no one can enter
the regions of this higher devotion (Para-Bhakti), is
renunciation. This frightens many; yet, without it, there cannot
be any spiritual growth. In all our Yogas this renunciation is
necessary. This is the stepping-stone and the real centre and the
real heart of all spiritual culture - renunciation. This is
religion - renunciation.
When the human soul draws back from the things of the world and
tries to go into deeper things; when man, the spirit which has
here somehow become concretised and materialised, understands that
he is thereby going to be destroyed and to be reduced almost into
mere matter, and turns his face away from matter - then begins
renunciation, then begins real spiritual growth. The Karma-Yogi's
renunciation is in the shape of giving up all the fruits of his
action; he is not attached to the results of his labour; he does
not care for any reward here or hereafter. The Râja-Yogi knows
that the whole of nature is intended for the soul to acquire
experience, and that the result of all the experiences of the soul
is for it to become aware of its eternal separateness from nature.
The human soul has to understand and realise that it has been
spirit, and not matter, through eternity, and that this
conjunction of it with matter is and can be only for a time. The
Raja-Yogi learns the lesson of renunciation through his own
experience of nature. The Jnâna-Yogi has the harshest of all
renunciations to go through, as he has to realise from the very
first that the whole of this solid-looking nature is all an
illusion. He has to understand that all that is any kind of
manifestation of power in nature belongs to the soul, and not to
nature. He has to know from the very start that all knowledge and
all experience are in the soul and not in nature; so he has at
once and by the sheer force of rational conviction to tear himself
away from all bondage to nature. He lets nature and all that
belongs to her go, he lets them vanish and tries to stand alone!
Of all renunciations, the most natural, so to say, is that of the
Bhakti-Yogi. Here there is no violence, nothing to give up,
nothing to tear off, as it were, from ourselves, nothing from
which we have violently to separate ourselves. The Bhakta's
renunciation is easy, smooth flowing, and as natural as the things
around us. We see the manifestation of this sort of renunciation,
although more or less in the form of caricatures, every day around
us. A man begins to love a woman; after a while he loves another,
and the first woman he lets go. She drops out of his mind
smoothly, gently, without his feeling the want of her at all. A
woman loves a man; she then begins to love another man, and the
first one drops off from her mind quite naturally. A man loves his
own city, then he begins to love his country, and the intense love
for his little city drops off smoothly, naturally. Again, a man
learns to love the whole world; his love for his country, his
intense, fanatical patriotism drops off without hurting him,
without any manifestation of violence. An uncultured man loves the
pleasures of the senses intensely; as he becomes cultured, he
begins to love intellectual pleasures, and his sense-enjoyments
become less and less. No man can enjoy a meal with the same gusto
or pleasure as a dog or a wolf, but those pleasures which a man
gets from intellectual experiences and achievements, the dog can
never enjoy. At first, pleasure is in association with the lowest
senses; but as soon as an animal reaches a higher plane of
existence, the lower kind of pleasures becomes less intense. In
human society, the nearer the man is to the animal, the stronger
is his pleasure in the senses; and the higher and the more
cultured the man is, the greater is his pleasure in intellectual
and such other finer pursuits. So when a man gets even higher than
the plane of the intellect, higher than that of mere thought, when
he gets to the plane of spirituality and of divine inspiration, he
finds there a state of bliss, compared with which all the
pleasures of the senses, or even of the intellect, are as nothing.
When the moon shines brightly, all the stars become dim; and when
the sun shines, the moon herself becomes dim. The renunciation
necessary for the attainment of Bhakti is not obtained by killing
anything, but just comes in as naturally as in the presence of an
increasingly stronger light, the less intense ones become dimmer
and dimmer until they vanish away completely. So this love of the
pleasures of the senses and of the intellect is all made dim and
thrown aside and cast into the shade by the love of God Himself.
That love of God grows and assumes a form which is called
Para-Bhakti or supreme devotion. Forms vanish, rituals fly away,
books are superseded; images, temples, churches, religions and
sects, countries and nationalities - all these little limitations
and bondages fall off by their own nature from him who knows this
love of God. Nothing remains to bind him or fetter his freedom. A
ship, all of a sudden, comes near a magnetic rock, and its iron
bolts and bars are all attracted and drawn out, and the planks get
loosened and freely float on the water. Divine grace thus loosens
the binding bolts and bars of the soul, and it becomes free. So in
this renunciation auxiliary to devotion, there is no harshness, no
dryness no struggle, nor repression nor suppression. The Bhakta
has not to suppress any single one of his emotions, he only
strives to intensify them and direct them to God.
CHAPTER II
THE BHAKTA'S RENUNCIATION RESULTS FROM LOVE
We see love everywhere in nature. Whatever in society is good and
great and sublime is the working out of that love; whatever in
society is very bad, nay diabolical, is also the ill-directed
working out of the same emotion of love. It is this same emotion
that gives us the pure and holy conjugal love between husband and
wife as well as the sort of love which goes to satisfy the lowest
forms of animal passion. The emotion is the same, but its
manifestation is different in different cases. It is the same
feeling of love, well or ill directed, that impels one man to do
good and to give all he has to the poor, while it makes another
man cut the throats of his brethren and take away all their
possessions. The former loves others as much as the latter loves
himself. The direction of the love is bad in the case of the
latter, but it is right and proper in the other case. The same
fire that cooks a meal for us may burn a child, and it is no fault
of the fire if it does so; the difference lies in the way in which
it is used. Therefore love, the intense longing for association,
the strong desire on the part of two to become one - and it may
be, after all, of all to become merged in one - is being
manifested everywhere in higher or lower forms as the case may be.
Bhakti-Yoga is the science of higher love. It shows us how to
direct it; it shows us how to control it, how to manage it, how to
use it, how to give it a new aim, as it were, and from it obtain
the highest and most glorious results, that is, how to make it
lead us to spiritual blessedness. Bhakti-Yoga does not say, "Give
up"; it only says, "Love; love the Highest!" - and everything low
naturally falls off from him, the object of whose love is the
Highest.
"I cannot tell anything about Thee except that Thou art my love.
Thou art beautiful, Oh, Thou art beautiful! Thou art beauty
itself." What is after all really required of us in this Yoga is
that our thirst after the beautiful should be directed to God.
What is the beauty in the human face, in the sky, in the stars,
and in the moon? It is only the partial apprehension of the real
all-embracing Divine Beauty. "He shining, everything shines. It is
through His light that all things shine." Take this high position
of Bhakti which makes you forget at once all your little
personalities. Take yourself away from all the world's little
selfish clingings. Do not look upon humanity as the centre of all
your human and higher interests. Stand as a witness, as a student,
and observe the phenomena of nature. Have the feeling of personal
non-attachment with regard to man, and see how this mighty feeling
of love is working itself out in the world. Sometimes a little
friction is produced, but that is only in the course of the
struggle to attain the higher real love. Sometimes there is a
little fight or a little fall; but it is all only by the way.
Stand aside and freely let these frictions come. You feel the
frictions only when you are in the current of the world, but when
you are outside of it simply as a witness and as a student, you
will be able to see that there are millions and millions of
channels in which God is manifesting Himself as Love.
"Wherever there is any bliss, even though in the most sensual of
things, there is a spark of that Eternal Bliss which is the Lord
Himself." Even in the lowest kinds of attraction there is the germ
of divine love. One of the names of the Lord in Sanskrit is Hari,
and this means that He attracts all things to Himself. His is in
fact the only attraction worthy of human hearts. Who can attract a
soul really? Only He! Do you think dead matter can truly attract
the soul? It never did, and never will. When you see a man going
after a beautiful face, do you think that it is the handful of
arranged material molecules which really attracts the man? Not at
all. Behind those material particles there must be and is the play
of divine influence and divine love. The ignorant man does not
know it, but yet, consciously or unconsciously, he is attracted by
it and it alone. So even the lowest forms of attraction derive
their power from God Himself. "None, O beloved, ever loved the
husband for the husband's sake; it is the Âtman, the Lord who is
within, for whose sake the husband is loved." Loving wives may
know this or they may not; it is true all the same. "None, O
beloved, ever loved the wife for the wife's sake, but it is the
Self in the wife that is loved." Similarly, no one loves a child
or anything else in the world except on account of Him who is
within. The Lord is the great magnet, and we are all like iron
filings; we are being constantly attracted by Him, and all of us
are struggling to reach Him. All this struggling of ours in this
world is surely not intended for selfish ends. Fools do not know
what they are doing: the work of their life is, after all, to
approach the great magnet. All the tremendous struggling and
fighting in life is intended to make us go to Him ultimately and
be one with Him.
The Bhakti-Yogi, however, knows the meaning of life's struggles;
he understands it. He has passed through a long series of these
struggles and knows what they mean and earnestly desires to be
free from the friction thereof; he wants to avoid the clash and go
direct to the centre of all attraction, the great Hari This is the
renunciation of the Bhakta. This mighty attraction in the
direction of God makes all other attractions vanish for him. This
mighty infinite love of God which enters his heart leaves no place
for any other love to live there. How can it be otherwise" Bhakti
fills his heart with the divine waters of the ocean of love, which
is God Himself; there is no place there for little loves. That is
to say, the Bhakta's renunciation is that Vairâgya or
non-attachment for all things that are not God which results from
Anurâga or great attachment to God.
This is the ideal preparation for the attainment of the supreme
Bhakti. When this renunciation comes, the gate opens for the soul
to pass through and reach the lofty regions of supreme devotion or
Para-Bhakti. Then it is that we begin to understand what
Para-Bhakti is; and the man who has entered into the inner shrine
of the Para-Bhakti alone has the right to say that all forms and
symbols are useless to him as aids to religious realisation. He
alone has attained that supreme state of love commonly called the
brotherhood of man; the rest only talk. He sees no distinctions;
the mighty ocean of love has entered into him, and he sees not man
in man, but beholds his Beloved everywhere. Through every face
shines to him his Hari. The light in the sun or the moon is all
His manifestation. Wherever there is beauty or sublimity, to him
it is all His. Such Bhaktas are still living; the world is never
without them. Such, though bitten by a serpent, only say that a
messenger came to them from their Beloved. Such men alone have the
right to talk of universal brotherhood. They feel no resentment;
their minds never react in the form of hatred or jealousy. The
external, the sensuous, has vanished from them forever. How can
they be angry, when, through their love, they are always able to
see the Reality behind the scenes?
CHAPTER III
THE NATURALNESS OF BHAKTI-YOGA AND ITS CENTRAL SECRET
"Those who with constant attention always worship You, and those
who worship the Undifferentiated, the Absolute, of these who are
the greatest Yogis?" - Arjuna asked of Shri Krishna. The answer
was: "Those who concentrating their minds on Me worship Me with
eternal constancy and are endowed with the highest faith, they are
My best worshippers, they are the greatest Yogis. Those that
worship the Absolute, the Indescribable, the Undifferentiated, the
Omnipresent, the Unthinkable, the All-comprehending, the
Immovable, and the Eternal, by controlling the play of their
organs and having the conviction of sameness in regard to all
things, they also, being engaged in doing good to all beings, come
to Me alone. But to those whose minds have been devoted to the
unmanifested Absolute, the difficulty of the struggle along the
way is much greater, for it is indeed with great difficulty that
the path of the unmanifested Absolute is trodden by any embodied
being. Those who, having offered up all their work unto Me, with
entire reliance on Me, meditate on Me and worship Me without any
attachment to anything else - them, I soon lift up from the ocean
of ever-recurring births and deaths, as their mind is wholly
attached to Me" (Gita, XII).
Jnâna-Yoga and Bhakti-Yoga are both referred to here. Both may be
said to have been defined in the above passage. Jnana-Yoga is
grand; it is high philosophy; and almost every human being thinks,
curiously enough, that he can surely do everything required of him
by philosophy; but it is really very difficult to live truly the
life of philosophy. We are often apt to run into great dangers in
trying to guide our life by philosophy. This world may be said to
be divided between persons of demoniacal nature who think the
care-taking of the body to be the be-all and the end-all of
existence, and persons of godly nature who realise that the body
is simply a means to an end, an instrument intended for the
culture of the soul. The devil can and indeed does cite the
scriptures for his own purpose; and thus the way of knowledge
appears to offer justification to what the bad man does, as much
as it offers inducements to what the good man does. This is the
great danger in Jnana-Yoga. But Bhakti-Yoga is natural, sweet, and
gentle; the Bhakta does not take such high flights as the
Jnana-Yogi, and, therefore, he is not apt to have such big falls.
Until the bandages of the soul pass away, it cannot of course be
free, whatever may be the nature of the path that the religious
man takes.
Here is a passage showing how, in the case of one of the blessed
Gopis, the soul-binding chains of both merit and demerit were
broken. "The intense pleasure in meditating on God took away the
binding effects of her good deeds. Then her intense misery of soul
in not attaining unto Him washed off all her sinful propensities;
and then she became free." -
तच्चिन्ताविपुलाह्लादक्षीणपुण्यचया तथा। तदप्राप्ति
महद्दुःखविलीनाशेषपातका॥
निरुच्छ्वासतया मुक्तिं गतान्या गोपकन्यका॥
(Vishnu-Purâna). In Bhakti-Yoga the central secret is, therefore,
to know that the various passions and feelings and emotions in the
human heart are not wrong in themselves; only they have to be
carefully controlled and given a higher and higher direction,
until they attain the very highest condition of excellence. The
highest direction is that which takes us to God; every other
direction is lower. We find that pleasures and pains are very
common and oft-recurring feelings in our lives. When a man feels
pain because he has not wealth or some such worldly thing, he is
giving a wrong direction to the feeling. Still pain has its uses.
Let a man feel pain that he has not reached the Highest, that he
has not reached God, and that pain will be to his salvation. When
you become glad that you have a handful of coins, it is a wrong
direction given to the faculty of joy; it should be given a higher
direction, it must be made to serve the Highest Ideal. Pleasure in
that kind of ideal must surely be our highest joy. This same thing
is true of all our other feelings. The Bhakta says that not one of
them is wrong, he gets hold of them all and points them
unfailingly towards God.