Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda - Vol-4
MY MASTER
(Two lectures delivered in New York and England in 1896 were
combined subsequently under the present heading.)
"Whenever virtue subsides and vice prevails, I come down to help
mankind," declares Krishna, in the Bhagavad-Gitâ. Whenever this
world of ours, on account of growth, on account of added
circumstances, requires a new adjustment, a wave of power comes;
and as a man is acting on two planes, the spiritual and the
material, waves of adjustment come on both planes. On the one
side, of the adjustment on the material plane, Europe has mainly
been the basis during modern times; and of the adjustment on the
other, the spiritual plane, Asia has been the basis throughout
the history of the world. Today, man requires one more
adjustment on the spiritual plane; today when material ideas are
at the height of their glory and power, today when man is likely
to forget his divine nature, through his growing dependence on
matter, and is likely to be reduced to a mere money-making
machine, an adjustment is necessary; the voice has spoken, and
the power is coming to drive away the clouds of gathering
materialism. The power has been set in motion which, at no
distant date, will bring unto mankind once more the memory of
its real nature; and again the place from which this power will
start will be Asia.
This world of ours is on the plan of the division of labour. It
is vain to say that one man shall possess everything. Yet how
childish we are! The baby in its ignorance thinks that its doll
is the only possession that is to be coveted in this whole
universe. So a nation which is great in the possession of
material power thinks that that is all that is to be coveted,
that that is all that is meant by progress, that that is all
that is meant by civilisation, and if there are other nations
which do not care for possession and do not possess that power,
they are not fit to live, their whole existence is useless! On
the other hand, another nation may think that mere material
civilisation is utterly useless. From the Orient came the voice
which once told the world that if a man possesses everything
that is under the sun and does not possess spirituality, what
avails it? This is the oriental type; the other is the
occidental type.
Each of these types has its grandeur, each has its glory. The
present adjustment will be the harmonising, the mingling of
these two ideals. To the Oriental, the world of spirit is as
real as to the Occidental is the world of senses. In the
spiritual, the Oriental finds everything he wants or hopes for;
in it he finds all that makes life real to him. To the
Occidental he is a dreamer; to the Oriental the Occidental is a
dreamer playing with ephemeral toys, and he laughs to think that
grown-up men and women should make so much of a handful of
matter which they will have to leave sooner or later. Each calls
the other a dreamer. But the oriental ideal is as necessary for
the progress of the human race as is the occidental, and I think
it is more necessary. Machines never made mankind happy and
never will make. He who is trying to make us believe this will
claim that happiness is in the machine; but it is always in the
mind. That man alone who is the lord of his mind can become
happy, and none else. And what, after all, is this power of
machinery? Why should a man who can send a current of
electricity through a wire be called a very great man and a very
intelligent man? Does not nature do a million times more than
that every moment? Why not then fall down and worship nature?
What avails it if you have power over the whole of the world, if
you have mastered every atom in the universe? That will not make
you happy unless you have the power of happiness in yourself,
until you have conquered yourself. Man is born to conquer
nature, it is true, but the Occidental means by "nature" only
physical or external nature. It is true that external nature is
majestic, with its mountains, and oceans, and rivers, and with
its infinite powers and varieties. Yet there is a more majestic
internal nature of man, higher than the sun, moon, and stars,
higher than this earth of ours, higher than the physical
universe, transcending these little lives of ours; and it
affords another field of study. There the Orientals excel, just
as the Occidentals excel in the other. Therefore it is fitting
that, whenever there is a spiritual adjustment, it should come
from the Orient. It is also fitting that when the Oriental wants
to learn about machine-making, he should sit at the feet of the
Occidental and learn from him. When the Occident wants to learn
about the spirit, about God, about the soul, about the meaning
and the mystery of this universe, he must sit at the feet of the
Orient to learn.
I am going to present before you the life of one man who has put
in motion such a wave in India. But before going into the life
of this man, I will try to present before you the secret of
India, what India means. If those whose eyes have been blinded
by the glamour of material things, whose whole dedication of
life is to eating and drinking and enjoying, whose ideal of
possession is lands and gold, whose ideal of pleasure is that of
the senses, whose God is money, and whose goal is a life of ease
and comfort in this world and death after that, whose minds
never look forward, and who rarely think of anything higher than
the sense-objects in the midst of which they live - if such as
these go to India, what do they see? Poverty, squalor,
superstition, darkness, hideousness everywhere. Why? Because in
their minds enlightenment means dress, education, social
politeness. Whereas occidental nations have used every effort to
improve their material position, India has done differently.
There live the only men in the world who, in the whole history
of humanity, never went beyond their frontiers to conquer
anyone, who never coveted that which belonged to anyone else,
whose only fault was that their lands were so fertile, and they
accumulated wealth by the hard labour of their hands, and so
tempted other nations to come and despoil them. They are
contented to be despoiled, and to be called barbarians; and in
return they want to send to this world visions of the Supreme,
to lay bare for the world the secrets of human nature, to rend
the veil that conceals the real man, because they know the
dream, because they know that behind this materialism lives the
real, divine nature of man which no sin can tarnish, no crime
can spoil, no lust can taint, which fire cannot burn, nor water
wet, which heat cannot dry nor death kill. And to them this true
nature of man is as real as is any material object to the senses
of an Occidental.
Just as you are brave to jump at the mouth of a cannon with a
hurrah, just as you are brave in the name of patriotism to stand
up and give up your lives for your country, so are they brave in
the name of God. There it is that when a man declares that this
is a world of ideas, that it is all a dream, he casts off
clothes and property to demonstrate that what he believes and
thinks is true. There it is that a man sits on the bank of a
river, when he has known that life is eternal, and wants to give
up his body just as nothing, just as you can give up a bit of
straw. Therein lies their heroism, that they are ready to face
death as a brother, because they are convinced that there is no
death for them. Therein lies the strength that has made them
invincible through hundreds of years of oppression and foreign
invasion and tyranny. The nation lives today, and in that nation
even in the days of the direst disaster, spiritual giants have,
never failed to arise. Asia produces giants in spirituality,
just as the Occident produces giants in politics, giants in
science. In the beginning of the present century, when Western
influence began to pour into India, when Western conquerors,
sword in hand, came to demonstrate to the children of the sages
that they were mere barbarians, a race of dreamers, that their
religion was but mythology, and god and soul and everything they
had been struggling for were mere words without meaning, that
the thousands of years of struggle, the thousands of years of
endless renunciation, had all been in vain, the question began
to be agitated among young men at the universities whether the
whole national existence up to then had been a failure, whether
they must begin anew on the occidental plan, tear up their old
books, burn their philosophies, drive away their preachers, and
break down their temples. Did not the occidental conqueror, the
man who demonstrated his religion with sword and gun, say that
all the old ways were mere superstition and idolatry? Children
brought up and educated in the new schools started on the
occidental plan, drank in these ideas, from their childhood; and
it is not to be wondered at that doubts arose. But instead of
throwing away superstition and making a real search after truth,
the test of truth became, "What does the West say?" The priests
must go, the Vedas must be burned, because the West has said so.
Out of the feeling of unrest thus produced, there arose a wave
of so-called reform in India.
If you wish to be a true reformer, three things are necessary.
The first is to feel. Do you really feel for your brothers? Do
you really feel that there is so much misery in the world, so
much ignorance and superstition? Do you really feel that men are
your brothers? Does this idea come into your whole being? Does
it run with your blood? Does it tingle in your veins? Does it
course through every nerve and filament of your body? Are you
full of that idea of sympathy? If you are, that is only the
first step. You must think next if you have found any remedy.
The old ideas may be all superstition, but in and round these
masses of superstition are nuggets of gold and truth. Have you
discovered means by which to keep that gold alone, without any
of the dross? If you have done that, that is only the second
step; one more thing is necessary. What is your motive? Are you
sure that you are not actuated by greed of gold, by thirst for
fame or power? Are you really sure that you can stand to your
ideals and work on, even if the whole world wants to crush you
down? Are you sure you know what you want and will perform your
duty, and that alone, even if your life is at stake? Are you
sure that you will persevere so long as life endures, so long as
there is one pulsation left in the heart? Then you are a real
reformer, you are a teacher, a Master, a blessing to mankind.
But man is so impatient, so short-sighted! He has not the
patience to wait, he has not the power to see. He wants to rule,
he wants results immediately. Why? He wants to reap the fruits
himself, and does not really care for others. Duty for duty's
sake is not what he wants. "To work you have the right, but not
to the fruits thereof," says Krishna. Why cling to results? Ours
are the duties. Let the fruits take care of themselves. But man
has no patience. He takes up any scheme. The larger number of
would-be reformers all over the world can be classed under this
heading.
As I have said, the idea of reform came to India when it seemed
as if the wave of materialism that had invaded her shores would
sweep away the teachings of the sages. But the nation had borne
the shocks of a thousand such waves of change. This one was mild
in comparison. Wave after wave had flooded the land, breaking
and crushing everything for hundreds of years. The sword had
flashed, and "Victory unto Allah" had rent the skies of India;
but these floods subsided, leaving the national ideals
unchanged.
The Indian nation cannot be killed. Deathless it stands, and it
will stand so long as that spirit shall remain as the
background, so long as her people do not give up their
spirituality. Beggars they may remain, poor and
poverty-stricken, dirt and squalor may surround them perhaps
throughout all time, but let them not give up their God, let
them not forget that they are the children of the sages. Just as
in the West, even the man in the street wants to trace his
descent from some robber-baron of the Middle Ages, so in India,
even an Emperor on the throne wants to trace his descent from
some beggar-sage in the forest, from a man who wore the bark of
a tree, lived upon the fruits of the forest and communed with
God. That is the type of descent we want; and so long as
holiness is thus supremely venerated, India cannot die.
Many of you perhaps have read the article by Prof. Max Müller in
a recent issue of the Nineteenth Century, headed "A Real
Mahâtman". The life of Shri Ramakrishna is interesting, as it
was a living illustration of the ideas that he preached. Perhaps
it will be a little romantic for you who live in the West in an
atmosphere entirely different from that of India. For the
methods and manners in the busy rush of life in the West vary
entirely from those of India. Yet perhaps it will be of all the
more interest for that, because it will bring into a newer
light, things about which many have already heard.
It was while reforms of various kinds were being inaugurated in
India that a child was born of poor Brâhmin parents on the
eighteenth of February, 1836, in one of the remote villages of
Bengal. The father and mother were very orthodox people. The
life of a really orthodox Brahmin is one of continuous
renunciation. Very few things can he do; and over and beyond
them the orthodox Brahmin must not occupy himself with any
secular business. At the same time he must not receive gifts
from everybody. You may imagine how rigorous that life becomes.
You have heard of the Brahmins and their priest craft many
times, but very few of you have ever stopped to ask what makes
this wonderful band of men the rulers of their fellows. They are
the poorest of all the classes in the country; and the secret of
their power lies in their renunciation. They never covet wealth.
Theirs is the poorest priesthood in the world, and therefore the
most powerful. Even in this poverty, a Brahmin's wife will never
allow a poor man to pass through the village without giving him
something to eat. That is considered the highest duty of the
mother in India; and because she is the mother it is her duty to
be served last; she must see that everyone is served before her
turn comes. That is why the mother is regarded as God in India.
This particular woman, the mother of our subject, was the very
type of a Hindu mother. The higher the caste, the greater the
restrictions. The lowest caste people can eat and drink anything
they like. But as men rise in the social scale, more and more
restrictions come; and when they reach the highest caste, the
Brahmin, the hereditary priesthood of India, their lives, as I
have said, are very much circumscribed. Compared to Western
manners, their lives are of continuous asceticism. The Hindus
are perhaps the most exclusive nation in the world. They have
the same great steadiness as the English, but much more
amplified. When they get hold of an idea they carry it out to
its very conclusion, and they, keep hold of it generation after
generation until they make something out of it. Once give them
an idea, and it is not easy to take it back; but it is hard to
make them grasp a new idea.
The orthodox Hindus, therefore, are very exclusive, living
entirely within their own horizon of thought and feeling. Their
lives are laid down in our old books in every little detail, and
the least detail is grasped with almost adamantine firmness by
them. They would starve rather than eat a meal cooked by the
hands of a man not belonging to their own small section of
caste. But withal, they have intensity and tremendous
earnestness. That force of intense faith and religious life
occurs often among the orthodox Hindus, because their very
orthodoxy comes from a tremendous conviction that it is right.
We may not all think that what they hold on to with such
perseverance is right; but to them it is. Now, it is written in
our books that a man should always be charitable even to the
extreme. If a man starves himself to death to help another man,
to save that man's life, it is all right; it is even held that a
man ought to do that. And it is expected of a Brahmin to carry
this idea out to the very extreme. Those who are acquainted with
the literature of India will remember a beautiful old story
about this extreme charity, how a whole family, as related in
the Mahâbhârata, starved themselves to death and gave their last
meal to a beggar. This is not an exaggeration, for such things
still happen. The character of the father and the mother of my
Master was very much like that. Very poor they were, and yet
many a time the mother would starve herself a whole day to help
a poor man. Of them this child was born; and he was a peculiar
child from very boyhood. He remembered his past from his birth
and was conscious for what purpose he came into the world, and
every power was devoted to the fulfilment of that purpose.
While he was quite young, his father died; and the boy was sent
to school. A Brahmin's boy must go to school; the caste
restricts him to a learned profession only. The old system of
education in India, still prevalent in many parts of the
country, especially in connection with Sannyasins, is very
different from the modern system. The students had not to pay.
It was thought that knowledge is so sacred that no man ought to
sell it. Knowledge must be given freely and without any price.
The teachers used to take students without charge, and not only
so, most of them gave their students food and clothes. To
support these teachers the wealthy families on certain
occasions, such as a marriage festival, or at the ceremonies for
the dead, made gifts to them. They were considered the first and
foremost claimants to certain gifts; and they in their turn had
to maintain their students. So whenever there is a marriage,
especially in a rich family, these professors are invited, and
they attend and discuss various subjects. This boy went to one
of these gatherings of professors, and the professors were
discussing various topics, such as logic or astronomy, subjects
much beyond his age. The boy was peculiar, as I have said, and
he gathered this moral out of it: "This is the outcome of all
their knowledge. Why are they fighting so hard? It is simply for
money; the man who can show the highest learning here will get
the best pair of cloth, and that is all these people are
struggling for. I will not go to school anymore." And he did
not; that was the end of his going to school. But this boy had
an elder brother, a learned professor, who took him to Calcutta,
however, to study with him. After a short time the boy became
fully convinced that the aim of all secular learning was mere
material advancement, and nothing more, and he resolved to give
up study and devote himself solely to the pursuit of spiritual
knowledge. The father being dead, the family was very poor; and
this boy had to make his own living. He went to a place near
Calcutta and became a temple priest. To become a temple priest
is thought very degrading to a Brahmin. Our temples are not
churches in your sense of the word, they are not places for
public worship; for, properly speaking, there is no such thing
as public worship in India. Temples are erected mostly by rich
persons as a meritorious religious act.
If a man has much property, he wants to build a temple. In that
he puts a symbol or an image of an Incarnation of God, and
dedicates it to worship in the name of God. The worship is akin
to that which is conducted in Roman Catholic churches, very much
like the mass, reading certain sentences from the sacred books,
waving a light before the image, and treating the image in every
respect as we treat a great man. This is all that is done in the
temple. The man who goes to a temple is not considered thereby a
better man than he who never goes. More properly, the latter is
considered the more religious man, for religion in India is to
each man his own private affair. In the house of every man there
is either a little chapel, or a room set apart, and there he
goes morning and evening, sits down in a corner, and there does
his worship. And this worship is entirely mental, for another
man does not hear or know what he is doing. He sees him only
sitting there, and perhaps moving his fingers in a peculiar
fashion, or closing his nostrils and breathing in a peculiar
manner. Beyond that, he does not know what his brother is doing;
even his wife, perhaps, will not know. Thus, all worship is
conducted in the privacy of his own home. Those who cannot
afford to have a chapel go to the banks of a river, or a lake,
or the sea if they live at the seaside, but people sometimes go
to worship in a temple by making salutation to the image. There
their duty to the temple ends. Therefore, you see, it has been
held from the most ancient times in our country, legislated upon
by Manu, that it is a degenerating occupation to become a temple
priest. Some of the books say it is so degrading as to make a
Brahmin worthy of reproach. Just as with education, but in a far
more intense sense with religion, there is the other idea behind
it that the temple priests who take fees for their work are
making merchandise of sacred things. So you may imagine the
feelings of that boy when he was forced through poverty to take
up the only occupation open to him, that of a temple priest.
There have been various poets in Bengal whose songs have passed
down to the people; they are sung in the streets of Calcutta and
in every village. Most of these are religious songs, and their
one central idea, which is perhaps peculiar to the religions of
India, is the idea of realisation. There is not a book in India
on religion which does not breathe this idea. Man must realise
God, feel God, see God, talk to God. That is religion. The
Indian atmosphere is full of stories of saintly persons having
visions of God. Such doctrines form the basis of their religion;
and all these ancient books and scriptures are the writings of
persons who came into direct contact with spiritual facts. These
books were not written for the intellect, nor can any reasoning
understand them, because they were written by men who saw the
things of which they wrote, and they can be understood only by
men who have raised themselves to the same height. They say
there is such a thing as realisation even in this life, and it
is open to everyone, and religion begins with the opening of
this faculty, if I may call it so. This is the central idea in
all religions, and this is why we may find one man with the most
finished oratorical powers, or the most convincing logic,
preaching the highest doctrines and yet unable to get people to
listen to him, while we may find another, a poor man, who
scarcely can speak the language of his own motherland, yet half
the nation worships him in his own lifetime as God. When in
India the idea somehow or other gets abroad that a man has
raised himself to that state of realisation, that religion is no
more a matter of conjecture to him, that he is no more groping
in the dark in such momentous questions as religion, the
immortality of the soul, and God, people come from all quarters
to see him and gradually they begin to worship him.
In the temple was an image of the "Blissful Mother". This boy
had to conduct the worship morning and evening, and by degrees
this one idea filled his mind: "Is there anything behind this
images? Is it true that there is a Mother of Bliss in the
universe? Is it true that She lives and guides the universe, or
is it all a dream? Is there any reality in religion?"
This scepticism comes to the Hindu child. It is the scepticism
of our country: Is this that we are doing real? And theories
will not satisfy us, although there are ready at hand almost all
the theories that have ever been made with regard to God and
soul. Neither books nor theories can satisfy us, the one idea
that gets hold of thousands of our people is this idea of
realisation. Is it true that there is a God? If it be true, can
I see Him? Can I realise the truth? The Western mind may think
all this very impracticable, but to us it is intensely
practical. For this their lives. You have just heard how from
the earliest times there have been persons who have given up all
comforts and luxuries to live in caves, and hundreds have given
up their homes to weep bitter tears of misery, on the banks of
sacred rivers, in order to realise this idea - not to know in
the ordinary sense of the word, not intellectual understanding,
not a mere rationalistic comprehension of the real thing, not
mere groping in the dark, but intense realisation, much more
real than this world is to our senses. That is the idea. I do
not advance any proposition as to that just now, but that is the
one fact that is impressed upon them. Thousands will be killed,
other thousands will be ready. So upon this one idea the whole
nation for thousands of years have been denying and sacrificing
themselves. For this idea thousands of Hindus every year give up
their homes, and many of them die through the hardships they
have to undergo. To the Western mind this must seem most
visionary, and I can see the reason for this point of view. But
though I have resided in the West, I still think this idea the
most practical thing in life.
Every moment I think of anything else is so much loss to me -
even the marvels of earthly sciences; everything is vain if it
takes me away from that thought. Life is but momentary, whether
you have the knowledge of an angel or the ignorance of an
animal. Life is but momentary, whether you have the poverty of
the poorest man in rags or the wealth of the richest living
person. Life is but momentary, whether you are a downtrodden man
living in one of the big streets of the big cities of the West
or a crowned Emperor ruling over millions. Life is but
momentary, whether you have the best of health or the worst.
Life is but momentary, whether you have the most poetical
temperament or the most cruel. There is but one solution of
life, says the Hindu, and that solution is what they call God
and religion. If these be true, life becomes explained, life
becomes bearable, becomes enjoyable. Otherwise, life is but a
useless burden. That is our idea, but no amount of reasoning can
demonstrate it; it can only make it probable, and there it
rests. The highest demonstration of reasoning that we have in
any branch of knowledge can only make a fact probable, and
nothing further. The most demonstrable facts of physical science
are only probabilities, not facts yet. Facts are only in the
senses. Facts have to be perceived, and we have to perceive
religion to demonstrate it to ourselves. We have to sense God to
be convinced that there is a God. We must sense the facts of
religion to know that they are facts. Nothing else, and no
amount of reasoning, but our own perception can make these
things real to us, can make my belief firm as a rock. That is my
idea, and that is the Indian idea.
This idea took possession of the boy and his whole life became
concentrated upon that. Day after day he would weep and say,
"Mother, is it true that Thou existest, or is it all poetry? Is
the Blissful Mother an imagination of poets and misguided
people, or is there such a Reality?" We have seen that of books,
of education in our sense of the word, he had none, and so much
the more natural, so much the more healthy, was his mind, so
much the purer his thoughts, undiluted by drinking in the
thoughts of others. Because he did not go to the university,
therefore he thought for himself. Because we have spent half our
lives in the university we are filled with a collection of other
people's thoughts. Well has Prof. Max Müller said in the article
I have just referred to that this was a clean, original man; and
the secret of that originality was that he was not brought up
within the precincts of a university. However, this thought -
whether God can be seen - which was uppermost in his mind gained
in strength every day until he could think of nothing else. He
could no more conduct the worship properly, could no more attend
to the various details in all their minuteness. Often he would
forget to place the food-offering before the image, sometimes he
would forget to wave the light; at other times he would wave it
for hours, and forget everything else.
And that one idea was in his mind every day: "Is it true that
Thou existest, O Mother? Why cost Thou not speak? Art Thou
dead?" Perhaps some of us here will remember that there are
moments in our lives when, tired of all these ratiocinations of
dull and dead logic, tired of plodding through books - which
after all teach us nothing, become nothing but a sort of
intellectual opium-eating - we must have it at stated times or
we die - tired with all this, the heart of our hearts sends out
a wail: "Is there no one in this universe who can show me the
light? If Thou art, show the light unto me. Why dost Thou not
speak? Why dost Thou make Thyself so scarce, why send so many
Messengers and not Thyself come to me? In this world of fights
and factions whom am I to follow and believe? If Thou art the
God of every man and woman alike, why comest Thou not to speak
to Thy child and see if he is not ready?" Well, to us all come
such thoughts in moments of great depression; but such are the
temptations surrounding us that the next moment we forget. For
the moment it seemed that the doors of the heavens were going to
be opened, for the moment it seemed as if we were going to
plunge into the light effulgent; but the animal man again shakes
off all these angelic visions. Down we go, animal man once more
eating and drinking and dying, and dying and drinking and eating
again and again. But there are exceptional minds which are not
turned away so easily, which once attracted can never be turned
back, whatever may be the temptation in the way, which want to
see the Truth knowing that life must go. They say, let it go in
a noble conquest, and what conquest is nobler than the conquest
of the lower man, than this solution of the problem of life and
death, of good and evil?
At last it became impossible for him to serve in the temple. He
left it and entered into a little wood that was near and lived
there. About this part of his life, he told me many times that
he could not tell when the sun rose or set, or how he lived. He
lost all thought of himself and forgot to eat. During this
period he was lovingly watched over by a relative who put into
his mouth food which he mechanically swallowed.
Days and nights thus passed with the boy. When a whole day would
pass, towards the evening when the peal of bells in the temples,
and the voices singing, would reach the wood, it would make the
boy very sad, and he would cry, "Another day is gone in vain,
Mother, and Thou hast not come. Another day of this short life
has gone, and I have not known the Truth." In the agony of his
soul, sometimes he would rub his face against the ground and
weep, and this one prayer burst forth: "Do Thou manifest Thyself
in me, Thou Mother of the universe! See that I need Thee and
nothing else!" Verily, he wanted to be true to his own ideal. He
had heard that the Mother never came until everything had been
given up for Her. He had heard that the Mother wanted to come to
everyone, but they would not have Her, that people wanted all
sorts of foolish little idols to pray to, that they wanted their
own enjoyments, and not the Mother, and that the moment they
really wanted Her with their whole soul, and nothing else, that
moment She would come. So he began to break himself into that
idea; he wanted to be exact, even on the plane of matter. He
threw away all the little property he had, and took a vow that
he would never touch money, and this one idea, "I will not touch
money", became a part of him. It may appear to be something
occult, but even in after-life when he was sleeping, if I
touched him with a piece of money his hand would become bent,
and his whole body would become, as it were, paralysed. The
other idea that came into his mind was that lust was the other
enemy. Man is a soul, and soul is sexless, neither man nor
woman. The idea of sex and the idea of money were the two
things, he thought, that prevented him from seeing the Mother.
This whole universe is the manifestation of the Mother, and She
lives in every woman's body. "Every woman represents the Mother;
how can I think of woman in mere sex relation?" That was the
idea: Every woman was his Mother, he must bring himself to the
state when he would see nothing but Mother in every woman. And
he carried it out in his life.
This is the tremendous thirst that seizes the human heart. Later
on, this very man said to me, "My child, suppose there is a bag
of gold in one room, and a robber in the next room; do you think
that the robber can sleep? He cannot. His mind will be always
thinking how to get into that room and obtain possession of that
gold. Do you think then that a man, firmly persuaded that there
is a Reality behind all these appearances, that there is a God,
that there is One who never dies, One who is infinite bliss, a
bliss compared with which these pleasures of the senses are
simply playthings, can rest contented without struggling to
attain It? Can he cease his efforts for a moment? No. He will
become mad with longing." This divine madness seized the boy. At
that time he had no teacher, nobody to tell him anything, and
everyone thought that he was out of his mind. This is the
ordinary condition of things. If a man throws aside the vanities
of the world, we hear him called mad. But such men are the salt
of the earth. Out of such madness have come the powers that have
moved this world of ours, and out of such madness alone will
come the powers of the future that are going to move the world.
So days, weeks, months passed in continuous struggle of the soul
to arrive at truth. The boy began to see visions, to see
wonderful things; the secrets of his nature were beginning to
open to him. Veil after veil was, as it were, being taken off.
Mother Herself became the teacher and initiated the boy into the
truths he sought. At this time there came to this place a woman
of beautiful appearance, learned beyond compare. Later on, this
saint used to say about her that she was not learned, but was
the embodiment of learning; she was learning itself, in human
form. There, too, you find the peculiarity of the Indian nation.
In the midst of the ignorance in which the average Hindu woman
lives, in the midst of what is called in Western countries her
lack of freedom, there could arise a woman of supreme
spirituality. She was a Sannyâsini; for women also give up the
world, throw away their property, do not marry, and devote
themselves to the worship of the Lord. She came; and when she
heard of this boy in the grove, she offered to go and see him;
and hers was the first help he received. At once she recognised
what his trouble was, and she said to him. "My son blessed is
the man upon whom such madness comes. The whole of this universe
is mad - some for wealth, some for pleasure, some for fame, some
for a hundred other things. They are mad for gold, or husbands,
or wives, for little trifles, mad to tyrannise over somebody,
mad to become rich, mad for every foolish thing except God. And
they can understand only their own madness. When another man is
mad after gold, they have fellow-feeling and sympathy for him,
and they say he is the right man, as lunatics think that
lunatics alone are sane. But if a man is mad after the Beloved,
after the Lord, how can they understand? They think he has gone
crazy; and they say, 'Have nothing to do with him.' That is why
they call you mad; but yours is the right kind of madness.
Blessed is the man who is mad after God. Such men are very few."
This woman remained near the boy for years, taught him the forms
of the religions of India, initiated him into the different
practices of Yoga, and, as it were, guided and brought into
harmony this tremendous river of spirituality.
Later, there came to the same grove a Sannyasin, one of the
begging friars of India, a learned man, a philosopher. He was a
peculiar man, he was an idealist. He did not believe that this
world existed in reality; and to demonstrate that, he would
never go under a roof, he would always live out of doors, in
storm and sunshine alike. This man began to teach the boy the
philosophy of the Vedas; and he found very soon, to his
astonishment, that the pupil was in some respects wiser than the
master. He spent several months with the boy, after which he
initiated him into the order of Sannyasins, and took his
departure.
When as a temple priest his extraordinary worship made people
think him deranged in his head, his relatives took him home and
married him to a little girl, thinking that that would turn his
thoughts and restore the balance of his mind. But he came back
and, as we have seen, merged deeper in his madness. Sometimes,
in our country, boys are married as children and have no voice
in the matter; their parents marry them. Of course such a
marriage is little more than a betrothal. When they are married
they still continue to live with their parents, and the real
marriage takes place when the wife grows older, Then it is
customary for the husband to go and bring his bride to his own
home. In this case, however, the husband had entirely forgotten
that he had a wife. In her far off home the girl had heard that
her husband had become a religious enthusiast, and that he was
even considered insane by many. She resolved to learn the truth
for herself, so she set out and walked to the place where her
husband was. When at last she stood in her husband's presence,
he at once admitted her right to his life, although in India any
person, man or woman, who embraces a religious life, is thereby
freed from all other obligations. The young man fell at the feet
of his wife and said, "As for me, the Mother has shown me that
She resides in every woman, and so I have learnt to look upon
every woman as Mother. That is the one idea I can have about
you; but if you wish to drag me into the world, as I have been
married to you, I am at your service."
The maiden was a pure and noble soul and was able to understand
her husband's aspirations and sympathise with them. She quickly
told him that she had no wish to drag him down to a life of
worldliness; but that all she desired was to remain near him, to
serve him, and to learn of him. She became one of his most
devoted disciples, always revering him as a divine being. Thus
through his wife's consent the last barrier was removed, and he
was free to lead the life he had chosen.
The next desire that seized upon the soul of this man as to know
the truth about the various religions. Up to that time he had
not known any religion but his own. He wanted to understand what
other religions were like. So he sought teachers of other
religions. By teachers you must always remember what we mean in
India, not a bookworm, but a man of realisation, one who knows
truth a; first hand and not through an intermediary. He found a
Mohammedan saint and placed himself under him; he underwent the
disciplines prescribed by him, and to his astonishment found
that when faithfully carried out, these devotional methods led
him to the same goal he had already attained. He gathered
similar experience from following the true religion of Jesus the
Christ. He went to all the sects he could find, and whatever he
took up he went into with his whole heart. He did exactly as he
was told, and in every instance he arrived at the same result.
Thus from actual experience, he came to know that the goal of
every religion is the same, that each is trying to teach the
same thing, the difference being largely in method and still
more in language. At the core, all sects and all religions have
the same aim; and they were only quarrelling for their own
selfish purposes - they were not anxious about the truth, but
about "my name" and "your name". Two of them preached the same
truth, but one of them said, "That cannot be true, because I
have not put upon it the seal of my name. Therefore do not
listen to him." And the other man said, "Do not hear him,
although he is preaching very much the same thing, yet it is not
true because he does not preach it in my name."
That is what my Master found, and he then set about to learn
humility, because he had found that the one idea in all
religions is, "not me, but Thou", and he who says, "not me", the
Lord fills his heart. The less of this little "I" the more of
God there is in him. That he found to be the truth in every
religion in the world, and he set himself to accomplish this. As
I have told you, whenever he wanted to do anything he never
confined himself to fine theories, but would enter into the
practice immediately; We see many persons talking the most
wonderfully fine things about charity and about equality and the
rights of other people and all that, but it is only in theory. I
was so fortunate as to find one who was able to carry theory
into practice. He had the most wonderful faculty of carrying
everything into practice which he thought was right.
Now, there was a family of Pariahs living near the place. The
Pariahs number several millions in the whole of India and are a
sect of people so low that some of our books say that if a
Brahmin coming out from his house sees the face of a Pariah, he
has to fast that day and recite certain prayers before he
becomes holy again. In some Hindu cities when a Pariah enters,
he has to put a crow's feather on his head as a sign that he is
a Pariah, and he has to cry aloud, "Save yourselves, the Pariah
is passing through the street", and you will find people flying
off from him as if by magic, because if they touch him by
chance, they will have to change their clothes, bathe, and do
other things. And the Pariah for thousands of years has believed
that it is perfectly right; that his touch will make everybody
unholy. Now my Master would go to a Pariah and ask to be allowed
to clean his house. The business of the Pariah is to clean the
streets of the cities and to keep houses clean. He cannot enter
the house by the front door; by the back door he enters; and as
soon as he has gone, the whole place over which he has passed is
sprinkled with and made holy by a little Gangâ water. By birth
the Brahmin stands for holiness, and the Pariah for the very
reverse. And this Brahmin asked to be allowed to do the menial
services in the house of the Pariah. The Pariah of course could
not allow that, for they all think that if they allow a Brahmin
to do such menial work it will be an awful sin, and they will
become extinct. The Pariah would not permit it; so in the dead
of night, when all were sleeping, Ramakrishna would enter the
house. He had long hair, and with his hair he would wipe the
place, saying, "Oh, my Mother, make me the servant of the
Pariah, make me feel that I am even lower than the Pariah."
"They worship Me best who worship My worshippers. These are all
My children and your privilege is to serve them" - is the
teaching of Hindu scriptures.
There were various other preparations which would take a long
time to relate, and I want to give you just a sketch of his
life. For years he thus educated himself. One of the Sâdhanâs
was to root out the sex idea. Soul has no sex, it is neither
male nor female. It is only in the body that sex exists, and the
man who desires to reach the spirit cannot at the same time hold
to sex distinctions. Having been born in a masculine body, this
man wanted to bring the feminine idea into everything. He began
to think that he was a woman, he dressed like a woman, spoke
like a woman, gave up the occupations of men, and lived in the
household among the women of a good family, until, after years
of this discipline, his mind became changed, and he entirely
forgot the idea of sex; thus the whole view of life became
changed to him.
We hear in the West about worshipping woman, but this is usually
for her youth and beauty. This man meant by worshipping woman,
that to him every woman's face was that of the Blissful Mother,
and nothing but that. I myself have seen this man standing
before those women whom society would not touch, and falling at
their feet bathed in tears, saying, "Mother, in one form Thou
art in the street, and in another form Thou art the universe. I
salute Thee, Mother, I salute Thee." Think of the blessedness of
that life from which all carnality has vanished, which can look
upon every woman with that love and reverence when every woman's
face becomes transfigured, and only the face of the Divine
Mother, the Blissful One, the Protectress of the human race,
shines upon it! That is what we want. Do you mean to say that
the divinity back of a woman can ever be cheated? It never was
and never will be, It always asserts itself. Unfailingly it
detects fraud, it detects hypocrisy, unerringly it feels the
warmth of truth, the light of spirituality, the holiness of
purity. Such purity is absolutely necessary if real spirituality
is to be attained.
This rigorous, unsullied purity came into the life of that man.
All the struggles which we have in our lives were past for him.
His hard-earned jewels of spirituality, for which he had given
three-quarters of his life, were now ready to be given to
humanity, and then began his mission. His teaching and preaching
were peculiar. In our country a teacher is a most highly
venerated person, he is regarded as God Himself. We have not
even the same respect for our father and mother. Father and
mother give us our body, but the teacher shows us the way to
salvation. We are his children, we are born in the spiritual
line of the teacher. All Hindus come to pay respect to an
extraordinary teacher, they crowd around him. And here was such
a teacher, but the teacher had no thought whether he was to be
respected or not, he had not the least idea that he was a great
teacher, he thought that it was Mother who was doing everything
and not he. He always said, "If any good comes from my lips, it
is the Mother who speaks; what have I to do with it?" That was
his one idea about his work, and to the day of his death he
never gave it up. This man sought no one. His principle was,
first form character, first earn spirituality and results will
come of themselves. His favourite illustration was, "When the
lotus opens, the bees come of their own accord to seek the
honey; so let the lotus of your character be full-blown, and the
results will follow." This is a great lesson to learn.
My Master taught me this lesson hundreds of times, yet I often
forget it. Few understand the power of thought. If a man goes
into a cave, shuts himself in, and thinks one really great
thought and dies, that thought will penetrate the walls of that
cave, vibrate through space, and at last permeate the whole
human race. Such is the power of thought; be in no hurry
therefore to give your thoughts to others. First have something
to give. He alone teaches who has something to give, for
teaching is not talking, teaching is not imparting doctrines, it
is communicating. Spirituality can be communicated just as
really as I can give you a flower. This is true in the most
literal sense. This idea is very old in India and finds
illustration in the West in the "theory, in the belief, of
apostolic succession. Therefore first make character - that is
the highest duty you can perform. Know Truth for yourself, and
there will be many to whom you can teach it after wards; they
will all come. This was the attitude of nay Master. He
criticised no one. For years I lived with that man, but never
did I hear those lips utter one word of condemnation for any
sect. He had the same sympathy for all sects; he had found the
harmony between them. A man may be intellectual, or devotional,
or mystic, or active; the various religions represent one or the
other of these types. Yet it is possible to combine all the four
in one man, and this is what future humanity is going to do.
That was his idea. He condemned no one, but saw the good in all.
People came by thousands to see and hear this wonderful man who
spoke in a patois every word of which was forceful and instinct
with light. For it is not what is spoken, much less the language
in which it is spoken, but it is the personality of the speaker
which dwells in everything he says that carries weight. Every
one of us feels this at times. We hear most splendid orations,
most wonderfully reasoned-out discourses, and we go home and
forget them all. At other times we hear a few words in the
simplest language, and they enter into our lives, become part
and parcel of ourselves and produce lasting results. The words
of a man who can put his personality into them take effect, but
he must have tremendous personality. All teaching implies giving
and taking, the teacher gives and the taught receives, but the
one must have something to give, and the other must be open to
receive.
This man came to live near Calcutta, the capital of India, the
most important university town in our country which was sending
out sceptics and materialists by the hundreds every year. Yet
many of these university men - sceptics and agnostics - used to
come and listen to him. I heard of this man, and I went to hear
him. He looked just like an ordinary man, with nothing
remarkable about him. He used the most simple language, and I
thought "Can this man be a great teacher?"- crept near to him
and asked him the question which I had been asking others all my
life: "Do you believe in God, Sir?" "Yes," he replied. "Can you
prove it, Sir?" "Yes." "How?" "Because I see Him just as I see
you here, only in a much intenser sense." That impressed me at
once. For the first time I found a man who dared to say that he
saw God that religion was a reality to be felt, to be sensed in
an infinitely more intense way than we can sense the world. I
began to go to that man, day after day, and I actually saw that
religion could be given. One touch, one glance, can change a
whole life. I have read about Buddha and Christ and Mohammed,
about all those different luminaries of ancient times, how they
would stand up and say, "Be thou whole", and the man became
whole. I now found it to be true, and when I myself saw this
man, all scepticism was brushed aside. It could be done; and my
Master used to say, "Religion can be given and taken more
tangibly, more really than anything else in the world." Be
therefore spiritual first; have something to give and then stand
before the world and give it. Religion is not talk, or
doctrines, or theories; nor is it sectarianism. Religion cannot
live in sects and societies. It is the relation between the soul
and God; how can it be made into a society? It would then
degenerate into business, and wherever there are business and
business principles in religion, spirituality dies. Religion
does not consist in erecting temples, or building churches, or
attending public worship. It is not to be found in books, or in
words, or in lectures, or in organisations. Religion consists in
realisation. As a fact, we all know that nothing will satisfy us
until we know the truth for ourselves. However we may argue,
however much we may hear, but one thing will satisfy us, and
that is our own realisation; and such an experience is possible
for every one of us if we will only try. The first ideal of this
attempt to realise religion is that of renunciation. As far as
we can, we must give up. Darkness and light, enjoyment of the
world and enjoyment of God will never go together. "Ye cannot
serve God and Mammon." Let people try it if they will, and I
have seen millions in every country who have tried; but after
all, it comes to nothing. If one word remains true in the
saying, it is, give up everything for the sake of the Lord. This
is a hard and long task, but you can begin it here and now. Bit
by bit we must go towards it.
The second idea that I learnt from my Master, and which is
perhaps the most vital, is the wonderful truth that the
religions of the world are not contradictory or antagonistic.
They are but various phases of one eternal religion. That one
eternal religion is applied to different planes of existence, is
applied to the opinions of various minds and various races.
There never was my religion or yours, my national religion or
your national religion; there never existed many religions,
there is only the one. One infinite religion existed all through
eternity and will ever exist, and this religion is expressing
itself in various countries in various ways. Therefore we must
respect all religions and we must try to accept them all as far
as we can. Religions manifest themselves not only according to
race and geographical position, but according to individual
powers. In one man religion is manifesting itself as intense
activity, as work. In another it is manifesting itself as
intense devotion, in yet another, as mysticism, in others as
philosophy, and so forth. It is wrong when we say to others,
"Your methods are not right." Perhaps a man, whose nature is
that of love, thinks that the man who does good to others is not
on the right road to religion, because it is not his own way,
and is therefore wrong. If the philosopher thinks, "Oh, the poor
ignorant people, what do they know about a God of Love, and
loving Him? They do not know what they mean," he is wrong,
because they may be right and he also.
To learn this central secret that the truth may be one and yet
many at the same time, that we may have different visions of the
same truth from different standpoints, is exactly what must be
done. Then, instead of antagonism to anyone, we shall have
infinite sympathy with all. Knowing that as long as there are
different natures born in this world, the same religious truth
will require different adaptations, we shall understand that we
are bound to have forbearance with each other. Just as nature is
unity in variety - an infinite variation in the phenomenal - as
in and through all these variations of the phenomenal runs the
Infinite, the Unchangeable, the Absolute Unity, so it is with
every man; the microcosm is but a miniature repetition of the
macrocosm; in spite of all these variations, in and through them
all runs this eternal harmony, and we have to recognise this.
This idea, above all other ideas, I find to be the crying
necessity of the day. Coming from a country which is a hotbed of
religious sects - and to which, through its good fortune or ill
fortune, everyone who has a religious idea wants to send an
advance-guard - I have been acquainted from my childhood with
the various sects of the world. Even the Mormons come to preach
in India. Welcome them all! That is the soil on which to preach
religion. There it takes root more than in any other country. If
you come and teach politics to the Hindus, they do not
understand; but if you come to preach religion, however curious
it may be, you will have hundreds and thousands of followers in
no time, and you have every chance of becoming a living God in
your lifetime. I am glad it is so, it is the one thing we want
in India.
The sects among the Hindus are various, a great many in number,
and some of them apparently hopelessly contradictory. Yet they
all tell you they are but different manifestations of religion.
"As different rivers, taking their start from different
mountains, running crooked or straight, all come and mingle
their waters in the ocean, so the different sects, with their
different points of view, at last all come unto Thee." This is
not a theory, it has to be recognised, but not in that
patronising way which we see with some people: "Oh yes, there
are some very good things in it. These are what we call the
ethnical religions. These ethnical religions have some good in
them." Some even have the most wonderfully liberal idea that
other religions are all little bits of a prehistoric evolution,
but "ours is the fulfilment of things". One man says, because
his is the oldest religion, it is the best: another makes the
same claim, because his is the latest.
We have to recognise that each one of them has the same saving
power as the other. What you have heard about their difference,
whether in the temple or in the church, is a mass of
superstition. The same God answers all; and it is not you, or I,
or any body of men that is responsible for the safety and
salvation of the least little bit of the soul; the same Almighty
God is responsible for all. I do not understand how people
declare themselves to be believers in God, and at the same time
think that God has handed over to a little body of men all
truth, and that they are the guardians of the rest of humanity.
How can you call that religion? Religion is realisation; but
mere talk - mere trying to believe, mere groping in darkness,
mere parroting the words of ancestors and thinking it is
religion, mere making a political something out of the truths of
religion - is not religion at all. In every sect - even among
the Mohammedans whom we always regard as the most exclusive -
even among them we find that wherever there was a man trying to
realise religion, from his lips have come the fiery words: "Thou
art the Lord of all, Thou art in the heart of all, Thou art the
guide of all, Thou art the Teacher of all, and Thou caress
infinitely more for the land of Thy children than we can ever
do." Do not try to disturb the faith of any man. If you can,
give him something better; if you can, get hold of a man where
he stands and give him a push upwards; do so, but do not destroy
what he has. The only true teacher is he who can convert
himself, as it were, into a thousand persons at a moment's
notice. The only true teacher is he who can immediately come
down to the level of the student, and transfer his soul to the
student's soul and see through the student's eyes and hear
through his ears and understand through his mind. Such a teacher
can really teach and none else. All these negative,
breaking-down, destructive teachers that are in the world can
never do any good.
In the presence of my Master I found out that man could be
perfect, even in this body. Those lips never cursed anyone,
never even criticised anyone. Those eyes were beyond the
possibility of seeing evil, that mind had lost the power of
thinking evil. He saw nothing but good. That tremendous purity,
that tremendous renunciation is the one secret of spirituality.
"Neither through wealth, nor through progeny, but through
renunciation alone, is immortality to be reached", say the
Vedas. "Sell all that thou hast and give to the poor, and follow
me", says the Christ. So all great saints and Prophets have
expressed it, and have carried it out in their lives. How can
great spirituality come without that renunciation? Renunciation
is the background of all religious thought wherever it be, and
you will always find that as this idea of renunciation lessens,
the more will the senses creep into the field of religion, and
spirituality will decrease in the same ratio.
That man was the embodiment of renunciation. In our country it
is necessary for a man who becomes a Sannyasin to give up all
worldly wealth and position, and this my Master carried out
literally. There were many who would have felt themselves blest
if he would only have accepted a present from their hands, who
would gladly have given him thousands of rupees if he would have
taken them, but these were the only men from whom he would turn
away. He was a triumphant example, a living realisation of the
complete conquest of lust and of desire for money. He was beyond
all ideas of either, and such men are necessary for this
century. Such renunciation is necessary in these days when men
have begun to think that they cannot live a month without what
they call their "necessities", and which they are increasing out
of all proportion. It is necessary in a time like this that a
man should arise to demonstrate to the sceptics of the world
that there yet breathes a man who does not care a straw for all
the gold or all the fame that is in the universe. Yet there are
such men.
The other idea of his life was intense love for others. The
first part of my Master's life was spent in acquiring
spirituality, and the remaining years in distributing it. People
in our country have not the same customs as you have in visiting
a religious teacher or a Sannyasin. Somebody would come to ask
him about something, some perhaps would come hundreds of miles,
walking all the way, just to ask one question, to hear one word
from him, "Tell me one word for my salvation." That is the way
they come. They come in numbers, unceremoniously, to the place
where he is mostly to be found; they may find him under a tree
and question him; and before one set of people has gone, others
have arrived. So if a man is greatly revered, he will sometimes
have no rest day or night. He will have to talk constantly. For
hours people will come pouring in, and this man will be teaching
them.
So men came in crowds to hear him, and he would talk twenty
hours in the twenty-four, and that not for one day, but for
months and months until at last the body broke down under the
pressure of this tremendous strain. His intense love for mankind
would not let him refuse to help even the humblest of the
thousands who sought his aid. Gradually, there developed a vital
throat disorder and yet he could not be persuaded to refrain
from these exertions. As soon as he heard that people were
asking to see him, he would insist upon having them admitted and
would answer all their questions. When expostulated with, he
replied, "I do not care. I will give up twenty thousand such
bodies to help one man. It is glorious to help even one man."
There was no rest for him. Once a man asked him, "Sir, you are a
great Yogi. Why do you not put your mind a little on your body
and cure your disease? "At first he did not answer, but when the
question had been repeated, he gently said, "My friend, I
thought you were a sage, but you talk like other men of the
world. This mind has been given to the Lord. Do you mean to say
that I should take it back and put it upon the body which is but
a mere cage of the soul?"
So he went on preaching to the people, and the news spread that
his body was about to pass away, and the people began to flock
to him in greater crowds than ever. You cannot imagine the way
they come to these great religious teachers in India, how they
crowd round them and make gods of them while they are yet
living. Thousands wait simply to touch the hem of their
garments. It is through this appreciation of spirituality in
others that spirituality is produced. Whatever man wants and
appreciates, he will get; and it is the same with nations. If
you go to India and deliver a political lecture, however grand
it may be, you will scarcely find people to listen to you but
just go and teach religion, live it, not merely talk it, and
hundreds will crowd just to look at you, to touch your feet.
When the people heard that this holy man was likely to go from
them soon, they began to come round him more than ever, and my
Master went on teaching them without the least regard for his
health. We could not prevent this. Many of the people came from
long distances, and he would not rest until he had answered
their questions. "While I can speak, I must teach them," he
would say, and he was as good as his word. One day, he told us
that he would lay down the body that day, and repeating the most
sacred word of the Vedas he entered into Samâdhi and passed
away.
His thoughts and his message were known to very few capable of
giving them out. Among others, he left a few young boys who had
renounced the world, and were ready to carry on his work.
Attempts were made to crush them. But they stood firm, having
the inspiration of that great life before them. Having had the
contact of that blessed life for years, they stood their ground.
These young men, living as Sannyasins, begged through the
streets of the city where they were born, although some of them
came from high families. At first they met with great
antagonism, but they persevered and went on from day to day
spreading all over India the message of that great man, until
the whole country was filled with the ideas he had preached.
This man, from a remote village of Bengal, without education, by
the sheer force of his own determination, realised the truth and
gave it to others, leaving only a few young boys to keep it
alive.
Today the name of Shri Ramakrishna Paramahamsa is known all over
India to its millions of people. Nay, the power of that man has
spread beyond India; and if there has ever been a word of truth,
a word of spirituality, that I have spoken anywhere in the
world, I owe it to my Master; only the mistakes are mine.
This is the message of Shri Ramakrishna to the modern world: "Do
not care for doctrines, do not care for dogmas, or sects, or
churches, or temples; they count for little compared with the
essence of existence in each man which is spirituality; and the
more this is developed in a man, the more powerful is he for
good. Earn that first, acquire that, and criticise no one, for
all doctrines and creeds have some good in them. Show by your
lives that religion does not mean words, or names, or sects, but
that it means spiritual realisation. Only those can understand
who have felt. Only those who have attained to spirituality can
communicate it to others, can be great teachers of mankind. They
alone are the powers of light."
The more such men are produced in a country, the more that
country will be raised; and that country where such men
absolutely do not exist is simply doomed nothing can save it.
Therefore my Master's message to mankind is: "Be spiritual and
realise truth for Yourself." He would have you give up for the
sake of your fellow-beings. He would have you cease talking
about love for your brother, and set to work to prove your
words. The time has come for renunciation, for realisation, and
then you will see the harmony in all the religions of the world.
You will know that there is no need of any quarrel. And then
only will you be ready to help humanity. To proclaim and make
clear the fundamental unity underlying all religions was the
mission of my Master. Other teachers have taught special
religions which bear their names, but this great teacher of the
nineteenth century made no claim for himself. He left every
religion undisturbed because he had realised that in reality
they are all part and parcel of the one eternal religion.
INDIAN RELIGIOUS THOUGHT
(Delivered under the auspices of tile Brooklyn Ethical
Society, in the Art Gallery of tile Pouch Mansion, Clinton
Avenue, Brooklyn, U.S.A.)
India, although only half the size of the United States,
contains a population of over two hundred and ninety millions,
and there are three religions which hold sway over them - the
Mohammedan, the Buddhist (including the Jain), and the Hindu.
The adherents of the first mentioned number about sixty
millions, of the second about nine millions, while the last
embrace nearly two hundred and six millions. The cardinal
features of the Hindu religion are founded on the meditative and
speculative philosophy and on the ethical teachings contained in
the various books of the Vedas, which assert that the universe
is infinite in space and eternal in duration. It never had a
beginning, and it never will have an end. Innumerable have been
the manifestations of the power of the spirit in the realm of
matter, of the force of the Infinite in the domain of the
finite; but the Infinite Spirit Itself is self-existent,
eternal, and unchangeable. The passage of time makes no mark
whatever on the dial of eternity. In its super sensuous region
which cannot be comprehended at all by the human understanding,
there is no past, and there is no future. The Vedas teach that
the soul of man is immortal. The body is subject to the law of
growth and decay, what grows must of necessity decay. But the in
dwelling spirit is related to the infinite and eternal life; it
never had a beginning and it never will have an end, One of the
chief distinctions between the Hindu and the Christian religions
is that the Christian religion teaches that each human soul had
its beginning at its birth into this world, whereas the Hindu
religion asserts that the spirit of man is an emanation of the
Eternal Being, and had no more a beginning than God Himself.
Innumerable have been and will be its manifestations in its
passage from one personality to another, subject to the great
law of spiritual evolution, until it reaches perfection, when
there is no more change.
It has been often asked: If this be so, why is it we do not
remember anything of our past lives? This is our explanation:
Consciousness is the name of the surface only of the mental
ocean, but within its depths are stored up all our experiences,
both pleasant and painful. The desire of the human soul is to
find out something that is stable. The mind and the body, in
fact all the various phenomena of nature, are in a condition of
incessant change. But the highest aspiration of our spirit is to
find out something that does not change, that has reached a
state of permanent perfection. And this is the aspiration of the
human soul after the Infinite! The finer our moral and
intellectual development, the stronger will become this
aspiration after the Eternal that changes not.
The modern Buddhists teach that everything that cannot be known
by the five senses is non-existent, and that it is a delusion to
suppose that man is an independent entity. The idealists, on the
contrary, claim that each individual is an independent entity,
and the external world does not exist outside of his mental
conception. But the sure solution of this problem is that nature
is a mixture of independence and dependence, of reality and
idealism. Our mind and bodies are dependent on the external
world, and this dependence varies according to the nature of
their relation to it; but the indwelling spirit is free, as God
is free, and is able to direct in a greater or lesser degree,
according to the state of their development, the movements of
our minds and bodies.
Death is but a change of condition. We remain in the same
universe, and are subject to the same laws as before. Those who
have passed beyond and have attained high planes of development
in beauty and wisdom are but the advance-guard of a universal
army who are following after them. The spirit of the highest is
related to the spirit of the lowest, and the germ of infinite
perfection exists in all. We should cultivate the optimistic
temperament, and endeavour to see the good that dwells in
everything. If we sit down and lament over the imperfection of
our bodies and minds, we profit nothing; it is the heroic
endeavour to subdue adverse circumstances that carries our
spirit upwards. The object of life is to learn the laws of
spiritual progress. Christians can learn from Hindus, and Hindus
can learn from Christians. Each has made a contribution of value
to the wisdom of the world.
Impress upon your children that true religion is positive and
not negative, that it does not consist in merely refraining from
evil, but in a persistent performance of noble decals. True
religion comes not front the teaching of men or the reading of
books; it is the awakening of the spirit within us, consequent
upon pure and heroic action. Every child born into the world
brings with it a certain accumulated experience from previous
incarnations; and the impress of this experience is seen in the
structure of its mind and body. But the feeling of independence
which possesses us all shows there is something in us besides
mind and body. The soul that reigns within is independent stud
creates the desire for freedom. If we are not free, how can we
hope to make the world better? We hold that human progress is
the result of the action of the human spirit. What the world is,
and what we ourselves are, are the fruits of the freedom of the
spirit.
We believe in one God, the Father of us all, who is omnipresent
and omnipotent, and who guides and preserves His children with
infinite love. We believe in a Personal God as the Christians
do, but we go further: we below that we are He! That His
personality is manifested in us, that God is in us, and that we
are in God We believe there is a germ of truth in all religions,
and the Hindu bows down to them all; for in this world, truth is
to be found not in subtraction but in addition. We would offer
God a bouquet of the most beautiful flowers of all the diverse
faiths. We must love God for love's sake, not for the hope of
reward. We must do our duty for duty's sake not for the hope of
reward. We must worship the beautiful for beauty's sake, not for
the hope of reward. Thus in the purity of our hearts shall we
see God. Sacrifices genuflexions, mumblings, and mutterings are
not religion. They are only good if they stimulate us to the
brave performance of beautiful and heroic deeds and lift our
thoughts to the apprehension of the divine perfection
What good is it, if we acknowledge in our prayers that God is
the Father of us all, and in our daily lives do not treat every
man as our brother? Books are only made so that they may point
the way to a higher life; but no good results unless the path is
trodden with unflinching steps! Every human personality may be
compared to a glass globe. There is the same pure white light -
an emission of the divine Being - in the centre of each, but the
glass being of different colours and thickness, the rays assume
diverse aspects in the transmission. The equality and beauty of
each central flame is the same, and the apparent inequality is
only in the imperfection of the temporal instrument of its
expression. As we rise higher and higher in the scale of being,
the medium becomes more and more translucent.