Mudgala Upanishad
Mudgala Upanishad
Translated by Dr. A. G. Krishna Warrier
Published by The Theosophical Publishing House, Chennai
Om! May my speech be based on (i.e. accord with) the mind;
May my mind be based on speech.
O Self-effulgent One, reveal Thyself to me.
May you both (speech and mind) be the carriers of the Veda to me.
May not all that I have heard depart from me.
I shall join together (i.e. obliterate the difference of) day
And night through this study.
I shall utter what is verbally true;
I shall utter what is mentally true.
May that (Brahman) protect me;
May That protect the speaker (i.e. the teacher), may That protect me;
May that protect the speaker - may That protect the speaker.
Om! Let there be Peace in me!
Let there be Peace in my environment!
Let there be Peace in the forces that act on me!
I. A SUMMARY OF PURUSHASUKTA
We shall explain the Purusha-sukta: In 'a thousand-headed' thousand means
countless; the word 'ten fingers', means infinite distance, by the first stanza
Vishnu's pervasion in space is stated, by the second the pervasion in time; the
third speaks of his giving liberation. The glory of Vishnu is given in 'Etavan'
(so much is his greatness). The same stanza states his four-fold nature. 'Tripad'
etc., speaks of the glory of Aniruddha. In 'from that Virat was born' has been
shown the origin of Prakriti and Purusha from a quarter of Hari. By 'Yat
Purushena' the sacrifice of creation is stated as well as Moksha. In 'Tasmad'
world creations are stated. 'Vedaham' speaks of Hari's glory. By 'Yajnena' is
stated the end of creation and liberation. One who knows it becomes liberated.
II. THE SUPREME MYSTERY
In Mudgalopanishad the greatness of Purusha-sukta has been stated in detail.
Vasudeva instructed the knowledge of Bhagavan to Indra; again imparted to the
humble Indra the great mystery with two sections of the Purusha-sukta. These two
are: The Purusha described above gave up the object which was beyond the scope
of name and form, hard for worldly people to understand and took a form with a
thousand parts and capable of giving Moksha on sight, for uplifting the
suffering Devas and others. In that form, pervading the world he was beyond it
by an infinite distance. This Narayana was the Past, Present and the Future. And
was the giver of Moksha to all. He is greater than the greatest - none is
greater than He.
He made himself into four parts and with three of them exists in the heaven. By
the fourth, the Aniruddha (for of) Narayana, all worlds have come to be. This
(part of) Narayana created Prakriti (Matter) for making the worlds (Prakriti
stands for the four-faced Brahma). In full form the latter did not know the work
of creation - this Aniruddha-Narayana told him.
Brahman! Meditate upon your organs as the sacrifice, the firm body of the
sheaths as the oblation, me as Agni, the spring season as ghee, summer as fuel,
autumn as the six tastes of food and make the offering in Agni and touch the
body - this will make the body (strong like) Vajra (diamond). Thence will appear
the products like animals. From the, the world of moving and unmoving things. It
must be understood that the manner of liberation is stated by the combination of
Jiva and Paramatman.
Whoever knows this Creation and Liberation lives a full life.
III
The single God becoming many; unborn, is born as many. The Adhvaryus worship him
as Agni. This as Yajus unites everything. The Samavedins worship as Saman. All
is established in him. The serpents meditate on his as poison. The knowers of
snake-lore as snake, gods as energy, men as wealth, Demons as Magic, the manes
as sustenance. The knowers of the superhuman as superhuman. Gandharvas as
beauty, Apsarases as perfume. He becomes whatever he is worshipped as; so, one
should think 'I am the supreme being' and will become that (who knows this).
IV. ONLY BRAHMAN WITH THE THREEFOLD MISSING IS JIVA
Beyond the threefold misery, free from layers devoid of the six waves, other
than the five sheaths, unaffected by the six transformations is the Brahman. The
three miseries are Adhyatmika (body disease), Adhibhautika (robbers, wild
animals etc.,) and Adhidaivika (rains etc.,). They relate to agents, action and
effect; knower, knowledge and the known; experiencer, experience and the
experienced. The six layers are skin, flesh, blood, bones, tendons and morrow.
The six enemies are lust etc. The five sheaths are those of food, vital airs,
mind cognition and bliss. The six transformations are: being, birth, growth,
change, decline and destruction. The six waves are hunger, thirst, sorrow,
delusion, old age and death. The six delusions are about family, lineage, class,
caste, stations (ashrama) and forms. Through contact with the supreme spirit
becomes the Jiva - he is none other.
He who studies this is purified in fire, wind and sun; has health and wealth,
becomes rich in children and grandchildren, a scholar, purified from great sin,
drink, improper contact with mother, daughter and daughter-in-law, stealing
gold, forgetting Vedic learning, failure to serve elders, sacrificing for the
unfit, eating what should not be, wrong gifts, contact with another's wife,
unaffected by lust etc., becomes the pristine Brahman in this birth. Therefore
one should not impart to an uninitiated person this Purusha-sukta which is a
secret, nor to one who does not know the Vedas, a non-sacrificer, a non-Vaishnava,
non-Yogin, a talkative person, a harsh talker, one who takes more than a year to
learn, the discontented.
The Guru shall impart this in a pure place, on a sacred star, after regulating
the vital airs to the humble disciple, in the right ear. It should not be done
too often - it would become stale but as often as needed, in the ear.
Thus both the teacher and the taught will become Purusha in this birth.
This is the Upanishad.
Om! May my speech be based on (i.e. accord with) the mind;
May my mind be based on speech.
O Self-effulgent One, reveal Thyself to me.
May you both (speech and mind) be the carriers of the Veda to me.
May not all that I have heard depart from me.
I shall join together (i.e. obliterate the difference of) day
And night through this study.
I shall utter what is verbally true;
I shall utter what is mentally true.
May that (Brahman) protect me;
May That protect the speaker (i.e. the teacher), may That protect me;
May that protect the speaker - may That protect the speaker.
Om! Let there be Peace in me!
Let there be Peace in my environment!
Let there be Peace in the forces that act on me!
Here ends the Mudgalopanishad, as contained in the Rig-Veda.