Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda - Vol-2
CHAPTER XIV
THE ATMAN: ITS BONDAGE AND FREEDOM
(Delivered in America)
According to the Advaita philosophy, there is only one thing
real in the universe, which it calls Brahman; everything else is
unreal, manifested and manufactured out of Brahman by the power
of Mâyâ. To reach back to that Brahman is our goal. We are, each
one of us, that Brahman, that Reality, plus this Maya. If we can
get rid of this Maya or ignorance, then we become what we really
are. According to this philosophy, each man consists of three
parts - the body, the internal organ or the mind, and behind
that, what is called the Âtman, the Self. The body is the
external coating and the mind is the internal coating of the
Atman who is the real perceiver, the real enjoyer, the being in
the body who is working the body by means of the internal organ
or the mind.
The Âtman is the only existence in the human body which is
immaterial. Because it is immaterial, it cannot be a compound,
and because it is not a compound, it does not obey the law of
cause and effect, and so it is immortal. That which is immortal
can have no beginning because everything with a beginning must
have an end. It also follows that it must be formless; there
cannot be any fond without matter. Everything that has form must
have a beginning and an end. We have none of us seen a form
which had not a beginning and will not have an end. A form comes
out of a combination of force and matter. This chair has a
peculiar form, that is to say a certain quantity of matter is
acted upon by a certain amount of force and made to assume a
particular shape. The shape is the result of a combination of
matter and force. The combination cannot be eternal; there must
come to every combination a time when it will dissolve. So all
forms have a beginning and an end. We know our body will perish;
it had a beginning and it will have an end. But the Self having
no form, cannot be bound by the law of beginning and end. It is
existing from infinite time; just as time is eternal, so is the
Self of man eternal. Secondly, it must be all-pervading. It is
only form that is conditioned and limited by space; that which
is formless cannot be confined in space. So, according to
Advaita Vedanta, the Self, the Atman, in you, in me, in every
one, is omnipresent. You are as much in the sun now as in this
earth, as much in England as in America. But the Self acts
through the mind and the body, and where they are, its action is
visible.
Each work we do, each thought we think, produces an impression,
called in Sanskrit Samskâra, upon the mind and the sum total of
these impressions becomes the tremendous force which is called
"character". The character of a man is what he has created for
himself; it is the result of the mental and physical actions
that he has done in his life. The sum total of the Samskaras is
the force which gives a man the next direction after death. A
man dies; the body falls away and goes back to the elements; but
the Samskaras remain, adhering to the mind which, being made of
fine material, does not dissolve, because the finer the
material, the more persistent it is. But the mind also dissolves
in the long run, and that is what we are struggling for. In this
connection, the best illustration that comes to my mind is that
of the whirlwind. Different currents of air coming from
different directions meet and at the meeting-point become united
and go on rotating; as they rotate, they form a body of dust,
drawing in bits of paper, straw, etc., at one place, only to
drop them and go on to another, and so go on rotating, raising
and forming bodies out of the materials which are before them.
Even so the forces, called Prâna in Sanskrit, come together and
form the body and the mind out of matter, and move on until the
body falls down, when they raise other materials to make another
body, and when this falls, another rises, and thus the process
goes on. Force cannot travel without matter. So when the body
falls down, the mind-stuff remains, Prana in the form of
Samskaras acting on it; and then it goes on to another point,
raises up another whirl from fresh materials, and begins another
motion; and so it travels from place to place until the force is
all spent; and then it falls down, ended. So when the mind will
end, be broken to pieces entirely, without leaving any Samskara,
we shall be entirely free, and until that time we are in
bondage; until then the Atman is covered by the whirl of the
mind, and imagines it is being taken from place to place. When
the whirl falls down, the Atman finds that It is all-pervading.
It can go where It likes, is entirely free, and is able to
manufacture any number of minds or bodies It likes; but until
then It can go only with the whirl. This freedom is the goal
towards which we are all moving.
Suppose there is a ball in this room, and we each have a mallet
in our hands and begin to strike the ball, giving it hundreds of
blows, driving it from point to point, until at last it flies
out of the room. With what force and in what direction will it
go out? These will be determined by the forces that have been
acting upon it all through the room. All the different blows
that have been given will have their effects. Each one of our
actions, mental and physical, is such a blow. The human mind is
a ball which is being hit. We are being hit about this room of
the world all the time, and our passage out of it is determined
by the force of all these blows. In each case, the speed and
direction of the ball is determined by the hits it has received;
so all our actions in this world will determine our future
birth. Our present birth, therefore, is the result of our past.
This is one case: suppose I give you an endless chain, in which
there is a black link and a white link alternately, without
beginning and without end, and suppose I ask you the nature of
the chain. At first you will find a difficulty in determining
its nature, the chain being infinite at both ends, but slowly
you find out it is a chain. You soon discover that this infinite
chain is a repetition of the two links, black and white, and
these multiplied infinitely become a whole chain. If you know
the nature of one of these links, you know the nature of the
whole chain, because it is a perfect repetition. All our lives,
past, present, and future, form, as it were, an infinite chain,
without beginning and without end, each link of which is one
life, with two ends, birth and death. What we are and do here is
being repeated again and again, with but little variation. So if
we know these two links, we shall know all the passages we shall
have to pass through in this world. We see, therefore, that our
passage into this world has been exactly determined by our
previous passages. Similarly we are in this world by our own
actions. Just as we go out with the sum total of our present
actions upon us, so we see that we come into it with the sum
total of our past actions upon us; that which takes us out is
the very same thing that brings us in. What brings us in? Our
past deeds. What takes us out? Our own deeds here, and so on and
on we go. Like the caterpillar that takes the thread from its
own mouth and builds its cocoon and at last finds itself caught
inside the cocoon, we have bound ourselves by our own actions,
we have thrown the network of our actions around ourselves. We
have set the law of causation in motion, and we find it hard to
get ourselves out of it. We have set the wheel in motion, and we
are being crushed under it. So this philosophy teaches us that
we are uniformly being bound by our own actions, good or bad.
The Atman never comes nor goes, is never born nor dies. It is
nature moving before the Atman, and the reflection of this
motion is on the Atman; and the Atman ignorantly thinks it is
moving, and not nature. When the Atman thinks that, it is in
bondage; but when it comes to find it never moves, that it is
omnipresent, then freedom comes. The Atman in bondage is called
Jiva. Thus you see that when it is said that the Atman comes and
goes, it is said only for facility of understanding, just as for
convenience in studying astronomy you are asked to suppose that
the sun moves round the earth, though such is not the case. So
the Jiva, the soul, comes to higher or lower states. This is the
well-known law of reincarnation; and this law binds all
creation.
People in this country think it too horrible that man should
come up from an animal. Why? What will be the end of these
millions of animals? Are they nothing? If we have a soul, so
have they, and if they have none, neither have we. It is absurd
to say that man alone has a soul, and the animals none. I have
seen men worse than animals.
The human soul has sojourned in lower and higher forms,
migrating from one to another, according to the Samskaras or
impressions, but it is only in the highest form as man that it
attains to freedom. The man form is higher than even the angel
form, and of all forms it is the highest; man is the highest
being in creation, because he attains to freedom.
All this universe was in Brahman, and it was, as it were,
projected out of Him, and has been moving on to go back to the
source from which it was projected, like the electricity which
comes out of the dynamo, completes the circuit, and returns to
it. The same is the case with the soul. Projected from Brahman,
it passed through all sorts of vegetable and animal forms, and
at last it is in man, and man is the nearest approach to
Brahman. To go back to Brahman from which we have been projected
is the great struggle of life. Whether people know it or not
does not matter. In the universe, whatever we see of motion, of
struggles in minerals or plants or animals is an effort to come
back to the centre and be at rest. There was an equilibrium, and
that has been destroyed; and all parts and atoms and molecules
are struggling to find their lost equilibrium again. In this
struggle they are combining and re-forming, giving rise to all
the wonderful phenomena of nature. All struggles and
competitions in animal life, plant life, and everywhere else,
all social struggles and wars are but expressions of that
eternal struggle to get back to that equilibrium.
The going from birth to death, this travelling, is what is
called Samsara in Sanskrit, the round of birth and death
literally. All creation, passing through this round, will sooner
or later become free. The question may be raised that if we all
shall come to freedom, why should we struggle to attain it? If
everyone is going to be free, we will sit down and wait. It is
true that every being will become free, sooner or later; no one
can be lost. Nothing can come to destruction; everything must
come up. If that is so, what is the use of our struggling? In
the first place, the struggle is the only means that will bring
us to the centre, and in the second place, we do not know why we
struggle. We have to. "Of thousands of men some are awakened to
the idea that they will become free." The vast masses of mankind
are content with material things, but there are some who awake,
and want to get back, who have had enough of this playing, down
here. These struggle consciously, while the rest do it
unconsciously.
The alpha and omega of Vedanta philosophy is to "give up the
world," giving up the unreal and taking the real. Those who are
enamoured of the world may ask, "Why should we attempt to get
out of it, to go back to the centre? Suppose we have all come
from God, but we find this world is pleasurable and nice; then
why should we not rather try to get more and more of the world?
Why should we try to get out of it?" They say, look at the
wonderful improvements going on in the world every day, how much
luxury is being manufactured for it. This is very enjoyable. Why
should we go away, and strive for something which is not this?
The answer is that the world is certain to die, to be broken
into pieces and that many times we have had the same enjoyments.
All the forms which we are seeing now have been manifested again
and again, and the world in which we live has been here many
times before. I have been here and talked to you many times
before. You will know that it must be so, and the very words
that you have been listening to now, you have heard many times
before. And many times more it will be the same. Souls were
never different, the bodies have been constantly dissolving and
recurring. Secondly, these things periodically occur. Suppose
here are three or four dice, and when we throw them, one comes
up five, another four, another three, and another two. If you
keep on throwing, there must come times when those very same
numbers will recur. Go on throwing, and no matter how long may
be the interval, those numbers must come again. It cannot be
asserted in how many throws they will come again; this is the
law of chance. So with souls and their associations. However
distant may be the periods, the same combinations and
dissolutions will happen again and again. The same birth, eating
and drinking, and then death, come round again and again. Some
never find anything higher than the enjoyments of the world, but
those who want to soar higher find that these enjoyments are
never final, are only by the way.
Every form, let us say, beginning from the little worm and
ending in man, is like one of the cars of the Chicago Ferris
Wheel which is in motion all the time, but the occupants change.
A man goes into a car, moves with the wheel, and comes out. The
wheel goes on and on. A soul enters one form, resides in it for
a time, then leaves it and goes into another and quits that
again for a third. Thus the round goes on till it comes out of
the wheel and becomes free.
Astonishing powers of reading the past and the future of a man's
life have been known in every country and every age. The
explanation is that so long as the Atman is within the realm of
causation - though its inherent freedom is not entirely lost and
can assert itself, even to the extent of taking the soul out of
the causal chain, as it does in the case of men who become free
- its actions are greatly influenced by the causal law and thus
make it possible for men, possessed with the insight to trace
the sequence of effects, to tell the past and the future.
So long as there is desire or want, it is a sure sign that there
is imperfection. A perfect, free being cannot have any desire.
God cannot want anything. If He desires, He cannot be God. He
will be imperfect. So all the talk about God desiring this and
that, and becoming angry and pleased by turns is babies' talk,
but means nothing. Therefore it has been taught by all teachers,
"Desire nothing, give up all desires and be perfectly
satisfied."
A child comes into the world crawling and without teeth, and the
old man gets out without teeth and crawling. The extremes are
alike, but the one has no experience of the life before him,
while the other has gone through it all. When the vibrations of
ether are very low, we do not see light, it is darkness; when
very high, the result is also darkness. The extremes generally
appear to be the same, though one is as distant from the other
as the poles. The wall has no desires, so neither has the
perfect man. But the wall is not sentient enough to desire,
while for the perfect man there is nothing to desire. There are
idiots who have no desires in this world, because their brain is
imperfect. At the same time, the highest state is when we have
no desires, but the two are opposite poles of the same
existence. One is near the animal, and the other near to God.
CHAPTER XIV
THE REAL AND THE APPARENT MAN
(Delivered in New York)
Here we stand, and our eyes look forward sometimes miles ahead.
Man has been doing that since he began to think. He is always
looking forward, looking ahead. He wants to know where he goes
even after the dissolution of his body. Various theories have
been propounded, system after system has been brought forward to
suggest explanations. Some have been rejected, while others have
been accepted, and thus it will go on, so long as man is here,
so long as man thinks. There is some truth in each of these
systems. There is a good deal of what is not truth in all of
them. I shall try to place before you the sum and substance, the
result, of the inquiries in this line that have been made in
India. I shall try to harmonise the various thoughts on the
subject, as they have come up from time to time among Indian
philosophers. I shall try to harmonise the psychologists and the
metaphysicians, and, if possible, I shall harmonise them with
modern scientific thinkers also.
The one theme of the Vedanta philosophy is the search after
unity. The Hindu mind does not care for the particular; it is
always after the general, nay, the universal. "What is that, by
knowing which everything else is to be known?" That is the one
theme. "As through the knowledge of one lump of clay all that is
of clay is known, so, what is that, by knowing which this whole
universe itself will be known?" That is the one search. The
whole of this universe, according to the Hindu philosophers, can
be resolved into one material, which they call Âkâsha.
Everything that we see around us, feel, touch, taste, is simply
a differentiated manifestation of this Akasha. It is
all-pervading, fine. All that we call solids, liquids, or gases,
figures, forms, or bodies, the earth, sun, moon, and stars -
everything is composed of this Akasha.
What force is it which acts upon this Akasha and manufactures
this universe out of it? Along with Akasha exists universal
power; all that is power in the universe, manifesting as force
or attraction - nay, even as thought - is but a different
manifestation of that one power which the Hindus call Prâna.
This Prana, acting on Akasha, is creating the whole of this
universe. In the beginning of a cycle, this Prana, as it were,
sleeps in the infinite ocean of Akasha. It existed motionless in
the beginning. Then arises motion in this ocean of Akasha by the
action of this Prana, and as this Prana begins to move, to
vibrate, out of this ocean come the various celestial systems,
suns, moons, stars, earth, human beings, animals, plants, and
the manifestations of all the various forces and phenomena.
Every manifestation of power, therefore, according to them, is
this Prana. Every material manifestation is Akasha. When this
cycle will end, all that we call solid will melt away into the
next form, the next finer or the liquid form; that will melt
into the gaseous, and that into finer and more uniform heat
vibrations, and all will melt back into the original Akasha, and
what we now call attraction, repulsion, and motion, will slowly
resolve into the original Prana. Then this Prana is said to
sleep for a period, again to emerge and to throw out all those
forms; and when this period will end, the whole thing will
subside again. Thus this process of creation is going down, and
coming up, oscillating backwards and forwards. In the language
of modern science, it is becoming static during one period, and
during another period it is becoming dynamic. At one time it
becomes potential, and at the next period it becomes active.
This alteration has gone on through eternity.
Yet, this analysis is only partial. This much has been known
even to modern physical science. Beyond that, the research of
physical science cannot reach. But the inquiry does not stop in
consequence. We have not yet found that one, by knowing which
everything else will be known. We have resolved the whole
universe into two components, into what are called matter and
energy, or what the ancient philosophers of India called Akasha
and Prana. The next step is to resolve this Akasha and the Prana
into their origin. Both can be resolved into the still higher
entity which is called mind. It is out of mind, the Mahat, the
universally existing thought-power, that these two have been
produced. Thought is a still finer manifestation of being than
either Akasha or Prana. It is thought that splits itself into
these two. The universal thought existed in the beginning, and
that manifested, changed, evolved itself into these two Akasha
and Prana: and by the combination of these two the whole
universe has been produced.
We next come to psychology. I am looking at you. The external
sensations are brought to me by the eyes; they are carried by
the sensory nerves to the brain. The eyes are not the organs of
vision. They are but the external instruments, because if the
real organ behind, that which carries the sensation to the
brain, is destroyed, I may have twenty eyes, yet I cannot see
you. The picture on the retina may be as complete as possible,
yet I shall not see you. Therefore, the organ is different from
its instruments; behind the instruments, the eyes, there must be
the organ So it is with all the sensations. The nose is not the
sense of smell; it is but the instrument, and behind it is the
organ. With every sense we have, there is first the external
instrument in the physical body; behind that in the same
physical body, there is the organ; yet these are not sufficient.
Suppose I am talking to you, and you are listening to me with
close attention. Something happens, say, a bell rings; you will
not, perhaps, hear the bell ring. The pulsations of that sound
came to your ear, struck the tympanum, the impression was
carried by the nerve into the brain; if the whole process was
complete up to carrying the impulse to the brain, why did you
not hear? Something else was wanting - the mind was not attached
to the organ. When the mind detaches itself from the organ, the
organ may bring any news to it, but the mind will not receive
it. When it attaches itself to the organ, then alone is it
possible for the mind to receive the news. Yet, even that does
not complete the whole. The instruments may bring the sensation
from outside, the organs may carry it inside, the mind may
attach itself to the organ, and yet the perception may not be
complete. One more factor is necessary; there must be a reaction
within. With this reaction comes knowledge. That which is
outside sends, as it were, the current of news into my brain. My
mind takes it up, and presents it to the intellect, which groups
it in relation to pre-received impressions and sends a current
of reaction, and with that reaction comes perception. Here,
then, is the will. The state of mind which reacts is called
Buddhi, the intellect. Yet, even this does not complete the
whole. One step more is required. Suppose here is a camera and
there is a sheet of cloth, and I try to throw a picture on that
sheet. What am I to do? I am to guide various rays of light
through the camera to fall upon the sheet and become grouped
there. Something is necessary to have the picture thrown upon,
which does not move. I cannot form a picture upon something
which is moving; that something must be stationary, because the
rays of light which I throw on it are moving, and these moving
rays of light, must be gathered, unified, coordinated, and
completed upon something which is stationary. Similar is the
case with the sensations which these organs of ours are carrying
inside and presenting to the mind, and which the mind in its
turn is presenting to the intellect. This process will not be
complete unless there is something permanent in the background
upon which the picture, as it were, may be formed, upon which we
may unify all the different impressions. What is it that gives
unity to the changing whole of our being? What is it that keeps
up the identity of the moving thing moment after moment? What is
it upon which all our different impressions are pieced together,
upon which the perceptions, as it were, come together, reside,
and form a united whole? We have found that to serve this end
there must be something, and we also see that that something
must be, relatively to the body and mind, motionless. The sheet
of cloth upon which the camera throws the picture is, relatively
to the rays of light, motionless, else there will be no picture.
That is to say, the perceiver must be an individual. This
something upon which the mind is painting all these pictures,
this something upon which our sensations, carried by the mind
and intellect, are placed and grouped and formed into a unity,
is what is called the soul of man.
We have seen that it is the universal cosmic mind that splits
itself into the Akasha and Prana, and beyond mind we have found
the soul in us. In the universe, behind the universal mind,
there is a Soul that exists, and it is called God. In the
individual it is the soul of man. In this universe, in the
cosmos, just as the universal mind becomes evolved into Akasha
and Prana, even so, we may find that the Universal Soul Itself
becomes evolved as mind. Is it really so with the individual
man? Is his mind the creator of his body, and his soul the
creator of his mind? That is to say, are his body, his mind, and
his soul three different existences or are they three in one or,
again, are they different states of existence of the same unit
being? We shall gradually try to find an answer to this
question. The first step that we have now gained is this: here
is this external body, behind this external body are the organs,
the mind, the intellect, and behind this is the soul. At the
first step, we have found, as it were, that the soul is separate
from the body, separate from the mind itself. Opinions in the
religious world become divided at this point, and the departure
is this. All those religious views which generally pass under
the name of dualism hold that this soul is qualified, that it is
of various qualities, that all feelings of enjoyment, pleasure,
and pain really belong to the soul. The non-dualists deny that
the soul has any such qualities; they say it is unqualified.
Let me first take up the dualists, and try to present to you
their position with regard to the soul and its destiny; next,
the system that contradicts them; and lastly, let us try to find
the harmony which non-dualism will bring to us. This soul of
man, because it is separate from the mind and body, because it
is not composed of Akasha and Prana, must be immortal. Why? What
do we mean by mortality? Decomposition. And that is only
possible for things that are the result of composition; anything
that is made of two or three ingredients must become decomposed.
That alone which is not the result of composition can never
become decomposed, and, therefore, can never die. It is
immortal. It has been existing throughout eternity; it is
uncreate. Every item of creation is simply a composition; no one
ever saw creation come out of nothing. All that we know of
creation is the combination of already existing things into
newer forms. That being so, this soul of man, being simple, must
have been existing forever, and it will exist for ever. When
this body falls off, the soul lives on. According to the
Vedantists, when this body dissolves, the vital forces of the
man go back to his mind and the mind becomes dissolved, as it
were, into the Prana, and that Prana enters into the soul of
man, and the soul of man comes out, clothed, as it were, with
what they call the fine body, the mental body, or spiritual
body, as you may like to call it. In this body are the Samskâras
of the man. What are the Samskaras? This mind is like a lake,
and every thought is like a wave upon that lake. Just as in the
lake waves rise and then fall down and disappear, so these
thought-waves are continually rising in the mind-stuff and then
disappearing, but they do not disappear forever. They become
finer and finer, but they are all there, ready to start up at
another time when called upon to do so. Memory is simply calling
back into waveform some of those thoughts which have gone into
that finer state of existence. Thus, everything that we have
thought, every action that we have done, is lodged in the mind;
it is all there in fine form, and when a man dies, the sum total
of these impressions is in the mind, which again works upon a
little fine material as a medium. The soul, clothed, as it were,
with these impressions and the fine body, passes out, and the
destiny of the soul is guided by the resultant of all the
different forces represented by the different impressions.
According to us, there are three different goals for the soul.
Those that are very spiritual, when they die, follow the solar
rays and reach what is called the solar sphere, through which
they reach what is called the lunar sphere, and through that
they reach what is called the sphere of lightning, and there
they meet with another soul who is already blessed, and he
guides the new-comer forward to the highest of all spheres,
which is called the Brahmaloka, the sphere of Brahmâ. There
these souls attain to omniscience and omnipotence, become almost
as powerful and all-knowing as God Himself; and they reside
there forever, according to the dualists, or, according to the
non-dualists, they become one with the Universal at the end of
the cycle. The next class of persons, who have been doing good
work with selfish motives, are carried by the results of their
good works, when they die, to what is called lunar sphere, where
there are various heavens, and there they acquire fine bodies,
the bodies of gods. They become gods and live there and enjoy
the blessing of heaven for a long period; and after that period
is finished, the old Karma is again upon them, and so they fall
back again to the earth; they come down through the spheres of
air and clouds and all these various regions, and, at last,
reach the earth through raindrops. There on the earth they
attach themselves to some cereal which is eventually eaten by
some man who is fit to supply them with material to make a new
body. The last class, namely, the wicked, when they die, become
ghosts or demons, and live somewhere midway between the lunar
sphere and this earth. Some try to disturb mankind, some are
friendly; and after living there for some time they also fall
back to the earth and become animals. After living for some time
in an animal body they get released, and come back, and become
men again, and thus get one more chance to work out their
salvation. We see, then, that those who have nearly attained to
perfection, in whom only very little of impurity remains, go to
the Brahmaloka through the rays of the sun; those who were a
middling sort of people, who did some good work here with the
idea of going to heaven, go to the heavens in the lunar sphere
and there obtain god-bodies; but they have again to become men
and so have one more chance to become perfect. Those that are
very wicked become ghosts and demons, and then they may have to
become animals; after that they become men again and get another
chance to perfect themselves. This earth is called the
Karma-Bhumi, the sphere of Karma. Here alone man makes his good
or bad Karma. When a man wants to go to heaven and does good
works for that purpose, he becomes as good and does not as such
store up any bad Karma. He just enjoys the effects of the good
work he did on earth; and when this good Karma is exhausted,
there come, upon him the resultant force of all the evil Karma
he had previously stored up in life, and that brings him down
again to this earth. In the same way, those that become ghosts
remain in that state, not giving rise to fresh Karma, but suffer
the evil results of their past misdeeds, and later on remain for
a time in an animal body without causing any fresh Karma. When
that period is finished, they too become men again. The states
of reward and punishment due to good and bad Karmas are devoid
of the force generating fresh Karmas; they have only to be
enjoyed or suffered. If there is an extraordinarily good or an
extraordinarily evil Karma, it bears fruit very quickly. For
instance, if a man has been doing many evil things all his life,
but does one good act, the result of that good act will
immediately appear, but when that result has been gone through,
all the evil acts must produce their results also. All men who
do certain good and great acts, but the general tenor of whose
lives has not been correct, will become gods; and after living
for some time in god-bodies, enjoying the powers of gods, they
will have again to become men; when the power of the good acts
is thus finished, the old evil comes up to be worked out. Those
who do extraordinarily evil acts have to put on ghost and devil
bodies, and when the effect of those evil actions is exhausted,
the little good action which remains associated with them, makes
them again become men. The way to Brahmaloka, from which there
is no more fall or return, is called the Devayâna, i.e. the way
to God; the way to heaven is known as Pitriyâna, i.e. the way to
the fathers.
Man, therefore, according to the Vedanta philosophy, is the
greatest being that is in the universe, and this world of work
the best place in it, because only herein is the greatest and
the best chance for him to become perfect. Angels or gods,
whatever you may call them, have all to become men, if they want
to become perfect. This is the great centre, the wonderful
poise, and the wonderful opportunity - this human life.
We come next to the other aspect of philosophy. There are
Buddhists who deny the whole theory of the soul that I have just
now been propounding. "What use is there," says the Buddhist,
"to assume something as the substratum, as the background of
this body and mind? Why may we not allow thoughts to run on? Why
admit a third substance beyond this organism, composed of mind
and body, a third substance called the soul? What is its use? Is
not this organism sufficient to explain itself? Why take anew a
third something?" These arguments are very powerful. This
reasoning is very strong. So far as outside research goes, we
see that this organism is a sufficient explanation of itself -
at least, many of us see it in that light. Why then need there
be a soul as substratum, as a something which is neither mind
nor body but stands as a background for both mind and body? Let
there be only mind and body. Body is the name of a stream of
matter continuously changing. Mind is the name of a stream of
consciousness or thought continuously changing. What produces
the apparent unity between these two? This unity does not really
exist, let us say. Take, for instance, a lighted torch, and
whirl it rapidly before you. You see a circle of fire. The
circle does not really exist, but because the torch is
continually moving, it leaves the appearance of a circle. So
there is no unity in this life; it is a mass of matter
continually rushing down, and the whole of this matter you may
call one unity, but no more. So is mind; each thought is
separate from every other thought; it is only the rushing
current that leaves behind the illusion of unity; there is no
need of a third substance. This universal phenomenon of body and
mind is all that really is; do not posit something behind it.
You will find that this Buddhist thought has been taken up by
certain sects and schools in modern times, and all of them claim
that it is new - their own invention. This has been the central
idea of most of the Buddhistic philosophies, that this world is
itself all-sufficient; that you need not ask for any background
at all; all that is, is this sense-universe: what is the use of
thinking of something as a support to this universe? Everything
is the aggregate of qualities; why should there be a
hypothetical substance in which they should inhere? The idea of
substance comes from the rapid interchange of qualities, not
from something unchangeable which exists behind them. We see how
wonderful some of these arguments are, and they appeal easily to
the ordinary experience of humanity - in fact, not one in a
million can think of anything other than phenomena. To the vast
majority of men nature appears to be only a changing, whirling,
combining, mingling mass of change. Few of us ever have a
glimpse of the calm sea behind. For us it is always lashed into
waves; this universe appears to us only as a tossing mass of
waves. Thus we find these two opinions. One is that there is
something behind both body and mind which is an unchangeable and
immovable substance; and the other is that there is no such
thing as immovability or un-changeability in the universe; it is
all change and nothing but change. The solution of this
difference comes in the next step of thought, namely, the
non-dualistic.
It says that the dualists are right in finding something behind
all, as a background which does not change; we cannot conceive
change without there being something unchangeable. We can only
conceive of anything that is changeable, by knowing something
which is less changeable, and this also must appear more
changeable in comparison with something else which is less
changeable, and so on and on, until we are bound to admit that
there must be something which never changes at all. The whole of
this manifestation must have been in a state of
non-manifestation, calm and silent, being the balance of
opposing forces, so to say, when no force operated, because
force acts when a disturbance of the equilibrium comes in. The
universe is ever hurrying on to return to that state of
equilibrium again. If we are certain of any fact whatsoever, we
are certain of this. When the dualists claim that there is a
something which does not change, they are perfectly right, but
their analysis that it is an underlying something which is
neither the body nor the mind, a something separate from both,
is wrong. So far as the Buddhists say that the whole universe is
a mass of change, they are perfectly right; so long as I am
separate from the universe, so long as I stand back and look at
something before me, so long as there are two things - the
looker-on and the thing looked upon - it will appear always that
the universe is one of change, continuously changing all the
time. But the reality is that there is both change and
changelessness in this universe. It is not that the soul and the
mind and the body are three separate existences, for this
organism made of these three is really one. It is the same thing
which appears as the body, as the mind, and as the thing beyond
mind and body, but it is not at the same time all these. He who
sees the body does not see the mind even, he who sees the mind
does not see that which he calls the soul, and he who sees the
soul - for him the body and mind have vanished. He who sees only
motion never sees absolute calm, and he who sees absolute calm -
for him motion has vanished. A rope is taken for a snake. He who
sees the rope as the snake, for him the rope has vanished, and
when the delusion ceases and he looks at the rope, the snake has
vanished.
There is then but one all-comprehending existence and that one
appears as manifold. This Self or Soul or Substance is all that
exists in the universe. That Self or Substance or Soul is, in
the language of non-dualism, the Brahman appearing to be
manifold by the interposition of name and form. Look at the
waves in the sea. Not one wave is really different from the sea,
but what makes the wave apparently different? Name and form; the
form of the wave and the name which we give to it, "wave". This
is what makes it different from the sea. When name and form go,
it is the same sea. Who can make any real difference between the
wave and the sea? So this whole universe is that one Unit
Existence; name and form have created all these various
differences. As when the sun shines upon millions of globules of
water, upon each particle is seen a most perfect representation
of the sun, so the one Soul, the one Self, the one Existence of
the universe, being reflected on all these numerous globules of
varying names and forms, appears to be various. But it is in
reality only one. There is no "I" nor "you"; it is all one. It
is either all "I" or all "you". This idea of duality, calf two,
is entirely false, and the whole universe, as we ordinarily know
it, is the result of this false knowledge. When discrimination
comes and man finds there are not two but one, he finds that he
is himself this universe. "It is I who am this universe as it
now exists, a continuous mass of change. It is I who am beyond
all changes, beyond all qualities, the eternally perfect, the
eternally blessed."
There is, therefore, but one Atman, one Self, eternally pure,
eternally perfect, unchangeable, unchanged; it has never
changed; and all these various changes in the universe are but
appearances in that one Self.
Upon it name and form have painted all these dreams; it is the
form that makes the wave different from the sea. Suppose the
wave subsides, will the form remain? No, it will vanish. The
existence of the wave was entirely dependent upon the existence
of the sea, but the existence of the sea was not at all
dependent upon the existence of the wave. The form remains so
long as the wave remains, but as soon as the wave leaves it, it
vanishes, it cannot remain. This name and form is the outcome of
what is called Maya. It is this Maya that is making individuals,
making one appear different from another. Yet it has no
existence. Maya cannot be said to exist. Form cannot be said to
exist, because it depends upon the existence of another thing.
It cannot be said as not to exist, seeing that it makes all this
difference. According to the Advaita philosophy, then, this Maya
or ignorance - or name and form, or, as it has been called in
Europe, "time, space, and causality" - is out of this one
Infinite Existence showing us the manifoldness of the universe;
in substance, this universe is one. So long as anyone thinks
that there are two ultimate realities, he is mistaken. When he
has come to know that there is but one, he is right. This is
what is being proved to us every day, on the physical plane, on
the mental plane, and also on the spiritual plane. Today it has
been demonstrated that you and I, the sun, the moon, and the
stars are but the different names of different spots in the same
ocean of matter, and that this matter is continuously changing
in its configuration. This particle of energy that was in the
sun several months ago may be in the human being now; tomorrow
it may be in an animal, the day after tomorrow it may be in a
plant. It is ever coming and going. It is all one unbroken,
infinite mass of matter, only differentiated by names and forms.
One point is called the sun; another, the moon; another, the
stars; another, man; another, animal; another, plant; and so on.
And all these names are fictitious; they have no reality,
because the whole is a continuously changing mass of matter.
This very same universe, from another standpoint, is an ocean of
thought, where each one of us is a point called a particular
mind. You are a mind, I am a mind, everyone is a mind; and the
very same universe viewed from the standpoint of knowledge, when
the eyes have been cleared of delusions, when the mind has
become pure, appears to be the unbroken Absolute Being, the ever
pure, the unchangeable, the immortal.
What then becomes of all this threefold eschatology of the
dualist, that when a man dies he goes to heaven, or goes to this
or that sphere, and that the wicked persons become ghosts, and
become animals, and so forth? None comes and none goes, says the
non-dualist. How can you come and go? You are infinite; where is
the place for you to go? In a certain school a number of little
children were being examined. The examiner had foolishly put all
sorts of difficult questions to the little children. Among
others there was this question: "Why does not the earth fall?"
His intention was to bring out the idea of gravitation or some
other intricate scientific truth from these children. Most of
them could not even understand the question, and so they gave
all sorts of wrong answers. But one bright little girl answered
it with another question: "Where shall it fall?" The very
question of the examiner was nonsense on the face of it. There
is no up and down in the universe; the idea is only relative. So
it is with regard to the soul; the very question of birth and
death in regard to it is utter nonsense. Who goes and who comes?
Where are you not? Where is the heaven that you are not in
already? Omnipresent is the Self of man. Where is it to go?
Where is it not to go? It is everywhere. So all this childish
dream and puerile illusion of birth and death, of heavens and
higher heavens and lower worlds, all vanish immediately for the
perfect. For the nearly perfect it vanishes after showing them
the several scenes up to Brahmaloka. It continues for the
ignorant.
How is it that the whole world believes in going to heaven, and
in dying and being born? I am studying a book, page after page
is being read and turned over. Another page comes and is turned
over. Who changes? Who comes and goes? Not I, but the book. This
whole nature is a book before the soul, chapter after chapter is
being read and turned over, and every now and then a scene
opens. That is read and turned over. A fresh one comes, but the
soul is ever the same - eternal. It is nature that is changing,
not the soul of man. This never changes. Birth and death are in
nature, not in you. Yet the ignorant are deluded; just as we
under delusion think that the sun is moving and not the earth,
in exactly the same way we think that we are dying, and not
nature. These are all, therefore, hallucinations. Just as it is
a hallucination when we think that the fields are moving and not
the railway train, exactly in the same manner is the
hallucination of birth and death. When men are in a certain
frame of mind, they see this very existence as the earth, as the
sun, the moon, the stars; and all those who are in the same
state of mind see the same things. Between you and me there may
be millions of beings on different planes of existence. They
will never see us, nor we them; we only see those who are in the
same state of mind and on the same plane with us. Those musical
instruments respond which have the same attunement of vibration,
as it were; if the state of vibration, which they call
"man-vibration", should be changed, no longer would men be seen
here; the whole "man-universe" would vanish, and instead of
that, other scenery would come before us, perhaps gods and the
god-universe, or perhaps, for the wicked man, devils and the
diabolic world; but all would be only different views of the one
universe. It is this universe which, from the human plane, is
seen as the earth, the sun, the moon, the stars, and all such
things - it is this very universe which, seen from the plane of
wickedness, appears as a place of punishment. And this very
universe is seen as heaven by those who want to see it as
heaven. Those who have been dreaming of going to a God who is
sitting on a throne, and of standing there praising Him all
their lives, when they die, will simply see a vision of what
they have in their minds; this very universe will simply change
into a vast heaven, with all sorts of winged beings flying about
and a God sitting on a throne. These heavens are all of man's
own making. So what the dualist says is true, says the Advaitin,
but it is all simply of his own making. These spheres and devils
and gods and reincarnations and transmigrations are all
mythology; so also is this human life. The great mistake that
men always make is to think that this life alone is true. They
understand it well enough when other things are called
mythologies, but are never willing to admit the same of their
own position. The whole thing as it appears is mere mythology,
and the greatest of all lies is that we are bodies, which we
never were nor even can be. It is the greatest of all lies that
we are mere men; we are the God of the universe. In worshipping
God we have been always worshipping our own hidden Self. The
worst lie that you ever tell yourself is that you were born a
sinner or a wicked man. He alone is a sinner who sees a sinner
in another man. Suppose there is a baby here, and you place a
bag of gold on the table. Suppose a robber comes and takes the
gold away. To the baby it is all the same; because there is no
robber inside, there is no robber outside. To sinners and vile
men, there is vileness outside, but not to good men. So the
wicked see this universe as a hell, and the partially good see
it as heaven, while the perfect beings realise it as God
Himself. Then alone the veil falls from the eyes, and the man,
purified and cleansed, finds his whole vision changed. The bad
dreams that have been torturing him for millions of years, all
vanish, and he who was thinking of himself either as a man, or a
god, or a demon, he who was thinking of himself as living in low
places, in high places, on earth, in heaven, and so on, finds
that he is really omnipresent; that all time is in him, and that
he is not in time; that all the heavens are in him, that he is
not in any heaven; and that all the gods that man ever
worshipped are in him, and that he is not in any one of those
gods. He was the manufacturer of gods and demons, of men and
plants and animals and stones, and the real nature of man now
stands unfolded to him as being higher than heaven, more perfect
than this universe of ours, more infinite than infinite time,
more omnipresent than the omnipresent ether. Thus alone man
becomes fearless, and becomes free. Then all delusions cease,
all miseries vanish, all fears come to an end for ever. Birth
goes away and with it death; pains fly, and with them fly away
pleasures; earths vanish, and with them vanish heavens; bodies
vanish, and with them vanishes the mind also. For that man
disappears the whole universe, as it were. This searching,
moving, continuous struggle of forces stops for ever, and that
which was manifesting itself as force and matter, as struggles
of nature, as nature itself, as heavens and earths and plants
and animals and men and angels, all that becomes transfigured
into one infinite, unbreakable, unchangeable existence, and the
knowing man finds that he is one with that existence. "Even as
clouds of various colours come before the sky, remain there for
a second and then vanish away," even so before this soul are all
these visions coming, of earths and heavens, of the moon and the
gods, of pleasures and pains; but they all pass away leaving the
one infinite, blue, unchangeable sky. The sky never changes; it
is the clouds that change. It is a mistake to think that the sky
is changed. It is a mistake to think that we are impure, that we
are limited, that we are separate. The real man is the one Unit
Existence.
Two questions now arise. The first is: "Is it possible to
realise this? So far it is doctrine, philosophy, but is it
possible to realise it?" It is. There are men still living in
this world for whom delusion has vanished forever. Do they
immediately die after such realisation? Not so soon as we should
think. Two wheels joined by one pole are running together. If I
get hold of one of the wheels and, with an axe, cut the pole
asunder, the wheel which I have got hold of stops, but upon the
other wheel is its past momentum, so it runs on a little and
then falls down. This pure and perfect being, the soul, is one
wheel, and this external hallucination of body and mind is the
other wheel, joined together by the pole of work, of Karma.
Knowledge is the axe which will sever the bond between the two,
and the wheel of the soul will stop - stop thinking that it is
coming and going, living and dying, stop thinking that it is
nature and has wants and desires, and will find that it is
perfect, desireless. But upon the other wheel, that of the body
and mind, will be the momentum of past acts; so it will live for
some time, until that momentum of past work is exhausted, until
that momentum is worked away, and then the body and mind fall,
and the soul becomes free. No more is there any going to heaven
and coming back, not even any going to the Brahmaloka, or to any
of the highest of the spheres, for where is he to come from, or
to go to? The man who has in this life attained to this state,
for whom, for a minute at least, the ordinary vision of the
world has changed and the reality has been apparent, he is
called the "Living Free". This is the goal of the Vedantin, to
attain freedom while living.
Once in Western India I was travelling in the desert country on
the coast of the Indian Ocean. For days and days I used to
travel on foot through the desert, but it was to my surprise
that I saw every day beautiful lakes, with trees all round them,
and the shadows of the trees upside down and vibrating there.
"How wonderful it looks and they call this a desert country!" I
said to myself. Nearly a month I travelled, seeing these
wonderful lakes and trees and plants. One day I was very thirsty
and wanted to have a drink of water, so I started to go to one
of these clear, beautiful lakes, and as I approached, it
vanished. And with a flash it came to my brain, "This is the
mirage about which I have read all my life," and with that came
also the idea that throughout the whole of this month, every
day, I had been seeing the mirage and did not know it. The next
morning I began my march. There was again the lake, but with it
came also the idea that it was the mirage and not a true lake.
So is it with this universe. We are all travelling in this
mirage of the world day after day, month after month, year after
year, not knowing that it is a mirage. One day it will break up,
but it will come back again; the body has to remain under the
power of past Karma, and so the mirage will come back. This
world will come back upon us so long as we are bound by Karma:
men, women, animals, plants, our attachments and duties, all
will come back to us, but not with the same power. Under the
influence of the new knowledge the strength of Karma will be
broken, its poison will be lost. It becomes transformed, for
along with it there comes the idea that we know it now, that the
sharp distinction between the reality and the mirage has been
known.
This world will not then be the same world as before. There is,
however, a danger here. We see in every country people taking up
this philosophy and saying, "I am beyond all virtue and vice; so
I am not bound by any moral laws; I may do anything I like." You
may find many fools in this country at the present time, saying,
"I am not bound; I am God Himself; let me do anything I like."
This is not right, although it is true that the soul is beyond
all laws, physical, mental, or moral. Within law is bondage;
beyond law is freedom. It is also true that freedom is of the
nature of the soul, it is its birthright: that real freedom of
the soul shines through veils of matter in the form of the
apparent freedom of man. Every moment of your life you feel that
you are free. We cannot live, talk, or breathe for a moment
without feeling that we are free; but, at the same time, a
little thought shows us that we are like machines and not free.
What is true then? Is this idea of freedom a delusion? One party
holds that the idea of freedom is a delusion; another says that
the idea of bondage is a delusion. How does this happen? Man is
really free, the real man cannot but be free. It is when he
comes into the world of Maya, into name and form, that he
becomes bound. Free will is a misnomer. Will can never be free.
How can it be? It is only when the real man has become bound
that his will comes into existence, and not before. The will of
man is bound, but that which is the foundation of that will is
eternally free. So, even in the state of bondage which we call
human life or god-life, on earth or in heaven, there yet remains
to us that recollection of the freedom which is ours by divine
right. And consciously or unconsciously we are all struggling
towards it. When a man has attained his own freedom, how can he
be bound by any law? No law in this universe can bind him, for
this universe itself is his.
He is the whole universe. Either say he is the whole universe or
say that to him there is no universe. How can he have then all
these little ideas about sex and about country? How can he say,
I am a man, I am a woman I am a child? Are they not lies? He
knows that they are. How can he say that these are man's rights,
and these others are woman's rights? Nobody has rights; nobody
separately exists. There is neither man nor woman; the soul is
sexless, eternally pure. It is a lie to say that I am a man or a
woman, or to say that I belong to this country or that. All the
world is my country, the whole universe is mine, because I have
clothed myself with it as my body. Yet we see that there are
people in this world who are ready to assert these doctrines,
and at the same time do things which we should call filthy; and
if we ask them why they do so, they tell us that it is our
delusion and that they can do nothing wrong. What is the test by
which they are to be judged? The test is here.
Though evil and good are both conditioned manifestations of the
soul, yet evil is the most external coating, and good is the
nearer coating of the real man, the Self. And unless a man cuts
through the layer of evil he cannot reach the layer of good, and
unless he has passed through both the layers of good and evil he
cannot reach the Self. He who reaches the Self, what remains
attached to him? A little Karma, a little bit of the momentum of
past life, but it is all good momentum. Until the bad momentum
is entirely worked out and past impurities are entirely burnt,
it is impossible for any man to see and realise truth. So, what
is left attached to the man who has reached the Self and seen
the truth is the remnant of the good impressions of past life,
the good momentum. Even if he lives in the body and works
incessantly, he works only to do good; his lips speak only
benediction to all; his hands do only good works; his mind can
only think good thoughts; his presence is a blessing wherever he
goes. He is himself a living blessing. Such a man will, by his
very presence, change even the most wicked persons into saints.
Even if he does not speak, his very presence will be a blessing
to mankind. Can such men do any evil; can they do wicked deeds?
There is, you must remember, all the difference of pole to pole
between realisation and mere talking. Any fool can talk. Even
parrots talk. Talking is one thing, and realising is another.
Philosophies, and doctrines, and arguments, and books, and
theories, and churches, and sects, and all these things are good
in their own way; but when that realisation comes, these things
drop away. For instance, maps are good, but when you see the
country itself, and look again at the maps, what a great
difference you find! So those that have realised truth do not
require the ratiocinations of logic and all other gymnastics of
the intellect to make them understand the truth; it is to them
the life of their lives, concretised, made more than tangible.
It is, as the sages of the Vedanta say, "even as a fruit in your
hand"; you can stand up and say, it is here. So those that have
realised the truth will stand up and say, "Here is the Self".
You may argue with them by the year, but they will smile at you;
they will regard it all as child's prattle; they will let the
child prattle on. They have realised the truth and are full.
Suppose you have seen a country, and another man comes to you
and tries to argue with you that that country never existed, he
may go on arguing indefinitely, but your only attitude of mind
towards him must be to hold that the man is fit for a lunatic
asylum. So the man of realisation says, "All this talk in the
world about its little religions is but prattle; realisation is
the soul, the very essence of religion." Religion can be
realised. Are you ready? Do you want it? You will get the
realisation if you do, and then you will be truly religious.
Until you have attained realisation there is no difference
between you and atheists. The atheists are sincere, but the man
who says that he believes in religion and never attempts to
realise it is not sincere.
The next question is to know what comes after realisation.
Suppose we have realised this oneness of the universe, that we
are that one Infinite Being, and suppose we have realised that
this Self is the only Existence and that it is the same Self
which is manifesting in all these various phenomenal forms, what
becomes of us after that? Shall we become inactive, get into a
corner and sit down there and die away? "What good will it do to
the world?" That old question! In the first place, why should it
do good to the world? Is there any reason why it should? What
right has any one to ask the question, "What good will it do to
the world?" What is meant by that? A baby likes candies. Suppose
you are conducting investigations in connection with some
subject of electricity and the baby asks you, "Does it buy
candies?" "No" you answer. "Then what good will it do?" says the
baby. So men stand up and say, "What good will this do to the
world; will it give us money?" "No." "Then what good is there in
it?" That is what men mean by doing good to the world. Yet
religious realisation does all the good to the world. People are
afraid that when they attain to it, when they realise that there
is but one, the fountains of love will be dried up, that
everything in life will go away, and that all they love will
vanish for them, as it were, in this life and in the life to
come. People never stop to think that those who bestowed the
least thought on their own individualities have been the
greatest workers in the world. Then alone a man loves when he
finds that the object of his love is not any low, little, mortal
thing. Then alone a man loves when he finds that the object of
his love is not a clod of earth, but it is the veritable God
Himself. The wife will love the husband the more when she thinks
that the husband is God Himself. The husband will love the wife
the more when he knows that the wife is God Himself. That mother
will love the children more who thinks that the children are God
Himself. That man will love his greatest enemy who knows that
that very enemy is God Himself. That man will love a holy man
who knows that the holy man is God Himself, and that very man
will also love the unholiest of men because he knows the
background of that unholiest of men is even He, the Lord. Such a
man becomes a world-mover for whom his little self is dead and
God stands in its place. The whole universe will become
transfigured to him. That which is painful and miserable will
all vanish; struggles will all depart and go. Instead of being a
prison-house, where we every day struggle and fight and compete
for a morsel of bread, this universe will then be to us a
playground. Beautiful will be this universe then! Such a man
alone has the right to stand up and say, "How beautiful is this
world!" He alone has the right to say that it is all good. This
will be the great good to the world resulting from such
realisation, that instead of this world going on with all its
friction and clashing, if all mankind today realise only a bit
of that great truth, the aspect of the whole world will be
changed, and, in place of fighting and quarrelling, there would
be a reign of peace. This indecent and brutal hurry which forces
us to go ahead of everyone else will then vanish from the world.
With it will vanish all struggle, with it will vanish all hate,
with it will vanish all jealousy, and all evil will vanish away
forever. Gods will live then upon this earth. This very earth
will then become heaven, and what evil can there be when gods
are playing with gods, when gods are working with gods, and gods
are loving gods? That is the great utility of divine
realisation. Everything that you see in society will be changed
and transfigured then. No more will you think of man as evil;
and that is the first great gain. No more will you stand up and
sneeringly cast a glance at a poor man or woman who has made a
mistake. No more, ladies, will you look down with contempt upon
the poor woman who walks the street in the night, because you
will see even there God Himself. No more will you think of
jealousy and punishments. They will all vanish; and love, the
great ideal of love, will be so powerful that no whip and cord
will be necessary to guide mankind aright.
If one millionth part of the men and women who live in this
world simply sit down and for a few minutes say, "You are all
God, O ye men and O ye animals and living beings, you are all
the manifestations of the one living Deity!" the whole world
will be changed in half an hour. Instead of throwing tremendous
bomb-shells of hatred into every corner, instead of projecting
currents of jealousy and of evil thought, in every country
people will think that it is all He. He is all that you see and
feel. How can you see evil until there is evil in you? How can
you see the thief, unless he is there, sitting in the heart of
your heart? How can you see the murderer until you are yourself
the murderer? Be good, and evil will vanish for you. The whole
universe will thus be changed. This is the greatest gain to
society. This is the great gain to the human organism. These
thoughts were thought out, worked out amongst individuals in
ancient times in India. For various reasons, such as the
exclusiveness of the teachers and foreign conquest, those
thoughts were not allowed to spread. Yet they are grand truths;
and wherever they have been working, man has become divine. My
whole life has been changed by the touch of one of these divine
men, about whom I am going to speak to you next Sunday; and the
time is coming when these thoughts will be cast abroad over the
whole world. Instead of living in monasteries, instead of being
confined to books of philosophy to be studied only by the
learned, instead of being the exclusive possession of sects and
of a few of the learned, they will all be sown broadcast over
the whole world, so that they may become the common property of
the saint and the sinner, of men and women and children, of the
learned and of the ignorant. They will then permeate the
atmosphere of the world, and the very air that we breathe will
say with every one of its pulsations, "Thou art That". And the
whole universe with its myriads of suns and moons, through
everything that speaks, with one voice will say, "Thou art
That".
Practical Vedanta and other lectures
PRACTICAL VEDANTA: PART I
(Delivered in London, 10th November 1896)
I have been asked to say something about the practical position
of the Vedanta philosophy. As I have told you, theory is very
good indeed, but how are we to carry it into practice? If it be
absolutely impracticable, no theory is of any value whatever,
except as intellectual gymnastics. The Vedanta, therefore, as a
religion must be intensely practical. We must be able to carry
it out in every part of our lives. And not only this, the
fictitious differentiation between religion and the life of the
world must vanish, for the Vedanta teaches oneness - one life
throughout. The ideals of religion must cover the whole field of
life, they must enter into all our thoughts, and more and more
into practice. I will enter gradually on the practical side as
we proceed. But this series of lectures is intended to be a
basis, and so we must first apply ourselves to theories and
understand how they are worked out, proceeding from forest caves
to busy streets and cities; and one peculiar feature we find is
that many of these thoughts have been the outcome, not of
retirement into forests, but have emanated from persons whom we
expect to lead the busiest lives - from ruling monarchs.
Shvetaketu was the son of Âruni, a sage, most probably a
recluse. He was brought up in the forest, but he went to the
city of the Panchâlas and appeared at the court of the king,
Pravâhana Jaivali. The king asked him, "Do you know how beings
depart hence at death?" "No, sir." "Do you know how they return
hither?" "No, sir." "Do you know the way of the fathers and the
way of the gods?" "No, sir." Then the king asked other
questions. Shvetaketu could not answer them. So the king told
him that he knew nothing. The boy went back to his father, and
the father admitted that he himself could not answer these
questions. It was not that he was unwilling to answer these
questions. It was not that he was unwilling to teach the boy,
but he did not know these things. So he went to the king and
asked to be taught these secrets. The king said that these
things had been hitherto known only among kings; the priests
never knew them. He, however, proceeded to teach him what he
desired to know. In various Upanishads we find that this Vedanta
philosophy is not the outcome of meditation in the forests only,
but that the very best parts of it were thought out and
expressed by brains which were busiest in the everyday affairs
of life. We cannot conceive any man busier than an absolute
monarch, a man who is ruling over millions of people, and yet,
some of these rulers were deep thinkers.
Everything goes to show that this philosophy must be very
practical; and later on, when we come to the Bhagavad-Gita -
most of you, perhaps, have read it, it is the best commentary we
have on the Vedanta philosophy - curiously enough the scene is
laid on the battlefield, where Krishna teaches this philosophy
to Arjuna; and the doctrine which stands out luminously in every
page of the Gita is intense activity, but in the midst of it,
eternal calmness. This is the secret of work, to attain which is
the goal of the Vedanta. Inactivity, as we understand it in the
sense of passivity, certainly cannot be the goal. Were it so,
then the walls around us would be the most intelligent; they are
inactive. Clods of earth, stumps of trees, would be the greatest
sages in the world; they are inactive. Nor does inactivity
become activity when it is combined with passion. Real activity,
which is the goal of Vedanta, is combined with eternal calmness,
the calmness which cannot be ruffled, the balance of mind which
is never disturbed, whatever happens. And we all know from our
experience in life that that is the best attitude for work.
I have been asked many times how we can work if we do not have
the passion which we generally feel for work. I also thought in
that way years ago, but as I am growing older, getting more
experience, I find it is not true. The less passion there is,
the better we work. The calmer we are, the better for us, and
the more the amount of work we can do. When we let loose our
feelings, we waste so much energy, shatter our nerves, disturb
our minds, and accomplish very little work. The energy which
ought to have gone out as work is spent as mere feeling, which
counts for nothing. It is only when the mind is very calm and
collected that the whole of its energy is spent in doing good
work. And if you read the lives of the great workers which the
world has produced, you will find that they were wonderfully
calm men. Nothing, as it were, could throw them off their
balance. That is why the man who becomes angry never does a
great amount of work, and the man whom nothing can make angry
accomplishes so much. The man who gives way to anger, or hatred,
or any other passion, cannot work; he only breaks himself to
pieces, and does nothing practical. It is the calm, forgiving,
equable, well-balanced mind that does the greatest amount of
work.
The Vedanta preaches the ideal; and the ideal, as we know, is
always far ahead of the real, of the practical, as we may call
it. There are two tendencies in human nature: one to harmonise
the ideal with the life, and the other to elevate the life to
the ideal. It is a great thing to understand this, for the
former tendency is the temptation of our lives. I think that I
can only do a certain class of work. Most of it, perhaps, is
bad; most of it, perhaps, has a motive power of passion behind
it, anger, or greed, or selfishness. Now if any man comes to
preach to me a certain ideal, the first step towards which is to
give up selfishness, to give up self-enjoyment, I think that is
impractical. But when a man brings an ideal which can be
reconciled with my selfishness, I am glad at once and jump at
it. That is the ideal for me. As the word "orthodox" has been
manipulated into various forms, so has been the word
"practical". "My doxy is orthodoxy; your doxy is heterodoxy." So
with practicality. What I think is practical, is to me the only
practicality in the world. If I am a shopkeeper, I think shop
keeping the only practical pursuit in the world. If I am a
thief, I think stealing is the best means of being practical;
others are not practical. You see how we all use this word
practical for things we like and can do. Therefore I will ask
you to understand that Vedanta, though it is intensely
practical, is always so in the sense of the ideal. It does not
preach an impossible ideal, however high it be, and it is high
enough for an ideal. In one word, this ideal is that you are
divine, "Thou art That". This is the essence of Vedanta; after
all its ramifications and intellectual gymnastics, you know the
human soul to be pure and omniscient, you see that such
superstitions as birth and death would be entire nonsense when
spoken of in connection with the soul. The soul was never born
and will never die, and all these ideas that we are going to die
and are afraid to die are mere superstitions. And all such ideas
as that we can do this or cannot do that are superstitions. We
can do everything. The Vedanta teaches men to have faith in
themselves first. As certain religions of the world say that a
man who does not believe in a Personal God outside of himself is
an atheist, so the Vedanta says, a man who does not believe in
himself is an atheist. Not believing in the glory of our own
soul is what the Vedanta calls atheism. To many this is, no
doubt, a terrible idea; and most of us think that this ideal can
never be reached; but the Vedanta insists that it can be
realised by everyone. There is neither man nor woman or child,
nor difference of race or sex, nor anything that stands as a bar
to the realisation of the ideal, because Vedanta shows that it
is realised already, it is already there.
All the powers in the universe are already ours. It is we who
have put our hands before our eyes and cry that it is dark. Know
that there is no darkness around us. Take the hands away and
there is the light which was from the beginning. Darkness never
existed, weakness never existed. We who are fools cry that we
are weak; we who are fools cry that we are impure. Thus Vedanta
not only insists that the ideal is practical, but that it has
been so all the time; and this Ideal, this Reality, is our own
nature. Everything else that you see is false, untrue. As soon
as you say, "I am a little mortal being," you are saying
something which is not true, you are giving the lie to
yourselves, you are hypnotising yourselves into something vile
and weak and wretched.
The Vedanta recognises no sin, it only recognises error. And the
greatest error, says the Vedanta, is to say that you are weak,
that you are a sinner, a miserable creature, and that you have
no power and you cannot do this and that. Every time you think
in that way, you, as it were, rivet one more link in the chain
that binds you down, you add one more layer of hypnotism on to
your own soul. Therefore, whosoever thinks he is weak is wrong,
whosoever thinks he is impure is wrong, and is throwing a bad
thought into the world. This we must always bear in mind that in
the Vedanta there is no attempt at reconciling the present life
- the hypnotised life, this false life which we have assumed -
with the ideal; but this false life must go, and the real life
which is always existing must manifest itself, must shine out.
No man becomes purer and purer, it is a matter of greater
manifestation. The veil drops away, and the native purity of the
soul begins to manifest itself. Everything is ours already -
infinite purity, freedom, love, and power.
The Vedanta also says that not only can this be realised in the
depths of forests or caves, but by men in all possible
conditions of life. We have seen that the people who discovered
these truths were neither living in caves nor forests, nor
following the ordinary vocations of life, but men who, we have
every reason to believe, led the busiest of lives, men who had
to command armies, to sit on thrones, and look to the welfare of
millions - and all these, in the days of absolute monarchy, and
not as in these days when a king is to a great extent a mere
figurehead. Yet they could find time to think out all these
thoughts, to realise them, and to teach them to humanity. How
much more then should it be practical for us whose lives,
compared with theirs, are lives of leisure? That we cannot
realise them is a shame to us, seeing that we are comparatively
free all the time, having very little to do. My requirements are
as nothing compared with those of an ancient absolute monarch.
My wants are as nothing compared with the demands of Arjuna on
the battlefield of Kurukshetra, commanding a huge army; and yet
he could find time in the midst of the din and turmoil of battle
to talk the highest philosophy and to carry it into his life
also. Surely we ought to be able to do as much in this life of
ours - comparatively free, easy, and comfortable. Most of us
here have more time than we think we have, if we really want to
use it for good. With the amount of freedom we have we can
attain to two hundred ideals in this life, if we will, but we
must not degrade the ideal to the actual. One of the most
insinuating things comes to us in the shape of persons who
apologise for our mistakes and teach us how to make special
excuses for all our foolish wants and foolish desires; and we
think that their ideal is the only ideal we need have. But it is
not so. The Vedanta teaches no such thing. The actual should be
reconciled to the ideal, the present life should be made to
coincide with life eternal.
For you must always remember that the one central ideal of
Vedanta is this oneness. There are no two in anything, no two
lives, nor even two different kinds of life for the two worlds.
You will find the Vedas speaking of heavens and things like that
at first; but later on, when they come to the highest ideals of
their philosophy, they brush away all these things. There is but
one life, one world, one existence. Everything is that One, the
difference is in degree and not in kind. The difference between
our lives is not in kind. The Vedanta entirely denies such ideas
as that animals are separate from men, and that they were made
and created by God to be used for our food.
Some people have been kind enough to start an antivivisection
society. I asked a member, "Why do you think, my friend, that it
is quite lawful to kill animals for food, and not to kill one or
two for scientific experiments?" He replied, "Vivisection is
most horrible, but animals have been given to us for food."
Oneness includes all animals. If man's life is immortal, so also
is the animal's. The difference is only in degree and not in
kind. The amoeba and I are the same, the difference is only in
degree; and from the standpoint of the highest life, all these
differences vanish. A man may see a great deal of difference
between grass and a little tree, but if you mount very high, the
grass and the biggest tree will appear much the same. So, from
the standpoint of the highest ideal, the lowest animal and the
highest man are the same. If you believe there is a God, the
animals and the highest creatures must be the same. A God who is
partial to his children called men, and cruel to his children
called brute beasts, is worse than a demon. I would rather die a
hundred times than worship such a God. My whole life would be a
fight with such a God But there is no difference, and those who
say there is, are irresponsible, heartless people who do not
know. Here is a case of the word practical used in a wrong
sense. I myself may not be a very strict vegetarian, but I
understand the ideal. When I eat meat I know it is wrong. Even
if I am bound to eat it under certain circumstances, I know it
is cruel. I must not drag my ideal down to the actual and
apologise for my weak conduct in this way. The ideal is not to
eat flesh, not to injure any being, for all animals are my
brothers. If you can think of them as your brothers, you have
made a little headway towards the brotherhood of all souls, not
to speak of the brotherhood of man! That is child's play. You
generally find that this is not very acceptable to many, because
it teaches them to give up the actual, and go higher up to the
ideal. But if you bring out a theory which is reconciled with
their present conduct, they regard it as entirely practical.
There is this strongly conservative tendency in human nature: we
do not like to move one step forward. I think of mankind just as
I read of persons who become frozen in snow; all such, they say,
want to go to sleep, and if you try to drag them up, they say,
"Let me sleep; it is so beautiful to sleep in the snow", and
they die there in that sleep. So is our nature. That is what we
are doing all our life, getting frozen from the feet upwards,
and yet wanting to sleep. Therefore you must struggle towards
the ideal, and if a man comes who wants to bring that ideal down
to your level, and teach a religion that does not carry that
highest ideal, do not listen to him. To me that is an
impracticable religion. But if a man teaches a religion which
presents the highest ideal, I am ready for him. Beware when
anyone is trying to apologise for sense vanities and sense
weaknesses. If anyone wants to preach that way to us, poor,
sense-bound clods of earth as we have made ourselves by
following that teaching, we shall never progress. I have seen
many of these things, have had some experience of the world, and
my country is the land where religious sects grow like
mushrooms. Every year new sects arise. But one thing I have
marked, that it is only those that never want to reconcile the
man of flesh with the man of truth that make progress. Wherever
there is this false idea of reconciling fleshly vanities with
the highest ideals, of dragging down God to the level of man,
there comes decay. Man should not be degraded to worldly
slavery, but should be raised up to God.
At the same time, there is another side to the question. We must
not look down with contempt on others. All of us are going
towards the same goal. The difference between weakness and
strength is one of degree; the difference between virtue and
vice is one of degree, the difference between heaven and hell is
one of degree, the difference between life and death is one of
degree, all differences in this world are of degree, and not of
kind, because oneness is the secret of everything. All is One,
which manifests Itself, either as thought, or life, or soul, or
body, and the difference is only in degree. As such, we have no
right to look down with contempt upon those who are not
developed exactly in the same degree as we are. Condemn none; if
you can stretch out a helping hand, do so. If you cannot, fold
your hands, bless your brothers, and let them go their own way.
Dragging down and condemning is not the way to work. Never is
work accomplished in that way. We spend our energies in
condemning others. Criticism and condemnation is a vain way of
spending our energies, for in the long run we come to learn that
all are seeing the same thing, are more or less approaching the
same ideal, and that most of our differences are merely
differences of expression.
Take the idea of sin. I was telling you just now the Vedantic
idea of it, and the other idea is that man is a sinner. They are
practically the same, only the one takes the positive and the
other the negative side. One shows to man his strength and the
other his weakness. There may be weakness, says the Vedanta, but
never mind, we want to grow. Disease was found out as soon as
man was born. Everyone knows his disease; it requires no one to
tell us what our diseases are. But thinking all the time that we
are diseased will not cure us - medicine is necessary. We may
forget anything outside, we may try to become hypocrites to the
external world, but in our heart of hearts we all know our
weaknesses. But, says the Vedanta, being reminded of weakness
does not help much; give strength, and strength does not come by
thinking of weakness all the time. The remedy for weakness is
not brooding over weakness, but thinking of strength. Teach men
of the strength that is already within them. Instead of telling
them they are sinners, the Vedanta takes the opposite position,
and says, "You are pure and perfect, and what you call sin does
not belong to you." Sins are very low degrees of
Self-manifestation; manifest your Self in a high degree. That is
the one thing to remember; all of us can do that. Never say,
"No", never say, "I cannot", for you are infinite. Even time and
space are as nothing compared with your nature. You can do
anything and everything, you are almighty.
These are the principles of ethics, but we shall now come down
lower and work out the details. We shall see how this Vedanta
can be carried into our everyday life, the city life, the
country life, the national life, and the home life of every
nation. For, if a religion cannot help man wherever he may be,
wherever he stands, it is not of much use; it will remain only a
theory for the chosen few. Religion, to help mankind, must be
ready and able to help him in whatever condition he is, in
servitude or in freedom, in the depths of degradation or on the
heights of purity; everywhere, equally, it should be able to
come to his aid. The principles of Vedanta, or the ideal of
religion, or whatever you may call it, will be fulfilled by its
capacity for performing this great function.
The ideal of faith in ourselves is of the greatest help to us.
If faith in ourselves had been more extensively taught and
practiced, I am sure a very large portion of the evils and
miseries that we have would have vanished. Throughout the
history of mankind, if any motive power has been more potent
than another in the lives of all great men and women, it is that
of faith in themselves. Born with the consciousness that they
were to be great, they became great. Let a man go down as low as
possible; there must come a time when out of sheer desperation
he will take an upward curve and will learn to have faith in
himself. But it is better for us that we should know it from the
very first. Why should we have all these bitter experiences in
order to gain faith in ourselves? We can see that all the
difference between man and man is owing to the existence or
non-existence of faith in himself. Faith in ourselves will do
everything. I have experienced it in my own life, and am still
doing so; and as I grow older that faith is becoming stronger
and stronger. He is an atheist who does not believe in himself.
The old religions said that he was an atheist who did not
believe in God. The new religion says that he is the atheist who
does not believe in himself. But it is not selfish faith because
the Vedanta, again, is the doctrine of oneness. It means faith
in all, because you are all. Love for yourselves means love for
all, love for animals, love for everything, for you are all one.
It is the great faith which will make the world better. I am
sure of that. He is the highest man who can say with truth, "I
know all about myself." Do you know how much energy, how many
powers, how many forces are still lurking behind that frame of
yours? What scientist has known all that is in man? Millions of
years have passed since man first came here and yet but one
infinitesimal part of his powers has been manifested. Therefore,
you must not say that you are weak. How do you know what
possibilities lie behind that degradation on the surface? You
know but little of that which is within you. For behind you is
the ocean of infinite power and blessedness.
"This Âtman is first to be heard of." Hear day and night that
you are that Soul. Repeat it to yourselves day and night till it
enters into your very veins, till it tingles in every drop of
blood, till it is in your flesh and bone. Let the whole body be
full of that one ideal, "I am the birthless, the deathless, the
blissful, the omniscient, the omnipotent, ever-glorious Soul."
Think on it day and night; think on it till it becomes part and
parcel of your life. Meditate upon it, and out of that will come
work. "Out of the fullness of the heart the mouth speaketh," and
out of the fullness of the heart the hand worketh also. Action
will come. Fill yourselves with the ideal; whatever you do,
think well on it. All your actions will be magnified,
transformed, deified, by the very power of the thought. If
matter is powerful, thought is omnipotent. Bring this thought to
bear upon your life, fill yourselves with the thought of your
almightiness, your majesty, and your glory. Would to God no
superstitions had been put into your head! Would to God we had
not been surrounded from our birth by all these superstitious
influences and paralysing ideas of our weakness and vileness!
Would to God that mankind had had an easier path through which
to attain to the noblest and highest truths! But man had to pass
through all this; do not make the path more difficult for those
who are coming after you.
These are sometimes terrible doctrines to teach. I know people
who get frightened at these ideas, but for those who want to be
practical, this is the first thing to learn. Never tell
yourselves or others that you are weak. Do good if you can, but
do not injure the world. You know in your inmost heart that many
of your limited ideas, this humbling of yourself and praying and
weeping to imaginary beings are superstitions. Tell me one case
where these prayers have been answered. All the answers that
came were from your own hearts. You know there are no ghosts,
but no sooner are you in the dark than you feel a little creepy
sensation. That is so because in our childhood we have had all
these fearful ideas put into our heads. But do not teach these
things to others through fear of society and public opinion,
through fear of incurring the hatred of friends, or for fear of
losing cherished superstitions. Be masters of all these. What is
there to be taught more in religion than the oneness of the
universe and faith in one's self? All the works of mankind for
thousands of years past have been towards this one goal, and
mankind is yet working it out. It is your turn now and you
already know the truth. For it has been taught on all sides. Not
only philosophy and psychology, but materialistic sciences have
declared it. Where is the scientific man today who fears to
acknowledge the truth of this oneness of the universe? Who is
there who dares talk of many worlds? All these are
superstitions. There is only one life and one world, and this
one life and one world is appearing to us as manifold. This
manifoldness is like a dream. When you dream, one dream passes
away and another comes. You do not live in your dreams. The
dreams come one after another, scene after scene unfolds before
you. So it is in this world of ninety per cent misery and ten
per cent happiness. Perhaps after a while it will appear as
ninety per cent happiness, and we shall call it heaven, but a
time comes to the sage when the whole thing vanishes, and this
world appears as God Himself, and his own soul as God. It is not
therefore that there are many worlds, it is not that there are
many lives. All this manifoldness is the manifestation of that
One. That One is manifesting Himself as many, as matter, spirit,
mind, thought, and everything else. It is that One, manifesting
Himself as many. Therefore the first step for us to take is to
teach the truth to ourselves and to others.
Let the world resound with this ideal, and let superstitions
vanish. Tell it to men who are weak and persist in telling it.
You are the Pure One; awake and arise, O mighty one, this sleep
does not become you. Awake and arise, it does not befit you.
Think not that you are weak and miserable. Almighty, arise and
awake, and manifest your own nature. It is not fitting that you
think yourself a sinner. It is not fitting that you think
yourself weak. Say that to the world, say it to yourselves, and
see what a practical result comes, see how with an electric
flash everything is manifested, how everything is changed. Tell
that to mankind, and show them their power. Then we shall learn
how to apply it in our daily lives.
To be able to use what we call Viveka (discrimination), to learn
how in every moment of our lives, in every one of our actions,
to discriminate between what is right and wrong, true and false,
we shall have to know the test of truth, which is purity,
oneness. Everything that makes for oneness is truth. Love is
truth, and hatred is false, because hatred makes for
multiplicity. It is hatred that separates man from man;
therefore it is wrong and false. It is a disintegrating power;
it separates and destroys.
Love binds, love makes for that oneness. You become one, the
mother with the child, families with the city, the whole world
becomes one with the animals. For love is Existence, God
Himself; and all this is the manifestation of that One Love,
more or less expressed. The difference is only in degree, but it
is the manifestation of that One Love throughout. Therefore in
all our actions we have to judge whether it is making for
diversity or for oneness. If for diversity we have to give it
up, but if it makes for oneness we are sure it is good. So with
our thoughts; we have to decide whether they make for
disintegration, multiplicity, or for oneness, binding soul to
soul and bringing one influence to bear. If they do this, we
will take them up, and if not, we will throw them off as
criminal.
The whole idea of ethics is that it does not depend on anything
unknowable, it does not teach anything unknown, but in the
language of the Upanishad, "The God whom you worship as an
unknown God, the same I preach unto thee." It is through the
Self that you know anything. I see the chair; but to see the
chair, I have first to perceive myself and then the chair. It is
in and through the Self that the chair is perceived. It is in
and through the Self that you are known to me, that the whole
world is known to me; and therefore to say this Self is unknown
is sheer nonsense. Take off the Self and the whole universe
vanishes. In and through the Self all knowledge comes. Therefore
it is the best known of all. It is yourself, that which you call
I. You may wonder how this I of me can be the I of you. You may
wonder how this limited I can be the unlimited Infinite, but it
is so. The limited is a mere fiction. The Infinite has been
covered up, as it were, and a little of It is manifesting as the
I. Limitation can never come upon the unlimited; it is a
fiction. The Self is known, therefore, to every one of us - man,
woman, or child - and even to animals. Without knowing Him we
can neither live nor move, nor have our being; without knowing
this Lord of all, we cannot breathe or live a second. The God of
the Vedanta is the most known of all and is not the outcome of
imagination.
If this is not preaching a practical God, how else could you
teach a practical God? Where is there a more practical God than
He whom I see before me - a God omnipresent, in every being,
more real than our senses? For you are He, the Omnipresent God
Almighty, the Soul of your souls, and if I say you are not, I
tell an untruth. I know it, whether at all times I realise it or
not. He is the Oneness, the Unity of all, the Reality of all
life and all existence.
These ideas of the ethics of Vedanta have to be worked out in
detail, and, therefore, you must have patience. As I have told
you, we want to take the subject in detail and work it up
thoroughly, to see how the ideas grow from very low ideals, and
how the one great Ideal of oneness has developed and become
shaped into the universal love; and we ought to study these in
order to avoid dangers. The world cannot find time to work it up
from the lowest steps. But what is the use of our standing on
higher steps if we cannot give the truth to others coming
afterwards? Therefore, it is better to study it in all its
workings; and first, it is absolutely necessary to clear the
intellectual portion, although we know that intellectuality is
almost nothing; for it is the heart that is of most importance.
It is through the heart that the Lord is seen, and not through
the intellect. The intellect is only the street-cleaner,
cleansing the path for us, a secondary worker, the policeman;
but the policeman is not a positive necessity for the workings
of society. He is only to stop disturbances, to check
wrong-doing, and that is all the work required of the intellect.
When you read intellectual books, you think when you have
mastered them, "Bless the Lord that I am out of them", because
the intellect is blind and cannot move of itself, it has neither
hands nor feet. It is feeling that works, that moves with speed
infinitely superior to that of electricity or anything else. Do
you feel? - that is the question. If you do, you will see the
Lord: It is the feeling that you have today that will be
intensified, deified, raised to the highest platform, until it
feels everything, the oneness in everything, till it feels God
in itself and in others. The intellect can never do that.
"Different methods of speaking words, different methods of
explaining the texts of books, these are for the enjoyment of
the learned, not for the salvation of the soul"
(Vivekachudâmani, 58).
Those of you who have read Thomas a Kempis know how in every
page he insists on this, and almost every holy man in the world
has insisted on it. Intellect is necessary, for without it we
fall into crude errors and make all sorts of mistakes. Intellect
checks these; but beyond that, do not try to build anything upon
it. It is an inactive, secondary help; the real help is feeling,
love. Do you feel for others? If you do, you are growing in
oneness. If you do not feel for others, you may be the most
intellectual giant ever born, but you will be nothing; you are
but dry intellect, and you will remain so. And if you feel, even
if you cannot read any book and do not know any language, you
are in the right way. The Lord is yours.
Do you not know from the history of the world where the power of
the prophets lay? Where was it? In the intellect? Did any of
them write a fine book on philosophy, on the most intricate
ratiocinations of logic? Not one of them. They only spoke a few
words. Feel like Christ and you will be a Christ; feel like
Buddha and you will be a Buddha. It is feeling that is the life,
the strength, the vitality, without which no amount of
intellectual activity can reach God. Intellect is like limbs
without the power of locomotion. It is only when feeling enters
and gives them motion that they move and work on others. That is
so all over the world, and it is a thing which you must always
remember. It is one of the most practical things in Vedantic
morality, for it is the teaching of the Vedanta that you are all
prophets, and all must be prophets. The book is not the proof of
your conduct, but you are the proof of the book. How do you know
that a book teaches truth? Because you are truth and feel it.
That is what the Vedanta says. What is the proof of the Christs
and Buddhas of the world? That you and I feel like them. That is
how you and I understand that they were true. Our prophet-soul
is the proof of their prophet-soul. Your godhead is the proof of
God Himself. If you are not a prophet, there never has been
anything true of God. If you are not God, there never was any
God, and never will be. This, says the Vedanta, is the ideal to
follow. Every one of us will have to become a prophet, and you
are that already. Only know it. Never think there is anything
impossible for the soul. It is the greatest heresy to think so.
If there is sin, this is the only sin - to say that you are
weak, or others are weak.