SWAMI
VIVEKANANDA
A
GREAT LEGACY BUT LESS POPULARISED
by BALAYOGI
He
heralded meaningful
understanding of Sanathana Dharma
on
the world stage.
SWAMI VIVEKANNADA was the
great sage who initiated the orientation of the west towards understanding the
oriental philosophies and culture. He single handedly and with great ease heralded
the modernization, manifestation and meaningful understanding of Sanathan
Dharma with all the concepts of intrinsic value to life on the world stage.
The
first great Motivational Guru
Then emboldened by his very own
motivations, for I consider him as the
first great Motivational Guru, never to get bogged down by anything I
decided to present this small write up and invariably when one writes about
such great souls one cannot avoid using their own words to depict the many
ideals and realities which they emphasized for the happy and harmonious living
of everyone and environment.
Thus this whole write up is just
made up mostly of Swami Vivekananda’s
own words with some humble interpretations or at best one may label it as
mere titling with different
nomenclatures.
Being
a sage who always insisted on speaking and following the heartfelt and
spiritually correct truth, he never resorted to play politics and therefore
declared facts as they were without any hypocritical and diplomatic pandering
to popular opinion or pleasing preaching to either the Indians or the
Westerners.
His legacy does not need sponsoring
by lesser mortals
who have decided our history books.
This being the case, albeit unfortunate,
it is no wonder that SWAMI VIVEKANANDA does not occupy great space in our
history books and biographies of nationalists, patriots and philosophers etc.
It is perhaps the curse of this land that great and good souls are not
officially anointed and appreciated but then the legacy that they have left is
so great that it does not require sponsoring by these lesser mortals parading
their parochial agenda and pandering the pats from their pay masters.
He
never hesitated to acknowledge fact and frankly
declare them
as they were.
One great and unique lesson that Swami Vivekananda
taught through his life was that he never hesitated not only to see and accept
facts as they were unmindful of whether they would contradict anything that he
was following close to his heart but he also frankly gave his views and spelt
out his feelings about those facts ,even if it meant confronting pet beliefs of
his followers. Here are a few examples.
The mistake of Indian Priests
“One thing can be said for these Indian
priests - they were not, and never are, intolerant of religion; they never have
persecuted religion. Any man was allowed to preach against them. Theirs is such
a religion; they never molested any one for his religious views. But they
suffered from the peculiar weakness of all priests: they also sought power,
they also promulgated rules and regulations and made religion unnecessarily
complicated, and thereby undermined the strength of those who followed their
religion”. (CW, Vol.8: Buddha's Message to the World, p.97)
“Priests
are an evil in every country because they denounce and criticise, pulling at
one string to mend it until two or three others are out of place. Love never
denounces, only ambition does that. There is
no such thing as " righteous "anger
of justifiable killing”.(from one of hi speeches)
The Smritis and Puranas are productions of
people
of limited intelligence
“The
Smritis and Puranas are productions of people of limited intelligence and are
full of fallacies, errors, and the feelings of class and malice. Only parts of them
breathing broadness of spirit and love are acceptable; the rest are to be rejected.
The Upanishads and the Gita are the true scriptures.”
( CW, Vol.6: Letter to
Pramadadas Mitra from Almora, May 30, 1897, pp.393-394.)
Truths
have been revealed to saints and seers
in accordance with their own
various
levels of consciousness
“[There
are] various levels and kinds of spiritual consciousness and of the
superimposition or projection (adhyasa) of these inner states of being upon
external nature creating, as it were, the universes experienced at different
stages of spiritual awareness. It is thus that various truths have been
revealed to saints and seers in accordance with their own various levels of
consciousness and points of view - all of them equally valid, none of them
revelations of absolute Truth, of which there can be no description and no
revealer”
“Truth can be stated in a thousand different ways, yet each one
can be true.”
Truth is always uncomfortable
“Comfort” is no test of truth; on the contrary,
truth is often far from being
“comfortable.”
“ Everything
can be sacrificed for truth, but truth can't be sacrificed for anything.”
“ Truth is strengthening. Truth is purity, Truth is all knowledge. Truth must be
strengthening, must be enlightening, must be invigorating.”
“Truth always triumphs, and this is true”. “Through truth everything is
attained.”
Don’t
believe anything blindly
“ Test everything, try everything, and then
believe it,
and if you
find it for the good of many, give it
to all.”
Linguistic hurdles to realization
“This
Sanskrit language is so intricate, the Sanskrit of the Vedas is so ancient, and
the Sanskrit philology so perfect, that any amount of discussion can be carried
on for ages in regard to the meaning of any word. If pandits takes it into
their heads, they can render anybody’s prattle into correct Sanskrit by force
of argument and quotation of texts and rules. These are the difficulties in our
way of understanding the Upanishads”.( CW, Vol.3: The Vedanta in Its
Application to Indian Life, p.233.)
“[Having]
an idea of studying the grammar of the Vedas I began with all
earnestness to study Panini and the
Mahabhashya, but to my surprise I found
that the best part of the Vedic grammar
consists only of exceptions to the
rules. A rule is make and later there
comes a statement to the effect, "This
rule will be an exception". So you
see what an amount of liberty there is for
anybody to write anything, the only
safeguard being the dictionary of Yaksa.
Still, in this you will find, for the
most part, but a large number of
Synonyms”.(. CW, Vol.3: The Vedanta in
All Its Phases, p.329.)
Even the
faults of a guru must be told
“Our
great commentators, Shankaracharya, Ramanujacharaya and
Madhvacharya… committed mistakes. Each
one believed that the Upanishads are the sole authority, but thought that they
preached one thing, one path only.
Thus Shankaracharya committed the mistake
of supposing that the whole of
the Upanishads taught one thing, which
was Advaitism and nothing else; and
wherever a passage bearing distinctly the
Dvaita idea occurred, he twisted and
tortured the meaning to make it support
his own theory. So with Ramanuja and
Madhvacharya when a pure Advaitic text
occurred. It was perfectly true that
the Upanishads had one thing to teach,
but that was taught as a going up from
one step to another”.( CW, Vol.3:
Vedantism, p.439.)
“I
am bound to tell you that [thinking that the three systems are contradictory] has
been a mistake committed by not a few. We find that an Advaitist teacher keeps
intact those texts which especially teach Advaitism and tries to interpret the
dualistic or qualified non-dualistic texts into his own meaning. Similarly, we find
dualistic teachers trying to read their dualistic meaning into Advaitic texts.
Our gurus were great men and women; yet there is a saying, "Even the faults
of a guru must be told." I am of the opinion that in this only they were mistaken.
We need not go into text-torturing, we need not go into any sort of religious
dishonesty, we need not go into any sort of grammatical twaddle, we not go
about trying to put our own ideas into texts that were never meant for them;
but the work is plain and becomes easier once you understand the marvelous
doctrine of adhikarabheda…. The old idea of arundhati nyaya applies. To show
someone the fine star arundhati, one takes the big and brilliant star nearest
to it, upon which he or she is asked to fix his or her eyes first, and then it
becomes quite easy to direct his or her sight to arundhati. This is the task
before us; and to prove my idea I will have simply to show you the Upanishads,
and you will see it”.( CW, Vol.3: The Vedanta, pp.397-398)
Shraddha
may be performed mentally.
“Yet no Hindu who loves his or her
religion, his or her country, his or her past and his or her great forebears should
give up shraddha. The outward formalities and the feeding of brahmins are not essential.
We have no brahmins in these days worthy of being fed on shraddha days. The
brahmins fed ought not to be professional eaters, but brahmins who feed
disciples gratis and teach them true Vedic doctrines. In these days, shraddha
may be performed mentally”.( Sankari Prasad Basu, op. cit., p.297.)
There is a
harmony to this apparently hopeless mass of confusion which we call our
religion.
“
The Identification of Vedanta with Popular Custom in the Common Mind Is Based
upon Juggling with the Meaning of the Vedas There is another difficulty: these
scripture of ours have been very vast. We read in the Mahabhashya of Patanjali,
that great philological work, that the Sama-Veda had one thousand branches.
Where are they all? Nobody knows. So with each of the Vedas; the major portion
of these books have disappeared, and it is only the minor portion that remains
with us. They were all taken charge of by particular families; and either those
families died out or were killed under foreign persecution, or somehow became
extinct; and with them that branch of the learning of the Vedas they took
charge of became extinct also. This fact we ought to remember, as it always
forms the sheet-anchor in the hands of those who want to preach anything new or
to defend anything, even against the Vedas.
Wherever
in India there is a discussion between local custom and the Shrutis, and
whenever it is pointed out that local custom is against the scriptures, the argument
that is forwarded is that it is not, that the customs existed in the branch of
the Shrutis which has become extinct, and so has been a recognized one. In the
midst of all these varying methods of reading and commenting on our scriptures
it is very difficult indeed to find the thread that runs through all of them;
for we become convinced at once that there must be some common ground
underlying all these varying divisions and subdivisions. There must be a harmony,
a common plan, upon which all these little bits of buildings have been constructed,
some basis common to this apparently hopeless mass of confusion which we call
our religion. Otherwise, it could not have stood so long, it could not have
endured so long”.( CW, Vol.3: Vedanta in Its Application to Indian Life,
pp.232-233.)
There is a
harmony to this apparently hopeless mass of confusion which we call our
religion.
“Every
man should take up his own ideal and endeavour to accomplish it. That is a
surer way of progress than taking up other men's ideals, which he can never hope
to accomplish.”
“ Unity in variety is the plan of
nature, and the Hindu has recognised it. Every other religion lays down certain
fixed dogmas, and tries to force society to adopt them. It places before
society only one coat which must fit Jack and John and Henry, all alike. If it
does not fit John or Henry, he must go without a coat to cover his body. The
Hindus have discovered that the absolute can only be realised, or thought of,
or stated, through the relative, and the images, crosses,
and crescents are simply so many
symbols — so many pegs to hang the
spiritual ideas on. It is not
that this help is necessary for every one, but those
that do not need it have no
right to say that it is wrong. Nor is it compulsory in
Hinduism.”
He declared if truth is too much for
intelligent people
let them go; the sooner the better
So
he never believed in uttering things just to comfort others or for publicity or
for getting patronizing pats of international media if it was far from truth.
Unfortunately many modern day intellectuals [ so called ] of this country
pander to this puerile publicity and they even do not mind getting into self
loathing mode and bad mouthing about their own religion and mother land and
invariably the lot belonging to this ilk are promoted both by the popular media
and the political dispensations. He always declared “Tell the truth boldly, whether it hurts or not. Never pander to weakness.
If truth is too much for intelligent people and sweeps them away, let them go;
the sooner the better”.
His very name epitomizes
the ideal youth of Bharath
When
I embarked on reading Vivekanda I was imbued with Ananda [joy] but when I decided to write about the
legacy, love, learned perception of this great soul I felt language was too
inadequate. I even hesitated initially with the thinking how can a very small
and ordinary person like me is going to
embark on the task of writing about a person whose very name unfolds
immense positive thoughts, abundant energy and power of concentration - a name
that epitomizes the ideal youth of
Bharat.
His love for this country was immense
Pride
of ancestry of our great country
You need to have pride of
ancestry to create hope for the future and every Indian must, if they are not
already aware, at least after reading Swami Vivekanda’s immense pride in India
and great hope in its future must work towards it. He has never failed to take
pride in India’s ancestry especially her life –blood of spirituality nor has he
failed to visualize her important role not only in India’s future but her
contribution to the global happiness and well being. Many of his writing
reflect these. Let me present just one such wonderful piece “ “This is the ancient land
where wisdom made its home before it went into any other country, the same
India whose influx of spirituality is represented, as it were, on the material
plane, by rolling rivers like oceans, where the eternal Himalayas, rising tier
above tier with their snow caps, look as it were into the very mysteries of
heaven. Here is the same India whose soil has been trodden by the feet of the
greatest sages that ever lived. Here first sprang up enquiries into the nature
of man, and into the eternal world. Here first arose the doctrines of the
immortality of the soul, the existence of a supervising God, an immanent God in
nature and in man, and here the highest ideals of religion and philosophy have
attained their culminating points. This is the land whence, like the tidal
waves, spirituality and philosophy have again and again rushed out and deluged
the world, and this is the land from whence once more such tides must proceed
in order to bring life and vigor into the decaying races of mankind. Our
ancestors were great. We must first recall that. We must learn the elements of
our being, the blood that courses in our veins; we must have faith in that
blood, and what it did in the past; and out of that faith, and consciousness of
our past greatness, we must build an India yet greater than what she has been.
The one common ground that we have is our sacred tradition, our religion. That
is the only common ground, and upon that we shall have to build. The first
plank in the making of a future India, the first step that is to be hewn out of
that rock of ages, is the unification of religions. All of us have to be taught
that we Hindus – dualist, qualified monists, or monists, Shaivas, Vaishnavas,
or Pashupatas – to whatever denomination we may belong, have certain common
ideas behind us, and that the time has come when for the well-being of
ourselves, for the well-being of our race, we must give up all our little
quarrels and differences. Our life-blood is spirituality. If it flows clear, if
it flows strong and pure and vigorous, everything is right; political, social,
any other material defects, even the poverty of the land, will be cured if that
blood is pure” “in
India, race difficulties, linguistic difficulties, social difficulties,
national difficulties, all melt away before the unifying power of religion. We
know that, to the Indian mind, there is nothing higher than religious ideals,
that this is the keynote of Indian life”.
Pride of ancestry of our great country
“This is the
motherland of philosophy, of spirituality, and of ethics, of
sweetness, gentleness, and love.
These still exist, and my experience of the
world leads me to stand on firm
ground and make the bold statement that India
is still the first and foremost
of all the nations of the world in these respects”.
“ Each nation has its own peculiarity and
individuality with which it is born. Each represents, as it were, one peculiar
note in this harmony of nations, and this is its very life, its vitality. In it
is the backbone, the foundation, and the bed-rock of the national life, and here
in this blessed land, the foundation, the backbone, the life-centre is religion
and religion alone. Let others talk of politics, of the glory of acquisition of
immense wealth poured in by trade, of the power and spread of commercialism, of
the glorious fountain of physical liberty; but these the Hindu mind does not
understand and does not want to understand. Touch him on spirituality, on
religion, on God, on the soul, on the Infinite, on spiritual freedom, and I
assure you, the lowest peasant in India is better informed on these subjects
than many a so-called philosopher in other lands. I have said, gentlemen, that
we have yet something to teach to the world. This is the very reason, the
raison d'être, that this nation has lived on, in spite of hundreds of years of
persecution, in spite of nearly a thousand year of foreign rule and foreign
oppression. This nation still lives; the raison d'être is it still holds to God,
to the treasure-house of religion and spirituality. In this land are, still,
religion and spirituality, the fountains which will have to overflow and flood
the world to bring in new life and new vitality to the Western and other
nations”
So, it is no wonder that
Ravindranath Tagore said
‘ read Vivekananda’
He once said on this saint “If you want to know
India, read Vivekananda, in him everything is positive and nothing is
negative”.
Gandhi “ My love to nation become 1000 fold after
through reading of
Vivekananda. ”.
Gandhi wrote Swami Vivekananda's
writings need no introduction from anybody. They make their own irresistible appeal.
Gandhi after his visit to Belur Math, requested by youth to comment on
Vivekananda; once told “ My love to nation become 1000 fold after through
reading of Vivekananda. ”.
Subhas on
Vivekananda
He
wrote on Swamiji “I
cannot write about Vivekananda without going into raptures. Few indeed could
comprehend or fathom him. Swamiji was a full-blooded masculine personality and
a fighter to the core of his being. I can go on for hours and yet fail to do
the slightest justice to that great man. A yogi of
the higher spiritual level in direct communion with truth, who had for the time
being consecrated his whole life to moral and spiritual uplift of India, That
is how I would describe him. If he had been alive, I would have been at his
feet. The foundation of the present freedom movement owes its origin to
Swamiji’s message.”
Jawaharlal
Nehru on Vivekananda
“Where can you find a man like him? Study what he
wrote, and learn from his teachings, for if you do, you will gain immense
strength. Take advantage of the fountain of wisdom, of Spirit, and of fire that
flowed through Vivekananda.”
SWAMI VIVEKANANDA ON
INDIA
"If
there is any land on this earth that can lay claim to be the blessed Punya
Bhumi … the land where humanity has attained its highest towards gentleness,
towards generosity, towards purity, towards calmness, above all, the land of
introspection and of spirituality—it is India.
His
love for the country was not a parochial
nationalism
But
broad
internationalism
His love for the country and
admiration of her pride of ancestry and hope for the future was never a
parochial nationalism, for, he had broad
internationalism. Once during his tour to western world he wrote:
“Doubtless
I do love India, but every day my sight grows clear”. “What is India
or
England or America to us? We are the servant of that God ….called as Man”.
There is one basis of well being, social, political or spiritual to know that I
and my brother are one”. It does not mean that differences and variety do not
exist but there is beneath these differences and varieties there lies oneness.
He always said “no one method can suit all and no two people
see the same world”.
“The
one eternal religion is applied to the opinions of various minds and various races.
There never was my religion or yours, my national religion or your
national religion; there never existed
many religions, there is only the one. One
infinite religion existed all through
eternity and will ever exist, and this religion
is expressing itself in various countries
in various ways.”
“We must not
look down with contempt on others. All of us are
going towards the same
goal. The difference between the 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 difference in this world are of degree, and not of kind, because
oneness is the secret of everything.”
His heart longed for a united, much evolved
harmonious and happy
humanity.
But
he never intended to declare that oriental philosophies are superior or a
panacea for life, on the contrary he was a visionary who realized the necessity
to create a synthesis of the two ways of looking at and living life in harmony
with both, namely the OCCIDENTAL and the ORIENTAL. This is clear from what he
said when he left India in June 1899 to sister Nivedita “Social
life in the West is like a peal of laughter, but underneath, it is wail. In
India it is sad and gloomy on the surface, but underneath are carelessness and
merriment.” The West has much to learn from the East and the East from the
West. His heart longed for a united, much evolved harmonious and happy humanity
with perfect understanding of different
philosophies and choosing the best for human emancipation , which is manifestation
of divinity already in man”
He wished that Indians
must play an important role
to contribute to the global welfare
H
e not only vindicated the greatness of both Sanathan Dharma and India he also
visualized in India an unmatched spiritual vision for humanity at large and
wished that we Indians must play an important role to contribute to the global welfare and he
also realized political freedom alone was inadequate for its regeneration.
He preached
only what contributed the intrinsic value
of either the BODY, MIND and /or SPIRIT/SOUL
He imbibed from his great GURU
SHRI RAMAKRISHNA PARAMAHAMSA and the many other great spiritual saints of this
great land the fundamental essence of
spiritual philosophy of this land and its religion that follows and promotes
only anything and everything that has or can contribute to the intrinsic values
of either the BODY, MIND and /or
SPIRIT/SOUL at the individual level and
to the happy, healthy, peaceful and prosperous
coexistence of everyone in
society at large with
pride in their heart about their native religion, culture and heritage ,
which are essential aspects of
primary identity which enthuses and energizes everyone to
further contribute to human, humane and social development rather than allowing to be shamelessly subjugated, suppressed by
alien systems at the expense of
one’s own heritage especially
when it does not offer anything
intrinsically valuable to the body,
mind and /or soul .
You
read any of his speeches or interactions with any of his disciples you can see
the thread of these basic ideological imprints.
He insisted on empowerment of women
He insisted on empowerment of
women he said often that, “The idea of perfect womanhood is perfect
independence.”
“The idea of perfect
womanhood is perfect independence. Woman has suffered for eons (ages), and that
has given her infinite patience and infinite perseverance. Women will work out
their destinies—much better, too, than men can ever do for them. All the
mischief to women has come because men undertook to shape the destiny of women”.
Also,
few know that Vivekananda supported the women suffrage movement in the West, as
also proposed training women in physical education and self defense. He
implored some notable Hindu women like Sarala Ghoshal, the niece of
Rabindranath to represent Indian womanhood on the world stage.
"The soul
has neither sex, nor caste nor imperfection."
"The
best thermometer to the progress of a nation is its treatment of its
women."
"
There is no chance for the welfare of
the world unless the condition of women is
improved."
“ The first manifestation of
God is the hand that rocks
the cradle”.
Greatness of women rishis
“The
discoverers of [spiritual] laws, the rishis... we Hindus honor as perfected
beings. I am glad to [say] that some of the very greatest of them were women”.
(CW, Vol.1: Paper on Hinduism, p.7.)
“It
was a female sage who first found the unity of God and laid down this doctrine
in one of the first hymns of the Vedas. [Devi Sukta]” (SVW, Vol.2, Chapter 13:
The Last Battle, p.269.)
“In the Vedic or
Upanishadic age, Maitreyi, Gargi, and other ladies of revered memory have taken
the place of rishis through their skill in discussing Brahman”. (CW, Vol.7:
Conversation with Sharat Chandra Chakravarty at Belur, 1901, pp.214-215.)
His vision in the words of Sri Aurobindo
“The definite work he has left behind is quite
incommensurate with our impression of his creative might and energy. We perceive
his influence still working gigantically, we know not well where, in something,
that is not yet formed, something leonine, grand, and intuitive, upheaving that
has entered the soul of India.”
INTELLECT WITH COMPASSION
[FROM PRACTICAL VEDANTHA]
He was an intellectual giant par
excellence with his laser sharp intellect and perfect perception he communicated
lucidly to the analytical western mind the grand concepts of Sanathan Dharma but
his emphasis was always the underlying compassion of the heart. In his work
PRACTICAL VEDANTHA he says “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.” Here I would like to
point out that there are thousands of anecdotes available in print from many of
his disciples and all those who have come into contact with him about his
natural compassion. He often said, “When there is a conflict
between the heart and the brain, let the heart be followed.” “Our
supreme duty is to advance toward freedom—physical, mental, and spiritual—and
help others to do so”.
“ It is feeling that is the life, the strength, the
vitality, without which no amount of intellectual activity can reach God.”
“
Learning and wisdom are superfluities, the surface glitter merely, but it is
the heart that is the seat of all power. It is not in the brain but in the
heart that the Atman, possessed of knowledge, power, and activity, has its seat”.
“Let
us make our hearts as big as an ocean, to go beyond all the trifles of the world
and see it only as a picture. We can then enjoy the world without being in any
way affected by it”.
“Work
on with the intrepidity of a lion but at the same time with the tenderness of a
flower.”
“
Follow
the heart. A pure heart sees beyond the intellect; it gets
inspired; it knows things that
reason can never know, and whenever there is conflict between the pure heart
and the intellect, always side with the pure heart even if you think what your
heart is doing is unreasonable.”
INTELLECT WITH COMPASSION
[FROM PRACTICAL VEDANTHA]
“ The history of world is of six men of faith,
six men of deep pure
character. We need to have three
things: the heart to feel, the brain to
conceive, the hand to work. Make
yourself a dynamo. Feel, first for the world.
…… Ask yourself, does your mind
react in hatred or jealousy? Good works
are continually are being undone
by the tons of hatred and anger which are
being poured out on the world.
If you are pure, if you are strong, you, one
man, are equal to the whole
world”. CW
VI 144-45
"It
is only a few that understand the language of the brain, but
everyone understands the language that comes
from the heart."
Religion of reason over religion of authority.
He
felt that religion cannot escape the scrutiny of reason on any pretext, for he
knew at fundamental level the human intellect can appreciate and perceive
things only if they appeal to reason. In PRACTICAL VEDANTHA he states “religion
must become broad enough. Everything it claims must be judged from the
standpoint of reason. Why religions should claim that they are not bound to
abide by the standpoint of reason, no one knows. If one does not take the
standard of reason, there cannot be any true judgment, even in the case of
religions” …….“with all its[reason’s] weakness there is some chance of my
getting at truth through it; while, by the other means, there is no such hope
at all.”…..
“ I am sure God will pardon a man who
will use his reason and cannot believe, rather than a man who believes blindly
instead of using his faculties He has given him. ……. We must reason; and when
reason proves to us the truth of
these prophets and great men and
about whom the ancient books speak in
every country, we shall believe
in them. We shall believe in them when we
see such prophets among
ourselves. We shall then find that they were not
peculiar men, but only
illustrations of certain principals.” CW VI 12-13
“
That part of the Vedas which agrees with reason is theVedas, and
nothing
else.”
He never denied or dodged facts so declared boldly
“All religions are going beyond reason, but
reason
is the only guide to get there.”
“We
should, therefore, follow reason and also sympathise with those who do not come
to any sort of belief, following reason. For it is better that mankind should become
atheist by following reason than blindly believe in two hundred millions of
gods on the authority of anybody. What we want is progress, development, and
realization. No theories ever made men higher. No amount of books can help us
to become purer. The only power is in realization, and that lies in ourselves
and comes from thinking. Let men think. A clod of earth never thinks; but it
remains only a lump of earth. The glory of man is that he is a thinking being.
It is the nature of man to think and therein he differs from animals. I believe
in reason and follow reason having seen enough of the evils of authority.” He was
one who never denied or dodged facts and realty and therefore frankly accepted
the necessity that in one’s spiritual journey there are many steps, they are
steps, inevitable but not stops. That’s why he declared “Obey
the scriptures until you are not strong enough to do without them” and also
that “ All religions
are going beyond reason, but reason is the only guide to get there.”
He believed in the individual’s infinite
capacity.
He believed in the individual’s
infinite capacity. Again in PRACTICAL
VEDANTHA he states, “We are in reality that Infinite Being, and our
personalities
represent so many channels through which this Infinite Reality is
manifesting Itself;
and the whole mass of changes which we call evolution is
brought about by the
soul trying to manifest more and more of its infinite energy. We cannot stop
anywhere on this side of the Infinite; our power, and blessedness, and wisdom,
cannot but grow into the Infinite. Infinite power and existence and blessedness
are ours, and we have not to acquire them; they are our own, and we have only
to manifest them.”
“As body, mind, or soul, you are a dream;
you really are Being, Consciousness, Bliss (satchidananda). You are the God of
this universe”.
“Our first duty is not to hate ourselves,
because to advance we must have faith in ourselves first and then in God. Those
who have no faith in themselves can never have faith in God”.
“Whatever
you believe, that you will be. If you believe yourselves to be sages, sages you
will be tomorrow. There is nothing to obstruct you”.
“
Stand up, be bold, be strong. Take the whole responsibility on your own
shoulders, and know that you are the creator of your own destiny. All the
strength and succor you want is within yourself.”
“We are responsible for what we
are, and whatever we wish
ourselves to be, we
have the power to make ourselves.”
Sanathan
Dharma is not based on any authority
He declared elsewhere the
essence of Sanathan Dharma that it is not based on any single or even multiple
authority but it is a way of following certain laws of spiritual world “By
the Vedas no books are meant. They mean the accumulated treasury of spiritual
laws discovered by different persons in different times. Just as the law of
gravitation existed before its discovery, and would exist if all humanity
forgot it, so is it with the laws that govern the spiritual world”.
Religion is realization.
For him “That soul which is behind each mind and each body
is called Pratyagâtman, the individual Atman, and that Soul which is behind the
universe as its guide, ruler, and governor, is God”“It is realization,
perception of God [which alone is religion].” “Religion is not
in books, nor in theories, nor in dogmas, nor in talking, not even in
reasoning. It is being and becoming.”
“ Pray all the time, read all the scriptures
in the world, and worship all the gods there are ...but unless you realize the Truth,
there is no freedom.”
“True religion is not talk, or doctrines,
or theories, nor is it sectarianism. It is the relation between soul and God.
Religion does not consist in erecting
temples, or building churches, or
attending public worship. It is not to be found
in books, or in words, or in lectures, or
in organizations. Religion consists in
realization. We must realize God, feel
God, see God, talk to God. That is
religion.”
Essence of the soul-your teacher
“Absolute Existence, absolute
Knowledge, and absolute Blessedness are not qualities of the soul, but the essence;
there is no difference between them and the soul. And the three are one; we see
the one thing in three different aspects. They are beyond all relative knowledge.
That eternal knowledge of the Self percolating through the brain of man becomes
his intuition, reason, and so on. Its manifestation varies according to the
medium through which it shines. As soul, there is no difference between man and
the lowest animal, only the latter's brain is less developed and the manifestation
through it which we call instinct is very dull. In a man the brain is much
finer, so the manifestation is much clearer, and in the highest man it becomes
entirely clear. So with existence; the existence which we know, the limited
sphere of existence, is simply a reflection of that real existence which is the
nature of the soul. So with bliss; that which we call love or attraction is but
the rejection of the eternal blessedness of the Self.” “You
have to grow from the inside out. None can teach you, none can make you
spiritual. There is no other teacher but your own soul.”
He viewed every being as divine with infinite capacities.
“Religion is the manifestation of the divinity already in man”.
With manifestation comes limitation,
but the unmanifested, the essential nature of the soul, is unlimited; to that
blessedness there is no limit.” It is manifestation and objectification that
limits us and everything. When we move from objectification to manifestation to
ultimate realization we become the Infinite.
He declared this in his usual style, “God
has become man, man will become god again.” “To know God is to become God.” The
very purpose of religion he felt was to manifest this divinity he declared
“Religion is the manifestation of the divinity already in man”. “Each soul is
potentially divine. The Goal is to manifest this divinity, by controlling
nature, external and internal. Do this either by work, or worship, or psychic
control, or philosophy – by one, or more, or all of these – and be free.
This is the whole of religion.
Doctrines, or dogmas, or rituals, or books, or
temples, or
forms, are but secondary details.” “The moment I have realized
God sitting in the temple of every human body, the moment I stand in reverence
before every human being and see God in him - that moment I am free from
bondage, everything that binds vanishes, and I am free.” He was at the same
time very clear about how and when a man becomes god when he so graphically
declared that “Man is an infinite circle, whose circumference is nowhere,
but the centre is located on one spot; and God is an in finite circle whose
circumference is nowhere, but whose centre is everywhere.”
Virtue
“ Virtue is that which tends to our
improvement, and vice is to our
degeneration. Man is made of
three qualities – brutal, human and godly. That
which tends to increase the
divinity in you is virtue, and that which tends to
increase brutality in you is
vice. You must kill the brutal nature and become
human, that is, loving and
charitable. You must transcend that too and become
pure bliss, Sachchidanananda,
fire without burning, wonderfully loving, but
without the weakness of human
love, without the feeling of misery.” CW VI
112
First, believe in this world - that there is
meaning
behind
everything
Through his honesty, humility,
clarity and candid disposition of
calling a spade a spade and accepting facts he demonstrated the
inevitable process involved in the path of realization his famous saying stands
to vindicate this,
“ When I Asked God for Strength
He Gave Me Difficult
Situations to Face
When I Asked God for
Brain & Brown
He Gave Me Puzzles in
Life to Solve
When I Asked God for
Happiness
He Showed Me Some
Unhappy People
When I Asked God for
Wealth
He Showed Me How to Work
Hard
When I Asked God for
Favors
He Showed Me
Opportunities to Work Hard
When I Asked God for
Peace
He Showed Me How to Help
Others
God Gave Me Nothing I
Wanted
He Gave Me Everything I
Needed”
I
said he accepted facts as they are without passing any judgment based on any
pre conditioning and that’s why he neither denied nor defied the importance of
anything. “First, believe in this world - that there is meaning behind
everything. Everything in the world is good, is holy and beautiful. If you see
something evil, think that you do not understand it in the right light. Throw
the burden on yourselves!”
“Education is the
manifestation of the perfection already in man.”
He realized every manifested
aspect of divinity has its place in the scheme of things. This is precisely the
reason why he insisted on the importance of overall development of the individual
and insisted that real “Education is the manifestation of the perfection
already in man.” “The
goal of mankind is knowledge... now this knowledge is inherent in man. No
knowledge
comes from
outside: it is all inside. What we say a man 'knows', should, in strict
psychological language, be what he 'discovers' or 'unveils'; what man 'learns'
is really what he discovers by taking the cover off his own soul, which is a
mine of infinite knowledge.” He declared “ My
child, what I want is muscles of iron and nerves of steel, inside which dwells
a mind of the same material as that of which the thunderbolt is made” and he
wanted education “by which character is formed,
strength of mind is increased, the intellect is expanded, and by which one can
stand on one's own feet”.
“The
education which does not help the common mass of people to equip themselves for
the struggle for life, which does not bring out strength of character, a spirit
of philanthropy, and the courage of a lion – is it worth the name?”
“Education
is not the amount of information that is put into your brain
and runs riot there, undigested all your
life. We must have life-building,
man-making, character-making, assimilation
of ideas.”
“ The ideal of all education, all training, should be real man-making
The end and aim of all training is to
make the man grow. The man who influences, who throws his magic, as it were,
upon his fellow-beings, is a dynamo of power, and when that man is ready, he
can do anything and everything he likes; that personality put upon anything
will make it work.”
“Education is the manifestation of the perfection already in
man.”
“ Compare the great teachers of religion with
the great philosophers. The philosophers scarcely influenced anybody's inner man,
and yet they wrote most marvelous books. The religious teachers, on the other
hand, moved countries in their lifetime. The diff erence was made by
personality. In the philosopher, it is a faint personality that influences; in
the great prophets it is temendous. In the
former we touch the intellect, in the
latter we touch life. In the one case, it is
simply a chemical process, put ting
certain chemical ingredients together,
which may gradually, combine and under
proper circumstances bring out a
flash of light or may fail. In the
other, it is like a torch that goes round
quickly, lighting others.”
“ The science of Yoga claims that it has
discovered the laws, which develop this personality, and by proper attention to
those laws and methods, each one can grow and strengthen his personality. This
is one of the great practical things and this is the secret of all education.
This has a universal application.”
He saw the necessity for syncretism or synthesis where ordinary mortals created fences and saw them
as differences.
He never missed to see the
necessity for syncretism or synthesis where ordinary mortals created fences and
saw them as differences. He declared “In Buddha we had the great,
universal heart and infinite patience, making religion practical and bringing
it to everyone’s door. In Shankaracharya we saw tremendous intellectual power,
throwing the scorching light of reason upon everything. We want today that
bright sun of intellectuality joined with the heart of Buddha, the wonderful
infinite heart of love and mercy. This union will give us the highest
philosophy”
Variety is the very soul of life but
beneath
the variety there lies oneness
“Variety is the very soul of life. When
it dies out entirely, creation will die. When this variation in thought is kept
up, we must exist; and we need not quarrel because of that variety. Your way is
very good for you, but not for me. My way is good for me, but not for you. My
way is called in Sanskrit my ishta. Mind you, we have no quarrel with any
religion in the world. We each have our ishta. But when we see people coming
and saying, "This is the only way" and trying to force it on us in
India, we have a word to say: we laugh at them. For such people who want to
destroy their brothers and sisters because they seem to follow a different path
towards God - for them to talk of love is absurd. Their love does not count for
much. How can they preach love who cannot bear another person to follow a path
different from their own? If that is love, what is hatred? We have no quarrel
with any religion in the world, whether it teaches people to worship Christ,
Buddha or Muhammad, or any other prophet. "Welcome, my brother, my sister",
the Hindu says; "I am going to help you; but you must allow me to follow
my way, too. That is my ishta. Your way is very good, no doubt; but it may be
dangerous for me. My own experience tells me what food is good for me, and no
army of doctors can tell me that. So I know from my own experience what path is
the best for me." That is the goal, the ishta; and, therefore, we say that
if a temple or a symbol or an image helps you to realize the divinity within,
you are welcome to it. Have two hundred images if you like. If certain forms
and formularies help you to realize the divine, God speed you; have, by all
means, whatever forms and whatever temples and whatever ceremonies you want to
bring you nearer to God; but do not quarrel about them; the moment you quarrel,
you are not going Godwards; you are going backward towards the brutes”. (CW,
Vol.3: Vedantism, pp.131-132.)
Variety is the very soul of life but
beneath
the variety there lies oneness
“The
more sides you can develop, the more souls you have and you can see the
universe through all souls - through the bhakta (devotee), and the jnani
(philosopher). Determine your own nature and stick to it. Nishtha (devotion to
the ideal) is the only method for the beginner; but with devotion and sincerity
it will lead to all. Churches, doctrines, forms are the hedges to protect the
tender plant; but they must later be broken down so that the plant may become a
tree. So the various religions, Bibles, Vedas, dogmas - all are must tubs for
the little plants; but it must get out of the tub”. (CW,
Vol.7: Inspired Talks, June 23, 1895, p.6)
“
Unity in variety is the plan of creation. However men and women may vary individually,
there is unity in the background. The different individual
characters and classes of men and women
are natural variations in creation.
Hence, we ought not to judge them by
the same standard or put the same ideal
before them. Such a course creates only
an unnatural struggle, and the result is
that man begins to hate himself and is
hindered from becoming religious and
good. Our duty is to encourage every
one in his struggle to live up to his own
highest ideal, and strive at the same
time to make the ideal as near as possible
to the truth.”
Variety is the very soul of life but
beneath
the variety there lies oneness
“In the Hindu system of morality we
find that this fact has been recognised from very ancient times; and in their
scriptures and books on ethics different rules are laid down for the different
classes of men — the householder, the Sannyâsin (the man who has renounced the
world), and the student.
The life of every individual, according
to the Hindu scriptures, has its peculiar
duties apart from what belongs in
common to universal humanity. The Hindu
begins life as a student; then he
marries and becomes a householder; in old age
he retires; and lastly he gives up the
world and becomes a Sannyasin. To each
of these stages of life certain duties
are attached. No one of these stages is
intrinsically superior to another. The
life of the married man is quite as great as
that of the celibate who has devoted
himself to religious work. The scavenger
in the street is quite as great and
glorious as the king on his throne. Take him
off his throne, make him do the work of
the scavenger, and see how he fares.
Take up the scavenger and see how he
will rule. It is useless to say that the man
who lives out of the world is a greater
man than he who lives in the world; it is
much more difficult to live in the
world and worship God than to give it up and
live a free and easy life. The four
stages of life in India have in later times been
reduced to two — that of the
householder and of the monk. The householder
marries and carries on his duties as a
citizen, and the duty of the other is to
devote his energies wholly to religion,
to preach and to worship God. “
Difference
interpretation of Vedas should be allowed
“The
Interpretation of the Vedas by Various Sects Should be Allowed
The Vedas are the common source of
Hinduism in all its varied stages, as also of
Buddhism and every other religious belief
in India. The seeds of the
multifarious growth of Indian thought on
religion lie buried in the Vedas.
Buddhism and the rest of India’s
religious thought are the outcome of the
unfolding and expansion of those seeds,
and modern Hinduism also is only their
developed and matured form. With the
expansion or the contraction of society,
those seeds lie more or less expanded at
one place or more or less contracted
at another”.( CW, Vol.4: The Paris
Congress of the History of Religion, p.425.)
“There
are certain principles in which, I think, we - whether Vaishnavas, Shaktas or
Ganapatyas, whether we belong to the ancient Vedantists or the modern ones,
whether belonging to the old, rigid sects or the modern reformed ones - are all
one; and whoever calls him or herself a Hindu believes in those principles. Of
course, there is a difference in the interpretation, in the explanation of those
principles, and that difference should be there, and it should be allowed, for
our standard is not to bind everyone down to our position. It would be a sin to
force everyone to work out our own interpretation of things, and to live by our
methods”.( CW, Vol.3: The Common Bases of Hinduism, p.372)
All Religions and
All Methods of Work and Worship
Lead
Us to One and the Same Goal.
“[The]
peculiar idea of the Vedanta is that we must allow this infinite variation in religious
thought and not try to bring everybody to the same opinion, because the goal is
the same”.( . CW, Vol.1: The Spirit and Influence of Vedanta, p.390.)
“Every
sect of every religion presents only one ideal of its own to humankind, but the
eternal Vedantic religion opens to humankind an infinite number of doors for
ingress into the inner shrine of divinity and places before humanity an almost
inexhaustible array of ideals, there being in each of them a
manifestation of the eternal One. With
the kindest solicitude the Vedanta
points out to aspiring men and women the
numerous roads, hewn out of the solid
rock of the realities of human life by
the glorious sons and daughters - or
human manifestations of God - in the past
and in the present, and stands with
arms outstretched to welcome all - to
welcome even those that are yet to be -
to that Home of Truth and that Ocean of
Bliss wherein the human soul,
liberated from the net of maya, may
transport itself with perfect freedom and
with eternal joy”.( CW, Vol.3: Bhakti-Yoga: The Chosen Ideal,
p.63.)
“Shankara
showed, too, that as a humanity can only travel slowly on the upward road, all
the varied presentations are needed to suit its varying capacity”.(
CW, Vol.8: Discourses on Jnana-Yoga II, p.6.)
In
the west too great scholars like RALPH W.EMERSON have declared "
God is UNITY but always works in VARIETY"-
The
varieties of religious belief are an advantage
He was one who
never denounced any religion, of course he did object to certain practices of
religions, he felt the more the number of religions the better it was,
in that sense he was a pioneer who appreciated NRMs [New Religious Movements]
He said , “The varieties of religious belief are an
advantage, since all faiths are good, so far as they
encourage us to lead a religious life. The more sects there are, the more
opportunities there are for making a successful appeal to the divine instinct
in all of us.”
“First, believe in the world—that there is
meaning behind everything.”
The first great GURU of motivational skills and positive attitudes.
He was in a way the first great
GURU of motivational skills and positive attitudes. He always said “Seek for the highest, aim at the
highest, and you shall reach the highest”
He emphasized the importance of
attitude. “ It is our own mental attitude, which makes the world what it is
for us. Our thoughts make things beautiful, our thoughts make things ugly. The
whole world is in our own minds. Learn to see things in the proper light.” “All
differences in this world are of degree, and not of kind, because oneness is
the secret of everything”
Love for love’s sake
He was candid in declaring love
for love’s sake “All love is expansion, all selfishness is
contraction. Love is therefore the only law of life. He who loves lives, he who
is selfish is dying. Therefore, love for love's sake, because it is law of
life, just as you breathe to live.”
Love is always mutual and reflective.
“Love
is always mutual and reflective. You may hate me, and if I want to love you,
you repulse me. But if I persist, in a month or a year you are bound to love
me. It is a well-known psychological phenomenon”.
“ The more we grow in love
and virtue and holiness, the more we see love and virtue and holiness outside.
All condemnation of others really condemns ourselves. Adjust the microcosm
(which is in your power to do) and the macrocosm will adjust itself for you. It
is like the hydrostatic paradox, one drop of water can balance the universe.”
No Mukti without equal love
“It is indeed very difficult to have
an equal love for all, but without it there is no Mukti.”
“What the world wants is
character. The world is in need of those whose life is one burning
love--selfless. That love will make every word tell like a
thunderbolt. Awake, awake, great souls!
The world is burning in misery. Can
you sleep?Work unto death--I am with you,
and when I am gone, my spirit will
work with you. This life comes and
goes--wealth, fame, enjoyments are only of
a few days. It is better, far better, to
die on the field of duty, preaching the
truth than to die like a
worldly worm. Advance!”
“Love and ask nothing ;
love and look for nothing further. Love and forget all the "isms."
Drink the cup of love and become mad. Say u Thine, O Thine forever O Lord !
" and plunge in, forgetting all else. The very idea of God is love. Seeing
a cat loving her kittens, stand and pray. God has become manifest there ;
literally believe this. Repeat I am
Thine, I am Thine", for we can see God everywhere. Do not seek for Him,
just see Him.”
"Love
opens the most impossible gates; love is the gate to all the
secrets of the universe. Every step that has
been really gained in the
world has been gained by love."
Success
“Purity, patience, and
perseverance are the three essentials to success, and above all – love”. CW VI
281
Impossibility
is an inebriated insect to be ejected
Impossibility
for him was an inebriated insect to be ejected he declared “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”. He said always “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.”
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.
Fear is
death, sin and hell.
“Fear is death, fear is sin,
fear is hell, fear is unrighteousness, and fear is wrong life. All the negative
thoughts and ideas that are in the world have proceeded from this evil spirit
of fear”.
“Stand up, be
bold, be strong. Take the whole responsibility on your own
shoulders, and know that you are the
creator of your own destiny. All the strength and succor you want is within
yourselves. Therefore, make your own future”.
“Everything can be sacrificed
for truth, but truth cannot be
sacrificed for anything”.
“ The moment you fear, you
are nobody. It is fear that is the greatest cause of misery in the world. It is
fear that is the greatest of all superstitions. It is fear
that is the cause of our woes, and it is
fearlessness that brings heaven in a
moment.”
Fearless
is the great mantra
“Brave,
bold men and women, these are what we want. What we want is vigor in the blood,
strength in the nerves, iron muscles and nerves of steel, not softening
namby-pamby ideas. Despondency is not religion, whatever else it may be If
there is one word that you find coming out like a bomb from the Upanishads,
bursting like a bombshell upon masses of ignorance, it is the word fearlessnes”.’
The Only Religion That Ought to Be
Taught Is the
Religions of Fearlessness
“The Only Religion That Ought to Be
Taught Is the Religions of Fearlessness If you read the Vedas you will find
this word always repeated - fearlessness; fear nothing. Fear is a sign of
weakness. People must go about their duties without taking notice of the sneers
and ridicule of the world”. (CW, Vol.1: Karma-Yoga, Chapter 2: Each Is Great in
His Own Place, p.47)
“ Be brave! Be strong! Be fearless! Once you have
taken up the spiritual life, fight as long as there is any life in you. Even
though you know you are going to be killed, fight till you “are killed.” Don’t
die of fright. Die fighting. Don’t go down till you are knocked down.”
“Be
not afraid, for all great power throughout the history of humanity has been with
the people. From out of their ranks have come all the greatest geniuses of the
world, and history can only repeat itself. Be not afraid of anything. You will do
marvelous work.”
“ Be strong! … You talk of ghosts and devils. We
are the living devils. The sign of life is strength and growth. The sign of
death is weakness. Whatever is weak, avoid! It is death. If it is strength, go
down into hell and get hold of it! There is salvation only for the brave.
"None but the brave deserves the fair." None but the bravest deserves
salvation.”
“
Fear is death, fear is sin, fear is hell, fear is unrighteousness, fear is
wrong life. All the negative thoughts and ideas that are in the world have
proceeded from this evil spirit of fear”.
“Why
are people so afraid? The answer is that they have made themselves helpless and
dependent on others. We are so lazy, we do not want to do anything ourselves. We want a Personal God, a
Savior or a Prophet to do
everything for us”.
Exercise is necessary for diabetes
“No one can save a person who hires
a carriage to go from one street to another, and then complain of diabetes”.
Take nutritious food
“If
there is no strength in body and mind, the Atman cannot be realized. First you
have to build the body by good nutritious food—then only will the mind be strong.”
Reject that, which makes you weak
physically,
intellectually, and spiritually
“If
we sit down and lament over the imperfection of our bodies and minds, we profit
nothing; it is the heroic endeavor to subdue
adverse circumstances
that carries our spirit upwards.Anything that makes you weak physically, intellectually,
and spiritually, reject as poison; there is no life in it; it cannot be true.”
The infinite library of the universe is
in our own mind
“All knowledge that the world has ever received comes from the
mind; the
infinite library of the universe is in our own mind. All power is within you.
You can do anything and everything. No power in the universe can withhold
from any one anything he really deserves”.
“Faith in one's own Self... is the basis of Vedanta.” (CW,
Vol.4: The Education That India Needs, p.481)
Face criticism and ridicule
He also insisted
not to get stifled by any criticism or opposition, for he declared very clearly
that “Each work has to pass through these
stages—ridicule, opposition, and then acceptance. Those who think ahead of their
time are sure to be misunderstood.”
Life
is Beautiful
“First, believe in this world -
that there is meaning behind everything. Everything in the world is good, is
holy and beautiful. If you see something evil, think that you do not understand
it in the right light. Throw the burden on yourselves!”
No hero worship or idolization
He did not approve of hero worship or
idolization.
He made it very clear “My name should not be made prominent. It is
my ideas that I want to see realized. The disciples of all the prophets have
always inextricably mixed up the ideas of the Master with person, and at last
killed the ideas for the person. The disciples of Sri Ramakrishna must guard
against doing the same thing. Work for the idea, not the person”.
Absolute equality can never be in this world.
Absolute
equality, that which means a perfect balance of all the
struggling forces in all
the planes, can never be in this world.
Before you attain that
state, the world will have become quite
unfit for any kind of life,
and no one will be there. We find,
therefore, that all these
ideas of the millennium and of absolute
equality not only are
impossible but also that, if we try to carry
them out, they will lead us
surely enough to the day of destruction.
Karma
Yoga. New York, 1896. Complete Works, 1: 114
Difference
It
is impossible that all difference can cease; it
must exist; without variation life must cease. Difference is the
sauce of life, it is the beauty, it is the art of everything.
Man
is a compound
“Man is a compound of animality,
humanity and Divinity”
You all can and must become great
“I want each one of my children to be a
hundred times greater than I could ever be. Every one of you must be great,
that is my word”.
A few
sincere people can perform better than a whole
nation
“A few heart-whole, sincere, and
energetic men and women can do more in a year than a mob in a century”.
Choice
is inevitable for the individual and the
nation
“ Every
man has to make his own choice; so has every nation”.
What is moral?
“Everything that strengthens the will by revealing the real nature
is moral”. “
Only
freedom can produce true morality”.
We must learn from every source
“We have indeed many things to learn
from others; yea, that man who refuses to learn is already dead”.
Take what is essential
“Books are infinite in number and
time is short. The secret of knowledge is to take what is essential. Take that
and try to live up to it”.
Truth
is nobody’s property
“All
power is within you. You can do anything and everything. Believe in
that. Do not believe that you are weak; do not believe that you are half-crazy
lunatics, as most of us do nowadays. Stand up and express the divinity within
you.All truth is eternal. Truth is
nobody’s property; no race, no individual can lay any exclusive claim toit.
Truth is the nature of all souls. By the Vedas no books are meant. They mean
the accumulated treasury of spiritual laws discovered by different persons in
different times. Just as the law of gravitation existed before its discovery,
and would exist if all humanity forgot it, so is it with the laws that govern
the spiritual world I, for one, thoroughly believe that no power in the
universe can withhold from anyone anything they really deserve”.
“The
greatest religion is to be true to your own nature. Have faith in yourselves!
If you do not exist, how can God exist, or anybody else?”
Manifest the divinity
within
“Proclaim
to the whole world with trumpet voice, There is no sin in thee,
there is no misery in thee; thou art the reservoir of omnipotent power. Arise,
awake, and manifest the divinity within!” Each soul is potentially divine. The goal is to manifest this
divine within, by controlling nature, external and internal.do this either by
work, or worship, or psychic control, or philosophy, or one, or more, or all of
these –and be free. This is the whole of religion. doctrines, or dogmas, or
rituals, or books, or temples, or forms, are but secondary details”.
Stick
to your own convictions
“Let people say whatever
they like stick to your own convictions,
and
rest assured, the world
will be at your feet. They say, ‘Have faith in
this fellow or that
fellow,’ but I say, ‘Have faith in yourself first,’
that’s the way. Have faith
in yourself. All power is in you, be conscious and bring it out. Say, ‘I can do everything.’
Even the poison of a snake is powerless, if you
can firmly deny it.”
“Above
all, beware of compromises. Hold on to your own principles in weal or woe and
never adjust them to others’ “fads” through the greed of getting
supporters. Your Atman is the support of
the universe—whose support do you
stand in need of?”
"Never
mind failures, they are quite natural, they are the beauty of life, these
failures. What would life be without them? I never heard a cow tell a lie, but
it is only a cow-never a man. So never mind these failures, these little
backslidings; hold on to the ideal a thousand times and if you fail a thousand
times make the attempt once more."
How
true it is! Thomas Alva Edison, one of the greatest scientists,
who made a series of inventions, had great
conviction in his capacity.
He had made over 1000 experiments before he
succeeded in inventing
the electric bulb. Though he was born in a poor
American family and
was dull in his studies, nothing could obstruct
his path or prevent him
from great achievements because of his firm
faith in his inner
strength.
"Great
convictions are the mothers of great deeds."
Help
the weaker
“The
only way of getting our divine nature manifested is by helping
others to do the same. If there is
inequality in nature, still there must
be equal chance for all or if greater
for some and for some
less.The weaker should be given more
chance than the
strong.”
“Him
I call a Mahatma ("great soul") whose heart bleeds for the poor,
otherwise he is a Duratma ("wicked soul"). Let us unite our wills in
continued prayer for their good”
“I,
for one, thoroughly believe that no power in the universe can withhold from anyone
anything they really deserve.”
“
Let each one of us pray day and night for the downtrodden millions, who are held
fast by poverty, priestcraft, and tyranny. Pray day and night for them. I
care more to preach religion to them than
to the high and the rich. I am no
metaphysician, no philosopher, nay, no
saint. But I am poor and I love the
poor.”
Friendship with
all
“We
must have friendship for all; we must be merciful toward those that are in misery;
when people are happy, we ought to be happy; and to the wicked we must be
indifferent. These attitudes will make the mind peaceful.”
Practice
the art of giving
“In
the world take always the position of the giver. Give everything and look for no
return. Give love, give help, give service, give any little thing you can, but keep out barter. Make no conditions and
none will be imposed. Let us give out of our own bounty, just as God gives to
us.”
“ Perfection does not come
from belief or faith. Talk does not count for anything. Parrots can do that.
Perfection comes through selfless work.”
“
Please everyone without becoming a hypocrite or a coward.”
“
Renunciation is the very basis of our true life. Every moment of goodness and real
life that we enjoy is when we do not think of ourselves.”
“
Renounce and give up. What did Christ say? "He that loseth his life for my
sake shall find it." Again and again did he preach renunciation as the
only way to perfection. There comes a time when the mind awakes from this long
and
dreary dream—the child gives up its play
and wants to go back to its mother”.
“
Renunciation is the background of all religious thought wherever it be, and you
will always find that as this idea of renunciation lessens, the more will the senses
creep into the field of religion, and spirituality will decrease in the same ratio”.
“ The great secret of true
success, of true happiness, is this: the man or woman who asks for no return,
the perfectly unselfish person, is the most successful.”
Do not destroy.
“Iconoclastic reformers do no good to the world. Break not, pull not anything down, but build. Help, if you can; if you cannot, fold your hands and stand by and
see things go on. Do not injure, if you
cannot render help. Say not a word against any man’s convictions so far as they
are sincere”.
Avoid excesses
“
Let the mind be cheerful but calm. Never let it run into excesses, because every
excess will be followed by a reaction.”
God's book is unfinished and an infinite number
of pages remain yet to be unfolded
“Is
God's book finished? Or is it still a continuous revelation going on? It is a
marvelous book these spiritual revelations of the world. The Bible, the Vedas,
the Koran, and all other sacred books are but so many pages; and an infinite
number of pages remain yet to be unfolded. I would leave it open for all of
them. We stand in the present, but open ourselves to the infinite future. We
take in all that has been in the past, enjoy the light of the present, and open
every window of the heart for all that will come in the future”
[from CW, Vol.2: The Way to
Realization of a Universal Religion, p.374]
The Vedas Are Impersonal
The Vedas Deal Almost Entirely with
Philosophy
a]
“None knows by whom the Vedas were written, they are so ancient”
[ CW, Vol.9: The Gita-I, p.277]
b]
“The mass of writings called the Vedas is not the utterance of persons.” (CW,
Vol.3: Vedantism, p.118.)
c]
“The Upanishads do not reveal the life of any teacher, but simply teach
principles”. (CW, Vol.1: The Gita I, p.446)
d]
“The Upanishads contain very little history of the doings of any man, but
nearly all other scriptures are largely personal histories. The Vedas deal
almost entirely with philosophy. Religion
without philosophy runs into superstition; philosophy without religion becomes
dry
atheism”.
(CW, Vol.7: Inspired Talks, July 7, 1895, p.36)
e]
“If you tell [the orthodox Hindus who defend the Vedas] that the Vedas must
have been pronounced by man first, [they will simply laugh]. You never heard of
any [man uttering them for the first time]. Take Buddha's words. [There is a
tradition that he lived and spoke these words] many times before. If the
Christian stands up and says, "My religion is a historical religion and
therefore yours is wrong and ours is
true", the mimamsaka [orthodox Hindu] replies, "Yours being
historical, you confess that a man invented it nineteen hundred years ago. That
which is true must be infinite and eternal. That is the one test of truth. It
never decays, it is always the same. You confess your religion was created by
such-and-such a man. The Vedas were not. By no prophets or anything.... Only
infinite words; infinite by their very nature, from which the whole universe
comes and goes." In the abstract, it is perfectly correct”. (CW, Vol.1:
The Gita I, pp.448-449)
The Vedas
Are Impersonal
The Vedas Deal Almost Entirely with
Philosophy
f] “Our religion preaches an impersonal
personal God. It preaches any amount of impersonal laws plus any amount of
personality, but the very fountainhead of our religion is the Shrutis, the
Vedas, which are perfectly impersonal; the persons all come in the Smritis and
Puranas – the great avataras, the incarnations of God, prophets, and so forth.
And this ought also to be observed that, except our religion, every other
religion in the world depends upon the life or lives of some personal founder
or founders. Christianity is built upon the life of Jesus Christ, Islam upon
Muhammad, Buddhism upon Buddha, Jainism upon the Jinas, and so on. It naturally
follows that there must be in all these religions a good deal of fight about
what they call the historical evidences of these great personalities. If at any
time the historical evidences about the existence of these personages in
ancient times becomes weak, the whole building of the religion tumbles down and
is broken to pieces. We Hindus escaped this fate because our religion is not
based upon persons, but upon principles.” (CW, Vol.3: The Sages of India,
p.249)
Priority is for principles
and not persons
“Religions
divide themselves equally into three parts. There is the first part, consisting
of philosophy, the essence, the principles of every religion. These principles
find expression in mythology - the lives of saints or heroes, demigods, or
gods, or divine beings; and the whole idea of this mythology is that of power.
And in the lower class of mythologies - the primitive – the expression of this
power is in the muscles; their heroes are strong, gigantic. One hero conquers
the whole world. As man advances, he must
find expression for his energy higher than in the muscles; so his heroes also
find expression in something higher. The higher mythologies have heroes who are
gigantic moral men. Their strength is manifested in becoming moral and pure. They
can stand alone, they can beat back the surging tide of selfishness and
immorality. The third portion of all religions is symbolism, which you call
ceremonials and forms. Even the expression through mythology, the lives of
heroes, is not sufficient for all. There are minds still lower. Like children
they must have their kindergarten of religion, and these symbologies are
evolved - concrete examples which they can handle and grasp and understand,
which they can see and feel as material somethings. So, in every religion you
find there are the three stages: philosophy, mythology, and ceremonial.”
Do not
lose sight of principles
“There
is one advantage that can be pleaded for the Vedanta: that, in India,
fortunately, these three stages have been sharply defined. In other religions
the principles are so interwoven with the mythology that it is very hard to
distinguish one from the other. The mythology stands supreme, swallowing up the
principles; and in the course of centuries the principles are lost sight of.
The explanation, the illustration of the principle, swallows up the principle
and the people see only the explanation, the prophet, the preacher, while the
principles have gone out of existence almost - so much so that today, if a man
dares to preach the principles of Christianity apart from Christ, they will try
to attack him and think he is wrong and dealing blows at Christianity. In the
same way, if a man wants to preach the principles of Islam, Muslims will think
the same; because concrete ideas, the lives of great men and prophets, have
entirely overshadowed the principles. In Vedanta the chief advantage is that it
was not the work of one single man; and therefore, naturally, unlike Buddhism,
or Christianity, or Islam, the prophet or teacher did not entirely swallow up
or overshadow the principles. The principles live; and the prophets, as it
were, form a secondary group, unknown to Vedanta. The Upanishads speak of no
particular prophet, but they speak of prophets and prophetesses. The old
Hebrews had something of that idea; yet we find Moses occupying most of the
space of the Hebrew literature. Of course, I do not mean that it is bad that
these prophets should take hold of a nation; but it certainly is very injurious
if the
whole field of principles is lost sight of.” (CW, Vol.6: The
Methods and Purpose of Religion, pp.6-7.)
“
Live for an
ideal, and that one ideal alone. Let it be so great, so strong, that there may
be nothing else left in the mind; no place for anything else, no time for
anything else”.
What is
idolatry?
“Worship of society and
popular opinions is idolatry. The soul has no sex, no country, no place, no
time”.
No single
personality or teacher can claim to
have created the Vedas.
“Every
one of the great religions in the world, excepting our own [Vedanta], is built
upon such historical characters; but ours rests upon principles. There is no
man or woman who can claim to have created the Vedas. They are the embodiment
of eternal principles; sages discovered them; and now and then the names of
these sages are mentioned - just their names; we do not even know who or what
they were. In many cases we do not know who their fathers were, and in almost
every case we do not know when and where they were born. But what cared they,
these sages, for their names? They were the preachers of principles; and they
themselves, so far as they went, tried to become illustrations of the
principles they preached. At the same time, just as our God is an impersonal
and yet a personal God, so is our religion a most intensely personal one - a
religion based upon principles and yet with an infinite scope for the play of
persons; for what religion gives you more incarnations, more prophets and
seers, and still waits for infinitely more?”
Incarnations are infinite
“The
Bhagavata says that incarnations are infinite, leaving ample scope for as many
as you like to come. Therefore, if any one or more of these persons in India's
religious history, any one or more of these incarnations, and any one or more
of our prophets are proved not to have been historical, it does not injure our
religion at all; even then it remains as firm as ever, because it is based on
principles and not upon persons. It is in vain that we try to gather all the
peoples of the world around a single personality. It is difficult to make them
gather together even round eternal and universal principles. If it ever becomes
possible to bring the largest portion of humanity to one way of thinking in
regard to religion, mark you, it must always be through principles and not
through persons. Yet, as I have said, our religion has ample scope for the
authority and influence of persons. There is that most wonderful theory of
ishta which gives you the fullest and the freest choice possible among these
great religious personalities. You may take up any one of the prophets or
teachers as your guide and the object of your special adoration; you are even
allowed to think that he whom you have chosen is the greatest of the prophets,
greatest of all the avatars - there is no harm in that - but you must keep to a
firm
background of eternally true principles.”
(CW, Vol.3: The Mission of the Vedanta, pp.183-184)
Vedas are
a great body of eternal truth and
more
is to come
“If Sri Krishna
and Rama and all the saints are proved to be mythical characters, the Vedas
still remain, not as a source of blind and imperative faith, not as a rigid and
inflexible spiritual possession, but as a great body of eternal truths, of
which more and more is to come in the way of revelation by the enlightened
ones.” (Life, Vol.2: Chapter 74: In Madras and Hyderabad, p.237)
The
Vedas are not inspired, but expired
“Vedanta
finds veneration for some particular person... difficult to uphold. those of
you who are students of Vedanta (and by Vedanta is always meant the Upanishads)
know that this is the only religion that
does not cling to any person. No one man or woman has ever become the object of
worship among the Vedantins. It cannot be. A man is no more worthy of worship
than any bird, any worm. We are all brothers. The difference is only in degree.
I am exactly the same as the lowest worm. You see how very little room there is
in Vedanta for any man to stand ahead of us and for us to go and worship him -
he is dragging us on and we being saved by him. Vedanta does not give you that.
No book, no man to worship, nothing.” (CW, Vol.8: Is Vedanta the Future Religion?
p.124)
“We
may remark that, as this is the unique position in
India, our claim is that Vedanta only can
be the universal religion, that it is already the existing universal religion
in the world, because it teaches principles and not persons. No religion built
upon a person can be taken up as a type by all the races of mankind. Now, the
Vedantic religion does not require any such personal sanction. Its sanction is
the eternal nature of man”. (CW, Vol.3: The Sages of India, pp.250-251.)
“The
Vedas are not inspired, but expired; not that they came from anywhere outside,
but they are the eternal laws living in every soul. The Vedas are in the soul
of the ant, in the soul of the god. The ant has only to evolve and get the body
of a sage or rishi, and the Vedas will come out, eternal laws expressing
themselves.” (CW, Vol.3: The Vedanta, pp.409-410.)
“You
must always remember that in all other scriptures inspiration is quoted as
their authority, but this inspiration is limited to a very few persons, and through
them the truth came to the masses - and we all have to obey them. Truth came to
Jesus of Nazareth and we must all obey him. But the truth came to the rishis of
India - the mantra-drashtas, the seers of thought - and will come to all rishis
in the future, not to talkers, not to book-swallowers, not to scholars, not to
philologists, but to seers of thought.” (CW, Vol.3: The Work Before Us, p.283)
Anyone
can attain sainthood or rishihood
“The
rishi-state is not limited by time or by place, by sex or race. Vatsayana
boldly declared that this rishihood is the common property of the descendants
of the sage, of the Aryan, of the non-Aryan, of even the Mlechcha. This is the
sageship of the Vedas; and constantly we ought to remember this ideal of
religion in India, which I wish other nations of the world would also remember
and learn, so that there may be less fight and less quarrel”. (CW, Vol.3: The
Sages of India, p.253)
“Who
are the rishis? Vatsayana says, "He who has attained through proper means
the direct realization of dharma, he alone can be a rishi, even if he is a
Mlechcha by birth." Thus it is that in ancient times, Vashishta, born of
an illegitimate union; Vyasa, the son of a fisherwoman; Narada, the son of a
maidservant of uncertain parentage, and many others of like nature attained to
rishihood”. (CW, Vol.3: The Religion We Are Born In, pp.456-457)
The hoax called "Aryan Invasion Theory
“A
gentle, yet clear brushing off of the cobwebs of the so-called Aryan theory and
all its vicious corollaries is... absolutely necessary, especially for the
South [of India]; and a proper self-respect created by a knowledge of the past
grandeurs of the ancestors of the Aryan race – the great Tamils”. (CW, Vol.4:
Aryans and Tamilians, p.301.)
“[There
has been] speculation whether there was a distinct, separate race called the
Aryas living in Central Asia to the Baltic. [Also as to] so-called types - the
"blonde" and the "brunette". [But] the races were always
mixed. Coming to practical common sense from so-called historical imagination:
the Aryas in their oldest records were in the land between Turkistan and the
Punjab and Northwest Tibet.” (CW, Vol.4: India's Message to the World #13-18,
p.309.)
“The
Americans, the English, the Dutch and the Portuguese got hold of the poor
Africans and made them work hard while they lived; and their children of mixed
birth were born in slavery and kept in that condition for a long period. From
that wonderful example, the mind jumps back several thousand years and fancies
that the same thing happened [in India]; and our archeologist dreams of India
being full of dark-eyed aborigines, and the bright Aryan came from - the Lord
knows where. According to some, they came from Central Asia. There are
patriotic Englishmen who think that the Aryans were all red-haired. Others,
according to their idea, think that they were all black-haired. If the writer
happens to be a black-haired man, the Aryans were all black-haired! Of late,
there was an attempt made to prove that the Aryans lived on the Swiss lakes. I
should not be sorry of they had all been drowned there, theory and all. Some
say now that they lived at the North Pole. Lord bless the Aryans and their
habitations! As for the truth of these theories, there is not one word in our
scriptures, not one, to prove that the Aryan ever came from anywhere outside of
India - and in ancient India was included Afghanistan. There it ends. And the
theory that the shudra castes were all non-Aryans and that they were a
multitude, is equally illogical and equally irrational. It could not have been
possible in those days that a few Aryans settled and lived there with a hundred
thousand slaves at their command. These slaves would have eaten them up, made
"chutney" of them in five minutes. The only explanation is to be
found in the Mahabharata, which says that in the beginning of the Satya Yuga
there was one caste, the brahmins; and then, by difference of occupation, they
went on dividing themselves into different castes, and that is the only true
and rational explanation that has been given. And in the coming Satya Yuga all
the other castes will have to go back to the same condition.”(CW, Vol.3: The
Future of India, pp.292-293)
The hoax
called "Aryan Invasion Theory
“What
your European pundits say about the Aryans' swooping down from some foreign
land, snatching away the lands of the aborigines and settling in India by
exterminating them, is all pure nonsense, foolish talk! Strange that our Indian
scholars, too, say amen to them; and all these monstrous lies are being taught
to our boys! This is very bad indeed. I am an ignoramus myself; I do not
pretend to any scholarship; but with the little that I understand, I strongly
protested against these ideas at the Paris Congress [in 1901]. I have been
talking with the Indian and European savants on the subject, and hope to raise
many objection to this theory in detail, when time permits. And this I say to
you, to our pundits, also: "You are learned men; hunt up your old books
and scriptures, please, and draw your own conclusions." Whenever Europeans
find an opportunity, they exterminate the aborigines and settle down in ease
and comfort on their lands; and therefore they think the Aryans must have done
the same! The Westerners would be considered wretched vagabonds if they lived
in their native homes, depending wholly on their own internal resources; and so
they have to run wildly about the world seeking how they can feed upon the fat
of the land of others by spoliation and slaughter; and therefore they conclude
that the Aryans must have done the same! But where is your proof? Guess-work?
Then keep your fanciful guesses to yourselves! In what Veda, in what Sukta, do
you find that the Aryans came into India from a foreign country? Where do you
get the idea that they slaughtered the wild aborigines? What do you gain by
talking such nonsense?... India has never [exterminated weaker races and
settled on their lands for ever]. The Aryans were kind and generous; and in
their hearts, which were Large and unbounded as the ocean, and in their brains,
gifted with superhuman genius, all these ephemeral and apparently pleasant, but
virtually beastly practices never found a place.”( CW, Vol.5: The East and the
West, pp.534-537)
Vedas are comprehensive and one more
step
towards self –realisation
“There
is a place in the Vedas [even] for superstition, for ignorance. The whole
secret is to find out the proper place for everything”. (CW, Vol.1: The Gita I,
p.457)
“One
peculiarity of the Vedas is that they are the only scriptures that again and
again declare that you must go beyond them. The Vedas say that they were
written just for the child-mind, and when you have grown, you must go beyond
them”. (CW, Vol.5: Questions and Answers - II, p.311)
“Our
own realization is beyond the Vedas because even they depend upon that. The
highest Vedanta is the philosophy of the Beyond”. (CW, Vol.7: Inspired Talks,
July 6, 1895, pp.34-35)
Religion Is a Superconscious State That Is
To Be
Realized
“Religion in India means
realization and nothing short of that. "Believe in doctrines and you are a
sage" can never be taught to us, for we do not believe in that. You are
what you make yourselves. You are, by the grace of God and your own exertions,
what you are. Mere believing in certain theories and doctrines will not help
you much. The mighty word that came from the sky of spirituality in India was
anubhuti, realization; and ours are the only books which declare
again and again, "The Lord is to be
seen." Bold, brave words, indeed; but true to their very core. Every
sound, every vibration is true. Religion is to be realized, not only heard; it
is not in learning some doctrine like a parrot. Neither is it mere intellectual
assent - that is nothing; but it must come into us”. (CW, Vol.3: The Common
Bases of Hinduism, pp.377-378)
“Religion
Is a Practical Science, the Opening of the Book of the Heart If you ask me how
[all of] this can be practical, my answer is: it has been practical first and
philosophical next. You can see that first these things have been perceived and
realized, and then written. This world spoke to the early thinkers. Birds spoke
to them, animals spoke to them, the sun and the moon spoke to them; and little
by little they realized things and got into the heart of nature. Not by
cogitation, not by the force of logic, not by picking the brains of others and
making a big book, as is the fashion in modern times; not even as I do, by
taking up one of their writings and making a long lecture, but by patient
investigation and discovery they found
out the truth. Its essential method was practice, and so it must be, always.
Religion is ever a practical science and there never was, nor will be any
theological religion. It is practice first and knowledge afterwards”. (CW,
Vol.2: Practical Vedanta II, p.317.)
Religion Is a Superconscious
State That Is To Be
Realized
“Scriptures
Only Help to Take Away the Veil Which Hides Truth from Our Eyes. Realization of
religion is the only way. Each one of us will have to discover. Of what use are
these books, then, these bibles of the world? They are of great use, just as
maps are of a country. I have seen maps of England all my life before I came
here, and they were great helps to me in forming some conception of England.
Yet, when I arrived in this country, what a difference between the maps and the
country itself! So is the difference between realization and the scriptures.
These books are only maps, the experiences of past men and women, as a motive
power to us to dare to make the same experiences and discover the same way, if
not better”.
“This
is the first principle of Vedanta - that realization is religion, and he or she
who realizes is the religious person; and he or she who does not is no better
than someone who says, "I do not know." - if not worse, because the
other says, "I do not know" and is sincere. In this realization
again, we shall be helped very much by these books, for every science has its
own particular method of investigation”. (CW, Vol.6: Methods and Purpose of
Religion, p.14.)
Reality must always be beyond all
system
“The
glory of the Vedic scriptures is unique in the history of religion, not merely
because of their great antiquity, but vastly more for the fact that they alone
amongst all the authoritative books of the world, warned man that he must go
beyond all books.” (Chapter 17: The Swami's Mission Considered as a Whole,
p.299.44)
“It
is true that we have created a system of religion in India which we believe to
be the only rational religious system extant; but our belief in its rationality
rests upon its all-inclusion of the searchers after God, it absolute charity
towards all forms of worship, and its eternal receptivity of those ideas
tending towards the evolution of God in the universe. We admit the imperfections
of our system, because the Reality must always be beyond all system; and in
this admission lies the portent and promise of an eternal growth. Sects,
ceremonies, and books, so far as they are the means of man's realizing his own
nature, are all right; when he has realized that, he gives up everything.
"I reject the Vedas!" is the last word of the Vedanta philosophy. Ritual,
hymns and scriptures through which he has traveled to freedom vanish for him.”
(CW, Vol.8: The Essence of Religion, pp.254-255)
Religious
freedom
“The Vedanta was (and is) the boldest system of religion. It stopped
nowhere, and it had one advantage: there was no body of priests who sought to
suppress everyone who tried to tell the truth. There was always absolute
religious freedom. In India the bondage of superstitions is a social one;… in
the West society is very free. Social matters in India are very strict, but
religious opinion is free”.( CW, Vol.2: Maya and the Evolution of the
Conception of God, pp.113-114.)
Fight
against rituals and philosophy allowed and
Materialism
praised
“[Besides the priests and the kings
engaged in struggle], there were others - recruited from both the priests and
the king castes - who ridiculed equally the rituals and philosophers, declared
spiritualism as a fraud and upheld the attainment of material comforts as the
highest goal of life. The people, tired of ceremonials, and wondering at the philosophers,
joined the materialists in masses”. (CW, Vol.6: The Historical Evolution of
India, p.160)
The
Charvakas, Who Upheld Materialism as
the
Highest Goal of Life
“The
Charvaka, or materialist, basing his doctrine on the first part - the
sacrificial portion – of the Vedas, believed that all was matter and that there
is neither a heaven nor a hell, neither a soul nor a God.” (CW, Vol.2: True
Buddhism, p.508)
“The
Charvakas... preached horrible things, the most rank, undisguised materialism,
such as in the nineteenth century they dare not openly preach. These Charvakas
were allowed to preach from temple to temple and city to city, that religion
was all nonsense, that it was priestcraft, that the Vedas were the words and
writings of fools, rogues, and demons, and that there was neither a God nor an
eternal soul. If there were a soul, why did it not come back after death drawn
by the love of wife and child? Their idea was that, if there were a soul, it
must still love after death and want good things to eat and nice dress. Yet no
one hurt these Charvakas.” (CW, Vol.2: Maya and the Evolution of the Conception
of God, pp.114-115.)
“[The
Charvaka movement] was the beginning of that caste question, and that
triangular fight in India between ceremonials, philosophy and materialism which
has come down unsolved to our own days”. (CW, Vol.6: The Historical Evolution
of India, p.160.)
“What is material and what
is not material? When the world is the end and God the means to attain that
end, then that is material. When God is the end and the world is only the means
to attain that end, spirituality has begun.”
Blame no view of religion as long as it is sincere.
“So,
the ceremonials, worship of gods, and myths are all right, says Krishna....
Why? Because they all lead to the same goal. Ceremonies, books and forms - all
these are the links in the chain. Get hold! That is the one thing. If you are
sincere and have really got hold of one link, do not let go; the rest is bound
to come. [But people] do not get hold. They spend the time quarreling and
determining what they should get hold of, and do not get hold of anything.… We
are always after truth, but never want to get it. We simply want the pleasure
to go about and ask. We have a lot of energy and spend it that way. That is why
Krishna says: Get hold of any one of these chains that are stretched out from a
common center. No one step is greater than another....Blame no view of religion
so far as it is sincere. Hold on to one of these links and it will pull you to
the center. Your heart itself will teach all the rest. The teacher within will
teach all the creeds, all the philosophies”. (CW, Vol.1: Krishna, p.439.)
Religion is a matter of
experience
“Religion
is a matter of experience, and not of intellectual understanding. One must
practice it in order to understand it. Such a position is corroborated by the
sciences of chemistry, physics, geology, etc. It won't do to put together one
bottle of oxygen and two of hydrogen and then cry, "Where is the
water?" They have to be placed in a closed container and an electric
current passed through them so they can combine into water. Then only you can
see water, and you can understand that water is produced from a combination of
hydrogen and oxygen. If you wish to have the unitive experience, you must have
that kind of faith in religion, that kind of eagerness, diligence, and
patience; and then only you will succeed”. (Rems (Haripada Mitra), pp.51-52.)
“Obey
the scriptures until you are strong enough to do without them; then go beyond
them. Books are not an end-all. Verification is the only proof of religious
truth. Each must verify for him- or herself; and no teacher who says, "I
have seen, but you cannot", is to be trusted – only that one who says,
"You can see, too." All scriptures, all truths are Vedas in all
times, in all countries, because these truths are to be seen, and anyone may discover
them.”(CW, Vol.7: Inspired Talks, June 24, 1895, p.9)
“ Knowledge can only be got in one
way, the way of experience; there is no other way to know.”
“ The book one must read to learn natural
sciences is the book of nature. The book from which to learn religion is your
own mind and heart.”
“ The secret of life is not enjoyment but
education through experience.”
Great role of Buddha
He broke
the Mental and Spiritual Bonds of Men by Preaching Vedanta to the Whole World.
“India
was full of witchcraft in Buddha's day. There were the masses of the people,
and they were debarred from all knowledge. If just a word of the Vedas entered
the ears of a man, terrible punishment was visited upon him. The priests had
made a secret of the Vedas – the Vedas that contained the spiritual truths
discovered by the ancient Hindus! At last, one man could bear it no more. He
had the brain, the power and the heart - a heart as infinite as the broad sky.
He felt how the masses were being led by the priests and how the priests were
glorying in their power, and he wanted to do something about it. He did not
want power over any one, and he wanted to break the mental and spiritual bonds
of men.” (CW, Vol.8: Buddha's Message to the World, p.96-97)
“What
Buddha did was to break wide open the gates of that very religion which was
confined in the Upanishads and to a particular caste”. (CW, Vol.6: Letter to
Swami Akhandananda from Ghazipur, February, 1890, p.225.)
Buddha helped the masses to know advaitha
“Advaita
(which gets its whole force on the subjective side of man), was never allowed
to come to the people. At first some monks got hold of it and took it to the
forests, and so it came to be called the "forest philosophy". By the
mercy of the Lord, the Buddha came and preached it to the masses, and the whole
nation became Buddhists.” (CW, Vol.2: The Absolute and Manifestation, p.138.)
“Shakya
Muni was himself a monk, and it was his glory that he had the large heartedness
to bring out the truths from the hidden Vedas and throw them broadcast all over
the world”. (CW, Vol.1: Buddhism, the Fulfillment of Hinduism, p.22)
Buddha was the living embodiment of true
Vedanta.
“How
much good to the world and its beings came out of Buddha's
["fanaticism"]! How many monasteries and schools and colleges, how
many public hospitals and veterinary refuges were established! How developed
architecture became! ... What was there in India before Buddha's advent? Only a
number of religious principles recorded on bundles of palm leaves - and those,
too, known only to a few. It was Lord Buddha who brought them down to the
practical field and showed how to apply them in the everyday life of the
people. In a sense he was the living embodiment of true Vedanta.” (CW, Vol.7:
Conversation with Sharat Chandra Chakravarty , Belur, 1898, pp.118-119)
“Shakya
Muni came not to destroy; he was the fulfillment, the logical conclusion, the
logical development of the religion of the Hindus.” (CW, Vol.1: Buddhism, the
Fulfillment of Hinduism, p.21)
Buddha wanted to make truth shine without any
compromise
“Buddha
wanted to make truth shine as truth. No softening, no compromise, no pandering
to the priests, the powerful, the kings. No bowing before superstitious
traditions, however hoary; no respect for forms and books just because they
came down from the distant past. He rejected all scriptures, all forms of
religious practice. Even the very language, Sanskrit, in which religions had
traditionally been taught in India, he rejected, so that his followers would
not have any chance to imbibe the superstitions that were associated with it.”
(CW, Vol.8: Buddha's Message to the World, p.100)
Contrast
between Buddhism and Hinduism
“The
great point of contrast between Buddhism and Hinduism lies in the fact that
Buddhism said, "Realize all this as illusion", while Hinduism said,
"Realize that within the illusion is the Real." Of how this was to be
done, Hindus never presumed to enunciate any rigid law. The Buddhist command
could only be carried out through monasticism; the Hindu might be fulfilled
through any state of life. All alike were roads to the one Real.... Thus
Buddhism became the religion of a monastic order, but Hinduism, in spite of its
exaltation of monasticism, remains ever the religion of faithfulness to daily
duty, whatever it be, as the path by which man may attain God”. (CW, Vol.8:
Sayings and Utterances #32 pp.273-274)
“ Buddha was a great Vedantist (for Buddhism is really only an offshoot
of
Vedanta) and Shankara is often called a
"hidden Buddhist". Buddha made the
analysis; Shankara made the synthesis out
of it. Buddha never bowed down to
anything - neither Veda, nor caste, nor
priest, nor custom. He fearlessly
reasoned so far as reason could take him.
Such a fearless search for truth and
love for every living thing the world has never seen”.( CW,
Vol.7: Inspired Talks, July 19, 1895, p.59.)
INDIAN RENAISSANCE
“A
renascent India, bought by the valor and blood of the heroic Rajputs, defined
by the merciless intellect of a brahmin from the same historical thought-center
of Mithila (Kumarila Bhatta), led by a new philosophical impulse organized by
Shankara and his band of sannyasins, and beautified by the arts and literature
of the courts of Malava - arose on the ruins of the old.”(CW, Vol.6: The
Historical Evolution of India, p.163.)
Shankaracharya placed before people the
wonderful,
coherent system of Advaita
“A
thousand years after Buddha's death... the mobs, the masses, and various races
had been converted to Buddhism; naturally, the teachings of the Buddha became
in time degenerated, because most of the people were very ignorant. Buddhism
taught no God, no Ruler of the universe, so gradually the masses brought their
gods and devils and hobgoblins out again and a tremendous hotchpotch was made
of Buddhism in India. Again materialism came to the fore, taking the form of
license with the upper classes and superstition with the lower. Then Shankaracharya
arose and once more revivified Vedanta philosophy. He made it a rationalistic
philosophy. In the Upanishads the arguments were often very obscure. By Buddha
the moral side of the philosophy was laid stress upon, and by Shankaracharya,
the intellectual side. He worked out, rationalized, and placed before people
the wonderful, coherent system of Advaita”.( CW, Vol.2: The Absolute and
Manifestation, p.139.)
Shankaracharya brought back the Vedas to life
“Shankaracharya….instead
of preaching new doctrines and always thinking new thoughts and making sects,
he brought back the Vedas to life; and modern Hinduism has thus an admixture of
ancient Hinduism, over which the Vedantists predominate. But, you see, what
once dies never comes back to life, and those ceremonials of Hinduism never
came back to life. You will be astonished if I tell you that, according to the
old ceremonials, he is not a good Hindu who does not eat beef. On certain
occasions he must sacrifice a bull and eat it. That is disgusting now. However
they may differ from each other in India, in that all Hindus are one - they
never eat beef. The ancient sacrifices and the ancient gods - they are all
gone; modern India belongs to the spiritual part of the Vedas”.(CW, Vol.3:
Buddhistic India, pp.535-536.)
Shankara
and Ramanuja firmly reestablished
the
eternal Vedic religion
“Shankara
and Ramanuja firmly reestablished the eternal Vedic religion, harmonizing and
balancing in due proportions dharma, artha, kama and moksha [duty, gain,
pleasure and liberation]. Thus the nation was brought to the way of regaining
its lost life; but India has three hundred million souls to awake, and hence
the delay. To revive three hundred millions - can it be done in a day?” (CW,
Vol.5: The East and the West, pp.454-455)
The
Upanishads, the Vyasa-Sutras, and the Gita
the
three important Prasthanas
“In
modern India the three Prasthanas are considered equally important in the study
of all systems of [the Hindu or Vedic] religion. First of all there are the
revelations - the Shrutis – by which I mean the Upanishads. Secondly, among our
philosophies, the Sutras of Vyasa have the greatest prominence on account of
their being the consummation of all the preceding systems of philosophy. These
systems are not contradictory to one another, but one is based on another; and
there is a gradual unfolding of the theme which culminates in the Sutras of
Vyasa. Then, between the Upanishads and the Sutras, which are the systematizing
of the marvelous truths of the Vedanta, comes in the Gita, the divine
commentary on the Vedanta. The Upanishads, the Vyasa-Sutras, and the Gita,
therefore, have to be taken up by every sect in India that wants to claim
authority for orthodoxy, whether dualist, or vishishtadvaitists, or advaitist;
the authorities of each of these are the three Prasthanas. We find that a
Shankaracharya, or a Ramanuja, or a Madhvacarya, or a Vallabhacarya, or a
Chaitanya – anyone who wanted to propound a new sect - had to take up these
three systems and write… a new commentary on them.” (CW, Vol.3: The Vedanta,
pp.395-396.)
“The
three Prasthanas, then, in the different explanations of Dvaita,
Vishishtadvaita, or Advaita, with a few minor recensions, form the
"authorities" of the Hindu religion”. (CW, Vol.4: Reply to the Madras
Address, p.335)
Aphorisms of Vyasa are the basis of the
Vedanta
philosophy
“All
schools of philosophy in India, although they claim to have been based on the
Vedas, took different names for their systems. The last one, the system of
Vyasa, took its stand upon the doctrines of the Vedas more than did the
previous systems and made an attempt to harmonize the preceding philosophies,
such as the Sankhya and the Nyaya, with the doctrines of the Vedanta. So it is
especially called the Vedanta philosophy; and the Sutras or aphorisms of Vyasa
are, in modern India, the basis of the Vedanta philosophy.” (CW, Vol.1: The
Vedanta Philosophy, p.358.
“Vyasa' s
philosophy is par excellence that of the Upanishads”.(CW, Vol.7: Inspired
Talks, July 7, p.36.)
“Following
the Upanishads there come other philosophies of India, but every one of them
failed to get that hold on India which the philosophy of Vyasa has got,
although the philosophy of Vyasa is a development out of an older one, the
Sankhya; and every philosophy and every system in India - I mean, throughout
the world - owes much to Kapila [the founder of Sankhya], perhaps the greatest
name in the history of India in psychological and philosophical lines.... The
philosophy of Vyasa, the Vyasa Sutras, is firm-seated and has attained the
permanence of that which it intended to present to humanity, the Brahman of the
Vedantic side of philosophy. Reason was entirely subordinated to the Shrutis;
and, as Shankara declares, Vyasa did not care to reason at all. His idea in
writing the Sutras was just to bring together, and with one thread to make a
garland of the flowers of Vedantic texts. His Sutras are admitted so far as
they are subordinate to the authority of the Upanishads, and no further. And,
as I have said, all the sects of India now hold these Vyasa Sutras to be the
great authority, and every new sect in India starts with a fresh commentary on
the Vyasa Sutras according to its light.... The Vyasa Sutras have got the place
of authority, and no one can expect to found a sect in India until he or she
can write a fresh commentary on them”. (CW, Vol.3: The Vedanta in All Its
Phases, pp.327-328.)
Aphorisms of
Vyasa are the basis of the
Vedanta
philosophy
“If
one be asked to point out the system of thought towards which as a center all
the ancient and modern Indian thought have converged, if one wants to see the
real backbone of Hinduism in all its various manifestations, the Sutras of
Vyasa will unquestionably be pointed out as constituting all that. Either one
hears the Advaita keshari (lion of Vedanta) roaring in peals of thunder - the
asti,bhati, priya (It exists, shines, and is beloved) - amid the heart-stopping
solemnities of the Himalayan forests, mixing with the solemn cadence of the
river of heaven; or listens to the cooing of the piya, pitam in the beautiful
bowers of the grove of Vrinda; whether one mingles with the sedate meditations
of the monasteries of Varanasi or the ecstatic dances of the followers of the
Prophet of Nadia (Sri Chaitanya); whether one sits at the feet of the teacher
of the Vishishtadvaita system with its Vadakale, Tenkale (two divisions of the
Ramanuja sect) and all the other subdivisions; or listens with reverence to the
acharyas of the Madhva school; whether one hears the martial Wa guruki fateh of
the secular Sikhs or the sermons on the Grantha Sahib of the Udasis and
Nirmalas; whether he salutes the sannyasin disciples of Kabir with Sat sahib
and listens with joy to the sakhis (bhajans); whether he pores upon the
wonderful lore of that reformer of Rajputana, Dadu, or the works of his royal
disciple, Sundaradasa, down to the great Nischaladasa, the celebrated author of
the Vichara Sagara, which book has more influence on India than any that has
been written in any language within the last three centuries; if one even asks
the Bhangi Mehtar of Northern India to sit down and give an account of the
teachings of his Lalguru - one will find that all these various teachers and
schools have as their basis that system whose authority is the Shruti, the Gita
its divine commentary, the Shariraka [Vyasa] Sutras its organized system, and
all the different sects in India, from the Paramahamsa Parivrajakacharyas to
the poor despised Mehtar disciples of Lalguru are different manifestations”.
(CW, Vol.4: Reply to the Madras Address, pp.334-335.)
The
Bhagavadgita
“Next
in authority is the celebrated Gita. The great glory of Shankaracharya was his
preaching of the Gita. It is one of the greatest works that this great man did
among the many noble works of his noble life - the preaching of the Gita and
writing the most beautiful commentary upon it. And he has been followed by all
the founders of the orthodox sects in India, each of whom has written a
commentary on the Gita”. (CW, Vol.3: The Vedanta in All Its Phases, p.328) Gita
has in fact harmonized the many contradictory parts of the Upanishads.
The Great
Sacred Books
“I
hope and wish... that you will reverently study the Upanishads, the Brahma
Sutras, and the Bhagavadgita, which are known as the Prasthanatraya (the three
supreme sources of truth), as also the Itihasas (epics), the Puranas, and the
Agamas (Tantras). You will not find the like of all these anywhere else in the
world. Human beings alone, of all living beings, have a hunger in their hearts
to know the whence and whither, the whys and wherefores of things. There are
four key words which you must remember, viz. abhaya (fearlessness), ahimsa
(non-injury), asanga (nonattachment), and ananda (bliss). These words really
sum up the essence o of all our sacred books. Remember them. Their implication
will become clear to you later on”. (Rems., (K.S. Ramaswami Shastri), p.108)
“[Many] books constitute the scriptures
of the Hindus. When there is such a
mass of sacred books in a nation and a
race which has devoted the greatest
part of its energies to the thought of
philosophy and spirituality (nobody knows
for how many thousands of years), it is
quite natural that there should be so
many sects; indeed it is a wonder that
there are not thousands more.( CW, Vol.3: Vedantism, p.122.)
Intellect
is necessary for spiritual aspiration
“Ordinarily
speaking, spiritual aspiration ought to be balanced through the intellect,
otherwise it may degenerate into mere sentimentality.”
Interdependence
is the law of the whole universe.
“The
Intellect Cannot Answer the Riddle of How the Infinite Became the Finite. The
one question that is most difficult to grasp in understanding the Advaita
philosophy, and the one question that will be asked again and again, and that
will always remain is: how has the Infinite, the Absolute, become the finite? I
will now take up this question and, in order to illustrate it, I will use a
figure: Here is the Absolute (a), and this is the universe (b). The Absolute
has become the universe. By this is not only meant the material world, but the
mental world, the spiritual world - heavens and earths and, in fact, everything
that exists. Mind is the name of a change, and body the name of another change,
and so on; and all these changes compose our universe. This Absolute (a) has
become the universe (b) by coming through time, space and causation (c). This
is the central idea of Advaita. Time, space and causation are like the glass
through which the Absolute is seen; and when It is seen on the lower side, It
appears as the universe.”
Interdependence is the
law of the whole universe.
“ Now, we at once gather from this that in
the Absolute there is neither time, space, nor causation. The idea of time
cannot be there, seeing that there is no mind, no thought. The idea of space
cannot be there, seeing that there is no external change. What you call motion
and causation cannot exist where there is only One. We have to understand this,
and impress it upon our mind, that what we call causation begins after, if we
may be permitted to say so, the degeneration of the Absolute into the
phenomenal, and not before;
and that our will, our desire, and all
these things always come after that”
A stone falls and we ask why. This question
is possible only on the supposition that nothing happens without a cause. I
request you to make this very clear in your minds, for whenever we ask why
anything happens, we are taking for granted that everything that happens must
have a why; that is to say, it must have been preceded by something else which
acted as the cause. This precedence and succession are what we call the law of
causation. It means that everything in the universe is by turns a cause and an
effect. It is the cause of certain things which come after it and is itself the
effect of something else which has preceded it. This is called the law of
causation and is a necessary condition of all our thinking.
We
believe that every particle in the universe, wherever it be, is in relation to
every other particle. There has been much discussion as to how this idea arose.
In Europe there have been intuitive philosophers who believed that it was
constitutional in humanity, others have believe it came from experience; but
the question has never been settled. We shall see later on what Vedanta has to
say about it. But first we have to understand that the very asking of the
question why presupposes that everything around us has been preceded by certain
other things and will be succeeded by certain other things.
The
other belief involved in this question is that nothing in the universe is
independent, that everything is acted upon by something outside itself.
Interdependence is the law of the whole universe.....Coming from subtleties of
logic to the logic of our common plane, to commonsense, we can see this from
another side, when we seek to know how the Absolute has become the relative.
Supposing we know the answer, would the Absolute remain the Absolute? It would
have become the relative” (CW, Vol.2: The Absolute and Manifestation,
pp.130-132.)
The world is a
mixture of existence and non-existence
“The Vedantist... has proved beyond all
doubt that the mind is limited, that it cannot go beyond certain limits -
beyond time, space and causation. As no one can jump out of his or her own
self, so no one can go beyond the limits that have been put on him or her by the
laws of time and space. Every attempt to solve the laws of causation, time and
space would be futile, because the very attempt would have to be made by taking
for granted the existence of these three. What does the statement of the
existence of the world mean, then? "This world has no existence" -
what is meant by that? It means it has no absolute
existence. It exists only in relation to
my mind, to your mind, and to the mind of everyone else. We see this world with
the five senses, but if we had another sense, we would see in it something
more. If we had another sense, it would appear as something still different. It
has, therefore, no real existence; it has no unchangeable, immovable, infinite
existence. Nor can it be called nonexistence, seeing that it exists, and we
have to work in and through it. It is a mixture of existence and
non-existence”. (CW, Vol.2: Maya and Illusion, pp.90-91.)
“The
internal universe, the real, is infinitely greater than the external, which is
only a shadowy projection of the true
one. This world is neither true nor untrue, it is the shadow of truth.
''Imagination is the gilded shadow of
truth,'' says the poet”(one of his inspired talks)
Change is
always subjective conquer through the
subjective,
by perfecting the subjective.
“The
Surest Way of Arriving at Facts Is through Change in the Subjective Here is
another thing to learn. How do you know that nature is finite? You can only
know this through metaphysics. Nature is that Infinite under
limitations.Therefore it is finite. So there must come a time when we shall
have conquered all environments. And how are we to conquer them? We cannot
possibly conquer all the objective environments. We cannot. The little fish
want to fly from its enemies in the water. How does it do so? By evolving wings
and becoming a bird. The fish did not change the air or the water; the change
was in itself. Change is always subjective. All through evolution you find that
the conquest of nature comes by change in the subject. Apply this to religion
and morality, and you will find that the conquest of evil comes by the change
in the subjective alone. That is how the Advaita system gets its whole force -
on the subjective side of humanity. To talk of evil and misery is nonsense,
because they do not exist outside. If I am immune against all anger I never
feel angry. If I am proof against all hatred I never feel hatred. This is,
therefore, the process by which to achieve that conquest - through the subjective,
by perfecting the subjective”. (CW, Vol.2: The Absolute and Manifestation,
pp.137-138.)
Creation
never had a beginning, and it will
never
have an end and there never
was
a time when there was no creation
“Creation
Is Without Beginning or End. The Vedas assert that the universe is infinite in
space and eternal in duration.
It never had a beginning, and it will
never have an end. (CW, Vol.4: Indian Religious Thought, p.188.)
The
Hindus received their religion through the revelation of the Vedas which teach
that creation is without beginning or end. (CW, Vol.2: The Hindu View of Life,
p.501.)
The ancient sages did not believe in a
creation [out of nothing]. A creation implies producing something out of
nothing. That is impossible. There was no beginning of creation as there was no
beginning of time. God and creation are as two lines without end, without
beginning, and parallel. Our theory of creation is, "It is, it was, and is
to be." (CW, Vol.5: Questions and Answers III, p.313)
[The spiritual laws comprising the Vedas]
may be said to be without end as laws, but they must have had a beginning. The
Vedas teach us that creation is without beginning and without end. Science is
said to have proved that the sum total of cosmic energy is always the same.
Then, if there was a time when nothing existed, where was all this manifested
energy? Some say it was in a potential form of God. In that case, God is
sometimes potential and sometimes kinetic, which would make Him or Her mutable.
Everything mutable is a compound, and everything compound must undergo that
change which is called destruction. So God would die, which is absurd. So there
never was a time when there was no creation”. (CW, Vol.1: Paper on Hinduism,
p.7)
Stand up
for your faith and strength
“There
are two great obstacles on our path in India - the Scylla of the old
orthodoxy, and the Charybdis of modern
European civilization. Of those two, I
vote for the old orthodoxy and not for
the Europeanized system; for the old
orthodox people may be ignorant, they may
be crude, but they are real human
beings, they have faith, they have
strength, they stand on their own feet; while
Europeanized people have no backbone,
they are a mass of heterogeneous ideas picked up at random from every source -
and these ideas are unassimilated, undigested, unharmonized. They do not stand
on their own feet, and their heads are turning round and round. Where is the
motive power of their work? In a few, patronizing pats from the English people.
Their schemes of reforms, their vehement vituperations against the evils of
certain social customs have, as the mainspring, some European patronage. Why
are some of our customs called evil? Because the Europeans say so. That is
about the reason they give. I would not submit to that. Stand and die in your
own strength; if there is any sin the world, it is weakness. Avoid all
weakness, for weakness is sin, weakness is death. These unbalanced creatures
are not yet formed into distinct personalities. What are we to call them - men,
women, or animals? On the other hand, these old, orthodox people were staunch,
and were real human beings”.
( CW, Vol.3: Reply to the Address of
Welcome at Ramnad, p.151)
"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."
Meditation
“
Meditation means the mind is turned back upon itself. The mind stops all the thought-waves
and the world stops. Your consciousness expands. Every time you meditate, you
will keep your growth”
“
Not even the deepest sleep will give you such a rest as meditation can. The mind
goes on jumping even in deepest sleep. Just those few moments in
meditation your brain has almost stopped.
… You forget the body. … You feel
such pleasure in it. You become so light.
This perfect rest we will get in
meditation.”
“
The animal has its happiness in the senses, the human beings in their
intellect, and the gods in spiritual contemplation. It is only to the soul that
has attained to this contemplative state that the world really becomes
beautiful.”
“
The greatest help to spiritual life is meditation. In meditation we divest
ourselves of all material conditions and
feel our divine nature. We do not
depend upon any external help in
meditation. The touch of the soul can paint
the brightest color even in the dingiest
places; it can cast a fragrance over the
vilest thing; it can make the wicked
divine--and all enmity, all selfishness is
effaced”.
“
The meditative state is the highest state of existence. So long as there is
desire, no real happiness can come. It is
only the contemplative, witness-like
study of objects that brings to us real
enjoyment and happiness.”
“Work a little harder at
meditation and it comes. You do not feel the body or anything else. When you
come out of it after the hour, you have had the most beautiful rest you ever
had in your life. That is the only way you ever give rest to your system.”
“
It is meditation that brings us nearer to
truth than anything else”.
Non attachment
“ Neither
seek nor avoid; take what comes. It is liberty to be affected by nothing. Do
not merely endure; be unattached”.
“
Nature, body, mind go to death, not we. We neither go nor come. The man Vivekananda
is in nature, is born and dies; but the Self we see as Vivekananda is never
born and never dies. It is the eternal and unchangeable Reality”.
“Jnana
teaches that the world should be given up, but not on that account to be abandoned.
To be in
the
world but not of it—is the true test of the sannyasin.”
“
When we can attach the mind to—or detach it from—the sense at our will, we shall
really possess character. Then alone we shall have taken a long step towards
freedom; before that, we are mere machines”.
“When
we come to nonattachment, then we can understand the marvelous mystery of the universe:
how it is intense activity and at the same time intense peace, how it is work
every moment and rest every moment.”
“Neither
seek nor avoid, take what comes. It is liberty to be affected by nothing ; do
not merely endure, be unattached. Remember the story of the bull. A mosquito
sat long on the horn of a certain bull 5 then his conscience troubled him and
he said : " Mr. Bull, I have been sitting here a long time, perhaps I
annoy
you. I am sorry, I will go away." But the
bull replied : " Oh no, not at all 1 Bring your whole family and live on
my horn ; what can you do to me ?"
Free your self
“ Our supreme duty is to advance toward freedom—physical, mental, and spiritual—and
help others to do so”.
“When
we have become free, we need not go mad and throw up society and rush off to
die in the forest or the cave; we shall remain where we were but we shall
understand the whole thing. The same phenomena will remain but with a new
meaning”.
Superstition and bigotry
“
Superstition is our great enemy, but bigotry is worse.”
Concentration
“
The powers of the mind should be concentrated and the mind turned back upon itself;
as the darkest places reveal their secrets before the penetrating rays of the
sun, so will the concentrated mind penetrate its own innermost secrets.”
“To
me the very essence of education is concentration of mind,
not the collecting
of facts.”
“If
I had to do my education over again, and had any voice in the matter,
I would not study facts at all. I would
develop the power of concentration
and detachment, and then with a perfect
instrument I could collect facts
at will.”
“The more this
power of concentration, the more knowledge is acquired,
because this is the one and only
method of acquiring knowledge. Even the
lowest shoeblack, if he gives
more concentration, will black shoes better; the
cook with concentration will
cook a meal all the better. In making money, or
in worshipping God, or in doing
anything, the better the power of
concentration, the better will
that thing be done. This is the one call, the one
knock, which opens the gates of
nature, and lets out the floods of light.” CW II
391
“ The main
difference between men and the animals is the difference in their power of
concentration. All success in any line of work is the result of this.
….. The difference in the power
of concentration also constitutes the
difference between man and man.
Compare the lowest with the highest man.
The difference is in the degree
of concentration”. CW VI 37
"Concentration
is the essence of all knowledge; nothing can be done
without it. Ninety percent of thought force is
wasted by the ordinary
human being, and therefore he is constantly
committing blunders; the
trained man or mind never makes a
mistake."
Search in the correct place
“
The sages are often ignorant of physical science, because they read the wrong book—the
book within; and the scientists are too often ignorant of religion, because
they too read the wrong book—the book outside.”
Evolution of Vedanta philosophy
“It
is remarkable also that the possession of India by a foreign power
has always been a turning-point in the
history of that power, bringing
to it wealth, prosperity, dominion, and
spiritual ideas. While the
Western man tries to measure how much
it is possible for him to
possess and to enjoy, the Eastern seems
to take the opposite course,
and to measure how little of material
possessions he can do with. In
the Vedas we trace the endeavour of
that ancient people to find God.
In their search for Him they came upon
different strata; beginning
with ancestor worship, they passed on
to the worship of Agni, the
fire-god, of Indra, the god of thunder,
and of Varuna, the God of
gods. We find the growth of this idea
of God, from many gods to one
God, in all religions; its real meaning
is that He is the chief of the
tribal gods, who creates the world,
rules it, and sees into every heart;
the stages of growth lead up from a
multiplicity of gods to
monotheism. This anthropomorphic
conception, however, did not
satisfy the Hindus, it was too human
for them who were seeking the
Divine. Therefore they finally gave up
searching for God in the outer
world of sense and matter, and turned
their attention to the inner
world. Is there an inner world? And
what is it? It is Âtman. It is the
Self, it is the only thing an
individual can be sure of. If he knows
himself, he can know the universe, and
not otherwise.”….
Evolution of Vedanta philosophy
“
The same question was asked in the beginning of time, even in the Rig-Veda, in
another form: "Who or what existed from the beginning?" That
question was gradually solved by the
Vedanta philosophy. The Atman existed. That is to say, what we call the Absolute,
the Universal Soul, the Self, is the force by which from the beginning all things
have been and are and will be manifested. While the Vedanta philosophers solved
that question, they at the
same time discovered the basis of
ethics. Though all religions have taught ethical precepts, such as, "Do
not kill, do not injure; love your neighbour as yourself," etc., yet none
of these has given the reason. Why should I not injure my neighbour? To this
question there was no satisfactory or conclusive answer forthcoming, until it
was evolved by the metaphysical speculations of the Hindus who could not rest
satisfied with mere dogmas. So the Hindus say that this Atman is absolute and
all-pervading, therefore infinite. There cannot
be two infinites, for they would limit
each other and would become finite. Also each individual soul is a part and
parcel of that Universal Soul, which is infinite. Therefore in injuring his
neighbour, the individual actually injures himself. This is the basic
metaphysical truth underlying all ethical codes. It is too often believed that
a person in his progress towards perfection passes from error to truth; that
when he passes on from one thought to another, he must necessarily reject the first. But no error
can lead to truth. The soul passing through its different stages goes from
truth to truth, and each stage is true; it goes from lower truth to higher
truth. This point may be illustrated in the following way. A man is journeying
towards the sun and takes a photograph at each step. How different would be the
first photograph from the second and still more from the third or the last,
when he reaches the real sun! But all these, though differing so
widely from each other, are true, only
they are made to appear different by the changing conditions of time and space.
It is the recognition of this truth, which has enabled the Hindus to perceive the
universal truth of all religions, from the lowest to the highest; it has made
of them the only people who never had religious persecutions.”
Evolution
of Vedanta philosophy
“ Let us take our stand on the
one central truth in our religion —
the common heritage
of the Hindus, the Buddhists, and Jains alike — the spirit of man, the Atman of
man, the immortal, birthless, all-pervading, eternal soul of man whose glories
the Vedas cannot themselves express, before whose majesty the universe with its
galaxy upon galaxy of suns and stars and nebulae is as a drop. Every man or
woman, nay, from the highest Devas to the worm that crawls under our feet, is
such a spirit evoluted or involuted. The difference is not in kind, but in degree.
This infinite power of the spirit, brought to bear upon matter evolves material
development, made to act upon thought evolves intellectuality, and made to act
upon itself makes of man a God. First, let us be Gods, and then help others to
be Gods. "Be and make." Let this be our motto. Say not man is a
sinner. Tell him that he is a God. Even if there were a devil, it would be our
duty to remember God always, and not the devil. If the room is dark, the
constant feeling and repeating of darkness will not take it away, but bring in
the light. Let us know that all that is negative, all that is destructive, all
that is mere criticism, is bound to pass away; it is the positive, the
affirmative, the constructive that is immortal, that will remain forever. Let
us say, "We are" and "God is" and "We are God",
"Shivoham, Shivoham", and march on. Not matter but spirit. All that
has name and form is subject to all that has none. This is the eternal truth
the Shrutis preach. Bring in the light; the darkness will vanish of itself. Let
the lion of Vedanta roar; the foxes will fly to their holes. Throw the ideas
broadcast, and let the result take care of itself. Let us put the chemicals
together; the crystallization will take its own course. Bring forth the power
of the spirit, and pour it over the length and breadth of India; and all that
is necessary will come by itself. Manifest the divinity within you, and
everything will be harmoniously arranged around it. Remember the illustration
of Indra and Virochana in the Vedas; both were taught their divinity. But the
Asura,
Virochana, took his
body for his God. Indra, being a Deva, understood that the Atman was meant. You
are the children of India. You are the descendants of the Devas. Matter can
never be your God; body can never be your God.”
“The
essence of Vedanta is that there is but one Being and that
every soul is that Being
in full, not a part of that Being.”
What
is the soul?
“We
cannot understand God in our scriptures without knowing the
soul. There have been attempts in
India, and outside of India too, to catch a glimpse of the beyond by studying
external nature, and we all know what an awful failure has been the result.
Instead of giving us a glimpse of the beyond, the more we study the material
world, the more we tend to become materialised. The more we handle the material
world, even the little spirituality which we possessed before vanishes.
Therefore that is not the way to spirituality, to knowledge of the Highest; but
it must come through the heart, the human soul. The external workings do not
teach us anything about the beyond, about the Infinite, it is only the internal
that can do so. Through soul,
therefore, the analysis of the human
soul alone, can we understand God. There are differences of opinion as to the
nature of the human soul among the various sects in India, but there are
certain points of agreement. We all agree that souls are without beginning and without
end, and immortal by their very nature; also that all powers, blessing, purity,
omnipresence, omniscience are buried in each soul. That is a grand idea we
ought to remember. In every man and in every animal, however weak or wicked,
great or small, resides the same omnipresent, omniscient soul. The difference
is not in the soul, but in the manifestation. Between me and the smallest
animal, the difference is only in manifestation, but as a principle he is the
same as I am, he is my brother, he has the same soul as I have. This is the greatest
principle that India has preached. The talk of the
brotherhood of man becomes in India the
brotherhood of universal life, of animals, and of all life down to the little
ants — all these are our bodies. Even as our scripture says, "Thus the
sage, knowing that the same Lord inhabits all bodies, will worship every body
as such." That is why in India there have been such merciful ideas about
the poor, about animals, about everybody, and everything else. This is one of
the common grounds about our ideas of the soul.”
Negative thought weakens
“
Negative thought weakens. Do you not find that where parents are
constantly taxing their sons to
read and write, telling them they will
never learn anything, and
calling them fools and so forth, the latter do
actually turn out to be so in
many cases? If you speak kind words to boys and encourage them, they are bound
to improve in time. What holds good of children, also holds good of children in
the region of higher thoughts.
If you can give them positive
ideas, people will grow up to be men and learn
to stand on their own legs. In
language and literature, in poetry and
arts--------------in everything
we must point out not the mistakes that people are making in their thoughts and
actions, but the way in which they will
gradually be able to do these
things better. Pointing out mistakes wounds a
man’s feelings.”
“
If you cannot speak a few encouraging words, speak nothing”.
Do not hide facts , be
bold and carry your spirits upwards
“
Every child is a born optimist; he dreams golden dreams. In
youth he becomes still more
optimistic. It is hard for a young man to believe that there is such a thing as
death, such a thing as defeat or degradation. Old age comes, and life is a mass
of ruins. Dreams have vanished into the air, and the man becomes a pessimist.
Thus we go from one extreme to another, buffeted
by nature……………..not one ideal
can be fully attained, not one thirst can be quenched………………and when latter we
get kicked about by society like foot balls…………………we sit in a corner and croak
and throw cold water on the enthusiasm of others. But
bold we must be. Hiding facts is not the way to find a remedy. As you all know, a hare hunted by dogs puts
its head down and thinks itself safe……………….If we sit down and lament over the
imperfection of our bodies and minds, we profit nothing; it is the heroic endeavour to subdue
adverse circumstances that carries our spirit upwards.”
Drop the ego and thank God that you have
become
part
of the good force that is going on.
“Our
good is not dependent on a person, a race, or on an area. Our good is for the
mankind. Good has no boundaries. The moment good work is attached with an
agenda wanting someone to get converted then the good work lost its importance
to conversion and that is no more a good work. Goodness of good work becomes
secondary and our other agenda becomes primary. A good work does not have any
boundaries. Only with the expectation of results, we create boundaries. When
Krishna said ‘don’t think of the results’, he never meant that good results
were not going to come. His idea was ‘don’t create a boundary around goodness’.
The thing which has no boundary is called as the divine (Ananthata= infinite).
This is Karma Yoga. Karma Yoga tells us to do the good
activity and not to look at the results. But
there is one more step Krishna wants us to recognize and it will take us one
more step ahead. Despite the fact that there is no visible result that you
expected, do not become depressed. The assurance is that the result is going to
be there anyway. Then the second objection when we start thinking is: “What a
wonderful, good work I’m doing. I am not even expecting results, but I am doing
good work.” This doing good work can become our ego. This is the evil about the
good work. A person who does bad work is saved from this evil anyway. A person
who does bad work is not egoistic, but a person who does good work can become
egoistic. We have to be
careful with that. Who are you to do
good work? You can never do good work. Good work is always there in this world.
You can only become a part of the good work that has been going on. I tell the
truth. Truth is always there. Millions of people have been telling truth, and
the truth is supporting them. The same way, you are also telling the truth. You
can be egoistic of goodness if you start thinking you are doing good work.
Subtly seeing you can only join the good forces that are there in this world.
Even before the untruth took birth, truth was there. So truth is something
which is eternal. The good work is eternal. It is like a
river that flows all the time, perennial. Your
good work is like taking a dip in that river. Be humble. Be humble that you are
given a chance to be good. Good is going on, and you are associated with that.
Thank God that you have become part of the good force that is going on. This
attitude takes away the ego of goodness, which is much more dangerous.”
Unselfishness
To do good, perfect unselfishness is absolutely necessary.
Be
steady. Avoid jealousy and selfishness.
The
selfish man is the most miserable in the world.
Are you perfectly unselfish? If so, you are
irresistible.
The
difference between God and the devil is in nothing except in
unselfishness
and selfishness.
The only remedy is in making unselfish men and
women.
The
exercise of might is invariably the exercise of selfishness.. He who has more
of this unselfishness is more spiritual and nearer to Shiva.
The perfectly unselfish man is the most
successful.
Force against force never cures, and the only
cure of evil is unselfishness.
All love is life, it is the only law of life;
all selfishness is death, and
this
is true here or hereafter.
There must not be a shade of jealousy or
selfishness, then you are a leader.
Selfish work is slave’s work.
Be perfectly unselfish, and you will be sure to succeed.
The
happiest is the man who is not at all selfish.
The degree of unselfishness marks the degree of
success everywhere.
With the sense of possession comes
selfishness.
It is only selfishness that causes the
difference between good and evil.
Our own selfishness makes us the most arrant
cowards; our own
selfishness
is the great cause of fear and cowardice.
Selfishness is the chief sin, thinking of
ourselves first.
There should be no motive for selfishness.
Selfishness is the great curse of the world.
True happiness consists in killing
selfishness.
It is
selfishness that we must seek to eliminate.
To be
unselfish, perfectly selfless, is salvation itself; for the man
within
dies, and God alone remains.
Cast into the fire/ all thy dross of self, thy
mean selfishness.
Unselfishness is God.
The more selfish a man, the more immoral he
is.
All ethics, all human action and all human thought,
hang upon this one idea of unselfishness.
These are gleaned from some of his
writings and speeches at different occasions
“The
goal of all nature is freedom, and freedom
is to be attained only
by
perfect unselfishness; every thought, word, or
deed that is
unselfish
takes us towards the goal, and, as such, is called moral.
The more selfish a man, the more immoral he
is.
Be unselfish even unto death, and work.
Fearlessness is the test of
truth. Unselfishness is the test of
religion.
Root out selfishness, and everything that makes you selfish.
Avoid
jealousy and selfishness.
Be selfless.
Our
goal is unselfishness.
Love
knows no barter, no selfishness.
Unselfishness is more paying, only people have
not the patience to
practise
it.
Are you unselfish? That is the question. If
you are, you will be
perfect
without reading a single religious book, without going into
a
single church or temple.
All expansion is life, all contradiction is
death. All love is expansion,
all
selfishness is contradiction. Love is therefore the only law of life.
Let all our actions---------------eating,
drinking, and everything that
we
do-------------------tend towards the sacrifice of our self.
No selfishness, no name, no fame, yours or mine, nor my
Master’s
even!
Self-abnegation
is the centre of all morality. The Vedas cannot show you Brahman, you are That
already;
they
can only help to take away the veil that hides the truth
from
our eyes. The first veil to vanish is ignorance, and when
that
is gone, sin goes, next desire ceases, selfishness ends and
all
misery disappears. This cessation of ignorance can only
come
when I know that God and I are one; in other words,
identify
yourself with Atman, not with human
limitations.
Disidentify
yourself with the body and all will cease. This is
the
secret of healing. The universe is a case of
hypnotization;
dehypnotize yourself and cease to suffer.
Those
who live unselfishly are those who have a life that’s most
worth
living.
People
never stop to think that those who bestowed the
least
thought on their own individualities have been the
greatest
workers in the world.
Be
perfectly unselfish, and you will be sure to
succeed.
Root out selfishness, and everything that makes you selfish.
There is only one ideal in morality
unselfishness.
Perfection
does not come from belief or faith. Talk does
not count for
anything. Parrots can do that. Perfection
comes
through selfless work.
Give me
few men and women who are pure and selfless and I shall
shake
the world.
Truth can
never come to us as long as we are selfish.
Truth, purity, and unselfishness
— wherever these are present,
there is no power below or above
the sun to crush the possessor
thereof. Equipped with these,
one individual is able to face the
whole universe
in opposition.”
Strength is important
“Be strong, my young
friends, that is my advice to you. You will be nearer to heaven through
football than through study of the Gita.
These are bold words, but I have to say them, for I love you. I know where the
shoe pinches. I have gained a little experience. You will understand the Gita
better with your
biceps, your muscles, a little
stronger. CW III 242”
“This
is one question I put to every men…..Are you strong? Do you feel
strength? – for I know it is the truth
alone that gives strength…….Strength is
the medicine for the world’s disease. CW
II 201”
“This
is great fact; Strength is life; weakness is death. Strength is felicity, life eternal,
immortal; weakness is constant strain and misery, weakness is
death. CW II 3”
Hard work
Dreams
can never become a reality without hard work.
"Fortune approaches him who is industrious.
It is the weak-minded who says 'fate gives’. No acts are done by mere desires;
they are done only by diligence. The deer doesn’t enter the mouth of a sleeping
lion. Men obtain the desired fruit by speak of destiny only. Neither the lazy
nor those who depend
solely on destiny fulfil their objective.
Therefore, one should persist in self-effort by all means."
"To
succeed, you must have tremendous perseverance, tremendouswill.’ I will drink
the ocean, 'says the persevering soul,' at my willmountains will crumble up.'
Have that sort of energy, that sort of will, work hard and you will reach the
goal."
”