MINISTER’S MESSAGE
(February 2010)
Divine Qualities
Study of Scriptures
Study of scriptures, or
svadhyaya, is another divine quality described in the Bhagavad Gita
(16.2). In the Taittiriya Upanishad, after imparting instructions
in Vedic texts to his disciples, the teacher exhorts them: “Do not neglect
the study and teaching of the Vedas.” (1.11.1)
By Vedanta is meant the Upanishads,
which form the knowledge portion of the Vedas. Vedanta teaches that God
alone is real and the world ephemeral and thus unreal. Our difficult
experiences in the world may awaken in us discrimination between the real
and the unreal. We then yearn for something real and abiding, and begin to
understand that God-realization, or Self-realization, is the only goal of
life that can lead to supreme fulfillment. A regular study of scriptures
always reminds us of this ultimate goal and helps us to strive for it.
Need to Avoid Dry Scholarship
Study of scriptures is not an end in
itself: it should lead to purification of mind and devotion to God. Mere
scholarship is deprecated in a well-known Sanskrit verse: “Just as a
donkey carrying a load of sandalwood on its back does not recognize the
worth of the sandalwood but only groans under its burden, even so many
people learned in the scriptures do not realize their true purport and
simply bear the ‘weight’ of the outward knowledge.”
Sri Shankara says in his
Vivekachudamani: “Erudition, flowery speech, skill in expounding the
scriptures—these things give pleasure to the learned, but do not lead to
liberation.” (58) “A network of words is like a dense forest that causes
the mind to wander all around. Hence those who realize this should
earnestly strive hard to know the true nature of the Self.” (60)
The following teachings from The
Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna illustrate the true import of scriptural
study:
“Shall I tell you the truth? What will
you gain by mere scholarship? The pundits hear many things and know many
things—the Vedas, the Puranas, the Tantras. But of what avail is mere
scholarship? Discrimination and renunciation are necessary.”
“You may learn a great deal from books;
but it is all futile if you have no love for God and no desire to realize
Him. A mere pundit, without discrimination and renunciation, has his
attention fixed on ‘woman and gold’. The vulture soars very high but its
eyes are fixed on the charnel-pit.”
“It is true that many things are
recorded in the scriptures; but all these are useless without the direct
realization of God, without devotion to His Lotus Feet, without purity of
heart. The almanac forecasts the rainfall of the year. But not a drop of
water will you get by squeezing the almanac. No, not even one drop.”
“Listen to a story. There was a king who
used daily to hear the Bhagavata recited by a pundit. Every day, after
explaining the sacred book, the pundit would say to the king, ‘O King,
have you understood what I have said?’ And every day the king would reply,
‘You had better understand it first yourself.’ The pundit would return
home and think: ‘Why does the king talk to me that way day after day? I
explain the texts to him so clearly, and he says to me, “You had better
understand it first yourself.” What does he mean?’ The pundit used to
practise spiritual discipline. A few days later he came to realize that
God alone is real and everything else—house, family, wealth, friends,
name, and fame— illusory. Convinced of the unreality of the world, he
renounced it. As he left home he asked a man to take this message to the
king: ‘O King, I now understand.’ ” (To be continued)
— Swami Yuktatmananda
Spiritual Leader
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