The Essential
Teachings of Vedanta
The way to the liberation
of the soul through Self-Knowledge is called yoga. Vedanta speaks of four
yogas, or paths to the goal: (i) Jnana-Yoga, or the direct way of
Knowledge; (ii) Bhakti-Yoga, or the natural way of divine love; (iii)
Karma-Yoga, or the practical way of unselfish work; and (iv) Raja-Yoga, or
the scientific way of concentration and meditation. The primary road block
to Self-Knowledge is the restless mind. The four Yogas are four ways to
overcome the restlessness. The path of Jnana-Yoga advocates the method of
persuasion through reason, saying that unreason, the cause of all
restlessness, can be overcome only by reason. Bhakti-Yoga looks upon the
cause as the mind's impurity, and for its purification prescribes worship,
prayer, and self-surrender to the divine. Karma-Yoga views the intoxicated
ego as the cause of all restlessness, and seeks to overcome restlessness
by the eradication of the ego. Raja-Yoga upholds the method of confrontation.
It maintains that restlessness of mind has its roots deep in the
psychophysical system. Reason is too weak to uproot ingrained habits,
worship and prayer in order to be effective require inborn faith in God,
and eradication of the elusive ego is almost impossible. So Raja-Yoga
calls for confronting the restless mind through concentration and meditation
and by control of posture and breathing (pranayama). To bring the mind
under control is the central purpose of all the yoga disciplines. Vedanta
maintains the mind never becomes controlled unless it is controlled consciously
and deliberately. For the spiritual seeker, the ultimate battlefield is
his mind. Yoga is not a collection of vague theories or theological
arguments. It takes a person from where he is and leads him to genuine
freedom, compared with which all other forms of freedom are merely bondage
in disguise.
The keynote of Vedanta is:
"Truth is one: sages call it by various names." The essence of
Vedanta can be summed up in four sentences: God as Pure Spirit alone
abides. The world of diversity is the manifestation of the Spirit in time
and space. The individual soul and God as the Supreme Soul are
non-different in essence. Realization of this identity alone can confer
liberation and put an end to all the sorrows and sufferings of life. The
four cardinal principles of Vedanta are non-duality of the Godhead,
divinity of the soul, oneness of existence, and harmony of religions.
These are not dogmas but four universal principles that are in keeping
with common sense, reason, and everyday personal experience. It is a universally
accepted fact that Ultimate Reality is one and beyond all names, forms,
and attributes, which are mere concepts superimposed on It by the human
mind. Again all religions proclaim that the individual soul is divine.
This divinity is innate, not acquired or given. Practice of spiritual
disciplines only endows us with faith in the divinity in ourselves. The difference
between a sinner and a saint is that the former has faith in his
sinfulness and the latter faith in his saintliness. Oneness of existence
is the basis of all ethics and morality. Life is interdependent, not
independent. There is only one life that pulsates in all. That which
unites us with the whole is virtue, and that which separates us from the
whole is vice. The creative process consists of evolution and involution,
potentiality and actuality, described by Vedanta as the outbreathing and
inbreathing of the Pure Spirit. The universe comes into being, endures for
a length of time, and again goes back to its causal state. In this sense,
creation is beginningless. Vedanta regards the creative process as the
play of God, or lila. God is at once all the actors and all the audience,
the props, the prompter, the playwright, and the producer.
Critics of Vedanta observe
that such a world-view dwarfs the human individual to utter
insignificance. In answer to this, Vedanta says the drama is cosmic and
evolves through a chain of numberless separate dramas where the One
assumes the roles of many. But how does Vedanta resolve the question of
evil in the realm of God and His drama? If everything is the play of God,
does He not become responsible for all the sufferings of the world? Does
this not make God whimsical and cruel, an irresponsible Creator who
just for His enjoyment inflicts suffering on his own created
beings? The seers of Vedanta never shrink from accepting evil
as part of creation. They have no use for a fairy-tale view of creation, a
childish sentimentality that says God made all things bright and beautiful
and had nothing to do with all things dark and hideous. Good and evil,
Vedanta maintains, have no absolute reality and are value-judgements of
individual minds, superimposed on the divine play. That which is good for
some is evil for others, and that which is evil for some is good for
others. They are different facets of the same drama. Life is role playing.
A human individual suffers when he refuses to play his role in this drama.
He slips into the fanciful world of his deluded ego and never thinks or
even suspects that his life is part of a vast cosmic drama. ( To be continued )
- Swami Adiswarananda
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