The Essential
Teachings of Vedanta ( Continued )
Vedanta designates the
individual ego as maya. The role of maya is to soften the glare of Reality
and to create a dream world where fact is diluted by fiction. Maya is not
a peculiar concept of Vedanta. The Buddhistic tradition calls it Mara; the
Taoist tradition says it is being "out of harmony with
Tao;" the Judeo-Christian, Islamic and Zoroastrian traditions
personify maya, calling it Satan, Iblis, and Ahriman; the Platonists refer
to it simply as delusion. Things and beings in the realm of maya are not non-existent,
though they are illusory. They are relatively real, that is, real for a
short time. God as Pure Spirit is the Absolute Reality. The beings and
things of the relative universe appear real because they reflect the light
of the Absolute. The message of Vedanta has two rhythms: "All this is
verily Brahman" and "That thou art;" that is, God is both
the Absolute and the relative Reality. One represents the dizzy height of
mystical realization, the other its counter part, its humanistic
expression. One is Knowledge, the other intimate Knowledge.
Harmony of religions is the
natural corollary to the first three cardinal principles. Different
religions are only different pathways to the same common goal - God. All
roads lead to Rome, provided Rome is our destination. Vedanta repudiates
the idea of proselytisation. Proselytisation seeks to wipe out the social
meaning of a person, which would be psychologically disruptive and morally
reprehensible. According to Vedanta, all are proceeding toward
God-realization, consciously or unconsciously, and all will reach the goal
eventually. When we move toward this goal voluntarily and consciously, we
call it spiritual quest; when this move is involuntary and forced by
nature, we call it an evolutionary process. Harmony of religions is not
uniformity. It is neither eclectic nor sectarian. It is not the
brotherhood of man based on the fatherhood of God. Harmony is unity in
diversity. This harmony is something that is not to be attained by mere
intellectual understanding and interfaith deliberations, nor can it be
enacted by law. It is to be discovered and realized by deepening our
individual God-consciousness. Essentially there is only one religion,
which is the religion of God-consciousness, one salvation, which is
communion or union with God, and the way to salvation is one, that is, the
way of purity and holiness. It is not the literal and meticulous observance
of ceremonials but the depth of spirituality that counts most. The depth
of a person's God-consciousness is measured by his spiritual
transformation. A tree is known by its fruit.
Vedanta's Contribution
to World Thought
Vedanta's contributions to
world religious thought may be said to be the following: upholding
spiritual democracy, promoting spiritual humanism, and providing a basis
for world unity. Vedanta advocates spiritual democracy. While each of the
other systems presents only one ideal and path to its followers, Vedanta
offers an infinite variety of ideals and paths to choose from in order to
reach the same ultimate goal. An ancient Sanskrit verse says that the
Supreme Brahman assumes many forms for the welfare of the seekers. Lacking
in this freedom, religion becomes authoritarian and oppressive, insisting
upon unthinking obedience to rigid traditions and dogmas and unquestioning
belief in ceremonials and creeds. Such religion relies more on assent to
given propositions than on certainty of conviction based on personal
experience. Democracy is considered the best form of government because
all the members freely participate in its process and take responsibility for
governing. in the same way, religious freedom ensures spiritual
individuality, critical enquiry, honest doubts, choice of the path, and
verification of truth through personal experience. The ideas of
"exclusive salvation," "a jealous God," "chosen
people," and "the only way" are repugnant to Vedanta.
The second major
contribution of Vedanta is spiritual humanism, as opposed to secular
humanism. Secular humanism without a spiritual basis soon degenerates into
enlightened self-interest. It seeks to make our life rich and meaningful
without defining life's goal and purpose. Mere morality without
spirituality is neither sure of itself nor self-sufficient. Vedanta, on
the other hand, presents spiritual humanism, which is not so much doing
good to others as it is rendering loving service to God, seeing His
presence in all. Spiritual humanism embraces the whole of humanity,
irrespective of race, culture, country, religion or social affiliation. ( To be continued )
- Swami Adiswarananda
PREVIOUS
|| NEXT
Spiritual
Leader
Archive