Vedanta
Contribution to World Thought( Continued )
The third major
contribution of Vedanta is its ideal for enduring world unity. World unity
based on political considerations, economic interest, cultural ties, or
humanitarian principles is never enduring. The bonds of such unity are too
fragile to withstand the stresses and strains of social diversities. They
are too often bonds of convenience and not of spiritual solidarity. Social
diversity without spiritual unity always proves to be explosive and
dangerous to society. Unity of the world-body, in order to be real, must
be organic, and this requires a World-Soul. As the presence of the soul
makes the human body with its various limbs into an organic unity, so also
only a World-Soul that is capable of embracing countless diversities of
culture, creed, religion, and human experience and aspirations can make
the unity of the world-body organic and enduring. Such a World-Soul, in
order to be universal, must be the Soul of all beings - human, superhuman,
and subhuman - beyond all names, forms, and epithets. Vedanta provides
that World-Soul, designating it as the all-pervading Self which is the
Common Self of both the macrocosm and the microcosm. The unity of this
Self includes not only humans but every form of life - animals,
plants, etc. Superficial critics often perceive this unity as
anthropomorphism. But science has proved life is as much present in the
galaxy as in a tiny plant, an animal, or a human being, only its
manifestation varies. The fabric of life in the universe is organically
woven. No one can move one atom of the universe without moving the
whole universe with it. No one can be truly happy by keeping the rest of
the world unhappy. No one can live in peace on a island of prosperity
surrounded by a sea of poverty and suffering.
Vedanta gives a spiritual
interpretation of the Ultimate Reality, the meaning of creation, and the
human individual, as opposed to mechanical and psychological
interpretations. Its view of the cosmos is one of organic wholeness that
includes all beings and things. It presents an immortality that is
attainable and a salvation that is verifiable. It extols a way of life
which is holistic and realistic. It avoids the extremes of
pseudo-mysticism and occultism on the one hand, and reason for reason's
sake on the other. Vedanta asserts that spirituality is the core dimension
of both the macrocosm and the microcosm. To deny this core or to neglect
is the surest and shortest way to self-destruction. Vedanta considers all
human problems as symptoms of a deep-rooted malady that is alienation from
our true self, our spiritual dimension. Any lasting remedy must be spiritual,
and not just humanistic, political, or social. Present day secular culture
has broken the unity of existence. It has replaced the cosmic law of
cooperation and interdependence with the low of competition and the
struggle for survival. It has ignored the old Socratic aphorism that
knowledge is virtue and replaced it with its own: knowledge is power. This
has set in motion a chain reaction of alienation - alienation from
Reality, alienation from nature, and alienation from our true self.
Vedanta seeks to give us back our spiritual connection with everybody and
everything.
Vedanta is the very soul of
India's spiritual wisdom. It is the message of the Upanishads, the voice
of the Bhagavad Gita, and the song of all its prophets and Godmen, past
and present. The conclusions of Vedanta are no idle speculations, but
guidelines of life that have been tested and verified through countless
spiritual experiments and adventures. Vedanta has saved India again and
again in her times of spiritual crisis. Deviation from the wisdom of
Vedanta always brought her spiritual decline, moral chaos, and material
degradation, and recovery came by invoking the spirit of Vedanta.
The Nineteenth Century
Eclipse of Vedanta
The nineteenth century
witnessed as unprecedented spiritual eclipse in India, the land of
Vedanta. Once again, Vedanta lost its fire and vigor and ceased to be a
social reality. That which is the teaching for the strong-minded became a
refuge for the weak and the escapists. The philosophy of Vedanta became
life-negating instead of life-giving. The spiritual values it championed
became separated from the material values which were their support. In
search of God in heaven, it ignored the God in the human heart. The
connecting link between mysticism and humanism was lost. Vedanta
forgot that holiness means nothing unless it brings happiness, that
filling
the empty stomach must come before filling the empty heart, and that
renunciation presupposes acquiring and enjoying things to renounce.
Passivity became its keynote and self-withdrawal its prime virtue. Inertia
passed for tranquility, hopelessness for dispassion. Its spiritual quest
encouraged a morbid inwardness, a flight from the world, in despair over
life and its problems. Once a teaching of hope and strength, Vedanta of
the time exaggerated human weakness, wickedness, unworthiness, and
sinfulness. It only saw human limitations and not human possibilities. As
a result, Vedanta proved to be a hollow philosophy of life that produced
only seedy reformers, dreamy idealists, idle philosophers, and so-called
knowers of truth who sought transcendental solutions for earthly problems.
It created pessimists who proved life intolerable, yet continued to
tolerate it. Except for a few sannyasins, the wisdom of Vedanta got lost
in the wilderness of superstition, false piety, pseudo-mysticism,
eroticism, occultism, and fatalism. ( To be continued )
- Swami Adiswarananda
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