The Vedanta Philosophy
by Sri Chinmoy - talk at Harvard, exactly 73 years after Swami Vivekananda's immortal talk
Seventy-three
long years ago, precisely on this date, the great spiritual giant Swami
Vivekananda dynamically blessed this university, the university
unparalleled in the whole of the United States of America, with his
august presence. He spoke on the Vedanta Philosophy. Today I am invited
to speak on the same lofty subject.
Seventy-three springs later, call
it a mere stroke of fate, call it a destined, divine dispensation, on
this fruitfully significant day, I am at once proud and blessed to
associate my name with that of Swami Vivekananda, a spiritual hero of
Himalayan stature.
Thomas
Jefferson, on replacing Benjamin Franklin as envoy to France, remarked,
"I succeed him; no one could replace him." With all the sincerity at my
command, I dare neither to replace nor to succeed Swami Vivekananda,
but, as a son of Bengal, I wish to bask in the unprecedented glory of
Sri Ramakrishna's dearest disciple, a unique son of Mother Bengal.
O
Harvard University, I tell you a sweet secret of mine. Perhaps you have
heard about the Royal Bengal Tigers. The fear of these tigers
ruthlessly tortured my infant heart. O Harvard, your very name used to
create almost the same fear in my mind in my adolescent days. But
today, to my extreme surprise, you have awakened enormous joy in my
heart.
Vedanta
means "the end of the Vedas"; indeed, this is purely a literal meaning.
Otherwise, Vedanta has a reservoir of countless meanings; religious,
philosophical, moral, ethical, spiritual, earthly human and heavenly
divine. Vedanta reveals guideposts for a spiritual pilgrimage�a
pilgrimage toward the absolute Truth. This pilgrimage welcomes all
those who soulfully cry for the Transcendental Brahman.
The
earth-bound mind is too feeble to enter into the Truth Absolute. "The
words return with the mind fruitlessly endeavouring to express what
Truth is." This truth sublime we learn from the Vedas.
Sarvam Khalvidam Brahma,
"Verily all this is Brahman." A true lover of Brahman needs must be a
true lover of mankind. Never can he see eye to eye with Samuel Johnson,
who voiced forth: "I am willing to love mankind, except an American."
Needless to say, the teachings of Vedanta are marked by a rare
catholicity of vision always.
Vedanta
welcomes not only the purest heart, but also the scoundrel of the
deepest dye. Vedanta invites all. Vedanta accepts all. Vedanta includes
all. Vedanta's inner door is open not only to the highest, but also to
the lowest in human society.
India's
Shankaracharya is by far the greatest Vedantin that our Mother-Earth
has ever produced. At the dawn of his spiritual journey, before he had
attained to the Consciousness of the Absolute Brahman, a certain
feeling of differentiation plagued his mind. Hard was it for him to
believe that everything in the universe was Brahman. One day as
Shankara was returning home after having completed his bath in the
Ganges, he chanced to meet a butcher�an untouchable. The butcher, who
was carrying a load of meat, accidentally touched Shankara in passing.
Shankara flew into a rage. His eyes blazed like two balls of fire. His
piercing glance was about to turn the butcher into a heap of ashes. The
poor butcher, trembling from the sole of his foot to the crown of his
head, said, "Venerable Sir, please tell me the reason of your anger. I
am at your service. I am at your command." Shankara blurted out, "How
dare you touch my body which has just been sanctified in the holiest
river? Am I to remind you that you are a butcher?" "Venerable Sir,"
replied the butcher, "who has touched whom? The Self is not the body.
You are not the body. Neither am I. You are the Self. So am I." The
Knowledge of the One Absolute dawned on poor Shankara. People nowadays
in India claim that the butcher was no other than Lord Shiva who wanted
Shankara to practise what he was preaching. But, according to many,
Shankara himself was an incarnation of Lord Shiva.
By
no means should we neglect the body. The body is the temple. The soul
is the Deity therein. Have we not learned from Vedanta that it is in
the physical that the spiritual disciplines have to be practised?
Lo and behold, Walt Whitman is powerfully knocking at our heart's door: "If anything is sacred, the human body is sacred."
The five cardinal points of Vedanta are: the Oneness of Existence, the Divinity in Man, the Divinity of Man, Man the Infinite and Man the Absolute.
Vedanta expresses itself through three particular systems: Advaita or Non-Dualism, Vishishtadvaita or Qualified Non-Dualism and Dvaita, Dualism. These three ancient systems developed large sects in India that were later shaken by the arrival of Buddhism. Buddhism shook the Vedic-Upanishadic tree. India is eternally grateful, therefore, to Shankara for the revival of the Non-Dualistic system, to Ramanuja for the Qualified Non-Dualistic System and to Madhava for the Dualistic System.
Shankara's Advaita (or Monism)
According
to Shankara, there is only one Reality, and this Reality is Brahman.
Brahman and Brahman alone is the Absolute Reality. Nothing does or can
exist without Brahman.
To
our sorrow, the world has misunderstood Shankara. He is being
misrepresented. If one studies Shankara with one's inner light, one
immediately comes to realise that Shankara never did say that the world
is a cosmic illusion. What he wanted to say and what he did say is
this: the world is not and cannot be the Ultimate Reality.
Shankara
saw the light of day in the eighth century A.D. In those days,
spirituality was on the wane in India. The Indian spirituality or,
should I say, the Hindu spirituality, was undergoing a serious
operation while a good many pseudo-religious sects were growing like
mushrooms. The Supreme commanded Shankara's appearance on Indian soil
to cast these unhealthy sects aside and reestablish one religion, the
religion of the Vedas, the sanatana dharma, the Eternal Religion. Shankara advocated monism. This monism is the oneness absolute of the universe, man and God.
The
Buddha stole God's Heart and Compassion; Shankara, God's Mind and
Intellect; Chaitanya, God's Body and Love; Ramakrishna, God's Soul and
Vision; Vivekananda, God's Vital and Will.
India's
champion philosopher, Shankara, founded modern philosophy in India.
Europe's champion philosopher, Spinoza, founded modern philosophy in
Europe. America's champion philosopher, Emerson, founded modern
philosophy in America.
Shankara's Kevala Advaita
is above all dualism. In his monism, there is no room for relative
things, relative values, the pair of opposites, for all these come and
go, appear and disappear. What is eternal is the Transcendental
Brahman. Ekam eva advitiyam, "That is one without a second."
Shankara's philosophy has dealt considerably with maya. Maya
is now taken to mean "illusion," but its literal meaning is
"measurement of extension." It refers to a way of conception. When we
want to conceive and express the Truth with our incapacities or our
very limited capacity, maya offers its help and comes to our rescue.
But Brahman, being Infinite, escapes both our conception and our
expression. Maya is the power that causes the world to be really real,
and at the same time distinct from God. Maya is a power, a mysterious
power, a power always inconceivable.
To quote Swami Bodhananda:
"Shankara
confesses his ignorance about this power, but he assumes it as a fact.
Just as we assume electricity as power, although we don't know what
electricity is, he accepted maya as a power, as a fact. Centrifugally
it is the becoming of the One, this Absolute Spirit, into the many, and
centripetally the re-becoming of the many into that One. So, in this
way maya is an eternal power. By this power Brahman projects Himself in
the forms of God, man and universe. These are inseparable from maya, as
well as from Brahman."
Shankara and Vedanta will always go together down the sweep of centuries. They are like twin souls.
* * *
Ramanuja's Vishishtadvaita Or Qualified Non-Dualism
According
to Ramanuja, the world is real, absolutely real, but it is wanting in
perfection. At the same time, it does not care for perfection. It has
no destined goal. The world was created by God's inspiration, is
sustained by His Concern and will be dissolved by His Will. The world
is God's playground. He performs His lila, "drama," here. This
eternal sport of His is His constant movement, His spontaneous
expression in endless repetition. Man is real. But he has to depend on
God. The world is real. But it has to depend on God. Without God, both
man and the world are meaningless futility. Man can be released and
will be released from the meshes of ignorance one day and he is bound
to realise God. But some difference between man and God will always
remain. Man will remain eternally below God, hence he will always have
to worship God.
Ramanuja's path is mainly the path of Devotion. He
stands firm against the theory of Shankara's undifferentiated Kevala Advaita.
To him, Brahman is and can only be personal. A true aspirant can
realise the Highest Truth and achieve the Knowledge infinite while he
is still on earth.
Madhava's Dvaita or Dualism
Madhava's philosophy affirms the complete
duality between the Brahman and the self (the small self). God, man and
the world have a permanent existence. But man and the world have to
depend solely on God for their existence. God is at once above the
universe and in the universe. God has a divine body that transcends all
our human imagination. Nothing can be done on earth without God's
immediate concern, direct approval and express command from the inner
planes. The Supreme Will of the Supreme guides the world. It pilots the
world to its destined goal. Man can be free from the shackles of
ignorance only when it is the Will of the Supreme. Liberation is not
only possible, but inevitable. What is absolutely essential for
liberation is man's loving adoration of God.
Now
I wish to tell you what I feel about Vedanta. Just once, soulfully
utter the word Vedanta. Immediately it will have the effect of a magic
spell on you. At once your heart is inspired, your consciousness
elevated and your life illumined.
To
my sorrow, in the consciousness of the Western world the idea of sin is
extravagant. A Vedantin's dictionary does not house the word sin. What
he knows within and without is a series of obstacles�doubt, fear and
desire. He feels that he must not doubt the Divinity within him. No
earthly fear can he allow to take birth in him. No desire, significant
or insignificant, can ever blight the purest heart in him. Very often
we are inclined to see ignorance all around. A Vedantin is justifiably
apt to see the underlying Truth here, there and everywhere.
Religious
people, especially the spiritual ones, cherish abundant joy in their
feeling that they live in God's world, in one undivided world. Each
individual is a true brother to them. The sense of brotherhood reigns
supreme in their all-loving hearts. A Vedantin's heart is fully at one
with them. He goes one step ahead. He sublimely declares, Tat Twam Asi, "That Thou Art." He sees and feels each human being as the embodiment of the Absolute Brahman.
Vedanta
means freedom, freedom from limitations, freedom from bondage and
freedom from ignorance. America is the land of matchless freedom. The
American soil is exceptionally fertile for God to grow the Vedantic
truth in measureless measure. Vedanta's freedom is the inner freedom.
When the inner freedom comes to the fore and guides and directs the
outer freedom, the outer freedom unmistakably and gloriously runs
toward its destined Goal. This Goal is the manifestation of God's
infinite Truth, Peace, Light, Bliss and Power here on earth. The inner
freedom is the realisation of the Eternal. The outer freedom is the
manifestation of the Infinite. When the inner freedom and the outer
freedom soulfully and divinely run abreast, today's man changes into
tomorrow's God.
Harvard University
March 25, 1969
