The Influence of Vedanta
Extract from a university talk given by Sri Chinmoy in 1972
Without the Vedas, the Upanishads do not exist. The Vedas are the source. But the wealth of the Vedas can be offered properly to the generality of mankind only through the Upanishads. The Upanishads have the capacity to enter into the source, and the capacity to offer the illumining fulfilling wealth of the source in a way that can be accepted and understood by humanity at large. They are the end or cream of the Vedas; they are called Vedanta. On the mental plane, on the spiritual plane, on the psychic plane, on the moral plane, all of India's achievements come from the polished, developed, aspiring, and illumining consciousness of the Upanishads.
Buddhism
is a form of Vedanta philosophy. But Buddha's philosophy emphasises a
special aspect of Vedanta. We speak of Buddha as the Lord of
Compassion. We speak of Buddha's moral ethics. Where did all this come
from? From Vedanta. But while expressing the Vedantic or Upanishadic
truth, Buddha offered his own inner light in a specific way. That is
why ordinary human beings find it difficult to believe that Vedanta was
the original source of Buddha's teachings.
In
the Western world we have Pythagoras and Plato, two great philosophers.
You can see that the philosophy of both of them, and especially of
Plato, has been greatly inspired by Upanishadic thought. Unfortunately,
people believe that the Western world did not accept anything from an
Eastern source, but it is not true. Sufism, this emotional or psychic
mysticism of the West, where does it come from? Again, from the
Upanishads, the same source.
The
world has received many significant things from the Upanishads, but
unfortunately the world does not want to offer credit to the source. No
harm. A child takes money from his parents and tells his friends that
it is his money. Friends of his age believe that it is his, but adults
will say, "He does not work. Where can he get money"� They know that he
has got it from his parents. Millions of people have been inspired by
the Upanishadic lore, consciously or unconsciously. In India and in the
West there are many paths, many religions, which have taken abundant
light from the Upanishads. But they find it hard to give credit to the
source.
The
Upanishadic Seers abide within us. They do not need any appreciation or
recognition. What do they want? What do they expect? From the genuine
seekers and followers of Truth, what they want and expect is the
application of the Truth which has been offered. If the Truth is
applied in our daily lives, no matter where it came from, divinity will
loom large in us, and divinity will offer appreciation, admiration and
glorification to the source. Even God does not expect or demand
anything more from us as long as we apply the Truth in our own lives
consciously, constantly, devotedly, soulfully, and unconditionally.
