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Humanity may, in a very important sense, be
regarded as a wholly brainwashed species, indoctrinated from childhood into the
prejudices of nationality, groupism, colour-bar, family and language clingings,
and the like, of different types. The strange notions of the social norms of
communities, the politically dichotomised law and regulations, the credal rules
of convenient ideas of rectitude, the civil and criminal systems of parochial
judicature, all cut off man from man, nation from nation, group from group,
ideology from ideology, and introduce disturbing interpretations of the
relation of man to man in the world, though none of these innovations may have
any relevance to the ultimate nature of things. The selfishness of man wishes
to get rid of all its obstacles either by personal onslaught on another's
welfare, or by a legalised massacre of his brethren through its religious and
political codes of judging persons from its own avowed notions of propriety,
righteousness and ethics of living.
It is evidently necessary to draw a
distinction between 'getting rid of' and 'freeing oneself from.' Political
revolutions, generally, try to 'get rid of' their opponents by any means, even
the most drastic and inhuman, but these methods cannot 'free' people from their
real opponents. Opposition does not really come from physical personalities and
things which are attempted to be 'got rid of,' but from certain historical
motive forces unleashed by Nature under its cosmic scheme of achieving a
specific purpose. Even the death of an enemy as a physical embodiment cannot be
equated with the annihilation of the inimical impulse, which is indeed
superphysical, and which will persist till the cause of the opposition is
finally resolved in the light of the higher purposes of the workings of Nature.
Wars will continue even if only two persons are going to be alive in the world.
The reason must, now, be obvious.
The logic of Nature, when it is lost sight
of due to ignorance, becomes the cause of failure in life, even in the case of
honest and sincere seekers of Truth. To the seekers of this kind, the
oppositions are generally regarded to be family relations, material
possessions, love of self-respect and of social position, and the urge of sex,
all going with the basic instinct for psychophysical survival. In rare cases
the love of higher learning and knowledge predominates, in the exceptionally
intellectual, scientific and rational types of individuals.
Mostly, seekers try to get rid of these
mentioned types of impulses and urges of the human constitution by running
away, geographically, by unnecessary fastings and vigils exercised by the force
of will, by abstinence purely of a repressive nature, without knowing why the
impulses occur at all, and what is the motivating cause behind them in the
general scheme of creation. Religious scholarship and traditional dogmatics
tries to brush aside these subtle difficulties by some commercial jargon of
society, which really explains nothing, except as the way a physician who is
ignorant of the real illness of the patient gets rid of the cause by a harmless
and useless 'add aqua' recipe. No one can be truly religious or spiritual who
adopts such self-deceptive methods of appearing to be holy and good, or
religious and spiritual, merely in a social or communal sense, or from the
public mob point of view. Spirituality, or true religion, is the ascent of the
mind by every stage of the evolutionary pattern of things, even what human
society, in its inadequate comprehensions, calls evil, ugly, or abhorrent, by a
dextrous adjustment of consciousness with the reality behind these so-called
evils, for, if these phenomena were unreal phantoms not intended to exist at
all, there would be no reason why one should be constrained to hate them.
Hatred and dislike imply a secret acceptance of the reality of things disliked
and hated; for what is real cannot be destroyed, and what is unreal need not
engage one's attention. Man, today, requires proper education more than
anything else.
All the present-day systems of spiritual
exercise, or Yogas, are mostly human ways of encountering superhuman
issues. This is naturally a contradiction in approach, for it stands to reason
that the superhuman can be approached only by superhuman techniques, which have
to be learnt from a competent master, and cannot be acquired through printed
books which can only appease the psychological and social idiosyncrasies of the
masses.
One of the boldest attempts ever made to
overcome human empiricality entirely by way of the practice of true religion,
is the scientific method of a supersocial nature, which the purely socially
conditioned mind, ridden over by traditions of community, cannot comprehend.
The Brihadaranyaka Upanishad (I.4) proclaims that the Absolute 'I-am-I,'
or 'I-am-the-All,' contemplated itself as such, and was there by itself, as One
alone without a second. It had no second to it, the very idea of the second
being contrary to the All-in-All. The consciousness of 'a second' is the true
evil which it destroyed by being the All. One who knows this truth, says the
Upanishad, destroys all the 'non-I's,' or anything second to oneself, and no
external can exist before such a one, the external being burnt up by the
inclusiveness of the All-Being. This is the first stage of Being, which
is the prius to creation. In the second stage, the All-One
alienates itself into a cosmic 'another,' the cosmic subject has before it a
cosmic object, the cosmic positive beholds the cosmic negative, spirit
encounters matter, man sees the woman, male the female. In that
non-personalised superhuman contemplative bipolarity of existence, these
universal bipolar phases exist as one and two at the same time, inseparable and
separable simultaneously, the knower and the known in an act of inscrutable
embrace, as it were, the union of the one in two and the two in one. This is
the second stage, which explains the cosmic background of the three basic
instincts of self-regard (Lokaishana), possession of wealth (Vittaishana),
and sexual integration (Daraishana), as the strings operating behind
every species of created being, as the Upanishad specially reiterates
(I.4.17). But, beware, whoever feels that the thing which one needs is outside
oneself shall lose it, as it will flee away from the one who regards it as an 'other'
(II.4.6). It is in the third stage that the group of the five Cosmic
Elements, or rather the Cosmic Force-Continuum, emanates as an embodied form of
this Cosmic Dual-nature potential in all things, so that in creation everything
is one and not one, at the same time. No one can be entirely alone to oneself
without the consciousness of some relation to another. This is the mystifying
secret of the manifested universe where everything is and is not at the same
time, satisfied and unsatisfied, happy and unhappy, complete and incomplete,
wanting nothing and wanting everything, the universal life and universal death
warring with each other.
The duals of the gods in heaven, the
deities of the celestial kingdom as facets of the All-Being, are envisaged in
the next stage, which is the fourth one. The one God has become the many
gods who fill the universe as the one body fills all its limbs. The problem now
is in the following stage, which is the fifth, where the quandary arises
as to how the one can be many, the knower contact the known, or the universal
can have anything which it has to face or encounter, how there can be a God
with a world outside Him, and how there can be a world independent of God's
existence. God seems to be the world and also the opposite of the world. The
world is sunk in God as its very being, and yet is the opposite of God in every
way, being an 'externalised' entity different from universality. In the
sixth stage, this problem is resolved by the One, knowing that, after all,
it is itself the so-called 'other,' and, so, the 'other' is one's own All-Self.
In the seventh stage, the difficulty of the dual existence becomes a
more complicated state of a tripartite cosmiacality of the consciousness
of there being an objective world, a subjective knower of it, and
an intermediary link between the two holding them in a state of balance,
the three facets being known as Adhibhuta, Adhyatma, and Adhidaiva,
respectively. Here it is that we begin to know that there is a world, that we
are there to behold it, and that there is a God above both the perceiver and
the perceived.
The multiplicity of the perceiving
individuals in a world of external perception who have no consciousness of
there being a link between the perceiver and the perceived requires to be
brought into the state of a harmonious community of a purposive organisation,
for their very survival, which is done in the eighth stage, by an
introduction of a law known as Dharma, called also Rita, which
cements the apparent multiplicity of individualities by stages. This law works
at the ninth stage, by the cooperative or organising principle of
action, through (1) directing wisdom, (2) administrative power, (3) commercial
activity, and (4) requisite labour, which go by the name of the classes of
society. Added to this system of social life is also the necessity for the
education of the individual, in an ascending order of (1) discipline and study,
(2) interdisciplinary contact with the world by an actual experience of its
constituents, (3) a consequent detachment from anything external to oneself, and,
finally, (4) a self-absorption in the contemplation of the Infinite. This is
achieved by the necessity of the (1) law operating to blend together the
system of the cosmos with the (2) material and (3) emotional
needs for the purpose of the (4) ultimate liberation of the individual
in the Universal being.
As a Tenth Commandment, the Upanishad
insists upon social service requiring everyone to sustain the grace of the
gods, by worship, of the sages by sacred study, of the forefathers by ritual
offerings and ablutions, of the humans by charity, of the animals by loving
feeding, of the plants by tending them, all as a sacrifice by which the (1)
gods, (2) the sages, (3) the forefathers, (4) the humans, (5) the animals, (6)
the plants and even the (7) birds and insects love the seeker as their own
self, and protect him as they protect themselves.
Here will commence the art of concentration
and meditation of consciousness for its gradual upward ascent towards
liberation in its own universality, in terms of a 'return current' of its whole
being.
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