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Magazine Articles November / December 2005 |
1. Editorial
- Swami Dayatmananda
2.
The
Yoga of Meditation - Swami Swahananda
3.
How
to Truly Help - Ananda
4.
Leaves of an Ashrama: 12 Hazards and Benefits of Playback
- Swami
Vidyatmananda
5.
St. Philip Neri - Brahmachari
Bhumachaitanya
6.
At
a Franciscan Seminary -
Swami Prabhavananda
Editorial
Straightforwardness
Swami Dayatmananda
Straightforwardness is one more quality Sri Krishna advises all spiritual
aspirants to acquire. Straightforwardness is an indispensable virtue which must
be practised by all aspirants desirous of realising God.
Everyone loves babies for they are innocent, pure and guileless. Unlike us who
practise hypocrisy (often in the name of etiquette and good manners!) a baby
expresses his or her inner feelings so naturally. A baby laughs when happy or
weeps when miserable. During the time of his sadhana Sri Ramakrishna used to
keep the company of small children. By observing them he wanted to learn their
purity, innocence and detachment.
Straightforwardness is the opposite of guile, deceit, crookedness, hypocrisy
etc. It is akin to truthfulness. To be frank, to think, speak and act with one
accord is straightforwardness. To make the mind, speech and action one is
straightforwardness.
Straightforwardness also means uprightness. Only those who lead a righteous life
can really become straightforward for they will, then, have nothing to hide or
to be afraid of.
There are many aspirants who are sincere and pure. Unfortunately some of them
are too outspoken, often hurting and creating problems both for themselves and
others. The case of Golap Ma, a woman disciple of Sri Ramakrishna comes to mind.
Many times Holy Mother, Sri Sarada Devi, warned her to be careful and not to
speak out harshly. She did not heed and had to suffer as a result.
There are few of us who can claim we are straightforward. Apparently we may feel
sometimes we are being straightforward, but often it may turn out to be a case
of pure rashness.
A rash or impulsive way of speaking is not a sign of straightforwardness. I have
come across people who have become positively proud and egoistic because they
delude themselves that they are straightforward. They are in the habit of
speaking out whatever comes to their mouth while failing to realise they are
rash and unthinking. In many cases they are not even sincere. Their practice of
frank speaking hides a great deal of selfishness and pride. Even a little
observation makes it clear that our mind beguiles us often and we are not even
aware of it.
Straightforwardness invariably follows simplicity. Simplicity, as many
misunderstand, is not having less number of things. If this were the case all
poor people would be simple people. Simplicity is a great virtue; it is the
result of conquering desires and depending solely on God. Because a simple
person depends for everything on God he has nothing to hide or fear. Therefore
he can afford to be straightforward. Such straightforwardness not only does not
harm any one, it often helps one go to God.
Straightforwardness leads the way to true faith. Sri Ramakrishna says: "Unless
one is guileless and broad-minded, one cannot have deep faith. A guileless man
easily realises God. He who can resign himself to the will of the Almighty with
simple faith and guileless love realises the Lord very quickly".
But it is not so easy to be guileless. Unless one practises spiritual
disciplines for a long time, it may be for many lives even, one cannot become
guileless. Sri Ramakrishna says: "One cannot be guileless and liberal-minded
without much austerity, or unless it is one's last birth. When a man has
performed many good actions in his previous births, in the final birth he
becomes guileless. Unless a man is guileless, he cannot so easily have faith in
God."
Practice of spiritual disciplines makes one unworldly. Even a trace of
worldliness does not allow one to be straightforward or guileless. Sri
Ramakrishna says: "The worldly man is a hypocrite. He cannot be guileless. He
professes to love God, but he is attracted by worldly objects. He doesn't give
God even a very small part of the love he feels for Ôlust' and Ôgold'. But he
says that he loves God. One cannot be guileless without a great deal of
spiritual discipline in previous births. Spiritual instruction produces quick
results in a guileless heart. Unless a man is guileless, he doesn't receive the
grace of God."
Bayazid was a great Sufi master. He advises that a believer be straightforward
and completely humble as a servant. According to him straightforwardness is the
last step on a three-step stairway leading to nearness of God. He says:
"The first step is consistency, where a traveller strives to embody Islam's
theoretical and practical dimensions. Success in this continuous effort brings
one's carnal self under control. The second step is settlement or tranquillity,
where an initiate purifies his or her inner self of the vices contaminating the
spirit and heart (e.g., show, fame, and vanity, all of which cannot be
reconciled with servanthood), thereby purging the heart of all that is not God.
The third step is straightforwardness, where the doors of Divinity and creation
are slightly opened to the traveller, and the Divine gifts are bestowed in the
form of wonder-working and blessings, although he or she neither desires nor
seeks them.
"Straightforwardness, the last station of the way, means living without
deviation from loyalty to God and under His direct protection; it is an
environment in which Divine gifts and favours are bestowed. Flowers never fade
away and hills and slopes do not experience winter, for it is an environment of
eternal "spring." This is what is pointed out in: If only they were
straightforward on the path, then, assuredly We would give them to drink of
"water" in abundance (72:16). So long as people pursue straightforwardness on
the path of belief in Divine Unity and fulfil their covenants with God and His
Messenger by fulfilling the Divine ordinances, Divine gifts and bounties will
flow abundantly."
Another Sufi master, declares: "So long as the heart of a servant is not sound
and straight, his belief cannot be true and upright; so long as his tongue is
not true, his heart cannot be sound and straight.
"Every morning, the parts of a man's body warn his tongue, saying: ÔFear God
concerning us. For if you are true, we will be true and straight; if you are
crooked, we will also deviate.'"
Straightforwardness takes one to God quickly.
The Yoga of Meditation
Swami Swahananda
In the spiritual view of life the purpose of our existence is to realise our
spiritual nature, to realise God. The scriptures, saints, mystics, and wise men
of all religions support this. They have prescribed four major methods, called
yogas, for achieving this realisation. The four yogas correspond to four
tendencies of the mind: jhana yoga, the way of knowledge, directs the reasoning
faculty of the mind to distinguish the ultimate Reality from the transitory
phenomena through philosophical analysis; bhakti yoga, the way of love, employs
the power of strong feeling to direct the mind and personality to absorption in
an ideal; karma yoga, the way of action, harnesses man's driving compulsion to
act, leading him to freedom from action through non-attachment and
desirelessness; and raja yoga, the way of concentration and meditation, utilizes
the mind's ability to reflect upon and affect itself to gain the power to direct
the mind and fix its attention wherever desired. By making the mind one-pointed
or functionless, one can reach the Highest. Although meditation is the
speciality of raja yoga, it is practised in some form in every yoga. "The
greatest help to spiritual life is meditation," said Swami Vivekananda. "In
meditation we divest ourselves of all material considerations and feel our
divine nature."
Various scriptures stress the importance of meditation for spiritual
realisation. The Chandogya Upanishad exhorts us, "Being tranquil, meditate."
(3.14) The same Upanishad describes meditation as the key to success. (7.6) Sri
Krishna, in the sixth chapter of the Bhagavad Gita, describes the process of
meditation in detail, instructing his disciple to become a man of meditation (a
yogi) because the yogi excels all. (6.46) The Mahanirvana Tantra gives second
place only to meditation to being absorbed in the Absolute, Brahman. (MT 14.122)
The Vedas and Puranas stress the efficacy of austerity in achieving success in
any endeavour (aikagryam paramam tapah). All point to concentration, control of
the mind, as the highest austerity. The Bhagavata says that the devotee becomes
one with the Lord through one-pointed love. (Bh. 10.29.15; 11.15.27) In the
Bible, Jesus alluded to one-pointedness of mind when he said: "If thine eye be
single, thy whole body will be filled with light." (Matthew 6.22)
What is meditation? Patanjali, the original teacher of Yoga, said, "Meditation
is uninterrupted thinking of one thought." (Yoga Sutras 3.2) It is like pouring
oil from one vessel to another. Swami Vivekananda said, "Meditation is the
focusing of the mind on some object. If the mind acquires concentration on one
object, it can concentrate on any object whatsoever." Raja-yoga describes two
processes for achieving concentration. The first process is withdrawing the mind
from sense objects. This "turning the mind around" is called pratyahara. The
second process, called dharana, is focusing the mind on some object. The
combined practice of withdrawing the mind and focusing the attention leads
gradually to dhyana, the state of true meditation, when we are able to hold the
mind on one chosen thought. Although the terms "concentration" and "meditation"
are used interchangeably, concentration means focusing the mind on any given
object, and meditation means concentration on spiritual truth.
Yogis, practitioners of raja yoga, describe five states of mind. The same person
may experience these five states at various times. In the restless or maddened
state, the mind cannot be concentrated on anything. A person in this state turns
from one activity to another in an exhausting flurry of unconcentrated and
unproductive activity. The five senses, like untamed horses, drag the hapless
person in five different directions at once. At times the mind becomes dull,
drowsy. The brain does not function fully when drowsy, and no concentration is
possible in this state. When the mind is alert but scattered, one's attention
drifts from one thing to another. With effort one can keep the scattered mind
for a limited time in a circle of thought. Through the practice of sense-control
(pratyahara) and focusing (dharana) one may attain a one-pointed state of mind.
One-pointedness is meditation. Meditation leads the developed yogi to a waveless
state of mind in which spiritual truth is spontaneously revealed. This is the
goal of raja yoga. "The real aim is to make the mind functionless," said Swamiji,
"but this cannot be done unless one becomes absorbed in some object."
Spiritual teachers from different religious traditions, philosophical
orientations and cultures prescribe different meditation techniques. There are
hundreds of specific meditations. Nevertheless, we can categorize meditation in
the sense of concentrated thinking into six major types.
One general type of meditation is to witness the workings of the mind without
trying to suppress or direct thoughts that arise. Vedanta philosophy asserts the
true nature of the Self as beyond mind and thoughts. The Self is the witness of
all phenomena. Witnessing one's thoughts, one feels disidentified with the
Witness Self, the spiritual Reality. As the spiritual aspirant practises this
type of meditation, he finds his wandering mind becoming calm, fit for deeper
meditation. Sri Ramakrishna used to say that the mind is like a naughty child;
if you look at it intently, it feels shy, as it were, and begins to behave. Some
also practise this type of meditation just to relax.
Another type of meditation is to think excellent thoughts. Swami Brahmananda
said, "The mind has to be made steady by two means: first, go to a quiet place,
make the mind free from waves, and meditate. Second, develop the mind by
thinking excellent thoughts. The mind must be given food. That is how it remains
calm. The food for the mind is meditation, japa, and holy thinking." The idea is
to occupy the mind with ennobling thoughts to the exclusion of negative or
degrading thoughts. Some compare the mind to a dirty inkwell attached to a desk
top. To clean the inkwell we need to pour in a large quantity of clean water.
Pure and holy thoughts, reflection on the love and compassion of God,
contemplation of the inspiring lives of saints all these act like currents of
fresh, clean water to cleanse and purify the mind. A pure mind is a calm mind,
fit for deep meditation.
Some teachers, especially Buddhists, recommend meditation on the transitoriness
of all things. The phenomenal world, composed of the same gross and subtle
elements as our bodies and minds, appears intensely real to us. Our minds
naturally seek what we believe to be real. Attachment to the objects and people
of this world obstructs our view of the changeless Reality. When we think deeply
on the composite and impermanent nature of all things our homes, our friends and
family, even our own bodies and minds our attachment to these things decreases.
We begin to realise that these things are not as real and permanent as they
appear at first glance. Youth, beauty, wealth, prestige never last. Lincoln's
advice to a young man applies equally in our days of success and failure: "Even
this shall pass away." Because the disease of worldly attachment is deep-seated,
drastic medicine may be needed to root it out. Therefore, some religious
teachers instruct their students to practice meditation in a cremation ground or
graveyard to impress vividly the transience of the world on an overly attached
mind. The Holy Mother said,"Discriminate always between the real and the unreal.
Whenever you find the mind drawn to any object, think of its transitoriness, and
therefore try to draw the mind back to the thought of God."
Many sects of Hinduism and Buddhism practise meditation on God with form. They
regard the various deities, Shiva, Durga, Vishnu; and the Avataras like Rama,
Krishna, Buddha, Jesus, and Ramakrishna; as manifestations of the Supreme God.
Meditation here means visualising the luminous form of the Chosen Deity.
Repetition of a Divine Name, or a mantra greatly helps the mind to limit its
wandering and achieve deeper concentration on the object of visualisation. Swami
Shivananda said, "If you meditate on God with form, He Himself will reveal to
you His real nature. It is very difficult to meditate on the formless... There
is no question of inferiority or superiority in this; it is a question of
temperament. Whatever appeals to one is best for him." If we love the object of
meditation, our concentration deepens more easily. The yogi cultivates devotion
to improve his meditation. The devotee practises meditation to deepen his love
for God.
Some like to think of God as endowed with personal qualities such as love and
kindness but without form. The formless personal God is the chief concept in
Christianity, Judaism and Islam, and one of many conceptions in Hinduism and
Buddhism. One may meditate on the formless personal God by feeling the living
conscious presence of the Lord in the heart by visualising a Being of boundless
light, radiating peace, love, wisdom and joy.
The sixth type of meditation is meditation on the Absolute Brahman, the
formless, qualityless, impersonal Reality beyond all conceptions, the Ground of
Being. Monistic Vedanta recommends this type of meditation. Swami Brahmananda
said,"God should be imagined as vast and infinite. To bring this idea of
vastness within, one should look at the Himalayas or the ocean, or gaze at the
sky." Of course, any representation of the infinite falls short of the Reality
itself. Therefore, some employ more tangible symbols like the syllable "Om,"
repeating the sacred word while visualising its written form as a symbol of the
all-pervading Self specially manifest in the heart.
The benefits of meditation depend in part on the motive one has in practising.
The jnana yogi in his discrimination between the Real and the unreal, the karma
yogi in his performance of selfless work, the bhakta yogi in his worshipful
adoration of the Divine and the raja yogi in his quest to control the mind, all
benefit from the power of concentration developed through meditation. As any
power can be injurious if not used with caution for a good purpose, so also
concentration without basic moral training may be harmful to oneself and others.
Modern medical science has discovered the therapeutic value of meditation in
treating hypertension, high blood pressure, insomnia and other by-products of
high-pressure civilization. The Latin root of the word meditation means "to
heal," but spiritual seekers will always consider good health as a fringe
benefit, subordinate to their primary Goal, which is Self-realisation or
God-realisation.
Of all spiritual disciplines prescribed for attainment of Self or
God-realisation, meditation forms the core, the common, underlying thread.
Whether one believes in God with or without form, as personal or impersonal, or
whether or not one believes in God at all, one can practise some form of
meditation conducive to success in one's particular approach. The science of
meditation, raja yoga, includes a comprehensive psychology, both theoretical and
practical, designed to diagnose one's state of mind and prescribe an appropriate
technique to make the mind fit for deeper states of concentration. Even from the
standpoint of maintaining one's physical and mental health in our modern world,
one should consider practising meditation. Perhaps the root meaning, "to heal,"
most accurately describes the value of meditation, which can cure our ills, be
they physical, mental or spiritual.
How Truly to Help
Ananda
The only true help that you can render to mankind is
when, by your very character, you teach others. Then you do good by your every
word, your every movement. When, for instance, you remain steady under all
conditions of good and evil, those around you learn the value of steadiness and
begin to try to practise it themselves. Thus, by the example of your character,
your whole life becomes a lesson to others.
If we carry the joy of God in our souls others will feel it, for joy of God is
also infectious. That is why great personalities, even without a word or any
organized method, succeed in minimizing the miseries around them. There are
human beings so radiant and vital that wherever they go they counteract all
darkness and deadness. They bring a new feeling, they create a fresh atmosphere.
Everyone who is overwhelmed with grief, or in pain, feels new life on meeting
them.
Practical, practical, practical religion! That is my plea. The only thing that
counts is living the life, creating a power that no one can resist.
If you find somebody whom you feel has gone astray, and who is not living
according to your ideal, do not go to him with long lectures. Overwhelm him by
your own conduct and love. We cannot convey a great deal by preaching, no matter
how full of beautiful sentiment our words may be. We need to live the sermon,
that in our dealings with humanity, even in a casual way, people may come to
realise that our faith is living.
The aim is to hold the one single, definite, spiritual fact that we radiate
light only as we possess it. Every time I have an opportunity to speak to you, I
lay emphasis on this one point, because it is spirituality which enriches our
own life, and is the only thing that enables us to reach the lives of the people
of the world. You meet someone on the bus, the train or on the pavement, and you
leave an impression. How wonderful if it is a radiant, living impression, full
of spiritual magnitude!
"Religion is being and becoming." More and more do I become interested in this
living aspect of life, as I see the unrest, the unhappiness, in human hearts,
the sickness that dwells in the souls of men.
When we come face to face with a life dedicated, consecrated, so like a crystal
that it shines, all confusion vanishes, all doubts are answered, and we are
filled with inspiration. Here lies the spiritual province.
The world today needs, more than gold, the understanding hearts who will, by
their staunchness of spirit, heal the wounds of humanity. Our real emancipation
comes through the mind. I want men who will show by their lives that they have
something other than just a material background. I want individuals who, when
men are puzzled as to what is to be done and how they are to do it, will awaken
them to the invincible power within. To you, my friend, who feel that your life
is discarded because you can no longer earn a few pounds in a factory, to you I
say, "You are going to be a producer, not just of machines, but of thought,
ideas, and idealism."
The real heritage of man is within himself. Let him discover it. He who does so
becomes a beacon light for his community.
Finding fault is not going to lead us anywhere. Disputing, discussing, are not
going to solve problems. I say again and again, let us go close to our Ideal
meditation, prayer, communion with the Supreme, then all these clouds will
vanish.
Peculiar phases of religious development, mysteries and complicated matters,
these do not interest me in the least, but there is a way of reaching the heart
of humanity, and we must find it. First however, we must reach our own depths.
We may preach to others and try to convert them, but do you suppose we can ever
really convince anyone until we have awakened in our own soul such ardour for
the spiritual Principle that we can convey it without a word?
Blessed are those who have come to this way of seeing, feeling and knowing, for
they alone can make others see, feel and know.
Blessed are those who have found their home in Truth, for they alone can guide
weary and wandering souls to their shelter of rest.
Reprinted from Vedanta for East and West May-June 1985
Leaves of an
Ashrama: l2
Hazards and Benefits of Playback
Swami Vidyatmananda
In 1974 as the Watergate trap began to close on him, President Nixon must have
asked himself ruefully, "Why did I ever make those recordings? How could I have
conceived the idea of preserving on electronic tape what went on in my office?"
for it was, ultimately, the President's own words, transmuting themselves from
magnetized particles back into voice, which testified against him and made his
departure from office unavoidable.
The undoing of the President was a spectacle played out for all the world to
see. The Vedantist can view it as a clear case of the planting of karmic cause
and the reaping of karmic result. In general, the relation between actions and
consequences, whether good or bad, is characterized by a considerable time lag.
The working out of a karmic equation is usually obscure because the process may
lap over into several lifetimes. Unpleasant events in one phase are explained as
having been created by unworthy acts in previous existences. But in the affair
in Washington, the cycle required but two years. What was sown in June of 1972
came to fruition in August of 1974.
And the rest of us? Are we not also busy recording every thought, every act? Is
not each word and attitude registered on the tape of the subtle body, garnered
up with a fidelity equal to that of the best cassette recorder? What is thus
recorded will, as inevitably as in the Watergate affair, assert itself, to
ensnare us, or as the case may be, to deliver us, later on.
The theory of karma is sometimes criticized as fatalist. On the contrary, it can
be the strongest support to moral behaviour, for it gives a pragmatic reason to
act and think well. What we ourselves amass "there" remains "there", to come
forth later on in terms of forces harmful or helpful to us, ourselves.
Vivekananda said it well: "You must always remember that each word, thought, and
deed lays up a store for you, and that as bad thoughts and bad works are ready
to spring upon you like tigers, so also there is the inspiring hope that the
good thoughts and good deeds are ready with the power of a hundred thousand
angels to defend you always and forever."
We all of us are proprietors of a White House basement storage room, and we are
constantly adding to the hoard locked up there. For our own good, if for no
other reason, let us resolve to act and think in such a fashion that we shall
have no cause for regret when all is played back to us and our contemporaries
later on.
St. Philip Neri
The Saint Who Wore the Mask of Humour
Brahmachari Bhumachaitanya
If any person seemed divinely commisioned to lighten the Christian conscience of
the sixteenth century for it has always tended to be uncomfortably grave it was
St. Philip Neri of Rome. Perhaps no one in the history of Western hagiography
has been quite so jolly, so captivatingly outgoing or so delightfully eccentric.
As one reads the life of of this contemporary of St. Teresa of Avila (both were
born in the year 1515), one gradually becomes aware of a few of the devices
saints employ to cover up their saintliness. Some retreat behind a mantle of
silence; others, gravity and sternness. Philip used humour.
It is reported that one day four Poles, hearing of Philip's saintliness, went to
see him - possibly expecting a miracle or some divine revelation. Philip settled
them all around him and then unexpectedly began to read from the pages of
Piovano Arlotto, a humorous writer of the period who was a favourite of Philip.
Not only that, the saint added some sallies of his own, and laughed loudly and
raucously at a number of the risqu' passages.
"Well, there you are, my lads," he said to them as they began to disperse in
embarrassment, "that's what I usually read. There's nothing like a funny book."
On another occasion, he was told that a certain Attilio Serrano, a prelate who
considered Philip unscholarly and boorish, was to attend his Mass. During the
service, Philip made a point of blurting out all sorts of nonsense, piling one
grammatical error upon another. When the Mass was over, the first thing he
wanted to know was what sort of effect he had produced.
One of the misfortunes of history has been the distressing habit of its
reporters to strip our heroes of the past - particularly the saintly ones - of
most of their humanity. For instance, we simply cannot conceive of Plato
committing an unwise act; of St. Francis, an irreligious one; or of Genghis Khan
acting at all like a gentleman. We so strongly identify such figures with some
extraordinary feat or pontifical statement, that the subtler, wiser, and perhaps
more enlivening aspects of their character are lost to us. As Pascal wrote:
ÔPeople always imagine Plato and Aristotle dressed in the long robes of the
pedagogue, but actually they were ordinary decent people who used to joke with
their friends like everyone else, and when they amused themselves writing their
Laws and their Politics they were simply playing a game: it was the least
serious and philosophic part of their lives. The more philosophic part was the
quiet and simple way they lived.' (Italics mine)
Philip is a bit of an anomaly. He wrote very little and since his personality
was so astonishingly vital we are left with the impression of a warm, generous,
and thoroughly human being, remarkably free of ecclesiastical trappings or
biographical emendations. He is a friend, surely, who will walk into the room at
any moment, clap us heartily on the shoulder, and with a wink ask us if we have
been behaving ourselves.
At the same time, we must resist the temptation to view Philip Neri as merely a
comic figure who spent his days poking fun at people or making them laugh. He
did make them laugh (and sometimes appear ridiculous), it is true, but there was
usually a purpose to it.
For instance, one of Philip's customs was to make a daily pilgimage to the seven
basilicas or ancient churches of Rome. Gradually, the number of persons in his
entourage grew although the pilgrimage meant several hours' walking as Philip's
personal magnetism drew more and more people to him. To one he would extend a
smile, another a wave of the hand, a third a wink. None could resist him. In
time, the group was made up of persons from all walks of life. Gentlemen rubbed
shoulders with workmen, and priests with laymen. Frequently the convoy would
halt while they listened to an impromptu concert of musicians, or Philip would
ask a child to speak to the group about God. It was as though the Lord had
appointed Philip one of His court magicians, to cast upon His children the spell
of laughter and gaiety, even for a few hours, to ease the pain of their
suffering.
Later the processions became more organized. Philip would assemble the group
before dawn. Then they would visit St. Peter's, where Philip would joyfully
begin praying, followed by the others.
They would go to another church, singing as they went, where they would attend
Mass and Communion. All the while Philip would joke and banter with the crowd,
maintaining an aura of liveliness and joy. The group would have a simple
breakfast together, and then visit the other basilicas.
During these walks, Philip had a special knack for dissolving class barriers,
using his love to veil, for a few hours, the rifts that pride and profession had
created in his followers. For example, he might challenge a number of the more
smartly dressed young men to climb the masts surrounding the castle of Sant'
Angelo. Before long these gentlemen could be seen hanging by their hands from
the forked gibbets, much to the amusement of the crowd. Or he might ask some
distinguished person to carry the Cardinal's dog (who had also grown attached to
Philip); another fellow would follow with Philip's cat in a basket. All in all,
it was one of the most bizarre and motley processions that had ever walked the
streets of Rome.
Philip had a deeply charitable nature, and he partly encouraged such gatherings,
particularly picnics, so that the poor of the city could be given a grand treat.
Although food was in abundance, he rarely ate much himself. When others would
comment on this, he would say; "Tuck away, children, it makes me put on weight
to watch you."
One of his biographers wrote of him:
"Everything was either a joy or a joke to him. In this way he emerged triumphant
over everything and everybody, and over every kind of social set-up in which he
was involved, without being enslaved by any of them or by anything or anyone
except God."
Philip's jocularity, however, in no way divorced him from the practical aspects
of life. One of his enduring concerns was for Rome's sick and needy, during a
time when such persons were nursed with little skill or affection. Drawing upon
his persuasive powers, he convinced many of the educated and noble of Rome to
offer their services.
Even here his talent for practical jokes helped him. A wealthy nobleman named
Salviati was a devoted follower of Philip. While Salviati would be deep in
prayer, he would sometimes feel his brocaded mantle being removed from his
shoulder and an apron replacing it. It was Philip's hint that his disciple had
best go tend the sick in the hospitals.
Philip could literally get anyone to do his will. Fabrizio de Massim wrote of
him:
"He won me over so magnificently that I was never able to give him up. He used
to accompany me in my carriage to get me to persevere in my religion, or else he
would force me to follow him a thing I had never done for anyone else with many
embraces and other signs of affection. He was such a lovable person and had such
a charming way with him that he could get anyone to do exactly what he wanted."
There is very little in Philip's early life to suggest either his extreme
sociability or his whimsical nature. Perhaps the only incident in his childhood
that might be called a prank was the time he rode a donkey down some cellar
steps and nearly broke his own neck. Until the age of twenty-nine, he lived
almost entirely withdrawn from the world (he maintained a consistent love of
solitude throughout his life), praying and meditating for long hours in a small
room or in one of Rome's dark and deserted catacombs. It was in one of those
subterranean chambers, in 1544, that supposedly a divine Ôball of fire' from
heaven entered his breast as he was praying. Such an extraordinary event was
attested to for the remainder of his life by a protrusion in the region of his
heart visible to all. A post-mortem examination, described in great detail by a
doctor who examined his body, revealed that indeed his ribs had been forced out
over a greatly enlarged heart.
It is of interest to know that after this event, the temperature of Philip's
body increased to such an extent that he refused an overcoat in even the coldest
weather. When he came upon people who expressed astonishment at this amazing
resistance to the cold, he would laugh and let them take hold of one of his
hands, which was burning hot.
Philip's heart was, indeed, the source of his overflowing love and spiritual
power. As his official biographer wrote: "We find in him an effusion of divine
love far more abundant than is strictly necessary to a saint; a certain kind of
love, more visible, more fruitful, brighter, and more gentle than we find in
other saints..."
His love went particularly to children. He could often be found playing with
them, taking part in their innocent games with a zest that belied his years. He
developed a particular affection for one of them, a French boy by the name of
Nicolo Gigli. When the boy died quite suddenly, Philip was found in the church,
where he imagined he was alone with the body of his young friend, caressing the
boy's face and chest, smiling at him, then bursting into laughter. When Philip's
friends expressed amazement at this behaviour, Philip replied that he had good
reason to rejoice, for his ÔLily' (the meaning of Gigli) would be flowering
forever in heaven.
His way of treating the illnesses and mental problems of others usually
involved, in one way or another, this generous heart. He seemed convinced that
from his breast issued the source of God's grace. He would often clasp an ill
person to him, and he was known to lie upon a person in extreme cases of
suffering or temptation. In many instances the mere sound of his voice, the
reassurance that all would be well, was enough to effect a cure. He told one
woman, "Antonia, I forbid you to be ill without my permission." So, whenever she
would feel particularly distraught she went to see him and her strength would
return.
Nothing seemed more ridiculous to him than the thought that doctors alone could
cure a patient. He would rebuke the doctors unmercifully. "There's nothing more
wrong with me than what you are putting me through," he would tell them.
A woman with a number of children was about to die. "For the children's sake",
Philip told her, "we must take heaven by storm." He grew furious with her
husband and the others who were resigned to her death, for they set limits to
God's power and grace. Philip won the day and the woman recovered.
Like a number of other mystics, Philip resisted membership in the hierarchy of
the Catholic Church. Though urged time and time again to become a priest in his
early years, he remained quite happy with his role as lay chaplain to a number
of Rome's young men. Eventually, however, Philip did yield to the pressures of
the church and was ordained a priest at the age of thirty-six, but for the
remainder of his life he stoutly declined the red hat of the cardinal, as well
as a number of attempts to make him Pope. He did take a few courses in a
theological school, but it was more to nourish his soul rather than to seek any
preferment in the church. He found it impossible to continue, however, because
the sight of the crucifix hanging on the wall of the classroom would send him
into rapture and he would be unable to absorb what the instructor was saying.
It was during this early period, in which he was living an utterly simple life,
wandering the Roman countryside and spending long hours in prayer and
meditation, that he first conceived the idea of the Oratory. This unusual
confraternity of young men was informally organized in 1548, and met weekly in a
church that had been made available to them. Its members, under the affectionate
guidance of the ebullient Philip, were required to attend Holy Communion
together each Sunday (though frequent Communion was rare in those days), then
attend service in the Church of San Girolano. In the afternoon, they met
together to engage in ragionamenti or spiritual discussions designed to
intensify their spiritual lives. Quite often Philip would begin the talks with a
fervent sermon on the necessity for practising religious disciplines or offer
some moving statement on the joys of spiritual life. He spoke with warmth and a
simple, unadorned eloquence. One of his disciples, who attended many of these
sessions, records that Philip's manner was so easy, so congenial and spontaneous
that it was impossible for any to shun him, and that men of the world became
attached to him with an everlasting devotion.
The congregation that Philip founded was really an attempt to join the natural
and supernatural elements in man in the most agreeable and beneficial
relationship possible. Philip's experiment, to say the least, was quite a
sensation in his day. What other religious group required its members, both
laymen and priests, to pay their own living expenses? Or permit voluntary vows
of poverty, chastity, and obedience (knowing full well that only then will they
be truly effective)?
The Oratory was a reflection of Philip's own unusual character. It was
disciplined, yet unsystematic; unconventional and individualistic; yet
thoroughly devotional. In its administrative procedures, the Oratory reflected
Philip's well-known dislike for autocracy. "All that was organized and exacting
displeased St. Philip," said Cardinal Newman. The Superior, for instance, though
honoured as titular head of the congregation, was not free from contributing to
the ordinary tasks necessary to the group including that of waiting at table.
Unlike other religions, the Oratorians could call to account, depose, or restore
any superior without recourse to outside authority.
Today, three Oratorian houses are to be found in the United States at Rock Hill,
South Carolina; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; and Monterey, California. They have a
combined priest-layman membership of 33. Two congregations exist in England at
Birmingham (founded by Cardinal Newman in 1847) and in London. There are, in
all, about 530 Oratorians living in 52 autonomous congregations throughout the
world.
In the nearly four centuries that have passed since Philip Neri's death, the
Oratory has experienced the effects of the changing years. Much, of course, has
not changed. Each of the congregations still remains autonomous (remarkably
similar, in this respect, to the Vedanta societies in the West) and resists
attempts at centralization with an undiminished vigour. Nor do they appear to
have lost the sense of community service inspired by St. Philip's teachings.
At the same time, one cannot help but sense a departure today from the strict
injunctions of Philip regarding mental prayer, an art he taught innumerable
times during the early days of the Oratory. With an insight that seems common to
nearly all saints, Philip knew that good works must be supported by a
well-established inner life. For perhaps the first time in their inexperienced
and thoughtless lives, the young men Philip gathered about him were to taste the
sweetness of contemplation. It was from these seeds, we must recall, that the
organisation sprang.
One of his most distinguished recruits was Giambattista Salviati, whom we have
earlier mentioned, a nephew to Pope Leo X and a cousin to the Queen of France.
There was also Tarugi, the perfect courtier eloquent, urbane, a judge of fine
horses and beautiful women. But under Philip's influence, Tarugi became
completely transformed. "I was an open window to every sort of caprice," he
wrote. "But after confessing to Philip for the first time I felt a flame burning
within myself that no sins that I committed could ever extinguish, and it went
on goading me until I put myself entirely in his hands."
These were the sort of men that Philip attracted to his divine net. Soon the
Oratory was drawing persons from all walks of life, priests as well as laymen,
all searching to broaden their spiritual lives under the guidance of this
remarkable soul.
Spiritual power has the same mysterious characteristics as any other force whose
source is unavailable to our senses. Rarely does this force fully manifest
itself. In Philip's case, the spiritual power that lay within him seemed ever
ready to burst the confines of his body, to overflow that fragile vessel which
contained it. Philip was particularly sensitive to exposing this inner fire to
others. Often, when he felt things getting out of control, he would either adopt
an air of bravado or resort to some expression of humour or apparent anger to
throw others off the scent. He was reported to have actually slapped a number of
persons who sought to flatter him.
Some mention has been made of Philip's unconventional social behaviour. Much of
it, so outlandish and bizarre, can be judged only as we judge the behaviour of
anyone who has transcended the laws of society by renouncing its claims on him.
For instance, Philip always found it difficult to obey the decorum of dress. It
was often when he was expected to appear respectable that he showed his
eccentric nature. He might, for instance, add a petticoat to his attire or white
shoes would be seen peeping out from under his cassock. In his old age, he wore
a scarlet garment indoors in combination with a variety of other oddly assorted
articles.
One day a Roman lady, proud of an opportunity to introduce Philip to some of her
friends, held a reception in his honour at her home. One can well imagine her
shock when Philip arrived with one half of his face clean-shaven and the other
sporting a week's growth of beard! In this, his own peculiar way, he discouraged
praise and sought humility.
Philip was ever ready to unmask the spiritual pretender. His test was not always
so gentle. One famous story connected with him concerns his investigation, at
the request of the Pope, into the case of a nun who was gaining a reputation for
miracle working. She lived in a country convent several miles from Rome. Philip
obediently rode on his favourite mule and paid a visit to the convent. But he
returned much sooner than expected. He told the surprised Pope:
"Holy Father, she does not perform miracles because she is lacking in the first
Christian virtue, humility. I arrive at the convent, bespattered with mud and
drenched by the rain. I hold out my boot to her and indicate that she is to pull
it off. She recoils indignantly and angrily refuses my request. What do I take
her for, she shouts. She is the handmaid of the Lord, not of anyone who comes to
demand a menial service of her. I get up calmly, mount my mule, and here I am,
convinced that you will not find another test necessary."
Philip's common sense approach was well-known, and he often resorted to
dispensing quite candid advice.
For instance, if a girl showed signs of hysteria or other weaknesses connected
with growing up, he might say, "Marry her." Or if caught in a lie, "Give her the
stick, then."
The highest and most moving part of Philip's day was the Mass. It was here he
had to exert great caution, or he might suddenly be thrown into a state of
ecstasy, which, of course, would halt the entire proceedings. To keep his mind
occupied during the preparations for Mass, he would often ask that little birds
or dogs be brought into the sacristy for him to play with. Or he would ask
others to read secular poems to him. Many were scandalized by these goings-on;
but few realized his inner condition, that all these distractions were necessary
if he was to avoid the absorption in ecstasy.
As soon as the Mass commenced, and Philip made the sign of the cross, he became
a changed person. He said it as fast as he could, for fear that he would fall
into a rapture, or perhaps be lifted a foot in the air. (There are numerous
recorded instances of Philip Neri's levitations.)
Sometimes his body would sway or he would begin a quick-time hop from one foot
to another, as though he were dancing. Many times he would turn to the server at
the altar addressing some pointless remark to him such as, "Send those dogs
away!" All such devices were attempts to prevent his mind from soaring in union
with the Lord.
He was not always successful. If he was getting dressed, for instance, and there
was nobody in attendance, he might be found an hour later still holding an
article of clothing, his hand sketching the air.
During the final few years of Philip's life, his attempts at preaching were
sometimes only a single cry, followed by silence.
On one occasion, when expected to say a few words after the regular sermon, he
suddenly put his hands up to his face and burst into sobs. A person near him
thought he heard him mutter, "Oh, people who want to have ecstasies do not know
what they are like."
At times, his body would stiffen until it was rigid as a corpse, or move
uncontrollably. Fabrizio de Massimi relates that he would often go in Philip's
room and find him struggling with himself; he would look at Fabrizio without
seeing him.
Once, during Mass, his eyes suddenly shone with a great beauty. His body became
motionless and rigid, and he stared fixedly at the Host. Two priors left their
prayers and went up to Philip. They found him cold as ice, deprived of all
sensibility, deaf to every word addressed to him. They rubbed his hands without
effect, and immediately assumed he was in some kind of a fit. He was moved to a
cell and remained in that condition for a long time. At last the ecstasy abated
and in a state of joy Philip related to them, "I have seen Jesus Christ visibly
present in the consecrated Host, and with his most sacred hand blessing all of
us who were there praying."
The painting we have of him in old age shows him seated at a desk, his eyes
large and luminous, expressing a serious, yet joyful countenance. Giovenale
Ancina described Philip towards the end of his life: "He is a splendid looking
old man with hair white as ermine; his skin is as delicate as a girl's. If he
lifts his hand up and it happens to be against the sun, it looks transparent,
just like alabaster."
Philip Neri passed out of the body in 1595, only a few months short of eighty,
after predicting the exact time of his death. Yet even during the last few days
he was still bounding up the stairs like a boy and indulging in his whimsical
joking. At two in the morning, the hour he had foretold, he sat up in bed and
had only sufficient time to extend his blessing before he fell back dead.
He was canonized by virtual acclaim, despite his unorthodoxy, which could well
have worked against a man of lesser humanity and saintliness. But the people
loved him, and there are few who can successfully resist that will. The
canonization process began only two months after Philip's passing away, on
August 2, 1595, when a hundred and ninety-four witnesses appeared on his behalf.
Twenty-seven years later, on March 12, 1622, he was declared a saint by Gregory
XV.
Goethe perhaps best summed up the character of Philip Neri when he wrote: "Man
is an extraordinarily complex being, in whose nature absolutely contradictory
elements coexist, the physical and the spiritual, the possible and the
impossible, the attractive and the repellent, the bound and the unbound... In
Neri's case, all these opposites overtly manifested themselves, confusing the
intellect by thrusting the incomprehensible upon it, unleashing imagination,
outwinging faith, justifying superstition, juxtaposing and even uniting the most
normal states with the most abnormal. It is not surprising, therefore, that such
a man, working untiringly for nearly a century and on a vast stage, should have
had the influence he did."
Reprinted from Prabuddha Bharata June 1973
At a Franciscan
Seminary
Swami Prabhavananda
This question-answer session was held at a Franciscan Seminary
in Santa Barbara, USA, on the 13th of March, 1965.
Q: Swami, do you feel, in general, that the moral beliefs and practices, the
world principles and the needs, of the average Western man one who is born and
grows up in Western society and has no acquaintance with Eastern religions are
similar to those of the Eastern man, say a Hindu?
A: First, I must point out to you that this distinction between "eastern" and
"western" religion is a wrong distinction. After all, Christ, in whose name you
are devoting your life, was an Easterner. He was born and lived in the East.
In relation to moral life, or ethical life, or spiritual life, I think that all
believe in the same general principles. For instance, you have devoted
yourselves to the religious life, and have taken vows of chastity, poverty, and
obedience. In our religion, we take such vows; only our terminology is
different. We say that we have to give up cravings for progeny, cravings for
wealth, cravings for name and fame you see, it amounts to the same thing. We are
taught to be truthful; not to hurt any being in thought, word or deed; not to
express greed for another's property; and to overcome lust.
We point out that this whole world really is bound by lust and greed, and that
worldliness and God do not go together. Therefore, in order that we can devote
ourselves to God and realize God in this life that's what we emphasize in order
that we can acquire the saintliness which comes when life and character have
been transformed by the vision of God these are the necessary precepts to
follow: truthfulness, not hurting any creature, chastity, overcoming greed.
As for obedience; what is meant by obedience after all? To renounce the ego, the
little self "I" as distinct from everybody else. This is the cause of all
bondage. We point out that the first-begotten son of ignorance is ego. And from
that comes attachment, aversion, and clinging to the surface life. Jesus pointed
out: "He who loves this life shall lose it." Clinging to life is something
instinctive, through ignorance. But it has to be overcome. How? There is only
one way: to devote ourselves to God, to follow the first commandment: "Love the
Lord thy God with all thy heart, with all thy mind, with all thy soul, with all
thy strength." This commandment is universal. The same in the east or west,
north or south.
We all worship one God. In Vedic times, long before any history was recorded, it
was stated: "Truth is one; sages call it by various names." And so it is one
God. You call him Christ, I call him Krishna. One man says "Allah," while
another says "Brahman." What difference does it make?
This reminds me of a story. Four men were travelling in the desert. One of them
said, "Oh, I wish I had a drink of water." Another said, "I wish I had a drink
of pani." A third said, "I wish I had a drink of jal." The fourth, "Oh for a
drink of aqua." But the first one said, "What are you three talking about? Pani
and jal and aqua cannot satisfy your thirst; only water can!"
Just then somebody came with some water, and all four pointed to it and
proclaimed: "That's it! That's it!" And they all took some and drank it.
Q: Could you elaborate a little bit on your understanding of God?
A: Is it possible to have any understanding of God? That's where we get into
difficulty! You define God in this way and I define God in that way, and we
quarrel. You say, "My God is the only God," and I say, "No, my God is the only
God." But what is the truth? I'll tell you what our Master, Sri Ramakrishna,
said about God. He said the bee, before it sits on the flower and begins to suck
the honey, makes a big, big noise. Then, as it sits on the flower and drinks the
honey, it becomes silent. Then again, having drunk the honey and become
intoxicated, the bee makes a sweet humming noise. Similarly, those who have no
vision of God, who have not gone to the neighbourhood of God even, who have only
book knowledge they make a big noise about God: "God can only be defined this
way, can only be defined that way." But as one begins to drink that honey, that
sweetness which is in God, one becomes silent; and then again, becoming
God-intoxicated, one begins to talk about God.
Some say God is personal, some say he's impersonal; some say he's with form,
some say he's without form. Some say God is with attributes; some say he is
without attributes. Yet they have drunk of the same ocean of nectar. According
to their temperaments, they introduce different ideas when they come to define
God. But the truth is, his name is Silence.
I'll tell you a story from our scriptures. A father sent his son away, saying,
"Go and study religion." The young boy studied for twelve years, and then came
back. His father asked him, "Tell me what you understand of God." The young man
gave him a wonderful sermon, quoting the scriptures. But the father said, "My
boy, go back. You have not yet learned what is to be learned. Go back. Study
some more." So the son studied for another twelve years. Then he came home
again. And again his father asked, "Now tell me what you have learned of God."
But the son kept silent. So the father said, "Why, my son, your face shines like
a knower of Brahman. You have known him. His name is Silence."
Q: We feel, though, that God can only be defined as silence in the sense that we
cannot rightly put down what he is he's way beyond us.
A: The moment you say, "He is this and that," you are limiting the unlimited,
the infinite.
Q: Then how do you explain Christ? In him we see the love, the justice, the
mercy all these aspects.
A: Wonderful! That's right! Christ is like a door through which you gaze into
the Infinite, the Absolute.
Q: From this point of view, how do you speak of God as silence?
A: When you see Christ, and through that door you reach That (the Absolute),
then you become silent. Until you have seen Christ you talk about him, and you
say he is this and that. We say Krishna also is this and that. If you were to
take Christ and Krishna and Buddha and Ramakrishna and shut them all in one
room, they would embrace each other. But if you shut a Buddhist, a Catholic, and
a Hindu together they'll fight one another. Why? Because none of them has known
anything about Christ or Buddha or Krishna or Ramakrishna. When you know, it is
different. A dog has the canine instinct for recognizing his master no matter
what clothes he is wearing, but we human beings have not even that canine
instinct to recognize that Christ can come in other dress also. It is the same
God. (I hope I have not disturbed any of you!)
Q: Swami, one comment almost accusation made against Eastern religions is that
these religions de-emphasize the individual so much that they want to annihilate
him, to dissolve him so he cannot be himself any more. In other words, I cannot
be "me" any more, in a sense.
A: What is your "me"? Explain it, define it. Is it your body? Your mind? Your
senses? Your character? Would you like to be what you are now forever? Aren't
you losing your "me" all the time? So your real "me" is in the infinite in God.
Find yourself in him: then you have truly found yourself. This idea about
individuality where is it? Define that which is you. Sages and saints Christians
and Hindus and Buddhists have dedicated years of their lives to finding out,
"What am I?" Ultimately they lose themselves in God. Shall I quote to you
Meister Eckhart, one of the great Christian mystics? This is what he says: "Most
people are so simple that they consider we are here and God is out there. But it
is not so. God and I are one." Is that blasphemous? Find that out for
yourselves. We are not the "I" or "me" that we think ourselves to be.
Q: Well, how can you speak of transforming yourself then?
A: Transforming yourself? You cannot transform yourself; but by devoting
yourself to God, by loving God, you can be transformed by him.
Q: Then who is it that seeks the real identity?
A: We have an ego. God has given us an ego, he has given us the little self, in
order that we can love him, and in order that ultimately the love, lover, and
the Beloved can become one.
Q: I'm still confused. You say we are to seek our true identity in God, and yet
I am confused by who this is then that is doing the seeking.
A: For this you have to go to Upanishadic thought. Atman, which we call the true
Self, the real Self, the real I, is Brahman: "I and my Father are one." And that
Atman is the unchangeable reality within each one of us. But through ignorance
from a beginningless time the Atman identifies itself with the sheaths covering
it. For instance, the body is a sheath, the mind is a sheath, the life principle
is a sheath, and we are identified with them: therefore, the sense of ego. When
you analyze what the ego is, you find it has no existence, no reality at all.
And yet, such is our ignorance, that we settle our whole world upon the false
ego. All the Western mystics point out to you (and they are all at one with
Eastern thought) that if you can empty yourself of your "self," there will come
the greater unfoldment of God. So this ego that we are holding on to, the
individuality that you speak of, is just a shadow.
Here is a parable that we find in our scriptures. Two birds of beautiful golden
plumage are sitting on the selfsame tree. The bird on the upper branch is calm
and is in its own glory. The lower bird, hopping from one branch to another,
tasting the sweet and bitter fruits, forgetful of the upper bird, continues to
enjoy and suffer. When it has eaten a very bitter fruit it looks at the upper
bird, and sees how calm and majestic, how glorious that bird is; but again
forgets, and goes on eating sweet and bitter fruits, until it has become
completely frustrated. Then it gazes at the upper bird, moves nearer and nearer
to it, and is gone. All the time the upper bird's shadow was playing; there was
all the time just one bird, calm, majestic, in its own glory.
Q: What is it that caused the bird to look up?
A: His true nature. Man's true nature is infinite and divine, and no matter how
he may go down and down, ultimately that divinity in him unfolds itself and
lifts him up. Therefore, none will be lost. As Christ said, we have to bring
about the death of the ego. Buddha showed the difference between ignorance and
spiritual knowledge. He said we are asleep, and we become awakened. Buddha was
asked, "What are you? Are you a god?" He answered, "No." "Are you a man?" "No."
"Then what are you?" He said, "I am Buddha, the awakened one." And he said that
everyone will be awakened.
Q: This unity that we strive for, the unity with God, is accomplished through
love. But love demands a separation, and once we arrive at that identity,
there's no more love. Right?
A: No! Love wants to become completely absorbed in the Beloved.
Q: But as soon as it is absorbed, it is no longer love.
A: We have a saying in India: "I want to taste sugar and not be sugar." That is
your viewpoint. But learn to taste sugar and then see what happens. This is not
human love, but in human love also there is what you can call a fruition, a
complete absorption. The Sufi mystics describe it this way. There is a knock at
the door. From inside comes the question, "Who is that?" Answer: "I." The door
does not open. Again a knock. "Who is that?" "I." No response. For a third time
comes the knock. "Who is that?" "Thou." The door opens. Love God with all your
heart, with all your mind, with all your soul, with all your strength, and then
see what happens. I don't have to prove anything to you. You will prove it to
yourself.
Q: Is union with God the same in all the Eastern religions?
A: "Union with God" is not exactly correct. The language does not express it.
The Vedantic idea is this: you are God, and that God becomes unfolded. There are
no two to have union. There is just one. I believe Meister Eckhart, among the
Christians, had that kind of experience.
Q: Many of us are not familiar with the Upanishads, the Bhagavad-Gita, or the
Vedas. Could you just explain to us what these scriptures are the general
content?
A: Well, I don't know. Suppose I were to say to you, will you explain to me what
is in the Bible? That's a very hard task! I'd have to give a series of lectures
on the Gita, a series of lectures on the Upanishads. But generally, these
scriptures give the methods and means by which one can realize God.
Let us look briefly at one, the Bhagavad-Gita. According to the Gita there are
four ways, called yogas, by which one can attain God. One is the path of
discrimination. That is, through a process of analysis we try to find out what
is Real. Now of course in your discrimination you must define the Real as that
which is abiding and eternal. Unreal is that which today is, tomorrow is not.
And so when you learn to discriminate this way you find that God alone is the
reality. Everything else is unreal. He is the one treasure. You devote yourself
to him. This is the path of knowledge, discrimination.
Then there is the path of love or devotion. It is the same as your idea to love
God.
Then there is the path of action work as worship where every act becomes an act
of worship.
Last there is the path of meditation psychic control.
All these paths are brought out in the teachings of the Gita. The teacher, Sri
Krishna, says that a harmonious combination of all these yogas is best. You see,
we have certain natures: emotional, intellectual, active, meditative. So we are
told, "Be emotional. Love God. But be discriminative. Also be active. At the
same time be contemplative. Combine these yogas." That is what we emphasise not
to be one-sided.
Of course this summary does not do justice to the Gita!
Q: Swami, could you explain to us a little of the doctrine of rebirth or
reincarnation?
A: The idea is this. If you consider God as the creator of this universe, you
cannot admit the beginning of a creation. To admit the beginning of creation is
to admit the beginning of a creator. So this creation is from a beginningless
time. Now, for instance, if this is our first birth, and the only chance we
have, what a calamity! You may say God has given us freedom, freedom of will to
devote ourselves to whichever we choose.
But why did he not give us the will to devote ourselves to God? Why did he
create some morally blind? Why did he create so many differences amongst
individuals? That God must be a cruel, unjust God. And then if this is the only
chance we have, and some go to heaven and the rest go somewhere else well God is
responsible for that; and who would like to love such a God? Love him through
fear? No, we cannot love God that way. In order that we can believe in a just
God, we have to believe that he will give us every opportunity, many
opportunities, through rebirth or reincarnation, until we wake up. Then all will
come to him. So that, in short, is the theory of reincarnation. It is the giving
of many chances.
But, you know, Sri Ramakrishna one time was asked, "What do you think about
reincarnation?" And he answered, "Yes, they say there is reincarnation. But
learn to find God, here and now." That is the practical teaching.
Q: Swami, In the Christian religion we make the distinction of natural and
supernatural. I was wondering, for example, how would you look upon a couple who
loved each other, but let us say they weren't familiar at all with any religion;
however, there was love, a true love between this man and woman. Would you call
that love exclusively human, or does it in some way participate in divine love?
Is there a distinction?
A: All love is divine. But when one loves a man or a woman and does not know
that one is loving God in that person if one is loving the flesh, or the mind it
is misguided love, no matter how faithful it may be. That would not lead you to
God. But if you can love somebody, with the idea that there is God dwelling in
him, and you love God that would lead you to the highest.
Your distinction between natural and supernatural is true. This is what we call
"relative" and "beyond the relative." In the relative there are three states of
consciousness: waking, dreaming, and dreamless sleep. We live within these three
states, but in them we cannot find God. Yet it is within the waking state that
we struggle to find God. Then we are lifted above the relative plane to the
plane of I cannot describe it, it is something beyond, that's all I can say.
Here we live in the relative plane, and it is by transcending this plane that we
have the vision of God, or an experience of God. None can see God with the
physical eyes, but he who has eyes to see, sees him; he who has ears to hear,
hears him in another plane of consciousness.
Q: Is there any distinction between persons and classes in India?
A: Of course! Just as you have different classes and persons and castes in
America, in Europe, everywhere, so we have different classes and castes in
India. We know that in God, in spirit, we are all one: but manifestations
differ. There's good; bad; saint; sinner; all kinds of people; ignorant, wise,
learned, illiterate. In spirit there is oneness, but in expression there is
difference, of course!
Q: Is there any effort to make India classless?
A: If you made America classless, there would be no America. Distinction,
difference, variety that is what makes life interesting; that is what makes the
world function. If we all behaved alike, and if our tendencies were all the same
how awful! Why don't you want difference? Variety is the law of nature. But at
the same time, recognize the underlying unity.
Q: I think what Father was talking about was difference of opportunity. We talk
about a classless society in the sense of equal opportunity.
A: Oh, yes, in America I know even a pauper is dreaming to be a millionaire, and
perhaps he can be a millionaire. So it is in India, everywhere.
Q: But can a lower-class person become a brahmin in that sense?
A: Not a brahmin. He can go beyond brahminhood. I, for instance, was not a
brahmin to begin with, yet now brahmins come and bow down to me. So what do you
say to that? Right here an example!
Q: Can you point to any experience in India, Swami, where you feel that the
Christian faith has made a creative contact with the Hindu faith?
A: Frankly speaking, as long as I lived in India, I never came in contact with
Christians at all. I've seen them, lecturing in the corner of a park. But we
never went there, because they would be denouncing the Hindus. That is their way
of preaching. You see, such preachers were untouchables to us. I'm sorry to say
that, but it is true.
Q: Swami, I'm very impressed with how close you seem to be to nature, and I just
wondered if you could amplify on your outlook towards the world, and just how
nature itself fits into your theology, or approach to God.
A: In order to approach God there are two things we must practise. One is to
close our eyes, forget the world just God and me. But that is not enough. Then
we open our eyes and see God dwells in everything.
Q: Well, how about utilizing a response to nature? Say the birds, or the tress,
or a beautiful place?
A: Wonderful! I'll give you an illustration of that. I was once on a pilgrimage;
I was about twenty years old at the time. There were about a hundred of us, men,
women, old and young, travelling in the Himalayas. As we were walking, we saw
the sunrise over snow-capped mountains. It was an exquisitely beautiful sight.
All these hundred people sighed, "Ah!" Then they sat down and closed their eyes.
Can you imagine it? You know what they felt? If this is so beautiful, how much
more beautiful would be the source of all that beauty! And where is that source?
The Lord within. And so they closed their eyes and tried to commune with God.
Yes, nature is beautiful and we love it, but it should remind us only of God.
Q: I thought you said that God is not really the source of all creation.
A: Who else?
Q: Well, you said he could not be a creator.
A: I said if God is regarded as the creator, and if the creation had a
beginning, then God had a beginning. And we say God is beginningless, creation
is beginningless.
Q: We would say that matter could not be eternal, because then it would be like
God.
A: Nature is not eternal, in the sense that nature is always changing. We do not
say it is eternal in that way.
Q: Swami, is Hinduism polytheistic?
A: Neither "polytheistic," nor "monotheistic," nor any other of your English
words can apply. Forget what you have learned about Hinduism before, please.
There is one God. He has many aspects.
Q: How does Hinduism regard good and evil?
A: In creation there is good and evil both. Either you have to take this as a
relative creation, or nothing at all. But what is good to you today becomes evil
tomorrow. There is no such thing in this relative world as absolute good and
absolute evil.
Q: Would a Hindu consider the principle of good and the principle of evil as
unequal elements?
A: They are both here in this universe: otherwise, if there were no evil, you
would not recognize good.
Q: Will evil be defeated?
A: No, there cannot be a millennium in this world. You can defeat evil by rising
above good and evil, to God. Goodness is the path to the absolute. But you have
to rise above both good and evil. You have to rise above both pleasure and pain,
through Christ, to God, the absolute.
Q: What would you say is the basis of Hindu ethics?
A: The basis of Hindu ethics has this one ideal in view: without purity of heart
there is no possibilty of realizing God. That which would lead you to God is
good; that which would take you away from God is evil. For instance, why should
I not hurt anybody? Because when I hurt another I hurt myself. I hurt God, for
God is within.
Q: But on an abstract level, you might say God is not "hurtable."
A: Yes, that's true. But because I recognize God in you, I would not hurt you.
Q: I'd like to know what you think about the relationship of poetry and
religious language.
A: You know, I'm not a poet. But it's wonderful to express God's truth in poetry
and poems. In fact, God is said to be a great poet. Kabi in Sanskrit means
"poet," and God is considered a great poet.
Q: Do you have any comment on the Christian belief that this world comes to an
end? Do you believe that?
A: No, I believe it is beginingless and endless. But for you and me we get out
of this mess!
Q: But we come back?
A: Oh, no! If we are devoted to God, and find God, then we do not come back. We
have to come back until we find him. This creation is infinite and is going on
infinitely. That is his play.
Q: What would you say about Christ's statement interpreted as saying the world
will end?
A: Did Christ say that?
Q: According to his followers, he did.
A: I'd like to see that what Christ said. You know, at one time I was in an
apartment in Portland, Oregon. And two young ladies knocked at the door. I
opened the door and said, "What is it?"
They said, "We are preachers."
I said, "Just a moment. I'm going to hold a class; you come along with me."
So I went and gave a class and they followed me and attended the class. After
the class, when I asked for questions, they said, "Do you believe in the Bible?"
I said, "Yes, I do."
They asked, "Every word of it?"
I replied, "Do you believe every word of it?"
"Yes, we do."
I asked then, "Have you read it?"
And they answered, "No."
I said, "That's why you believe in it!"
Reprinted from Vedanta and the West, 1965
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