Swami Vivekananda on the Ideal of a Universal Religion: How It Must Embrace Different Types of Mind and Methods
By Swami Vivekananda
The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda/Volume 2/Practical Vedanta and other lectures/The Ideal of a Universal Religion
Wheresoever our senses
reach, or whatsoever our minds imagine, we find therein the action and
reaction of two forces, the one counteracting the other and causing the
constant play of the mixed phenomena that we see around us, and of those
which we feel in our minds. In the external world, the action of these
opposite forces is expressing itself as attraction and repulsion, or as
centripetal and centrifugal forces; and in the internal, as love and
hatred, good and evil. We repel some things, we attract others. We are
attracted by one, we are repelled by another. Many times in our lives we
find that without any reason whatsoever we are, as it were, attracted
towards certain persons; at other times, similarly, we are repelled by
others. This is patent to all, and the higher the field of action, the
more potent, the more remarkable, are the influences of these opposite
forces. Religion is the highest plane of human thought and life, and
herein we find that the workings of these two forces have been most
marked. The intensest love that humanity has ever known has come from
religion, and the most diabolical hatred that humanity has known has
also come from religion. The noblest words of peace that the world has
ever heard have come from men on the religious plane, and the bitterest
denunciation that the world has ever known has been uttered by religious
men. The higher the object of any religion and the finer its
organisation, he more remarkable are its activities. No other human
motive has deluged the world with blood so much as religion; at the same
time, nothing has brought into existence so many hospitals and asylums
for the poor; no other human influence has taken such care, not only of
humanity, but also of the lowest of animals, as religion has done.
Nothing makes us so cruel as religion, and nothing makes us so tender as
religion. This has been so in the past, and will also, in all
probability, be so in the future. Yet out of the midst of this din and
turmoil, this strife and struggle, this hatred and jealousy of religions
and sects, there have arisen, from time to time, potent voices,
drowning all this noise — making themselves heard from pole to pole, as
it were — proclaiming peace and harmony. Will it ever come?
Is it possible that
there should ever reign unbroken harmony in this plane of mighty
religious struggle. The world is exercised in the latter part of this
century by the question of harmony; in society, various plans are being
proposed, and attempts are made to carry them into practice; but we know
how difficult it is to do so. People find that it is almost impossible
to mitigate the fury of the struggle of life, to tone down the
tremendous nervous tension that is in man. Now, if it is so difficult to
bring harmony and peace to the physical plane of life — the external,
gross, and outward side of it — then a thousand times more difficult is
it to bring peace and harmony to rule over the internal nature of man. I
would ask you for the time being to come out of the network of words.
We have all been hearing from childhood of such things as love, peace,
charity, equality, and universal brotherhood; but they have become to us
mere words without meaning, words which we repeat like parrots, and it
has become quite natural for us to do so. We cannot help it. Great
souls, who first felt these great ideas in their hearts, manufactured
these words; and at that time many understood their meaning. Later on,
ignorant people have taken up those words to play with them and made
religion a mere play upon words, and not a thing to be carried into
practice. It becomes "my father's religion", "our nation's religion",
"our country's religion", and so forth. It becomes only a phase of
patriotism to profess any religion, and patriotism is always partial. To
bring harmony into religion must always be difficult. Yet we will
consider this problem of the harmony of religions.
We see that in every
religion there are three parts — I mean in every great and recognised
religion. First, there is the philosophy which presents the whole scope
of that religion, setting forth its basic principles, the goal and the
means of reaching it. The second part is mythology, which is philosophy
made concrete. It consists of legends relating to the lives of men, or
of supernatural beings, and so forth. It is the abstractions of
philosophy concretised in the more or less imaginary lives of men and
supernatural beings. The third part is the ritual. This is still more
concrete and is made up of forms and ceremonies, various physical
attitudes, flowers and incense, and many other things, that appeal to
the senses. In these consists the ritual. You will find that all
recognised religions have these three elements. Some lay more stress on
one, some on another. Let us now take into consideration the first part,
philosophy. Is there one universal philosophy? Not yet. Each religion
brings out its own doctrines and insists upon them as being the only
true ones. And not only does it do that, but it thinks that he who does
not believe in them must go to some horrible place. Some will even draw
the sword to compel others to believe as they do. This is not through
wickedness, but through a particular disease of the human brain called
fanaticism. They are very sincere, these fanatics, the most sincere of
human beings; but they are quite as irresponsible as other lunatics in
the world. This disease of fanaticism is one of the most dangerous of
all diseases. All the wickedness of human nature is roused by it. Anger
is stirred up, nerves are strung high, and human beings become like
tigers.
Is there any
mythological similarity, is there any mythological harmony, any
universal mythology accepted by all religions? Certainly not. All
religions have their own mythology, only each of them says, "My stories
are not mere myths." Let us try to understand the question by
illustration. I simply mean to illustrate, I do not mean criticism of
any religion. The Christian believes that God took the shape of a dove
and came down to earth; to him this is history, and not mythology. The
Hindu believes that God is manifested in the cow. Christians say that to
believe so is mere mythology, and not history, that it is superstition.
The Jews think that if an image be made in the form of a box, or a
chest, with an angel on either side, then it may be placed in the Holy
of Holies; it is sacred to Jehovah; but if the image be made in the form
of a beautiful man or woman, they say, "This is a horrible idol; break
it down! " This is our unity in mythology! If a man stands up and says,
"My prophet did such and such a wonderful thing", others will say, "That
is only superstition", but at the same time they say that their own
prophet did still more wonderful things, which they hold to be
historical. Nobody in the world, as far as I have seen, is able to make
out the fine distinction between history and mythology, as it exists in
the brains of these persons. All such stories, to whatever religion they
may belong, are really mythological, mixed up occasionally, it may be
with, a little history.
Next come the rituals.
One sect has one particular form of ritual and thinks that that is
holy, while the rituals of another sect are simply arrant superstition.
If one sect worships a peculiar sort of symbol, another sect says, "Oh,
it is horrible!" Take, for instance, a general form of symbol. The
phallus symbol is certainly a sexual symbol, but gradually that aspect
of it has been forgotten, and it stands now as a symbol of the Creator.
Those nations which have this as their symbol never think of it as the
phallus; it is just a symbol, and there it ends. But a man from another
race or creed sees in it nothing but the phallus, and begins to condemn
it; yet at the same time he may be doing something which to the
so-called phallic worshippers appears most horrible. Let me take two
points for illustration, the phallus symbol and the sacrament of the
Christians. To the Christians the phallus is horrible, and to the Hindus
the Christian sacrament is horrible. They say that the Christian
sacrament, the killing of a man and the eating of his flesh and the
drinking of his blood to get the good qualities of that man, is
cannibalism. This is what some of the savage tribes do; if a man is
brave, they kill him and eat his heart, because they think that it will
give them the qualities of courage and bravery possessed by that man.
Even such a devout Christian as Sir John Lubbock admits this and says
that the origin of this Christian symbol is in this savage idea. The
Christians, of course, do not admit this view of its origin; and what it
may imply never comes to their mind. It stands for holy things, and
that is all they want to know. So even in rituals there is no universal
symbol, which can command general recognition and acceptance. Where then
is any universality? How is it possible then to have a universal form
of religion? That, however, already exists. And let us see what it is.
We all hear about
universal brotherhood, and how societies stand up especially to preach
this. I remember an old story. In India, taking wine is considered very
bad. There were two brothers who wished, one night, to drink wine
secretly; and their uncle, who was a very orthodox man was sleeping in a
room quite close to theirs. So, before they began to drink, they said
to each other, "We must be very silent, or uncle will wake up." When
they were drinking, they continued repeating to each other "Silence!
Uncle will wake up", each trying to shout the other down. And, as the
shouting increased, the uncle woke up, came into the room, and
discovered the whole thing. Now, we all shout like these drunken men,"
Universal brotherhood! We are all equal, therefore let us make a sect."
As soon as you make a sect you protest against equality, and equality is
no more. Mohammedans talk of universal brotherhood, but what comes out
of that in reality? Why, anybody who is not a Mohammedan will not be
admitted into the brotherhood; he will more likely have his throat cut.
Christians talk of universal brotherhood; but anyone who is not a
Christian must go to that place where he will be eternally barbecued.
And so we go on in
this world in our search after universal brotherhood and equality. When
you hear such talk in the world, I would ask you to be a little
reticent, to take care of yourselves, for, behind all this talk is often
the intensest selfishness. "In the winter sometimes a thunder-cloud
comes up; it roars and roars, but it does not rain; but in the rainy
season the clouds speak not, but deluge the world with water." So those
who are really workers, and really feel at heart the universal
brotherhood of man, do not talk much, do not make little sects for
universal brotherhood; but their acts, their movements, their whole
life, show out clearly that they in truth possess the feeling of
brotherhood for mankind, that they have love and sympathy for all. They
do not speak, they do and they live. This world is too full of
blustering talk. We want a little more earnest work, and less talk.
So far we see that it
is hard to find any universal features in regard to religion, and yet we
know that they exist. We are all human beings, but are we all equal?
Certainly not. Who says we are equal? Only the lunatic. Are we all equal
in our brains, in our powers, in our bodies? One man is stronger than
another; one man has more brain power than another. If we are all equal,
why is there this inequality? Who made it? We. Because we have more or
less powers, more or less brain, more or less physical strength, it must
make a difference between us. Yet we know that the doctrine of equality
appeals to our heart. We are all human beings; but some are men, and
some are women. Here is a black man, there is a white man; but all are
men, all belong to one humanity. Various are our faces; I see no two
alike, yet we are all human beings. Where is this one humanity? I find a
man or a woman, either dark or fair; and among all these faces I know
that there is an abstract humanity which is common to all. I may not
find it when I try to grasp it, to sense it, and to actualise it, yet I
know for certain that it is there. If I am sure of anything, it is of
this humanity which is common to us all. It is through this generalised
entity that I see you as a man or a woman. So it is with this universal
religion, which runs through all the various religions of the world in
the form of God; it must and does exist through eternity. "I am the
thread that runs through all these pearls," and each pearl is a religion
or even a sect thereof. Such are the different pearls, and the Lord is
the thread that runs through all of them; only the majority of mankind
are entirely unconscious of it.
Unity in variety is
the plan of the universe. We are all men, and yet we are all distinct
from one another. As a part of humanity I am one with you, and as Mr.
So-and-so I am different from you. As a man you are separate from the
woman; as a human being you are one with the woman. As a man you are
separate from the animal, but as living beings, man, woman, animal, and
plant are all one; and as existence, you are one with the whole
universe. That universal existence is God, the ultimate Unity in the
universe. In Him we are all one. At the same time, in manifestation,
these differences must always remain. In our work, in our energies, as
they are being manifested outside, these differences must always remain.
We find then that if by the idea of a universal religion it is meant
that one set of doctrines should be believed in by all mankind it is
wholly impossible. It can never be, there can never be a time when all
faces will be the same. Again, if we expect that there will be one
universal mythology that is also impossible; it cannot be. Neither can
there be one universal ritual. Such a state of things can never come
into existence; if it ever did, the world would be destroyed, because
variety is the first principle of life. What makes us formed beings?
Differentiation. Perfect balance would be our destruction. Suppose the
amount of heat in this room, the tendency of which is towards equal and
perfect diffusion, gets that kind of diffusion, then for all practical
purposes that heat will cease to be. What makes motion possible in this
universe? Lost balance. The unity of sameness can come only when this
universe is destroyed, otherwise such a thing is impossible. Not only
so, it would be dangerous to have it. We must not wish that all of us
should think alike. There would then be no thought to think. We should
be all alike, as the Egyptian mummies in a museum, looking at each other
without a thought to think. It is this difference, this
differentiation, this losing of the balance between us, which is the
very soul of our progress, the soul of all our thought. This must always
be.
What then do I mean by
the ideal of a universal religion? I do not mean any one universal
philosophy, or any one universal mythology, or any one universal ritual
held alike by all; for I know that this world must go on working, wheel
within wheel, this intricate mass of machinery, most complex, most
wonderful. What can we do then? We can make it run smoothly, we can
lessen the friction, we can grease the wheels, as it were. How? By
recognising the natural necessity of variation. Just as we have
recognised unity by our very nature, so we must also recognise
variation. We must learn that truth may be expressed in a hundred
thousand ways, and that each of these ways is true as far as it goes. We
must learn that the same thing can be viewed from a hundred different
standpoints, and vet be the same thing. Take for instance the sun.
Suppose a man standing on the earth looks at the sun when it rises in
the morning; he sees a big ball. Suppose he starts on a journey towards
the sun and takes a camera with him, taking photographs at every stage
of his journey, until he reaches the sun. The photographs of each stage
will be seen to be different from those of the other stages; in fact,
when he gets back, he brings with him so many photographs of so many
different suns, as it would appear; and yet we know that the same sun
was photographed by the man at the different stages of his progress.
Even so is it with the Lord. Through high philosophy or low, through the
most exalted mythology or the grossest, through the most refined
ritualism or arrant fetishism, every sect, every soul, every nation,
every religion, consciously or unconsciously, is struggling upward,
towards God; every vision of truth that man has, is a vision of Him and
of none else. Suppose we all go with vessels in our hands to fetch water
from a lake. One has a cup, another a jar, another a bucket, and so
forth, and we all fill our vessels. The water in each case naturally
takes the form of the vessel carried by each of us. He who brought the
cup has the water in the form of a cup; he who brought the jar — his
water is in the shape of a jar, and so forth; but, in every case, water,
and nothing but water, is in the vessel. So it is in the case of
religion; our minds are like these vessels, and each one of us is trying
to arrive at the realisation of God. God is like that water filling
these different vessels, and in each vessel the vision of God comes in
the form of the vessel. Yet He is One. He is God in every case. This is
the only recognition of universality that we can get.
So far it is all right
theoretically. But is there any way of practically working out this
harmony in religions? We find that this recognition that all the various
views of religion are true has been very very old. Hundreds of attempts
have been made in India, in Alexandria, in Europe, in China, in Japan,
in Tibet, and lastly in America, to formulate a harmonious religious
creed, to make all religions come together in love. They have all
failed, because they did not adopt any practical plan. Many have
admitted that all the religions of the world are right, but they show no
practical way of bringing them together, so as to enable each of them
to maintain its own individuality in the conflux. That plan alone is
practical, which does not destroy the individuality of any man in
religion and at the same time shows him a point of union with all
others. But so far, all the plans of religious harmony that have been
tried, while proposing to take in all the various views of religion,
have, in practice, tried to bind them all down to a few doctrines, and
so have produced more new sects, fighting, struggling, and pushing
against each other.
I have also my little
plan. I do not know whether it will work or not, and I want to present
it to you for discussion. What is my plan? In the first place I would
ask mankind to recognise this maxim, "Do not destroy". Iconoclastic
reformers do no good to the world. Break not, pull not anything down,
but build. Help, if you can; if you cannot, fold your hands and stand by
and see things go on. Do not injure, if you cannot render help. Say not
a word against any man's convictions so far as they are sincere.
Secondly, take man where he stands, and from there give him a lift. If
it be true that God is the centre of all religions, and that each of us
is moving towards Him along one of these radii, then it is certain that
all of us must reach that centre. And at the centre, where all the radii
meet, all our differences will cease; but until we reach there,
differences there must be. All these radii converge to the same centre.
One, according to his nature, travels along one of these lines, and
another, along another; and if we all push onward along our own lines,
we shall surely come to the centre, because, "All roads lead to Rome".
Each of us is naturally growing and developing according to his own
nature; each will in time come to know the highest truth for after all,
men must teach themselves. What can you and I do? Do you think you can
teach even a child? You cannot. The child teaches himself. Your duty is
to afford opportunities and to remove obstacles. A plant grows. Do you
make the plant grow? Your duty is to put a hedge round it and see that
no animal eats up the plant, and there your duty ends. The plant grows
of itself. So it is in regard to the spiritual growth of every man. None
can teach you; none can make a spiritual man of you. You have to teach
yourself; your growth must come from inside.
What can an external
teacher do? He can remove the obstructions a little, and there his duty
ends. Therefore help, if you can; but do not destroy. Give up all ideas
that you can make men spiritual. It is impossible. There is no other
teacher to you than your own soul. Recognise this. What comes of it? In
society we see so many different natures. There are thousands and
thousands of varieties of minds and inclinations. A thorough
generalisation of them is impossible, but for our practical purpose it
is sufficient to have them characterised into four classes. First, there
is the active man, the worker; he wants to work, and there is
tremendous energy in his muscles and his nerves. His aim is to work — to
build hospitals, do charitable deeds, make streets, to plan and to
organise. Then there is the emotional man who loves the sublime and the
beautiful to an excessive degree. He loves to think of the beautiful, to
enjoy the aesthetic side of nature, and adore Love and the God of Love.
He loves with his whole heart the great souls of all times, the
prophets of religions, and the Incarnations of God on earth; he does not
care whether reason can or cannot prove that Christ or Buddha existed;
he does not care for the exact date when the Sermon on the Mount was
preached, or for the exact moment of Krishna's birth; what he cares for
is their personalities, their lovable figures. Such is his ideal. This
is the nature of the lover, the emotional man. Then, there is the mystic
whose mind wants to analyse its own self, to understand the workings of
the human mind, what the forces are that are working inside, and how to
know, manipulate, and obtain control over them. This is the mystical
mind. Then, there is the philosopher who wants to weigh everything and
use his intellect even beyond the possibilities of all human philosophy.
Now a religion, to
satisfy the largest proportion of mankind, must be able to supply food
for all these various types of minds; and where this capability is
wanting, the existing sects all become one-sided. Suppose you go to a
sect which preaches love and emotion. They sing and weep, and preach
love. But as soon as you say, "My friend, that is all right, but I want
something stronger than this — a little reason and philosophy; I want to
understand things step by step and more rationally", they say, "Get
out"; and they not only ask you to get out but would send you to the
other place, if they could. The result is that that sect can only help
people of an emotional turn of mind. They not only do not help others,
but try to destroy them; and the most wicked part of the whole thing is
that they will not only not help others, but do not believe in their
sincerity. Again, there are philosophers who talk of the wisdom of India
and the East and use big psychological terms, fifty syllables long, but
if an ordinary man like me goes to them and says, "Can you tell me
anything to make me spiritual?", the first thing they would do would be
to smile and say, "Oh, you are too far below us in your reason. What can
you understand about spirituality?" These are high-up philosophers.
They simply show you the door. Then there are the mystical sects who
speak all sorts of things about different planes of existence, different
states of mind, and what the power of the mind can do, and so on; and
if you are an ordinary man and say, "Show me anything good that I can
do; I am not much given to speculation; can you give me anything that
will suit me?", they will smile and say, "Listen to that fool; he knows
nothing, his existence is for nothing." And this is going on everywhere
in the world. I would like to get extreme exponents of all these
different sects, and shut them up in a room, and photograph their
beautiful derisive smiles!
This is the existing
condition of religion, the existing condition of things. What I want to
propagate is a religion that will be equally acceptable to all minds; it
must be equally philosophic, equally emotional, equally mystic, and
equally conducive to action. If professors from the colleges come,
scientific men and physicists, they will court reason. Let them have it
as much as they want. There will be a point beyond which they will think
they cannot go, without breaking with reason. They will say, "These
ideas of God and salvation are superstitious, guise them up! " I say,
"Mr. Philosopher, this body of yours is a bigger superstition. Give it
up, don't go home to dinner or to your philosophic chair. Give up the
body, and if you cannot, cry quarter and sit down." For religion must be
able to show how to realise the philosophy that teaches us that this
world is one, that there is but one Existence in the universe.
Similarly, if the mystic comes, we must welcome him, be ready to give
him the science of mental analysis, and practically demonstrate it
before him. And if emotional people come, we must sit, laugh, and weep
with them in the name of the Lord; we must "drink the cup of love and
become mad". If the energetic worker comes, we must work with him, with
all the energy that we have. And this combination will be the ideal of
the nearest approach to a universal religion. Would to God that all men
were so constituted that in their minds all these elements of
philosophy, mysticism, emotion, and of work were equally present in
full! That is the ideal, my ideal of a perfect man. Everyone who has
only one or two of these elements of character, I consider "one-sided;
and this world is almost full of such "one-sided" men, with knowledge of
that one road only in which they move; and anything else is dangerous
and horrible to them. To become harmoniously balanced in all these four
directions is my ideal of religion. And this religion is attained by
what we, in India, call Yoga — union. To the worker, it is union between
men and the whole of humanity; to the mystic, between his lower and
Higher Self; to the lover, union between himself and the God of Love;
and to the philosopher; it is the union of all existence. This is what
is meant by Yoga. This is a Sanskrit term, and these four divisions of
Yoga have in Sanskrit different names. The man who seeks after this kind
of union is called a Yogi. The worker is called the Karma-Yogi. He who
seeks the union through love is called the Bhakti-Yogi. He who seeks it
through mysticism is called the Râja-Yogi. And he who seeks it through
philosophy is called the Jnâna-Yogi So this word Yogi comprises them
all.
Now first of all let
me take up Râja-Yoga. What is this Raja-Yoga, this controlling of the
mind? In this country you are associating all sorts of hobgoblins with
the word Yoga, I am afraid. Therefore, I must start by telling you that
it has nothing to do with such things. No one of these Yogas gives up
reason, no one of them asks you to be hoodwinked, or to deliver your
reason into the hands of priests of any type whatsoever. No one of them
asks that you should give your allegiance to any superhuman messenger.
Each one of them tells you to cling to your reason to hold fast to it.
We find in all beings three sorts of instruments of knowledge. The first
is instinct, which you find most highly developed in animals; this is
the lowest instrument of knowledge. What is the second instrument of
knowledge? Reasoning. You find that most highly developed in man. Now in
the first place, instinct is an inadequate instrument; to animals, the
sphere of action is very limited, and within that limit instinct acts.
When you come to man, you see it is largely developed into reason. The
sphere of action also has here become enlarged. Yet even reason is still
very insufficient. Reason can go only a little way and then it stops,
it cannot go any further; and if you try to push it, the result is
helpless confusion, reason itself becomes unreasonable. Logic becomes
argument in a circle. Take, for instance, the very basis of our
perception, matter and force. What is matter? That which is acted upon
by force. And force? That which acts upon matter. You see the
complication, what the logicians call see-saw, one idea depending on the
other, and this again depending on that. You find a mighty barrier
before reason, beyond which reasoning cannot go; yet it always feels
impatient to get into the region of the Infinite beyond. This world,
this universe which our senses feel, or our mind thinks, is but one
atom, so to say, of the Infinite, projected on to the plane of
consciousness; and within that narrow limit, defined by the network of
consciousness, works our reason, and not beyond. Therefore, there must
be some other instrument to take us beyond, and that instrument is
called inspiration. So instinct, reason, and inspiration are the three
instruments of knowledge. Instinct belongs to animals, reason to man,
and inspiration to God-men. But in all human beings are to be found, in a
more or less developed condition, the germs of all these three
instruments of knowledge. To have these mental instruments evolved, the
germs must be there. And this must also be remembered that one
instrument is a development of the other, and therefore does not
contradict it. It is reason that develops into inspiration, and
therefore inspiration does not contradict reason, but fulfils it. Things
which reason cannot get at are brought to light by inspiration; and
they do not contradict reason. The old man does not contradict the
child, but fulfils the child. Therefore you must always bear in mind
that the great danger lies in mistaking the lower form of instrument to
be the higher. Many times instinct is presented before the world as
inspiration, and then come all the spurious claims for the gift of
prophecy. A fool or a semi-lunatic thinks that the confusion going on in
his brain is inspiration, and he wants men to follow him. The most
contradictory irrational nonsense that has been preached in the world is
simply the instinctive jargon of confused lunatic brains trying to pass
for the language of inspiration.
The first test of true
teaching must be, that the teaching should not contradict reason. And
you may see that such is the basis of all these Yogas. We take the
Raja-Yoga, the psychological Yoga, the psychological way to union. It is
a vast subject, and I can only point out to you now the central idea of
this Yoga. We have but one method of acquiring knowledge. From the
lowest man to the highest Yogi, all have to use the same method; and
that method is what is called concentration. The chemist who works in
his laboratory concentrates all the powers of his mind, brings them into
one focus, and throws them on the elements; and the elements stand
analysed, and thus his knowledge comes. The astronomer has also
concentrated the powers of his mind and brought them into one focus; and
he throws them on to objects through his telescope; and stars and
systems roll forward and give up their secrets to him. So it is in every
case — with the professor in his chair, the student with his book —
with every man who is working to know. You are hearing me, and if my
words interest you, your mind will become concentrated on them; and then
suppose a clock strikes, you will not hear it, on account of this
concentration; and the more you are able to concentrate your mind, the
better you will understand me; and the more I concentrate my love and
powers, the better I shall be able to give expression to what I want to
convey to you. The more this power of concentration, the more knowledge
is acquired, because this is the one and only method of acquiring
knowledge. Even the lowest shoeblack, if he gives more concentration,
will black shoes better; the cook with concentration will cook a meal
all the better. In making money, or in worshipping God, or in doing
anything, the stronger the power of concentration, the better will that
thing be done. This is the one call, the one knock, which opens the
gates of nature, and lets out floods of light. This, the power of
concentration, is the only key to the treasure-house of knowledge. The
system of Raja-Yoga deals almost exclusively with this. In the present
state of our body we are so much distracted, and the mind is frittering
away its energies upon a hundred sorts of things. As soon as I try to
calm my thoughts and concentrate my mind upon any one object of
knowledge, thousands of undesired impulses rush into the brain,
thousands of thoughts rush into the mind and disturb it. How to check it
and bring the mind under control is the whole subject of study in
Raja-Yoga.
Now take Karma-Yoga,
the attainment of God through work. It is evident that in society there
are many persons who seem to be born for some sort of activity or other,
whose minds cannot be concentrated on the plane of thought alone, and
who have but one idea, concretised in work, visible and tangible. There
must be a science for this kind of life too. Each one of us is engaged
in some work, but the majority of us fritter away the greater portion of
our energies, because we do not know the secret of work. Karma-Yoga
explains this secret and teaches where and how to work, how to employ to
the greatest advantage the largest part of our energies in the work
that is before us. But with this secret we must take into consideration
the great objection against work, namely that it causes pain. All misery
and pain come from attachment. I want to do work, I want to do good to a
human being; and it is ninety to one that that human being whom I have
helped will prove ungrateful and go against me; and the result to me is
pain. Such things deter mankind from working; and it spoils a good
portion of the work and energy of mankind, this fear of pain and misery.
Karma-Yoga teaches us how to work for work's sake, unattached, without
caring who is helped, and what for. The Karma-Yogi works because it is
his nature, because hefeels that it is good for him to do so, and he has
no object beyond that. His position in this world is that of a giver,
and he never cares to receive anything. He knows that he is giving, and
does not ask for anything in return and, therefore, he eludes the grasp
of misery. The grasp of pain, whenever it comes, is the result of the
reaction of "attachment".
There is then the
Bhakti-Yoga for the man of emotional nature, the lover. He wants to love
God, he relies upon and uses all sorts of rituals, flowers, incense,
beautiful buildings, forms and all such things. Do you mean to say they
are wrong? One fact I must tell you. It is good for you to remember, in
this country especially, that the world's great spiritual giants have
all been produced only by those religious sects which have been in
possession of very rich mythology and ritual. All sects that have
attempted to worship God without any form or ceremony have crushed
without mercy everything that is beautiful and sublime in religion.
Their religion is a fanaticism at best, a dry thing. The history of the
world is a standing witness to this fact. Therefore do not decry these
rituals and mythologies. Let people have them; let those who so desire
have them. Do not exhibit that unworthy derisive smile, and say, "They
are fools; let them have it." Not so; the greatest men I have seen in my
life, the most wonderfully developed in spirituality, have all come
through the discipline of these rituals. I do not hold myself worthy to
sit at their feet, and for me to criticise them! How do I know how these
ideas act upon the human minds which of them I am to accept and which
to reject? We are apt to criticise everything in the world: without
sufficient warrant. Let people have all the mythology they want, with
its beautiful inspirations; for you must always bear in mind that
emotional natures do not care for abstract definitions of the truth. God
to them is something tangible, the only thing that is real; they feel,
hear, and see Him, and love Him. Let them have their God. Your
rationalist seems to them to be like the fool who, when he saw a
beautiful statue, wanted to break it to find out of what material it was
made. Bhakti-Yoga: teaches them how to love, without any ulterior
motives, loving God and loving the good because it is good to do so, not
for going to heaven, nor to get children, wealth, or anything else. It
teaches them that love itself is the highest recompense of love --- that
God Himself is love. It teaches them to pay all kinds of tribute to God
as the Creator, the Omnipresent, Omniscient, Almighty Ruler, the Father
and the Mother. The highest phrase that can express Him, the highest
idea that the human mind can conceive of Him, is that He is the God of
Love. Wherever there is love, it is He. "Wherever there is any love, it
is He, the Lord is present there." Where the husband kisses the wife, He
is there in the kiss; where the mother kisses the child, He is there in
the kiss; where friends clasp hands, He, the Lord, is present as the
God of Love. When a great man loves and wishes to help mankind, He is
there giving freely His bounty out of His love to mankind. Wherever the
heart expands, He is there manifested. This is what the Bhakti-Yoga
teaches.
We lastly come to the
Jnana-Yogi, the philosopher, the thinker, he who wants to go beyond the
visible. He is the man who is not satisfied with the little things of
this world. His idea is to go beyond the daily routine of eating,
drinking, and so on; not even the teaching of thousands of books will
satisfy him. Not even all the sciences will satisfy him; at the best,
they only bring this little world before him. What else will give him
satisfaction? Not even myriads of systems of worlds will satisfy him;
they are to him but a drop in the ocean of existence. His soul wants to
go beyond all that into the very heart of being, by seeing Reality as It
is; by realising It, by being It, by becoming one with that Universal
Being. That is the philosopher. To say that God is the Father or the
Mother, the Creator of this universe, its Protector and Guide, is to him
quite inadequate to express Him. To him, God is the life of his life,
the soul of his soul. God is his own Self. Nothing else remains which is
other than God. All the mortal parts of him become pounded by the
weighty strokes of philosophy and are brushed away. What at last truly
remains is God Himself.
Upon the same tree
there are two birds, one on the top, the other below. The one on the top
is calm, silent, and majestic, immersed in his own glory; the one on
the lower branches, eating sweet and bitter fruits by turns, hopping
from branch to branch, is becoming happy and miserable by turns. After a
time the lower bird eats an exceptionally bitter fruit and gets
disgustful and looks up and sees the other bird, that wondrous one of
golden plumage, who eats neither sweet nor bitter fruit, who is neither
happy nor miserable, but calm, Self-centred, and sees nothing beyond his
Self. The lower bird longs for this condition but soon forgets it, and
again begins to eat the fruits. In a little while, he eats another
exceptionally bitter fruit, which makes him feel miserable, and he again
looks up, and tries to get nearer to the upper bird. Once more he
forgets and after a time he looks up, and so on he goes again and again,
until he comes very near to the beautiful bird and sees the reflection
of light from his plumage playing around his own body, and he feels a
change and seems to melt away; still nearer he comes, and everything
about him melts away, and at last he understands this wonderful change.
The lower bird was, as it were, only the substantial-looking shadow, the
reflection of the higher; he himself was in essence the upper bird all
the time. This eating of fruits, sweet and bitter, this lower, little
bird, weeping and happy by turns, was a vain chimera, a dream: all
along, the real bird was there above, calm and silent, glorious and
majestic, beyond grief, beyond sorrow. The upper bird is God, the Lord
of this universe; and the lower bird is the human soul, eating the sweet
and bitter fruits of this world. Now and then comes a heavy blow to the
soul. For a time, he stops the eating and goes towards the unknown God,
and a flood of light comes. He thinks that this world is a vain show.
Yet again the senses drag hint down, and he begins as before to eat the
sweet and bitter fruits of the world. Again an exceptionally hard blow
comes. His heart becomes open again to divine light; thus gradually he
approaches God, and as he gets nearer and nearer, he finds his old self
melting away. When he has come near enough, he sees that he is no other
than God, and he exclaims, "He whom I have described to you as the Life
of this universe, as present in the atom, and in suns and moons — He is
the basis of our own life, the Soul of our soul. Nay, thou art That."
This is what this Jnana-Yoga teaches. It tells man that he is
essentially divine. It shows to mankind the real unity of being, and
that each one of us is the Lord God Himself, manifested on earth. All of
us, from the lowest worm that crawls under our feet to the highest
beings to whom we look up with wonder and awe — all are manifestations
of the same Lord.
Lastly, it is
imperative that all these various Yogas should be carried out in,
practice; mere theories about them will not do any good. First we have
to hear about them, then we have to think about them. We have to reason
the thoughts out, impress them on our minds, and we have to meditate on
them, realise them, until at last they become our whole life. No longer
will religion remain a bundle of ideas or theories, nor an intellectual
assent; it will enter into our very self. By means of intellectual
assent we may today subscribe to many foolish things, and change our
minds altogether tomorrow. But true religion never changes. Religion is
realisation; not talk, nor doctrine, nor theories, however beautiful
they may be. It is being and becoming, not hearing or acknowledging; it
is the whole soul becoming changed into what it believes. That is
religion.
Source:http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Complete_Works_of_Swami_Vivekananda/
Volume_2/Practical_Vedanta_and_other_lectures/The_Ideal_of_a_Universal_Religion
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