The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda/Volume 2/Practical Vedanta and other lectures/Practical Vedanta: Part IV
PRACTICAL VEDANTA
PART IV
(Delivered in London, 18th November 1896)
We have been dealing more with the universal so far. This morning I shall
try to place before you the Vedantic ideas of the relation of the particular
to the universal. As we have seen, in the dualistic form of Vedic doctrines,
the earlier forms, there was a clearly defined particular and limited soul
for every being. There have been a great many theories about this particular
soul in each individual, but the main discussion was between the ancient
Vedantists and the ancient Buddhists, the former believing in the individual
soul as complete in itself, the latter denying in toto the existence of such
an individual soul. As I told you the other day, it is pretty much the same
discussion you have in Europe as to substance and quality, one set holding
that behind the qualities there is something as substance, in which the
qualities inhere; and the other denying the existence of such a substance as
being unnecessary, for the qualities may live by themselves. The most
ancient theory of the soul, of course, is based upon the argument of
self-identity — "I am I" — that the I of yesterday is the I of today, and
the I of today will be the I of tomorrow; that in spite of all the changes
that are happening to the body, I yet believe that I am the same I. This
seems to have been the central argument with those who believed in a
limited, and yet perfectly complete, individual soul.
On the other hand, the ancient Buddhists denied the necessity of such an
assumption. They brought forward the argument that all that we know, and all
that we possibly can know, are simply these changes. The positing of an
unchangeable and unchanging substance is simply superfluous, and even if
there were any such unchangeable thing, we could never understand it, nor
should we ever be able to cognise it in any sense of the word. The same
discussion you will find at the present time going on in Europe between the
religionists and the idealists on the one side, and the modern positivists
and agnostics on the other; one set believing there is something which does
not change (of whom the latest representative is your Herbert Spencer), that
we catch a glimpse of something which is unchangeable. And the other is
represented by the modern Comtists and modern Agnostics. Those of you who
were interested a few years ago in the discussions between Herbert Spencer
and Frederick Harrison might have noticed that it was the same old
difficulty, the one party standing for a substance behind the changeful, and
the other party denying the necessity for such an assumption. One party says
we cannot conceive of changes without conceiving of something which does not
change; the other party brings out the argument that this is superfluous; we
can only conceive of something which is changing, and as to the unchanging,
we can neither know, feel, nor sense it.
In India this great question did not find its solution in very ancient
times, because we have seen that the assumption of a substance which is
behind the qualities, and which is not the qualities, can never be
substantiated; nay, even the argument from self-identity, from memory, —
that I am the I of yesterday because I remember it, and therefore I have
been a continuous something — cannot be substantiated. The other quibble
that is generally put forward is a mere delusion of words. For instance, a
man may take a long series of such sentences as "I do", "I go", "I dream",
"I sleep", "I move", and here you will find it claimed that the doing,
going, dreaming etc., have been changing, but what remained constant was
that "I". As such they conclude that the "I" is something which is constant
and an individual in itself, but all these changes belong to the body. This,
though apparently very convincing and clear, is based upon the mere play on
words. The "I" and the doing, going, and dreaming may be separate in black
and white, but no one can separate them in his mind.
When I eat, I think of myself as eating — am identified with eating. When I
run, I and the running are not two separate things. Thus the argument from
personal identity does not seem to be very strong. The other argument from
memory is also weak. If the identity of my being is represented by my
memory, many things which I have forgotten are lost from that identity. And
we know that people under certain conditions forget their whole past. In
many cases of lunacy a man will think of himself as made of glass, or as
being an animal. If the existence of that man depends on memory, he has
become glass, which not being the case we cannot make the identity of the
Self depend on such a flimsy substance as memory. Thus we see that the soul
as a limited yet complete and continuing identity cannot be established as
separate from the qualities. We cannot establish a narrowed-down, limited
existence to which is attached a bunch of qualities.
On the other hand, the argument of the ancient Buddhists seems to be
stronger — that we do not know, and cannot know, anything that is beyond the
bunch of qualities. According to them, the soul consists of a bundle of
qualities called sensations and feelings. A mass of such is what is called
the soul, and this mass is continually changing.
The Advaitist theory of the soul reconciles both these positions. The
position of the Advaitist is that it is true that we cannot think of the
substance as separate from the qualities, we cannot think of change and
not-change at the same time; it would be impossible. But the very thing
which is the substance is the quality; substance and quality are not two
things. It is the unchangeable that is appearing as the changeable. The
unchangeable substance of the universe is not something separate from it.
The noumenon is not something different from the phenomena, but it is the
very noumenon which has become the phenomena. There is a soul which is
unchanging, and what we call feelings and perceptions, nay, even the body,
are the very soul, seen from another point of view. We have got into the
habit of thinking that we have bodies and souls and so forth, but really
speaking, there is only one.
When I think of myself as the body, I am only a body; it is meaningless to
say I am something else. And when I think of myself as the soul, the body
vanishes, and the perception of the body does not remain. None can get the
perception of the Self without his perception of the body having vanished,
none can get perception of the substance without his perception of the
qualities having vanished.
The ancient illustration of Advaita, of the rope being taken for a snake,
may elucidate the point a little more. When a man mistakes the rope for a
snake, the rope has vanished, and when he takes it for a rope, the snake has
vanished, and the rope only remains. The ideas of dual or treble existence
come from reasoning on insufficient data, and we read them in books or hear
about them, until we come under the delusion that we really have a dual
perception of the soul and the body; but such a perception never really
exists. The perception is either of the body or of the soul. It requires no
arguments to prove it, you can verify it in your own minds.
Try to think of yourself as a soul, as a disembodied something. You will
find it to be almost impossible, and those few who are able to do so will
find that at the time when they realise themselves as a soul they have no
idea of the body. You have heard of, or perhaps have seen, persons who on
particular occasions had been in peculiar states of mind, brought about by
deep meditation, self-hypnotism, hysteria, or drugs. From their experience
you may gather that when they were perceiving the internal something, the
external had vanished for them. This shows that whatever exists is one. That
one is appearing in these various forms, and all these various forms give
rise to the relation of cause and effect. The relation of cause and effect
is one of evolution — the one becomes the other, and so on. Sometimes the
cause vanishes, as it were, and in its place leaves the effect. If the soul
is the cause of the body, the soul, as it were vanishes for the time being,
and the body remains; and when the body vanishes, the soul remains. This
theory fits the arguments of the Buddhists that were levelled against the
assumption of the dualism of body and soul, by denying the duality, and
showing that the substance and the qualities are one and the same thing
appearing in various forms.
We have seen also that this idea of the unchangeable can be established only
as regards the whole, but never as regards the part. The very idea of part
comes from the idea of change or motion. Everything that is limited we can
understand and know, because it is changeable; and the whole must be
unchangeable, because there is no other thing besides it in relation to
which change would be possible. Change is always in regard to something
which does not change, or which changes relatively less.
According to Advaita, therefore, the idea of the soul as universal,
unchangeable, and immortal can be demonstrated as far as possible. The
difficulty would be as regards the particular. What shall we do with the old
dualistic theories which have such a hold upon us, and which we have all to
pass through — these beliefs in limited, little, individual souls?
We have seen that we are immortal with regard to the whole; but the
difficulty is, we desire so much to be immortal as parts of the whole. We
have seen that we are Infinite, and that that is our real individuality. But
we want so much to make these little souls individual. What becomes of them
when we find in our everyday experience that these little souls are
individuals, with only this reservation that they are continuously growing
individuals? They are the same, yet not the same. The I of yesterday is the
I of today, and yet not so, it is changed somewhat. Now, by getting rid of
the dualistic conception, that in the midst of all these changes there is
something that does not change, and taking the most modern of conceptions,
that of evolution, we find that the "I" is a continuously changing,
expanding entity.
If it be true that man is the evolution of a mollusc, the mollusc individual
is the same as the man, only it has to become expanded a great deal. From
mollusc to man it has been a continuous expansion towards infinity.
Therefore the limited soul can be styled an individual which is continuously
expanding towards the Infinite Individual. Perfect individuality will only
be reached when it has reached the Infinite, but on this side of the
Infinite it is a continuously changing, growing personality. One of the
remarkable features of the Advaitist system of Vedanta is to harmonise the
preceding systems. In many cases it helped the philosophy very much; in some
cases it hurt it. Our ancient philosophers knew what you call the theory of
evolution; that growth is gradual, step by step, and the recognition of this
led them to harmonise all the preceding systems. Thus not one of these
preceding ideas was rejected. The fault of the Buddhistic faith was that it
had neither the faculty nor the perception of this continual, expansive
growth, and for this reason it never even made an attempt to harmonise
itself with the preexisting steps towards the ideal. They were rejected as
useless and harmful.
This tendency in religion is most harmful. A man gets a new and better idea,
and then he looks back on those he has given up, and forthwith decides that
they were mischievous and unnecessary. He never thinks that, however crude
they may appear from his present point of view, they were very useful to
him, that they were necessary for him to reach his present state, and that
everyone of us has to grow in a similar fashion, living first on crude
ideas, taking benefit from them, and then arriving at a higher standard.
With the oldest theories, therefore, the Advaita is friendly. Dualism and
all systems that had preceded it are accepted by the Advaita not in a
patronising way, but with the conviction that they are true manifestations
of the same truth, and that they all lead to the same conclusions as the
Advaita has reached.
With blessing, and not with cursing, should be preserved all these various
steps through which humanity has to pass. Therefore all these dualistic
systems have never been rejected or thrown out, but have been kept intact in
the Vedanta; and the dualistic conception of an individual soul, limited yet
complete in itself, finds its place in the Vedanta.
According to dualism, man dies and goes to other worlds, and so forth; and
these ideas are kept in the Vedanta in their entirety. For with the
recognition of growth in the Advaitist system, these theories are given
their proper place by admitting that they represent only a partial view of
the Truth.
From the dualistic standpoint this universe can only be looked upon as a
creation of matter or force, can only be looked upon as the play of a
certain will, and that will again can only be looked upon as separate from
the universe. Thus a man from such a standpoint has to see himself as
composed of a dual nature, body and soul, and this soul, though limited, is
individually complete in itself. Such a man's ideas of immortality and of
the future life would necessarily accord with his idea of soul. These phases
have been kept in the Vedanta, and it is, therefore, necessary for me to
present to you a few of the popular ideas of dualism. According to this
theory, we have a body, of course, and behind the body there is what they
call a fine body. This fine body is also made of matter, only very fine. It
is the receptacle of all our Karma, of all our actions and impressions,
which are ready to spring up into visible forms. Every thought that we
think, every deed that we do, after a certain time becomes fine, goes into
seed form, so to speak, and lives in the fine body in a potential form, and
after a time it emerges again and bears its results. These results condition
the life of man. Thus he moulds his own life. Man is not bound by any other
laws excepting those which he makes for himself. Our thoughts, our words and
deeds are the threads of the net which we throw round ourselves, for good or
for evil. Once we set in motion a certain power, we have to take the full
consequences of it. This is the law of Karma. Behind the subtle body, lives
Jiva or the individual soul of man. There are various discussions about the
form and the size of this individual soul. According to some, it is very
small like an atom; according to others, it is not so small as that;
according to others, it is very big, and so on. This Jiva is a part of that
universal substance, and it is also eternal; without beginning it is
existing, and without end it will exist. It is passing through all these
forms in order to manifest its real nature which is purity. Every action
that retards this manifestation is called an evil action; so with thoughts.
And every action and every thought that helps the Jiva to expand, to
manifest its real nature, is good. One theory that is held in common in
India by the crudest dualists as well as by the most advanced non-dualists
is that all the possibilities and powers of the soul are within it, and do
not come from any external source. They are in the soul in potential form,
and the whole work of life is simply directed towards manifesting those
potentialities.
They have also the theory of reincarnation which says that after the
dissolution of this body, the Jiva will have another, and after that has
been dissolved, it will again have another, and so on, either here or in
some other worlds; but this world is given the preference, as it is
considered the best of all worlds for our purpose. Other worlds are
conceived of as worlds where there is very little misery, but for that very
reason, they argue, there is less chance of thinking of higher things there.
As this world contains some happiness and a good deal of misery, the Jiva
some time or other gets awakened, as it were, and thinks of freeing itself.
But just as very rich persons in this world have the least chance of
thinking of higher things, so the Jiva in heaven has little chance of
progress, for its condition is the same as that of a rich man, only more
intensified; it has a very fine body which knows no disease, and is under no
necessity of eating or drinking, and all its desires are fulfilled. The Jiva
lives there, having enjoyment after enjoyment, and so forgets all about its
real nature. Still there are some higher worlds, where in spite of all
enjoyments, its further evolution is possible. Some dualists conceive of the
goal as the highest heaven, where souls will live with God for ever. They
will have beautiful bodies and will know neither disease nor death, nor any
other evil, and all their desires will be fulfilled. From time to time some
of them will come back to this earth and take another body to teach human
beings the way to God; and the great teachers of the world have been such.
They were already free, and were living with God in the highest sphere; but
their love and sympathy for suffering humanity was so great that they came
and incarnated again to teach mankind the way to heaven.
Of course we know that the Advaita holds that this cannot be the goal or the
ideal; bodilessness must be the ideal. The ideal cannot be finite. Anything
short of the Infinite cannot be the ideal, and there cannot be an infinite
body. That would be impossible, as body comes from limitation. There cannot
be infinite thought, because thought comes from limitation. We have to go
beyond the body, and beyond thought too, says the Advaita. And we have also
seen that, according to Advaita, this freedom is not to be attained, it is
already ours. We only forget it and deny it. Perfection is not to be
attained, it is already within us. Immortality and bliss are not to be
acquired, we possess them already; they have been ours all the time.
If you dare declare that you are free, free you are this moment. If you say
you are bound, bound you will remain. This is what Advaita boldly declares.
I have told you the ideas of the dualists. You can take whichever you like.
The highest ideal of the Vedanta is very difficult to understand, and people
are always quarrelling about it, and the greatest difficulty is that when
they get hold of certain ideas, they deny and fight other ideas. Take up
what suits you, and let others take up what they need. If you are desirous
of clinging to this little individuality, to this limited manhood, remain in
it, have all these desires, and be content and pleased with them. If your
experience of manhood has been very good and nice, retain it as long as you
like; and you can do so, for you are the makers of your own fortunes; none
can compel you to give up your manhood. You will be men as long as you like;
none can prevent you. If you want to be angels, you will be angels, that is
the law. But there may be others who do not want to be angels even. What
right have you to think that theirs is a horrible notion? You may be
frightened to lose a hundred pounds, but there may be others who would not
even wink if they lost all the money they had in the world. There have been
such men and still there are. Why do you dare to judge them according to
your standard? You cling on to your limitations, and these little worldly
ideas may be your highest ideal. You are welcome to them. It will be to you
as you wish. But there are others who have seen the truth and cannot rest in
these limitations, who have done with these things and want to get beyond.
The world with all its enjoyments is a mere mud-puddle for them. Why do you
want to bind them down to your ideas? You must get rid of this tendency once
for all. Accord a place to everyone.
I once read a story about some ships that were caught in a cyclone in the
South Sea Islands, and there was a picture of it in the Illustrated London News.
All of them were wrecked except one English vessel, which weathered
the storm. The picture showed the men who were going to be drowned, standing
on the decks and cheering the people who were sailing through the storm.
[1] Be brave and
generous like that. Do not drag others down to where you are. Another
foolish notion is that if we lose our little individuality, there will be no
morality, no hope for humanity. As if everybody had been dying for humanity
all the time! God bless you! If in every country there were two hundred men
and women really wanting to do good to humanity, the millennium would come
in five days. We know how we are dying for humanity! These are all tall
talks, and nothing else. The history of the world shows that those who never
thought of their little individuality were the greatest benefactors of the
human race, and that the more men and women think of themselves, the less
are they able to do for others. One is unselfishness, and the other
selfishness. Clinging on to little enjoyments, and to desire the
continuation and repetition of this state of things is utter selfishness. It
arises not from any desire for truth, its genesis is not in kindness for
other beings, but in the utter selfishness of the human heart, in the idea,
"I will have everything, and do not care for anyone else." This is as it
appears to me. I would like to see more moral men in the world like some of
those grand old prophets and sages of ancient times who would have given up
a hundred lives if they could by so doing benefit one little animal! Talk of
morality and doing good to others! Silly talk of the present time!
I would like to see moral men like Gautama Buddha, who did not believe in a
Personal God or a personal soul, never asked about them, but was a perfect
agnostic, and yet was ready to lay down his life for anyone, and worked all
his life for the good of all, and thought only of the good of all. Well has
it been said by his biographer, in describing his birth, that he was born
for the good of the many, as a blessing to the many. He did not go to the
forest to meditate for his own salvation; he felt that the world was
burning, and that he must find a way out. "Why is there so much misery in
the world ?" — was the one question that dominated his whole life. Do you
think we are so moral as the Buddha?
The more selfish a man, the more immoral he is. And so also with the race.
That race which is bound down to itself has been the most cruel and the most
wicked in the whole world. There has not been a religion that has clung to
this dualism more than that founded by the Prophet of Arabia, and there has
not been a religion which has shed so much blood and been so cruel to other
men. In the Koran there is the doctrine that a man who does not believe
these teachings should be killed; it is a mercy to kill him! And the surest
way to get to heaven, where there are beautiful houris and all sorts of
sense-enjoyments, is by killing these unbelievers. Think of the bloodshed
there has been in consequence of such beliefs!
In the religion of Christ there was little of crudeness; there is very
little difference between the pure religion of Christ and that of the
Vedanta. You find there the idea of oneness; but Christ also preached
dualistic ideas to the people in order to give them something tangible to
take hold of, to lead them up to the highest ideal. The same Prophet who
preached, "Our Father which art in heaven", also preached, "I and my Father
are one", and the same Prophet knew that through the "Father in heaven" lies
the way to the "I and my Father are one". There was only blessing and love
in the religion of Christ; but as soon as crudeness crept in, it was
degraded into something not much better than the religion of the Prophet of
Arabia. It was crudeness indeed — this fight for the little self, this
clinging on to the "I", not only in this life, but also in the desire for
its continuance even after death. This they declare to be unselfishness;
this the foundation of morality! Lord help us, if this be the foundation of
morality! And strangely enough, men and women who ought to know better think
all morality will be destroyed if these little selves go and stand aghast at
the idea that morality can only stand upon their destruction. The watchword
of all well-being, of all moral good is not "I" but "thou". Who cares
whether there is a heaven or a hell, who cares if there is a soul or not,
who cares if there is an unchangeable or not? Here is the world, and it is
full of misery. Go out into it as Buddha did, and struggle to lessen it or
die in the attempt. Forget yourselves; this is the first lesson to be
learnt, whether you are a theist or an atheist, whether you are an agnostic
or a Vedantist, a Christian or a Mohammedan. The one lesson obvious to all
is the destruction of the little self and the building up of the Real Self.
Two forces have been working side by side in parallel lines. The one says
"I", the other says "not I". Their manifestation is not only in man but in
animals, not only in animals but in the smallest worms. The tigress that
plunges her fangs into the warm blood of a human being would give up her own
life to protect her young. The most depraved man who thinks nothing of
taking the lives of his brother men will, perhaps, sacrifice himself without
any hesitation to save his starving wife and children. Thus throughout
creation these two forces are working side by side; where you find the one,
you find the other too. The one is selfishness, the other is unselfishness.
The one is acquisition, the other is renunciation. The one takes, the other
gives. From the lowest to the highest, the whole universe is the playground
of these two forces. It does not require any demonstration; it is obvious to
all.
What right has any section of the community to base the whole work and
evolution of the universe upon one of these two factors alone, upon
competition and struggle? What right has it to base the whole working of the
universe upon passion and fight, upon competition and struggle? That these
exist we do not deny; but what right has anyone to deny the working of the
other force? Can any man deny that love, this "not I", this renunciation is
the only positive power in the universe? That other is only the misguided
employment of the power of love; the power of love brings competition, the
real genesis of competition is in love. The real genesis of evil is in
unselfishness. The creator of evil is good, and the end is also good. It is
only misdirection of the power of good. A man who murders another is,
perhaps, moved to do so by the love of his own child. His love has become
limited to that one little baby, to the exclusion of the millions of other
human beings in the universe. Yet, limited or unlimited, it is the same
love.
Thus the motive power of the whole universe, in what ever way it manifests
itself, is that one wonderful thing, unselfishness, renunciation, love, the
real, the only living force in existence. Therefore the Vedantist insists
upon that oneness. We insist upon this explanation because we cannot admit
two causes of the universe. If we simply hold that by limitation the same
beautiful, wonderful love appears to be evil or vile, we find the whole
universe explained by the one force of love. If not, two causes of the
universe have to be taken for granted, one good and the other evil, one love
and the other hatred. Which is more logical? Certainly the one-force theory.
Let us now pass on to things which do not possibly belong to dualism. I
cannot stay longer with the dualists. I am afraid. My idea is to show that
the highest ideal of morality and unselfishness goes hand in hand with the
highest metaphysical conception, and that you need not lower your conception
to get ethics and morality, but, on the other hand, to reach a real basis of
morality and ethics you must have the highest philosophical and scientific
conceptions. Human knowledge is not antagonistic to human well-being. On the
contrary, it is knowledge alone that will save us in every department of
life — in knowledge is worship. The more we know the better for us. The
Vedantist says, the cause of all that is apparently evil is the limitation
of the unlimited. The love which gets limited into little channels and seems
to be evil eventually comes out at the other end and manifests itself as
God. The Vedanta also says that the cause of all this apparent evil is in
ourselves. Do not blame any supernatural being, neither be hopeless and
despondent, nor think we are in a place from which we can never escape
unless someone comes and lends us a helping hand. That cannot be, says the
Vedanta. We are like silkworms; we make the thread out of our own substance
and spin the cocoon, and in course of time are imprisoned inside. But this
is not for ever. In that cocoon we shall develop spiritual realisation, and
like the butterfly come out free. This network of Karma we have woven around
ourselves; and in our ignorance we feel as if we are bound, and weep and
wail for help. But help does not come from without; it comes from within
ourselves. Cry to all the gods in the universe. I cried for years, and in
the end I found that I was helped. But help came from within. And I had to
undo what I had done by mistake. That is the only way. I had to cut the net
which I had thrown round myself, and the power to do this is within. Of this
I am certain that not one aspiration, well-guided or ill-guided in my life,
has been in vain, but that I am the resultant of all my past, both good and
evil. I have committed many mistakes in my life; but mark you, I am sure of
this that without every one of those mistakes I should not be what I am
today, and so am quite satisfied to have made them. I do not mean that you
are to go home and wilfully commit mistakes; do not misunderstand me in that
way. But do not mope because of the mistakes you have committed, but know
that in the end all will come out straight. It cannot be otherwise, because
goodness is our nature, purity is our nature, and that nature can never be
destroyed. Our essential nature always remains the same.
What we are to understand is this, that what we call mistakes or evil, we
commit because we are weak, and we are weak because we are ignorant. I
prefer to call them mistakes. The word sin, although originally a very good
word, has got a certain flavour about it that frightens me. Who makes us
ignorant? We ourselves. We put our hands over our eyes and weep that it is
dark. Take the hands away and there is light; the light exists always for
us, the self-effulgent nature of the human soul. Do you not hear what your
modern scientific men say? What is the cause of evolution? Desire. The
animal wants to do something, but does not find the environment favourable,
and therefore develops a new body. Who develops it? The animal itself, its
will. You have developed from the lowest amoeba. Continue to exercise your
will and it will take you higher still. The will is almighty. If it is
almighty, you may say, why cannot I do everything? But you are thinking only
of your little self. Look back on yourselves from the state of the amoeba to
the human being; who made all that? Your own will. Can you deny then that it
is almighty? That which has made you come up so high can make you go higher
still. What you want is character, strengthening of the will.
If I teach you, therefore, that your nature is evil, that you should go home
and sit in sackcloth and ashes and weep your lives out because you took
certain false steps, it will not help you, but will weaken you all the more,
and I shall be showing you the road to more evil than good. If this room is
full of darkness for thousands of years and you come in and begin to weep
and wail, "Oh the darkness", will the darkness vanish? Strike a match and
light comes in a moment. What good will it do you to think all your lives,
"Oh, I have done evil, I have made many mistakes"? It requires no ghost to
tell us that. Bring in the light and the evil goes in a moment. Build up
your character, and manifest your real nature, the Effulgent, the
Resplendent, the Ever-Pure, and call It up in everyone that you see. I wish
that everyone of us had come to such a state that even in the vilest of
human beings we could see the Real Self within, and instead of condemning
them, say, "Rise thou effulgent one, rise thou who art always pure, rise
thou birthless and deathless, rise almighty, and manifest thy true nature.
These little manifestations do not befit thee." This is the highest prayer
that the Advaita teaches. This is the one prayer, to remember our true
nature, the God who is always within us, thinking of it always as infinite,
almighty, ever-good, ever-beneficent, selfless, bereft of all limitations.
And because that nature is selfless, it is strong and fearless; for only to
selfishness comes fear. He who has nothing to desire for himself, whom does
he fear, and what can frighten him? What fear has death for him? What fear
has evil for him? So if we are Advaitists, we must think from this moment
that our old self is dead and gone. The old Mr., Mrs., and Miss So-and-so
are gone, they were mere superstitions, and what remains is the ever-pure,
the ever-strong, the almighty, the all-knowing — that alone remains for us,
and then all fear vanishes from us. Who can injure us, the omnipresent? All
weakness has vanished from us, and our only work is to arouse this knowledge
in our fellow beings. We see that they too are the same pure self, only they
do not know it; we must teach them, we must help them to rouse up their
infinite nature. This is what I feel to be absolutely necessary all over the
world. These doctrines are old, older than many mountains possibly. All
truth is eternal. Truth is nobody's property; no race, no individual can lay
any exclusive claim to it. Truth is the nature of all souls. Who can lay an,
special claim to it? But it has to be made practical, to be made simple (for
the highest truths are always simple), so that it may penetrate every pore
of human society, and become the property of the highest intellects and the
commonest minds, of the man, woman, and child at the same time. All these
ratiocinations of logic, all these bundles of metaphysics, all these
theologies and ceremonies may have been good in their own time, but let us
try to make things simpler and bring about the golden days when every man
will be a worshipper, and the Reality in every man will be the object of
worship.
- Notes