The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda/Volume 6/Writings: Prose and Poems(Original and Translated)/Hinduism and Shri Ramakrishna
HINDUISM AND SHRI RAMAKRISHNA
(Translated from Bengali)
By the word "Shastras" the Vedas without beginning or end are meant. In
matters of religious duty the Vedas are the only capable authority.
The Puranas and other religious scriptures are all denoted by the word
"Smriti". And their authority goes so far as they follow the Vedas and do
not contradict them.
Truth is of two kinds: (1) that which is cognisable by the five ordinary
senses of man, and by reasonings based thereon; (2) that which is cognisable
by the subtle, supersensuous power of Yoga.
Knowledge acquired by the first means is called science; and knowledge
acquired by the second is called the Vedas.
The whole body of supersensuous truths, having no beginning or end, and
called by the name of the Vedas, is ever-existent. The Creator Himself is
creating, preserving, and destroying the universe with the help of these
truths.
The person in whom this supersensuous power is manifested is called a Rishi,
and the supersensuous truths which he realises by this power are called the
Vedas.
This Rishihood, this power of supersensuous perception of the Vedas, is real religion. And so long as this does not develop in the life of an initiate, so long is religion a mere empty word to him, and it is to be understood that he has not taken yet the first step in religion.
The authority of the Vedas extends to all ages, climes and persons; that is
to say, their application is not confined to any particular place, time, and
persons.
The Vedas are the only exponent of the universal religion.
Although the supersensuous vision of truths is to be met with in some
measure in our Puranas and Itihasas and in the religious scriptures of other
races, still the fourfold scripture known among the Aryan race as the Vedas
being the first, the most complete, and the most undistorted collection of
spiritual truths, deserve to occupy the highest place among all scriptures,
command the respect of all nations of the earth, and furnish the rationale
of all their respective scriptures.
With regard to the whole Vedic collection of truths discovered by the Aryan
race, this also has to be understood that those portions alone which do not
refer to purely secular matters and which do not merely record tradition or
history, or merely provide incentives to duty, form the Vedas in the real
sense.
The Vedas are divided into two portions, the Jnâna-kânda (knowledge-portion)
and the Karma-kânda (ritual-portion). The ceremonies and the fruits of the
Karma-kanda are confined within the limits of the world of Mâyâ, and
therefore they have been undergoing and will undergo transformation
according to the law of change which operates through time, space, and
personality.
Social laws and customs likewise, being based on this Karma-kanda, have been
changing and will continue to change hereafter. Minor social usages also
will be recognised and accepted when they are compatible with the spirit of
the true scriptures and the conduct and example of holy sages. But blind
allegiance only to usages such as are repugnant to the spirit of the
Shastras and the conduct of holy sages has been one of the main causes of
the downfall of the Aryan race.
It is the Jnana-kanda or the Vedanta only that has for all time commanded
recognition for leading men across Maya and bestowing salvation on them
through the practice of Yoga, Bhakti, Jnana, or selfless work; and as its
validity and authority remain unaffected by any limitations of time, place
or persons, it is the only exponent of the universal and eternal religion
for all mankind.
The Samhitas of Manu and other sages, following the lines laid down in the Karma-kanda, have mainly ordained rules of conduct conducive to social welfare, according to the exigencies of time, place, and persons. The Puranas etc. have taken up the truths imbedded in the Vedanta and have explained them in detail in the course of describing the exalted life and deeds of Avataras and others. They have each emphasised, besides, some out of the infinite aspects of the Divine Lord to teach men about them.
But when by the process of time, fallen from the true ideals and rules of
conduct and devoid of the spirit of renunciation, addicted only to blind
usages, and degraded in intellect, the descendants of the Aryans failed to
appreciate even the spirit of these Puranas etc. which taught men of
ordinary intelligence the abstruse truths of the Vedanta in concrete form
and diffuse language and appeared antagonistic to one another on the
surface, because of each inculcating with special emphasis only particular
aspects of the spiritual ideal —
And when, as a consequence, they reduced India, the fair land of religion, to a scene of almost infernal confusion by breaking up piecemeal the one Eternal Religion of the Vedas (Sanâtana Dharma), the grand synthesis of all the aspects of the spiritual ideal, into conflicting sects and by seeking to sacrifice one another in the flames of sectarian hatred and intolerance —
Then it was that Shri Bhagavan Ramakrishna incarnated himself in India, to demonstrate what the true religion of the Aryan race is; to show where amidst all its many divisions and offshoots, scattered over the land in the course of its immemorial history, lies the true unity of the Hindu religion, which by its overwhelming number of sects discordant to superficial view, quarrelling constantly with each other and abounding in customs divergent in every way, has constituted itself a misleading enigma for our countrymen and the butt of contempt for foreigners; and above all, to hold up before men, for their lasting welfare, as a living embodiment of the Sanatana Dharma, his own wonderful life into which he infused the universal spirit and character of this Dharma, so long cast into oblivion by the process of time.
In order to show how the Vedic truths — eternally existent as the instrument
with the Creator in His work of creation, preservation, and dissolution —
reveal themselves spontaneously in the minds of the Rishis purified from all
impressions of worldly attachment, and because such verification and
confirmation of the scriptural truths will help the revival, reinstatement,
and spread of religion — the Lord, though the very embodiment of the Vedas,
in this His new incarnation has thoroughly discarded all external forms of
learning.
That the Lord incarnates again and again in human form for the protection of the Vedas or the true religion, and of Brahminhood or the ministry of that religion — is a doctrine well established in the Puranas etc.
The waters of a river falling in a cataract acquire greater velocity, the
rising wave after a hollow swells higher; so after every spell of decline,
the Aryan society recovering from all the evils by the merciful dispensation
of Providence has risen the more glorious and powerful — such is the
testimony of history.
After rising from every fall, our revived society is expressing more and more its innate eternal perfection, and so also the omnipresent Lord in each successive incarnation is manifesting Himself more and more.
Again and again has our country fallen into a swoon, as it were, and again and again has India's Lord, by the manifestation of Himself, revivified her.
But greater than the present deep dismal night, now almost over, no pall of darkness had ever before enveloped this holy land of ours. And compared with the depth of this fall, all previous falls appear like little hoof-marks.
Therefore, before the effulgence of this new awakening' the glory of all past revivals in her history will pale like stars before the rising sun; and compared with this mighty manifestation of renewed strength, all the many past epochs of such restoration will be as child's play.
The various constituent ideals of the Religion Eternal, during its present
state of decline, have been lying scattered here and there for want of
competent men to realise them — some being preserved partially among small
sects and some completely lost.
But strong in the strength of this new spiritual renaissance, men, after reorganising these scattered and disconnected spiritual ideals, will be able to comprehend and practice them in their own lives and also to recover from oblivion those that are lost. And as the sure pledge of this glorious future, the all-merciful Lord has manifested in the present age, as stated above, an incarnation which in point of completeness in revelation, its synthetic harmonising of all ideals, and its promoting of every sphere of spiritual culture, surpasses the manifestations of all past ages.
So at the very dawn of this momentous epoch, the reconciliation of all aspects and ideals of religious thought and worship is being proclaimed; this boundless, all embracing idea had been lying inherent, but so long concealed, in the Religion Eternal and its scriptures, and now rediscovered, it is being declared to humanity in a trumpet voice.
This epochal new dispensation is the harbinger of great good to the whole
world, specially to India; and the inspirer of this dispensation, Shri
Bhagavan Ramakrishna, is the reformed and remodelled manifestation of all
the past great epoch-makers in religion. O man, have faith in this, and lay
to heart.
The dead never return; the past night does not reappear; a spent-up tidal wave does not rise anew; neither does man inhabit the same body over again. So from the worship of the dead past, O man, we invite you to the worship of the living present; from the regretful brooding over bygones, we invite you to the activities of the present; from the waste of energy in retracing lost and demolished pathways, we call you back to broad new-laid highways lying very near. He that is wise, let him understand.
Of that power, which at the very first impulse has roused distant echoes from all the four quarters of the globe, conceive in your mind the manifestation in its fullness; and discarding all idle misgivings, weaknesses, and the jealousies characteristic of enslaved peoples, come and help in the turning of this mighty wheel of new dispensation!
With the conviction firmly rooted in your heart that you are the servants of
the Lord, His children, helpers in the fulfilment of His purpose, enter the
arena of work.