"Oh, My God, if there is God, save my Soul, if
there is one". Sceptic as we are, we neither believe in God nor know anything about our
Soul. 'Avidya' ('Ignorance') governs our lives. We are so foolish that we
believe in others who are created by the Lord, but we do not have faith and
belief in God. Our God is in our Mind. Our Mind is our God. Mind is the man;
Mind is the world. Our Mind can create the God it wants! The concept of God has
to be clearly understood. It is for want of a clear understanding, a proper
conception of God that this beautiful world is made a veritable hell, and that
too, by a very small minority of crooked, selfish people. First of all, we must
be educated and trained to know 'God’. Upanishads reiterate that 'that which is
worshipped here is not 'God'. It is not God that we generally hope and believe
it to be in the sense we can understand or comprehend by our fickle mind or
sensuous senses. The eyes cannot see, the mind cannot figure out what God is
since It is not an object of perception; but, God is everywhere! God is omnipresent.
God is effulgent and all-powerful. God is omniscient and all- pervasive. God is
‘Supreme Consciousness’. God is in you as well as in me as Consciousness,
Truth, and the Self, the Soul, or 'Atman'.
The Concept of God
The Vedanta
Sutra of Badarayana (2nd aphorism) defines God as ‘the One from whom
the origination etc. of the universe proceeds’. In other words, ‘Brahman’ is
the father from whom the universe has sprung, by whom it is sustained and
dissolved’. God is the cause of the causes, the universal cause. Every act,
event, or occurrence has a volition as its prompter, a will-force giving the
initial impulse. It just cannot be ‘law
of nature’ a non-intelligent principle, ultimate cause cause, according to Shri
Madhvacharya. He is the Supreme Inteligence. Karma, illusion, aberration, time,
attributes or gunas, or matter cannot be the cause, for they are
non-intelligent and incapable of volition. A volition proceeding from
chit-intelligence is the source of every movement, of every action, of every
vibration. God is the universal cause; God is the will-force that accounts for
the worlds from the infinitesimal vibration of the molecules for the thrilling
march of the starry galaxy in orbits immeasurable. The Sankhyas, who admit God
as the ‘Supreme Being’ make Him an appeandage of Prakruti.
God pervades through every conceivable atom
of the universe, occupies every point of space, ever engaged in creation,
Preservation, destruction, and, all the rest. This is known as the ‘immanence
of God’ in the universe. Wordsworth, Carlyle and many others hold to this view.
There is a similar view. “Not a blade of grass waves without Him and all is
governed by His volition, ichha, and is permeated by it. He is present nearer
than the nearest, directing everything. This is the concept of ‘omnipresence of
God’ defined in Vedanta.
In Bhagavad Gita, Lord Shri Krishna says, ‘I
am the indwelling soul residing within the heart of every creature. I pervade
the earth and everything born, and sustain it by my power’.
Shrutis, the Upanishads declare:
‘He is the hearer, thinker, ordainer, announcer, knower in detail, and the
inner guide of all beings’.
Vishnu, the all-pervading supreme
reality, is the ‘One without a second’. Cardinal Newman defines God ‘as
absolutely self-dependent ‘Being’ and the only ‘Being’ as such’.
There is a beautiful explanation in Kenopanishad that makes very clear the entire
concept of what is God and what is not God. The disciple puts the questions:
‘Who impels the mind to alight on its object? Enjoined by whom does the vital
force proceed to function? At whose behest do men utter speech? What
Intelligence, indeed, directs the eyes and the ears? The common sense view that sense faculties,
mind and the life force- either each in itself or as a psychophysical
combination centering round the body-
are in themselves the ultimate factors in personality. However, there is
the suspicion that there is in us something deeper than these- an unrestricted
Intelligence that ultimately guides all our mental and physical faculties.
The answer given to these questions are
to be understood carefully.
“It is the Atman, the spirit, by whose
power the ear hears, the tongue speaks, the mind understands and life
functions. The wise man separates the Atman from these faculties, rises out of
sense-life, and attains immortality”. By themselves, these senses are inert.
The Atman is the sole intelligent principle in man. By its presence behind our
various organs, It enables them to fulfil their respective functions. But not
knowing this fact, ignorant man mistakes the senses, mind, etc. to be really
intelligent, and, therefore identifies the Atman with them. The wise man, on
the other hand, overcomes this identification, realizes his spiritual nature
and hence attains immortality. The Atman is beyond the ken (why) of the senses
and the mind, It being the source of the intelligence. It cannot be known as
other things of the world, i.e., in an objective sense. “One who syas he knows
It, does not know It”. It cannot be explained by words like other objects. “It
is not this, anything that the people worship here”.
It should be very clearly
understood that the ‘Atman’ is the ‘Spirit within’ man. It is the source of all
faculties of personality; and, it is this Spirit that governs all activities of
man. The ‘Atman’ stands for the ‘Spirit within man’ and the ‘Brahman’ stands
for the ‘Spirit behind the universe’. To establish unity between the two is ‘to
know’ the Reality, ‘the Sat’. This ‘knowing’ is a continuous process and it
never ends. “It is knowable but never known”. Thus, the ultimate reality of the
creation of this cosmic world, the Universe, is beyond the province of mind and
language.
As regards, the English term God, there is no such thing as God since
the Western or the Christian concept is of a ‘messenger of God’ and they do not
know who is God. They do not understand the Atman and Paramatman concepts and
let alone the concept of antaryamin and antaratma. For the Hindu devotees
paramatma is everything and the parabrahman is nameless formless and has no attributes
whatsoever; whatever attributes we use are our own attributed to that supreme
power, invisible hand that runs our life. For us God is one who protects and
support and lift us up in our consciousness levels from muladhara to the
sahasrar. We have thus powers that be, the devata and devis who virtually take
us by hand and save us from all the adversities of life. This is what we believe.
This is our faith and religion as Hindus.
There is the ‘Devatmashakti’ that
guides the life and activities of all human beings. Here, ‘Deva’ means God (of religion) and ‘atma’ means the self (of philosophy), and ‘shakti’ means the energy (of science). It also means the
self-conscious power, which is inherent in all jeevas, and Deva meaning, the
self-luminous.
‘Devatmashakti’ also means the source of knowledge, emotions, and
will - the three aspects of the mind.
‘Deva’ stands for knowledge, ‘atma’ for the emotions, and ‘shakti’ for the
will. One who puts his heart and soul into all his actions will no doubt
achieve all success in his endeavour.
An ignorant man is usually
concerned only with himself and the world. To him, God, the third entity, does
not exist. The intelligent man soon finds out, however, that there is some
unknown power behind the Universe, which is guiding his destiny. The first part
of spiritual practice, therefore, is to realize the existence of this power on
which both he and the world depends. At first, this realization is only
intellectual.
The idea of God comes early in the life of individuals. However, with
the maturity of intellectual power comes, the real search as to the fundamental
character of this power. Sadhana first begins with a separation of God from the
Universe, as a being with qualities entirely different from the individual and
the world. Subsequently, with the analysis of the individual and the world
psychologically and scientifically, the various systems of philosophy come into
being. Each system represents a stage in the progress of thought and sadhana.
In the final stage of realization in the depths of samadhi, the world and the
individual soul, as we know them, vanish entirely and God alone remains. The
individual soul gradually acquires all the fundamental characteristics of the
world, the world consisting of all dualities such as: gross and the subtle,
spirit and the matter, cause and effect. The realization of oneness of Jeeva
and Brahman is referred to as ‘Divine
Grace’. It also means, that Lord’s Grace is required for the realization of
identity. One must understand that the Grace of God is bestowed on a person
only after he has reached the limits of self-effort.
Matter is perishable but God is
imperishable and immortal. God rules over all the perishable matters, and the
individual souls, too. By meditating upon Him, by uniting with Him in thought,
and by becoming one with him, there is cessation of all illusion in the end.
With the knowledge of God all fetters fall off; with the waning of ignorance,
birth and death cease. Going beyond consciousness of the body by meditating
upon Him, one reaches the stage of Universal Lordship, become one without a
second- fulfillment of all desires and attaining Universal Lordship.
Even those who seek salvation or
‘mukti’ and want to become one with Him should realize that they are aspiring
for something what they do not know. To become one with God is just impossible
according to Sri Madhwacharya, who is the incarnation of Hanuman and Bheema of
the previous Treta and Dwapara Yugas, respectively. Shankara’s ‘Tat Tvam asi’ has not been properly
understood and it is widely believed that God is none else but the One who
dwells in oneself. In order to realize this, one has to become God, rather
should acquire divine qualities and behave as God Himself dispelling all
tamasic and rajasic gunas, and even transcend the Sattvic guna; One should get
rid of ari-shad vargas such as kama, krodha, lobha, moha, mada, matsarya (i.e.,
one should get rid of ego, prejudices, likes and dislikes, anger, prejudice,
desire, greed, jealousy, etc.) and become totally benevolent. One must become
pure in mind, heart and soul and attain ‘poorna prajnya’ state, state of
Supreme Consciousness. This is a tall order for one who comes within the grip
of the samsara, bondage and attachment to this earth. Hence, ‘God Realization’
is a remote possibility according to Shri Madhwacharya. “To him, let alone
merge with him, even visioning Him is a remote possibility”. There are four
kinds of ‘mukti’ and there is no equality in bliss among jeevas and that there
are degrees of enjoyment graduated and allotted according to the devotee’s
worth.
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