Guest guest Posted December 11, 2005 Report Share Posted December 11, 2005 Sai Ram Light and Love Swami teaches... 10 - 11 December, 2005 The Path of Prema Towards the Cosmic Self The letter A is the first step in this life-long pilgrimage to the source of life, Light and Love, the Divine, the Truth. It is a pilgrimage that ends when the emerged is merged in that from which it has emerged, when Thou realize that it is That, when Thwam knows that it is Thath. The stow of billions of births and deaths is summarised in the three words Thath Thwam Asi. Brahman (The Cosmic Self) is described as the embodiment of Cosmic vibrations which permeate the Universe, fill it with effulgence, wisdom and bliss. The Cosmic Spirit is one only, though it may be called by many names and worshipped in varied forms. True spirituality consists in this sense of spiritual Oneness. It can arise only when the attachment to the body is given up. When you develop the conviction that you are the Atma (the Self), then it will be easy to give up attachment to the body. When people in general develop this feeling, there will be a great transformation in the life of mankind. After years of steady and impartial research, the sages of India have said that education has as its goal the realization of the spiritual Oneness as Atma (the Divine Self) and the manifestation of its inherent attributes of Sath-Chith-Ananda (Being, Awareness and Bliss). When the unchanging, eternal Divinity unites with the changing and inert Prakrithi (Nature), you have Ananda. The Lord is experienced as Sath-Chith-Ananda. What is Sath? Sath is Being, that which is eternally present. This means that even when an object is not there, its qualities are present. These qualities are described as Asthi, Bhathi and Priyam (principles of Existence, Cognisability and Utility). Asthi means existence (the quality of permanence). This may be likened, say, to sugar. In whatever manner sugar may be used, by dissolving it in water or mixing it with flour, its quality of sweetness remains. It is Sath in the sense that it has the unchanging quality of sweetness. Chith is awareness (or consciousness). Chith is like water. When Sath (as sugar) is combined with Chith (as water) you have neither sugar not water, but syrup. The combination of Sath and Chith results in Ananda (Bliss). Apart from instincts, impulses, emotions and passions which human shares with the boasts, he/she has some unique attributes like the urge to renounce and to serve, to attach himself to Truth, and to cultivate the qualities of tolerance, and forbearance. The Sastras are only road map towards the path to the Divine Self; they are guide books at best, describing the road and giving the directions for the journey. It is the actual journey that will reveal the hardships, the delays, the landslips and the pot-holes, as well as the beauty of the scenery encountered and the magnificence of the final goal. No second-hand account can equal the first-hand experience. Moreover, the Sastras might speak about a one and the same thing in many different ways, just to elaborate it for better understanding; even the Vedas extol a thing in ten different poetic forms, from different angles and standpoints. You may experience the similar Swami's skill by originals of His Works or even by present serial "Swami teaches..." The symbols on the Sastras are interpreted differently by different scholars according to their pre-conceived notions, predilections and pet theories. Swami explain sastras as a Premavadhin (expounder of love). He has no conflict with the scholars who adheres to texts or the devotee of reason. If you acquire Prema (love), then you can dispense with the Sastras, for the purpose of all the Sastras is just that: to create the feeling of equal love for all and to negate egoism which stands in the way. Swami advises to develop Ananda through the cultivation of Prema, which begins in the home and family and spreads to all creatures. If you cannot help another, at least avoid doing him harm or causing him pain. That itself is a great service. Put down the sharp-edged weapon that seeks to analyse and chop the arguments of the opponent, to cut his/her point of view to pieces. Even if you cannot love others, do not hate them or feel envy towards them. Do not misunderstand them motives and scandalise them; if you only knew, their motives might be as noble as yours or their action might be due to ignorance, rather than wickedness or mischief. Take up the sweet pudding of love which spreads joy and wins over recalcitrant hearts. That is Swami's path, the path of Prema. Treat the others in the same way as you would like them to treat you. Never brood over the past; when grief over-powers you, do not recollect similar incidents in your past experience and add to the sum of your grief; recollect, rather, incidents when grief did not knock at your door, but you were happy instead. Namasmarana is the best antidote for this and if only men and women take up to it, the Lord will come to their rescue. That willinstil the faith that everything is God's Will and teach that you have no right to exult or despair. For realization path of Prema cultivate Neti (the path of straightforwardness) in everything. That will reveal the Atma. Neti will enable you to overcome the three gunas. The treatment you have to give these gunas is to grind them to a paste so that a new taste of Ananda might emerge; just as you grind salt, chillies and tamarind together to get a tasty chutney for your meal. No single guna should dominate; all must be tamed and diverted to fill the lake of Ananda. (It is the internal Ananda that matters, not the external. If the inner poise or inner equilibrium is undisturbed by external ups and downs, that is real success). Of course, you cannot reach the peak in one jump; it is a hard job to negate the evidence of the senses; one has to overcome the tendencies that have grown through hundreds of births. Life one long series of worries from birth to death. But all worries can be overcome by the Love of God. Do not look upon the objective world as something to be exploited; it is something to be adopted and appreciated. Then, you can derive the maximum Ananda out of the contact. The truth about the individual, the Universe and God discovered by dedicated delving and announced through universal compassion can never be tarnished or argued away. Never yearn for authority over others; recognise the authority of God over all. Be immersed in Ananda, and in Love. The body, the Sense organs, the mind and the intellect are the instruments for a human being. Only the person who understands the secret of these instruments will be able to comprehend the Atmic Principle. If a person cannot understand the vesture he/she is wearing, how is possible to understand the mystery of the Infinite Indwelling Spirit? The body at the beginning is a lump of flesh (as foetus). Then it acquires an attractive form. Youth confers on it special charm. In old age it develops deformities. The Scriptures declare that human is endowed with a body primarily to lead a righteous life. The body should be regarded primarily as an instrument for the realisation of the Divine through the nine forms of devotion. All organs are able to function because of this divine energy. The Gita declares that both the body and the Atma are divine. If you live on the level of the body and the individual, you will be entangled in food, fun and frolic, in ease, envy and pride. Forget it, ignore it, overcome it - you will have peace, joy and calm. In the Divine Path, there is no chance of failure; it is the Path of Love alias Path of Prema There is deep-rooted unrest today in every individual, because there is no harmony within. The body is the caravanserai, the individual is the pilgrim and the mind is the watchman. The mind seeks happiness; it feels that happiness can be got in this world from fame, riches, land and property, from other individuals or relatives;further, it builds up pictures of heaven where there is more intense happiness for a longer time; at last, it discovers that eternal undiminished happiness can be got only by dwelling on the Reality of one's own Self, which is Ananda Itself. The the life principle is like the grain covered up in the husk of maya (delusion), as the rice is enveloped in the paddy. The maya has to be removed; the life principle has to be boiled and made soft and assimilated so that it might add to health and strength. The softened rice can be compared to Paramatma (Supreme Soul). The mind has to be used for this process. It has to be fixed in the Sathyam (truth) and the Nithyam (everlasting). Toremove the husk of delusion, viveka (discrimination) is an instrument. Budhi (intellect) revels in discussion and disputation; once you yield to the temptation of dialectics, it takes a long time for you to escape from its shackles and efface it and enjoy the bliss which comes from its nullification. You must all the while be aware of the limitation of reason. Logic must give way to Logos and Deduction must yield place to Devotion. Budhi can help you only some distance along the Godward path; the rest is illuminated by intuition. However, your feelings and emotions warp even your thought processes; and reason is made by them into an untamed bull. Very often, egoism tends to encourage and justify the wildness, for a person is led along the wrong path by very reason, if that is the path person likes. You very often come to the conclusion you want to reach. The Rudras, in association with the Budhi (the intellect), enter the minds of people and cause them various types of difficulties and worries. Of these difficulties, three types are predominant in the world. They are Adhibhhautika Adhyatmika and Adhidaivika. Adhibhhautika refers to difficulties caused by the five elements (ether, air, fire, water and earth) and the five sheaths (relating to food, life, mind, awareness and bliss). These sufferings are caused by human beings, animals, insects or other creatures. Adhyatmika refers to sufferings caused by Vatha (wind), Pitha (bile), and Kapha (phlegm). Adhidaivika refers to the calamities caused to human by floods and drought, storms and earthquakes and similar natural disasters. Of all the sufferings endured by human beings, those coming under these three categories are most prominent. All other calamities are encompassed by these three. For all these sufferings the eleven Rudras are the cause. The whole world is permeated by the Rudras. Only Adhidaivika has an element of security. Whatever emanates from Rudra is fraught with fear. The name itself testifies to the dangerous power implicit in it. Rudra means that which induces fear. The eleven Rudras are dreadful in form. These dreadful entities enter the minds of human beings and subject them to all kinds of afflictions. Therefore Indriya nigraha (control of the senses) is not that easy. Even if evil impulses coming from external sources are controlled, those arising from within cannot be easily controlled. (If people cannot give up petty addictions to coffee or betel leaves, how can they acquire control over the senses? In Svaami's view, giving up is easier than holding on to things. It is easier to give up a handkerchief than to hold it in the hand). While the Rudhras are inflicting sufferings on mankind in various ways, by the control of the senses, if humans turn their minds towards God and devote themselves to Godly pursuits, they will find their path to Moksha (liberation). Moksha means getting rid of Moha (the delusions relating to the physical). Truth and Righteousness are expressions of the promptings from the depths of one's Conscience. Todaypeople are prone to disregard the voice of conscience. Today, people imagine that God can be propitiated by the offer of money. However, money has a useful role to play in the service of worthy causes. God has no part to play in this. People try to influence the Divine by some kind of force. God cannot be secured by "force." He is amenable only to the "Inner source." However, many good deeds are being done all over the world. People should participate in good activities, render help to others and regard them as spiritual exercises. Three times Santhi, Santhi, Santhi - the prayer is for peace of the body, the mind and the Spirit. Without this triune peace human cannot have real peace. And this threefold peace can be conferred only by God. This means that spirituality is essential for the health of the body, the peace of the mind and the bliss of the Spirit. (Reet's compilation from, Sathya Sai Speaks. Vol. 1. "Tolerance," Chapter 12 and "Neither Scriptures nor Logic," Chapter 20; Sathya Sai Speaks. Vol. 11. "Thou and That," Chapter 39 and "My People," Chapter 41;Sathya Sai Speaks. Vol. 27. "God realisation by sense-control," Chapter 9; Sathya Sai Speaks. Vol. 30. "From the corporeal to the Divine," Chapter 24). Namaste - Reet Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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