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Book: Hindu Dharma, Written by Swami Chandrashekarendra
Saraswati |
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All religious traditions have one purpose, to elevate man by freeing him
from his cares and worries. A human being has worries that are not
shared by other creatures. But it must be noted that all religious
systems
proclaim that man can not only free himself from his cares, if he makes
an effort, but that he can also attain the enlightenment that is not
within
the reach of other creatures. They speak in one voice that he will be
rid of
his cares if he goes for refuge to the Great Power that rules all
worldly
activities. Devotion or bhakti is a feature common to all religious
schools-
Advaita (non-dualism), Dvaita (dualism), Visistadvaita (qualified
nondualism),
Saiva Siddhanta, Christianity, Islam and so on. The Buddha did
not speak of devotion but it seems his followers cannot regard their
master without bhakti. They have deified the Buddha and created images
of him that are bigger than those sculpted for any deity. In very recent
times a number of jnanins have laid stress on inquiry into the Self as
the
sole means of liberation. But they are themselves worshipped as God by
their followers. Bhakti is an inborn characteristic of man; it is indeed
an
organic part of him.
Devotion in the Advaita system implies adopting an attitude of
nondifference
between the worshipper and the worshipped; that is the
devotee must look upon Isvara as not being different from himself. It
might be asked: "The devotee who worships the omnipotent and
omniscient Lord has only very limited strength and knowledge. How can
the two of them be the same? “But the question also arises: "Does God
regard us as being different from himself? If there are objects,
entities,
different from God how did they originate? If they came into existence
as
entities separate from Him how can He hold sway over them? ".
If we think on these lines it will become clear that the one and only
Paramatman exists in various forms: if the ocean stands for Isvara we
have in contrast the pond, the well and the little quantity of water
contained in a spoon and soon that stand for diverse living beings. The
water in all is the same. There maybe differences in the strengths of
the
various entities. But if you go to the base, the ground or root, you
will
discover that they are the same. If we go to the root we will become one
with the root. This is liberation according to Advaita. Merely to talk
about
non-dualistic liberation is nothing more than an Intellectual exercise
and
will serve no purpose. The truth of such liberation must become an
inward reality. In other words the quest must culminate in actual
experience and it can be had only with the grace of Isvara. Great sages
proclaim that it is only with the blessings of that Power which keeps us
in
a constant whirl of action that the whirl will stop and that we will
have
the Advaitic urge to seek the ground. "Isvaranugrahadeva pumsam
Advaitavasana.”
Even in the initial stages when we feel that Isvara and his devotee are
separate, we must try to cultivate the awareness, albeit to a small
degree,
that the Paramatman who appears as Isvara is the same as the
Paramatman that has become "us". If such be our approach, our love for
the Lord will become more intense. After all, is there anything or
anyone
we love more than ourselves?
Isvara awards us the fruits of our actions. If we become more and more
devoted to him, as recipients of his grace, we will get closer and
closer to
him. He will himself reveal to us who he is and there will be no need
for
us to inquire about him or into him. In response to our devotion he will
deign to reveal his true nature to us. He declares so in the Gita: "Bhaktya
mam abhijanati yavan yascasmi. . . .” (By devotion he comes to know who
in truth I am. . . ).
Countless are the attributes of Isvara that bespeak his surpassing
beauty
and auspicious qualities. Devotees find constant delight in
contemplating
them. But for the jnanin, the enlightened one, the ideal is the Godhead
that has no attributes and it is in his Godhead that he is finally
absorbed.
Sagunopasana (worship of Isvara with attributes) is the first step
towards
this end. For it our religion has evolved the concept of "istadevata"
("the
deity of one's choice", "the deity one likes").
What is special about sanatana dharma or Hinduism as it has come to be
called? Alone among all religions it reveals the one and only Godhead in
many different divine forms, with manifold aspects. The devotee
worships the Lord in a form suited to his mental make-up and is thus
helped to come closer to the Lord with his love and devotion. These
different forms are not the creation of anyone's imagination. The
Paramatman has revealed himself in these forms to great men and they
have had close contact, so to speak, with the deities so revealed. They
have also shown us how we too may come face to face with these
divinities, given us the mantras to accomplish this and also prescribed
the
manner in which the divine forms, whose vision they have had, are to be
adored.
Bhakti or devotion is common to all religions whatever the manner of
worship they teach. It is not exclusive to our faith in which different
deities are reverenced. |
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