THE CHIEF SYMBOLS - SWAMIJI
THE CHIEF SYMBOLS
There are two Sanskrit words, Pratika and Pratimâ. Pratika means
coming towards, nearing. In all countries you find various grades of worship.
In this country, for instance, there are people who worship images of saints,
there are people who worship certain forms and symbols. Then there are people
who worship different beings who are higher than men, and their number is
increasing very rapidly — worshippers of departed spirits. I read that there
are something like eight millions of them here. Then there are other people who
worship certain beings of higher grade — the angels, the gods, and so forth.
Bhakti-Yoga does not condemn any one of these various grades, but they are all
classed under one name, Pratika. These people are not worshipping God, but
Pratika, something which is near, a step towards God. This Pratika worship
cannot lead us to salvation and freedom; it can only give us certain particular
things for which we worship them. For instance, if a man worships his departed
ancestors or departed friends, he may get certain powers or
certain information from them. Any particular gift that is got from these
objects of worship is called Vidyâ, particular knowledge; but freedom, the
highest aim, comes only by worship of God Himself. Some Orientalists think, in
expounding the Vedas, that even the Personal God Himself is a Pratika. The
Personal God may be a Pratika, but the Pratikas are neither the Personal nor
Impersonal God. They cannot be worshipped as God. So it would be a great
mistake if people thought that by worshipping these different Pratikas, either
as angels, or ancestors, or Mahâtmâs (holy men, saints), etc., or departed
spirits, they could ever reach to freedom. At best they can only reach to
certain powers, but God alone can make us free. But because of that they are
not to be condemned, their worship produces some result. The man who does not
understand anything higher may get some power, some enjoyment, by the worship
of these Pratikas; and after a long course of experience, when he will be ready
to come to freedom, he will of his own accord give up the Pratikas.
Of these various Pratikas the most prevalent form is the worship
of departed friends. Human nature — personal love, love for our friends — is so
strong in us that when they die, we wish to see them once more — clinging on to
their forms. We forget that these forms while living were constantly changing,
and when they die, we think they become constant, and that we shall see them
so. Not only so, but if I have a friend or a son who has been a scoundrel, as
soon as he dies, I begin to think he is the saintliest person in existence; he
becomes a god. There are people in India who, if a baby dies, do not burn it,
but bury it and build a temple over it; and that little baby becomes the god of
that temple. This is a very prevalent form of religion in many countries, and
there are not wanting philosophers who think this has been the origin of all
religions. Of course they cannot prove it. We must remember, however, that
this worship of Pratikas can never bring us to salvation or to freedom.
Secondly, it is very dangerous. The danger is that these
Pratikas, "nearing-stages", so far as they lead us on to a further
stage, are all right; but the chances are ninety-nine to one that we shall
stick to the Pratikas all our lives. It is very good to be born in a church,
but it is very bad to die there. To make it clearer, it is very good to be born
in a certain sect and have its training — it brings out our higher qualities;
but in the vast majority of cases we die in that little sect, we never come out
or grow. That is the great danger of all these worships of Pratikas. One says
that these are all stages which one has to pass, but one never gets out of
them; and when one becomes old, one still sticks to them. If a young man does
not go to church, he ought to be condemned. But if an old man goes to church,
he also ought to be condemned; he has no business with this child's play any
more; the church should have been merely a preparation for something higher. What
business has he any more with forms and Pratikas and all these preliminaries?
Book worship is another strong form of this Pratika, the
strongest form. You find in every country that the book becomes the God. There
are sects in my country who believe that God incarnates and becomes man, but
even God incarnate as man must conform to the Vedas, and if His teachings do
not so conform, they will not take Him. Buddha is worshipped by the Hindus, but
if you say to them, "If you worship Buddha, why don't you take His
teachings?" they will say, because they, the Buddhists, deny the Vedas.
Such is the meaning of book worship. Any number of lies in the name of a
religious book are all right. In India if I want to teach anything new, and
simply state it on my own authority, as what I think, nobody will come to
listen to me; but if I take some passage from the Vedas, and juggle with it,
and give it the most impossible meaning, murder everything that is
reasonable in it, and bring out my own ideas as the ideas that were meant by
the Vedas, all the fools will follow me in a crowd. Then there are men
preaching a sort of Christianity that would frighten the ordinary Christian out
of his wits; but they say, "This is what Jesus Christ meant", and
many come round them. People do not want anything new, if it is not in the
Vedas or the Bible It is a case of nerves: when you hear a new and striking
thing, you are startled; or when you see a new thing, you are startled; it is
constitutional. It is much more so with thoughts. The mind has been running in
ruts, and to take up a new idea is too much of a strain; so the idea has to be
put near the ruts, and then we slowly take it. It is a good policy, but bad
morality. Think of the mass of incongruities that reformers, and what you call
the liberal preachers, pour into society today. According to Christian
Scientists, Jesus was a great healer; according to the Spiritualists, He was a
great psychic; according to the Theosophists, He was a Mahâtmâ. All these have
to be deduced from the same text. There is a text in the Vedas which says,
"Existence (Sat) alone existed, O beloved, nothing else existed in the
beginning". Many different meanings are given to the word Sat in this
text. The Atomists say the word meant "atoms", and out of these atoms
the world has been produced. The Naturalists say it meant "nature",
and out of nature everything has come. The Shunyavâdins (maintainers of the
Void) say it meant "nothing", "zero", and out of nothing
everything has been produced. The Theists say it meant "God", and the
Advaitists say it was "Absolute Existence", and all refer to the same
text as their authority.
These are the defects of book worship. But there is, on the
other hand, a great advantage in it: it gives strength. All religious sects
have disappeared excepting those that have a book. Nothing seems to kill
them. Some of you have heard of the Parsees. They were the ancient
Persians, and at one time there were about a hundred millions of them. The
majority of them were conquered by the Arabs, and converted to Mohammedanism. A
handful fled from their persecutors with their book, which is still preserving
them. A book is the most tangible form of God. Think of the Jews; if they had
not had a book, they would have simply melted into the world. But that keeps
them up; the Talmud keeps them together, in spite of the most horrible
persecution. One of the great advantages of a book is that it crystallises
everything in tangible and convenient form, and is the handiest of all idols.
Just put a book on an altar and everyone sees it; a good book everyone reads. I
am afraid I may be considered partial. But, in my opinion books have produced
more evil than good. They are accountable for many mischievous doctrines.
Creeds all come from books, and books are alone responsible for the persecution
and fanaticism in the world. Books in modern times are making liars everywhere.
I am astonished at the number of liars abroad in every country.
The next thing to be considered is the Pratima, or image, the
use of images. All over the world you will find images in some form or other.
With some, it is in the form of a man, which is the best form. If I wanted to
worship an image I would rather have it in the form of a man than of an animal,
or building, or any other form. One sect thinks a certain form is the right
sort of image, and another thinks it is bad. The Christian thinks that when God
came in the form of a dove it was all right, but if He comes in the form of a
fish, as the Hindus say, it is very wrong and superstitious. The Jews think if
an idol be made in the form of a chest with two angels sitting on it, and a
book on it, it is all right, but if it is in the form of a man or a woman, it
is awful. The Mohammedans think that when they pray, if they try to form a
mental image of the temple with the Caaba, the black stone in it, and turn
towards the west, it is all right, but if you form the image in the shape of a
church it is idolatry. This is the defect of image-worship. Yet all these seem
to be necessary stages.
In this matter it is of supreme importance to think what we
ourselves believe. What we have realised, is the question. What Jesus, or
Buddha, or Moses did is nothing to us, unless we too do it for ourselves. It
would not satisfy our hunger to shut ourselves up in a room and think of what
Moses ate, nor would what Moses thought save us. My ideas are very
radical on these points. Sometimes I think that I am right when I agree with
all the ancient teachers, at other times I think they are right when they agree
with me. I believe in thinking independently. I believe in becoming entirely
free from the holy teachers; pay all reverence to them, but look at religion as
an independent research. I have to find my light, just as they found theirs.
Their finding the light will not satisfy us at all. You have to become the
Bible, and not to follow it, excepting as paying reverence to it as a light on
the way, as a guide-post, a mark: that is all the value it has. But these
images and other things are quite necessary. You may try to concentrate your
mind, or even to project any thought. You will find that you naturally form
images in your mind. You cannot help it. Two sorts of persons never require any
image — the human animal who never thinks of any religion, and the perfected being
who has passed through these stages. Between these two points all of us require
some sort of ideal, outside and inside. It may be in the form of a departed
human being, or of a living man or woman. This is clinging to personality and
bodies, and is quite natural. We are prone to concretise. How could we be here
if we did not concretise? We are concreted spirits, and so we find ourselves
here on this earth. Concretisation has brought us here, and it will
take us out. Going after things of the senses has made us human beings,
and we are bound to worship personal beings, whatever we may say to the
contrary. It is very easy to say "Don't be personal"; but the same
man who says so is generally most personal. His attachment for particular men
and women is very strong; it does not leave him when they die, he wants to
follow them beyond death. That is idolatry; it is the seed, the very cause of
idolatry; and the cause being there it will come out in some form. Is it not
better to have a personal attachment to an image of Christ or Buddha than to an
ordinary man or woman? In the West, people say that it is bad to kneel before
images, but they can kneel before a woman and say, "You are my life, the
light of my eyes, my soul." That is worse idolatry. What ifs this talk
about my soul my life? It will soon go away. It is only sense-attachment. It is
selfish love covered by a mass of flowers. Poets give it a good name and throw
lavender-water and all sorts of attractive things over it. Is it not better to
kneel before a statue of Buddha or the Jina conqueror and say, "Thou art
my life"? I would rather do that.
There is another sort of Pratika which is not recognised in
Western countries, bout is taught in our books. This teaches the worship of
mind as God. Anything that is worshipped as God is a stage, a nearing, as it
were. An example of this is the method of showing the fine star known as
Arundhati, near the group Pleiades. One is shown a big star near to it, and
when he has fixed his attention on this and has come to know it, he is shown a
finer and still nearer star; and when he has fixed his attention on that, he is
led up to Arundhati. So all these various Pratikas and Pratimas lead to God.
The worship of Buddha and of Christ constitute a Pratika. a drawing near to the
worship of God. But this worship of Buddha and of Christ will not save a man,
he must go beyond them to Him who manifested Himself as Jesus Christ,
for God alone can give us freedom. There are even some philosophers who
say these should he regarded as God; they are not Pratikas, but God Himself.
However, we can take all these different Pratikas, these different stages of
approach, and not be hurt by them: but if we think while we are worshipping
them that we are worshipping God, we are mistaken. If a man worships Jesus
Christ, and thinks he will be saved by that, he is mistaken entirely. If a man
thinks that by worshipping an idol or the ghosts or spirits of the departed he
will be saved, he is entirely mistaken. We may worship anything by seeing God in it,
if we can forget the idol and see God there. We must not project any image upon
God. But we may fill any image with that Life which is God. Only forget the
image, and you are right enough — for "Out of Him comes everything".
He is everything. We may worship a picture as God, but not God as the picture.
God in the picture is right, but the picture as God is wrong. God in the
image is perfectly right. There is no danger there. This is the real worship of
God. But the image-God is a mere Pratika.
The next great thing to consider in Bhakti is the
"word", the Nâmashakti, the power of the name. The whole universe is
composed of name and form. Whatever we see is either a compound of name and
form, or simply name with form which is a mental image. So, after all, there is
nothing that is not name and form. We all believe God to be without form or
shape, but as soon as we begin to think of Him, He acquires
both name and form The Chitta is like the calm lake, thoughts being like waves
upon this Chitta — and name and form are the normal ways in which these waves
arise; no wave can rise without name and form. The uniform cannot be thought
of; it is beyond thought; as soon as it becomes thought and matter, it must
have name and form. We cannot separate these. It is said in many books that God
created the universe out of the Word. Shabdabrahman, in Sanskrit, is the
Christian theory of the Word. An old Indian theory, it was taken to
Alexandria by Indian preachers and was planted there. Thus the idea of the Word
and the Incarnation became fixed there.
There is deep meaning in the thought that God created everything
out of the Word. God Himself being formless, this is the best way to describe
the projection of forms, or the creation. The Sanskrit word for creation is
Srishti, projection. What is meant by "God created things out of
nothing"? The universe is projected out of God. He becomes the universe,
and it all returns to Him, and again it proceeds forth, and again returns.
Through all eternity it will go on in that way. We have seen that the
projection of anything in the mind cannot be without name and form. Suppose the
mind to be perfectly calm, entirely without thought; nevertheless, as soon as
thought begins to rise it will immediately take name and form. Every thought has
a certain name and a certain form. In the same way the very fact of creation,
the very fact of projection is eternally connected with name and form. Thus we
find that every idea that man has, or can have, must be connected with a
certain name or word as its counterpart. This being so, it is quite natural to
suppose that this universe is the outcome of mind, just as your body is the
outcome of your idea — your idea, as it were, made concrete and externalised.
If it be true, moreover, that the whole universe is built on the same plan,
then, if you know the manner in which one atom is built, you can understand how
the whole universe is built. If it is true that in you, the body forms the
gross part outside and the mind forms the fine part inside, and both are eternally
inseparable, then, when you cease to have the body, you will cease to have the
mind also. When a man's brain is disturbed, his ideas also get disturbed,
because they are but one, the finer and the grosser parts. There are not two
such things as matter and mind. As in a high column of air there are dense
and rarefied strata of one and the same element air, so it is with the body; it
is one thing throughout, layer on layer, from grosser to finer. Again, the body
is like the finger nails. As these continue growing even when they are cut, so
from our subtle ideas grows body after body. The finer a thing the more
persistent it is; we find that always. The grosser it is the less persistent.
Thus, form is the grosser and name the finer state of a single manifesting
power called thought. But these three are one; it is the Unity and the Trinity,
the three degrees of existence of the same thing. Finer, more condensed, and
most condensed. Wherever the one is, the others are there also. Wherever name
is, there is form and thought.
It naturally follows that if the universe is built upon the same
plan as the body, the universe also must have the same divisions of form, name,
and thought. The "thought" is the finest part of the universe, the
real motive power. The thought behind our body is called soul, and the thought
behind the universe is called God. Then after that is the name, and last of all
is the form which we see and feel. For instance, you are a particular person, a
little universe in this universe, a body with a particular form; then behind
that a name, John or Jane, and behind that again a thought; similarly there is
this whole universe, and behind that is the name, what is called the
"Word" in all religions, and behind that is God. The universal
thought is Mahat, as the Sânkhyas call it, universal consciousness. What is
that name? There must be some name. The world is homogeneous, and modern
science shows beyond doubt that each atom is composed of the same material as
the whole universe. If you know one lump of clay you know the whole universe.
Man is the most representative being in the universe, the microcosm, a small
universe in himself. So in man we find there is the form, behind that the name,
and behind that the thought, the thinking being. So this universe must be
on exactly the same plan. The question is: What is that name? According to the
Hindus that word is Om. The old Egyptians also believed that. The Katha
Upanishad says, "That, seeking which a man practices Brahmacharya, I will
tell you in short what that is, that is Om. ... This is Brahman, the Immutable
One, and is the highest; knowing this Immutable One, whatever one desires one
gets."
This Om stands for the name of the whole universe, or God.
Standing midway between the external world and God, it represents both. But
then we can take the universe piecemeal, according to the different senses, as
touch, as colour, as taste, and in various other ways. In each case we can make
of this universe millions of universes from different standpoints, each of
which will be a complete universe by itself, and each one will have a name, and
a form, and a thought behind. These thoughts behind are Pratikas. Each of them
has a name. These names of sacred symbols are used in Bhakti-Yoga. They have
almost infinite power. Simply by repetition of these words we can get anything
we desire, we can come to perfection. But two things are necessary. "The
teacher must be wonderful, so also must be the taught", says the Katha
Upanishad. Such a name must come from a person to whom it has descended through
right succession. From master to disciple, the spiritual current has been
coming; from ancient times, bearing its power. The person from whom such a word
comes is called a Guru, and the person to whom it goes is called Shishya, the
disciple. When the word has been received in the regular way, and when it has
been repeated, much advance has been made in Bhakti-Yoga. Simply by the
repetition of that word will come even the highest state of Bhakti. "Thou
hast so many names. Thou understandest what is meant by them all these names
are Thine, and in each is Thine infinite power; there is neither time nor place
for repeating these names, for all times and places are holy. Thou art so
easy, Thou art so merciful, how unfortunate am I, that I have no love for
Thee!"
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