Tuesday, December 16, 2014
Thursday, December 11, 2014
Wednesday, December 3, 2014
Sunday, November 16, 2014
Saturday, November 1, 2014
Saturday, October 25, 2014
Tuesday, October 14, 2014
Wednesday, October 8, 2014
Saturday, September 27, 2014
Sunday, September 21, 2014
Monday, September 15, 2014
Tuesday, September 9, 2014
Tuesday, September 2, 2014
Tuesday, August 26, 2014
Wednesday, August 20, 2014
Friday, August 15, 2014
Wednesday, August 13, 2014
Thursday, June 19, 2014
Tuesday, April 22, 2014
Tuesday, March 18, 2014
Saturday, March 1, 2014
Thursday, February 27, 2014
KATHA UPANISHAD IN SIMPLE ENGLISH PART ONE CHAPTER ONE SECTION ONE
Katha Upanishad in
Simple English:
PART ONE
Introduction
The Katha Upanishad is one of the eleven principal
Upanishads of the Hindu Religion. It is also called Kathakopanishad. It belongs
to the Taittiriya School of the Yajur Veda and consists of two chapters each of
which has three sections. There are a total of 119 verses in the Upanishad.
The Upanishad is about the boy Nachiketa obtaining the
knowledge of Brahm, the Supreme, from Yama, the Lord of Death himself.
A pious Brahmin Vajasravas performs a sacrifice and gives as
gifts to the priests old and feeble cows. Nachiketa, his son, feels disturbed
by this act of his father and questions his motives in giving away old, worn
out, and useless cows as gifts to the priests; and suggests that he be given as
gift to some priest, and when he persists, his father in anger gives Nachiketa
over to death.
In deference to his father’s command, Nachiketa goes to the
abode of Yama. Yama is not at home and returns only three days later. All this
while, Nachiketa waits without food or water in the residence of the Lord of
Death.
When Yama returns, he finds that Nachiketa has been waiting
for him for three days without food or water. To atone for this lapse of his,
Yama offers Nachiketa three boons, one for each night he has gone without food
and water.
It is the third boon of Nachiketa asking about what happens
after death, for enlightenment on the “great transition” which is called death,
and Yama giving Nachiketa that knowledge, that is the subject matter and the
central theme of the Upanishad.
The Upanishad is presented in three parts. Part one consists
of the Introduction and Section one of Chapter one. Part two consists of the
remaining two sections of Chapter one and Par three, the concluding part
consists of the three sections of Chapter three.
THE
UPANISHAD
Chapter One
Section One
Once upon a time long, long ago there lived in India in the
line of the great sage Gautama, a teacher by the name of Vajasravas.
Vajasravas had a son
called Nachiketa.
Desiring religious merit and heaven, Vajasravas performed
the Vishvajeet, literally meaning, world winning, sacrifice.
At the end of the
sacrifice he gave away all that he owned to the Brahmin priests.
Among the gifts being
given away to the priests were old cows so weakened by old age and infirmity
that they had no strength left in them and had no milk to give.
Nachiketa, his son, was watching.
Though very young and
just a boy, he was very spiritual minded and full of faith.
As the old cows were
being taken away, he thought: “These cows that my father is gifting are absolutely
useless, they have no strength left in them, they can barely eat grass or drink
water, and they have no milk to give.
Surely these cows
would be a burden for the one receiving them and would not give any benefit or
joy to him. And if the one receiving the gift gets no joy, then the one giving such a gift surely cannot expect to
get any benefit from the giving of such gifts either.
Rather than giving
any merit or heaven to my father which he is expecting, this act of his would
give him demerit and hell instead.
I must, therefore,
warn my father about this.
To gain true merit,
gifts that we give should be those that we ourselves prize and not ones for
which we ourselves have no use, and which are worthless.
My father loves and
values me very much.”
Thinking thus, Nachiketa went to his father, and said:
Father to whom will
you give me”?
His father ignored him.
Nachiketa repeated
his question.
His father again
ignored him.
Nachiketa persisted
and asked the question a third time.
By now his father was
very angry with Nachiketa, and in anger, said:
I give you to death.
These words of his
father stunned the young Nachiketa and set him thinking.
He thought: Along
with me, my father has many disciples.
Among them all, in
some matters I am at the top, I do most of my work without bidding, in some I
am in the middle, I do what I am told to do.
I am never at the
bottom. I never disobey or refuse to carry out an order.
I do not know what my
father wishes to accomplish today by giving me over to death.
Everyone has to die. Our forefathers before us all died and
those who follow us will also die.
Just as corn sprouts,
ripens, falls, becomes seed, and grows again; so too, do mortals grow old and
infirm with age, they die and are born again.
But I have not grown old so why should I have to die?
However, in deference to the command of his father, Nachiketa
reaches the abode of Yama, the Lord of Death.
Yama was not at home.
Nachiketa waited
three days and three nights in the home of Yama without food and water before
Yama returned.
When the Lord of death returned to his dwelling, he found
that the young Nachiketa had been in his home waiting for him for three days
and three nights without food or water.
He shuddered to think
of the plight of those in whose house such a one remains unfed.
He recalled the ancient
saying: Like god a seeker of Brahm enters into houses as a guest and people
give him peace offerings and honour him.
Disaster and
misfortune strikes those people of little understanding in whose house such a
one remains unfed.
Hope, expectation,
friendship, happiness, sacrifices, good works, sons, cattle, and wealth,
property and prosperity all go away from such a one; they have to live
their lives in misery.
Thinking about all this, Yama addresses Nachiketa: O seeker
of Brahm, since you, an honoured and venerable guest have stayed in my house
unfed for three days and three nights, I bow to you.
Let not this lapse of
mine bring misfortune to me. May all be well with me.
However, to compensate you for this omission of mine and for
the inconvenience and hardship you have endured remaining without food and
water for three days and three nights in my house, I grant you three boons, one
for each night of your ordeal.
The first boon of Nachiketa:
Nachiketa says: Very
well, sir, the first boon that I ask of you is that when I go back to my home
after being released by you, my father should be pleased to see me alive again,
return from death. His anxiety and his sorrow over sending me to death should
all be gone.
His anger should be
appeased and he should recognise me as his son and greet me with the love,
affection and grace befitting a loved son.
Yama replies: Dear Nachiketa, it shall be as you wish.
When you return, your
father, as he used to do earlier, on seeing you, will recognise you.
He will be happy to
see you released from the jaws of death and would sleep peacefully at night
through the remainder of his life, his anger gone.
This is my first boon
to you.
The second boon of Nachiketa: Nachiketa says:
Lord, we have heard
that in the world of heaven there is no death.
You are not there.
There is no fear, there is no old age, nor is there fear of old age.
There is no sorrow;
there is no hunger and there is no thirst.
Having crossed over hunger and thirst and leaving sorrow
behind, with all these not being there, there is only happiness and joy there;
people always rejoice in the world of heaven.
I understand that you, Yama, Lord of Death, know that fire
sacrifice which is the aid to heaven and which helps one attain heaven.
Please tell me in
detail about this fire sacrifice, in full faith, and about how those who live
in heaven gain immortality, how they gain freedom from death.
This is my second boon.
Yama replies: You are right Nachiketa; I know the fire
sacrifice which is the aid to heaven and, which helps in attaining heaven.
I will describe it in
detail to you. Listen carefully and learn it from me.
Know that the
knowledge of this fire is the means of attaining the infinite, limitless world,
know it as the support of the entire universe and as hidden and abiding in the
cave of the heart of every person.
Yama then went on to describe in detail that fire sacrifice
which is the beginning of the world, from where the world originated.
He described the kind
of bricks to be used, the number of bricks to be used, and the way and the
manner they should be put together to build the fire altar.
Yama then asked Nachiketa if he had understood what was told
to him.
Nachiketa repeated
exactly as Yama had told him to show that he had, indeed, understood everything
perfectly.
This pleased the Lord of Death very much and he said:
Nachiketa, I am very
pleased with you and give you here and now another special boon.
Henceforth, from now
onwards, this fire will be known by your name. It will be called the Nachiketa
fire.
I also give you this
chain which can take on many shapes.
Yama further says: One who has lit the Nachiketa fire
thrice, who has performed the Nachiketa sacrifice thrice, who has attained
union with the three, with the mother, with the father and with the teacher,
and who performs the three holy actions of studying the scriptures, of doing
worship and of giving charity to the needy, such a one crosses over birth and
death.
For then he knows the
god of fire, born of Brahm, the all knowing, the radiant, who always shines,
who is adorable, and, realizing Him, he attains everlasting, eternal peace.
He who does these duties, knowing well their full and true
meaning, he who, knowing the three duties, builds the altar of the fire
sacrifice and performs the Nachiketa sacrifice three times, and knowing so
meditates on the fire, such a one throws off the bonds of death, he overcomes
sorrows and enjoys and rejoices in the world of heaven.
This fire sacrifice leading to heaven Nachiketa, will
henceforth be known by your name.
This is my second
boon to you.
Choose now your third
boon, Nachiketa.
The third boon of Nachiketa:
Nachiketa asks Yama:
Lord, there is this doubt with regard to one who departs from this world after
death, some holding that he is, that he lives on, others holding that he is not
, that he dies.
I would like to know
the truth about this.
Please instruct me on
this knowledge.
This is my third
boon.
Yama tries to dissuade Nachiketa and replies:
Nachiketa the truth
about death is very subtle; it is very difficult to know and understand.
Even the gods in
heaven had their doubts about this and could not understand it properly.
Ask for something
else. Ask for another boon and release me from this one.
Nachiketa persists: Lord, you yourself say that even the
gods in heaven had doubts about this truth which is not easy to
understand. That being so, there could,
therefore, be nothing which could compare to this.
Furthermore, where
can I get a better teacher than you, the Lord of Death itself, to explain about
the mystery of death?
Yama continues in his attempt to dissuade Nachiketa.
He offers many allurements
to him saying:
Nachiketa choose
whatever you want in this world.
Choose a long life
for yourself for as many years as you wish. Choose wealth to go with it.
Ask for sons and
grandsons who will live for a hundred years.
Ask for as many
cattle, elephants, horses, and as much gold as you wish.
Ask for as much land
as you wish.
Ask for any desire
that you could possibly want to enjoy in this mortal world, desires hard to
obtain. Become the ruler of a large kingdom.
I will give you women
of rare beauty and loveliness, with many musical instruments and chariots, to
serve and entertain you in this world.
Ask for anything but
do not ask about the mystery of death.
But Nachiketa was made of sterner stuff.
He would not be
tempted. He would not be dissuaded from the truth he sought.
He said: All that you
have offered, O Lord, are transient, they must all wear out and must all end.
The vigour of all the senses of men are also transient and
must also wear out. The senses and strength of men wane and wither away with
age
All life, no matter
how long, no matter how full, is brief, and has to end.
Therefore, I have no use for your chariots, I have no use
for your women, I have no use for your music and the like.
I do not want any of
these. You may keep them all.
Man can never be satisfied
and contented with wealth. Having seen you we will get all the wealth we
desire.
But how can we ever
enjoy wealth when we know that death is always lurking? How can we live happily
knowing that we have to die, knowing that we are in your power?
Explain the mystery
of death. That alone is the boon that I still choose.
Having come in contact with an undecaying, immortal like you
and having witnessed immortality, how can a decaying mortal like me, who is
subject to old age, decay and death, ever enjoy a long life where all pleasures
are only of the senses, transient and temporary, and which have to pass away
and end.
Please reveal to me the great mystery of death, whether on
passing away a person still lives on or whether he dies, what is there in the
great passing on.
This is the boon that
I, Nachiketa, choose and none other.
End of Section One
END OF PART ONE
AUM, PEACE, PEACE, PEACE.
Tuesday, February 25, 2014
Thursday, February 20, 2014
MUNDAKA UPANISHAD IN SIMPLE ENGLISH PART THREE CONCLUSION
CHAPTER THREE
SECTION ONE
Two birds, who are companions and always united, live in the
same tree. Of the two, one eats the fruit; it experiences the pleasant and the
painful fruits of its past deeds, while the other looks on without eating.
On that very tree, a person, immersed in the sorrows of the
world, is deluded and, feeling helpless and impotent, he grieves and is sad.
However, when he sees and realizes that his other companion on the tree is none
other than the Supreme Lord who is worshipped all over, then, realizing this
and seeing the Lord’s greatness, he becomes freed from sorrows.
When a seer sees the golden coloured creator, the Lord, the
Person who is the source of Brahma, then becoming a knower, he gets rid of all
good and evil, he gets rid of them both, and then, free from any stain, he
attains equality with the Supreme Lord.
Truly it is life that shines forth in all living beings. Knowing
the Lord, knowing Brahm, the wise man does not talk of anything else. Living in
the Self and delighting in the Self, and always doing all his works, such a one
is the greatest among the knowers of Brahm.
This Self within the body is of the nature of light and is
pure. It can be attained by truth, it can be attained by austerity, it can be
attained by right knowledge and by the constant practice of chastity. All who
do so, all such ascetics get rid of all their imperfections, and then they
behold Him, the Lord.
Truth alone conquers, truth alone prevails, not untruth. By
truth alone is laid out the path leading to the gods and the Supreme abode of
truth, the path travelled by the sages who have fulfilled all their desires.
The Supreme is vast and infinite, the Supreme is divine, the
Supreme is of unthinkable form, and is subtler than the subtle. It always
shines forth. It is ever luminous. It is farther than the far, yet it is here
near at hand. Since it dwells in the secret place of the heart, it can be seen
as such by the intelligent.
The Supreme cannot be grasped by the eye, he cannot be seen
by the eyes, He cannot be grasped or known by speech or by any of the sense
organs. He cannot be grasped by austerity or by work. The Supreme, who is without
parts, can be seen only when one’s intellectual nature has been purified by the
light of knowledge through meditation.
When the senses in five different forms merge and centre in
the thoughts of a person, only then does the subtle sense become known to him.
The whole of man’s thought is totally pervaded by the senses. Therefore, when
his thoughts are purified then only does the self shine forth.
Whatever world a man of purified desire thinks of in his
mind, and whatever desire he desires, all those worlds and all those desires he
attains. The knower of the self has all his desires fulfilled, and he can
obtain anything or any world that he seeks. Therefore, let him who desires
prosperity worship the knower of the self.
SECTION TWO
He knows that Supreme abode of Brahm, wherein founded, the
world shines brightly. The wise men, who, freed from desires, worship the Person,
pass beyond the material cause of embodied birth, they pass beyond birth and
death and are not born again.
He who entertains desires and who keeps on thinking of them,
he therefore, on account of such thoughts and those very desires, is born here
and there. But the person who has his desires fully satisfied, and who has
become a perfected soul, all the desires of such a one vanish even here on
earth, in his very own lifetime.
This Self cannot be attained by instruction, nor can it be attained by intellectual power, nor even by hearing again and again. He can be attained only by the one whom the Self chooses. To such a one the Self reveals his true nature.
This Self cannot be attained by instruction, nor can it be attained by intellectual power, nor even by hearing again and again. He can be attained only by the one whom the Self chooses. To such a one the Self reveals his true nature.
The Self cannot be attained by one who does not have mental
strength, who does not have the inner strength derived from meditation. The Self
cannot be attained by the careless, or through carelessness, or even through
aimless austerity. But he who strives by these means, and if he becomes a
knower, then this Self of his enters the abode of Brahm and he attains
salvation.
Having attained him, the seers who are satisfied with their
knowledge, and who are perfected souls, who are free from passion, who are
tranquil, and who have attained the omnipresent self on all sides, those wise
ones, with concentrated minds, enter into the All itself. Having found the Self
in all, they, therefore enter into everything, they enter into all.
The ascetics who have understood well the meaning of the
Vedanta knowledge, and who have purified their natures through the path of
renunciation, they, dwelling in the worlds of Brahma, the highest immortal, and
becoming one with him, at the end of time are all liberated along with Brahma.
The fifteen parts then go back to their respective supports,
the elements and all the sense organs go back into their supporting deities.
One’s deeds and the self , consisting of understanding, all merge into and
become one with the Supreme Immutable Being, the Supreme Brahm.
Just as the flowing rivers disappear into the ocean casting
off their names and their shape, even so does the knower, freed from name and
shape, merge with and attain to the Divine Person, attain to Brahm who higher
than the high.
He, who truly knows the Supreme Brahm, becomes Brahm
himself. In his family no one who does not know Brahm will ever be born, all
will be knowers of Brahm. He crosses over sorrow. He crosses over all sins.
Liberated from the knots that bind the secret place of the heart, he becomes
immortal.
This very doctrine is declared in the verses. Those who
perform the rites, those who are learned in the scriptures, those who are well
established in Brahm, those who offer up themselves as sacrifice to the sole seer
with faith, to them alone may one declare this knowledge of Brahm, by whom the
rite of carrying fire on the head has been performed according to rule.
This is the truth. The sage Angiras declared it before. Let
none who has not performed the rite read this. We salute the great sages. We
salute the great sages.
END OF CHAPTER THREE
END OF PART THREE
END OF
MUNDAKA UPANISHAD
AUM, PEACE, PEACE, PEACE
Wednesday, January 29, 2014
MUNDAKA UPANISHAD IN SIMPLE ENGLISH PART TWO
CHAPTER TWO
SECTION ONE
This is the truth. Just as from a blazing fire, sparks of
similar form come out by the thousands, even so, dear one, do many kinds of
beings come out from the Immutable Person, from Brahm, and return there too.
Brahm, is divine and
formless. He is without and within everything; he is inside and outside
everything. He is unborn. He is without breath, He is without mind. He is pure
and even higher than the highest immutable.
From him are born life as we know it. From him are born
mind, from Him are born all the sense organs; from Him are also born ether,
air, water, fire and the earth, which supports all.
Fire is His head. His eyes are the sun and the moon, the
regions of space are His ears, the revealed Vedas are His speech, air is His
life and His heart is the world. Out of His feet is born the earth. Indeed He
is the Self, the Atma of all beings.
From Him comes fire whose fuel is the sun, from Him comes
the moon and from the moon comes rain, and from rain come the herbs and plants
on earth. Nourished by all these, the male pours seed into the female. This is
how all creatures are produced from the person of Brahm, this is how the birth
of all beings takes place from Brahm.
From him are born the verses of the Rig Veda, the chants of
the Sama Veda, and the formulae of the Yajur Veda; from Him are born the rites
of initiation, from Him are born all the sacrifices, all the ceremonies, all
the rituals and sacrificial gifts, from Him are born the years and time too,
and the sacrificer, as also the worlds where the moon purifies and where the
radiant sun shines ever so brightly.
From Him are also born all the gods in many different ways,
all the celestials, men, cattle, birds, the in- breath and the out- breath,
rice and barley, austerity, faith, truth, chastity, and the law.
From Him come out the seven life breaths, the seven flames
and their fuel, the seven oblations,
these seven worlds in which move the life breaths, seven and seven,
which dwell in the secret place of the heart.
From Him emerge all the oceans, all the seas and all the
mountains, from Him flow rivers of every kind, from Him come all the herbs and
their juices, too, by which, together with the elements, the inner soul is
upheld.
Brahm Himself is all that has been described. He is work, He
is austerity and He is Brahma beyond death.
He who knows Brahm as residing in
the secret place of the heart he, here on earth itself, O dear one, cuts open
the knots of ignorance; he gets rid of all ignorance in his very lifetime
itself.
SECTION
2
The Great Support, Brahm, is seen in the secret place of the
heart. It is well fixed and it is moving as well. In the same Great Support is
centred all this which moves, which breathes and which winks. Know that support
as being and also as non being, and as the Supreme Object to be desired. It is
the highest and it is beyond the reach of man’s understanding.
That which is ever luminous, That which is subtler than the
subtle, and That in which are centred all the worlds, and those that dwell in
them, That is the Imperishable Brahm, That is life, That is speech, and That is
mind. That is the true, That is the truth, That is immortal, That is Brahm to
be known. Therefore, know That Brahm.
Taking the great weapon of the Upanishads as the bow, one
should place in it the arrow of the self, sharpened by meditation. Then drawing
the bowstring with a mind engaged in the contemplation of Brahm, one should
make that very Imperishable Brahm as the target.
The syllable AUM is the bow, one’s own Self, one’s own Atma,
indeed, is the arrow. Brahm is the target which is to be hit without making a
mistake. Thus, hitting the target, the arrow becomes one with the target; the
Atma becomes one with Brahm, the Atma merges with Brahm.
He in whom the sky, the earth, the inter space, the mind and
all the vital breaths are all woven together, know Him alone as the one Self.
Dismiss all other claims, dismiss all other utterances and conjectures. This is
the bridge to immortality.
The heart is where the arteries of the body are brought
together like spokes in the centre of a wheel. It is in that very heart that
the Self moves about becoming many. May you be successful in crossing over from
the darkness of ignorance to the light of knowledge and wisdom.
He consists of mind and is the leader of life and the body
and is seated in the body controlling the heart. By the knowledge of Brahm, the
wise are able to clearly see the Immortal who shines forth brightly.
The doubts that assail the heart are dispelled, the knots,
the bonds that bind the heart are cut, and all past deeds and actions terminate
once the higher and the lower Brahm are seen.
Brahm is encased in the highest golden covering. Brahm is
without stain, without parts, Brahm is pure and pristine; He is the light of
all lights. The knowers of the Self know this.
The sun does not shine there, nor the moon, nor the stars;
these lightnings so not shine there. Where then could this fire be? That fire
and that light is, indeed, the light of Brahm itself. Everything shines only
after the shining light of Brahm. The sun, the moon, the stars, and all the
lightnings, they all get their light only from Brahm. Brahm, indeed, is the
source of the light of this universe. It is the light of Brahm that actually
illumines the whole world.
It is Brahm, indeed, who is this immortal. Brahm is everywhere.
Brahm is in front, Brahm is behind, Brahm
is to the right, Brahm is to the left, Brahm is above and below. Brahm,
indeed, is this universe. Brahm is the greatest.
END OF CHAPTER TWO
END OF PART TWO
AUM, PEACE, PEACE, PEACE
Tuesday, January 28, 2014
Sunday, January 26, 2014
MUNDAKA UPANISHAD IN SIMPLE ENGLISH PART ONE
MUNDAKA UPANISHAD
INTRODUCTION
The Mundaka Upanishad is one of the Principal eleven
Upanishads of the Hindu religion. It belongs to the Atharva Veda and has sixty
five verses spread over three chapters, each having two sections. The Upanishad
teaches the highest knowledge of Brahm which cannot be obtained by sacrifice or
by worship.
The name of the Upanishad is derived from the root “to shave” meaning, that he who understands the teaching of the Upanishad is “shaved” or liberated from all mistakes and ignorance.
The Upanishad clearly states the distinction between the higher knowledge of the Supreme Brahm and the lower knowledge of the empirical world.
It is by the higher knowledge and wisdom and not by sacrifices or worship that one can reach Brahm. Only the sanyasin, the renunciate, who has given up everything, can obtain the highest knowledge.
The name of the Upanishad is derived from the root “to shave” meaning, that he who understands the teaching of the Upanishad is “shaved” or liberated from all mistakes and ignorance.
The Upanishad clearly states the distinction between the higher knowledge of the Supreme Brahm and the lower knowledge of the empirical world.
It is by the higher knowledge and wisdom and not by sacrifices or worship that one can reach Brahm. Only the sanyasin, the renunciate, who has given up everything, can obtain the highest knowledge.
The Upanishad is presented in three parts, part one consists
of chapter one, part two of chapter two, and part three of chapter three.
THE UPANISHAD
PART ONE
CHAPTER
ONE
SECTION ONE
Brahma arose as the first among the gods, as the maker of
the universe, and as the protector of the world.
He taught the knowledge of Brahm, which is the foundation of all knowledge to his eldest son Atharvan.
He taught the knowledge of Brahm, which is the foundation of all knowledge to his eldest son Atharvan.
That knowledge of Brahm, both the higher and the lower
knowledge, which Brahma taught to his son Atharvan, Atharvan, in ancient times, told it to Angira
who in turn taught it to Satyavaha, son of Bhardvaja, who further taught it to
Angiras.
Shaunaka, a great householder and respected person of his
time, duly approached Angiras in the proper manner and asked very humbly:
Respected sir, through the knowledge of what does all this world and all that
exists become known? What is it that we must know so that all becomes known to
us? Is there any one cause of all the varied, different and multifarious things
that exist in the world, knowing which cause everything and all will be well
known?
Angiras replied: The knowers of Brahm declare that there are
two kinds of knowledge to be known, the higher and the lower, and both should
be known.
Of these, the lower knowledge is the knowledge of the Vedas,
of the Rig Veda, the Sama Veda, the Yajur Veda and the Atharva Veda, the
knowledge of all the scriptures, knowledge of Phonetics, of Ritual, of Grammar,
of Etymology, of Metrics and of Astrology. This is the knowledge of the world.
And the higher
knowledge is that knowledge by which the Undecaying Imperishable Supreme Brahm
is apprehended and attained.
The wise perceive the
Undecaying Supreme Brahm as the source of all beings and of all existence. That
Brahm is ungraspable, is without family, is without caste, is without sight or
hearing, is without hands or feet, is eternal, is all- pervading, and is
exceedingly subtle.
Just as a spider emits and draws in its thread, just as
herbs and plants grow on the earth, just as hair grows on the head and on the
body of a living person, so too does the universe emerge and grow from that
Imperishable Brahm.
By the power of contemplation and the energy so produced, Brahm
expands and grows. From that food is produced. From food comes life, then comes
mind, then come the five elements: earth, air, fire, water and space; then come
the worlds, then the rituals and from the rituals is produced immortality.
Brahm who is all knowing and all wise, whose austerity consists
of knowledge, from him is born Brahma, the creator, and from Brahma are born
all that have name and shape and from Brahma is produced food as well.
SECTION TWO
This is that truth. The works and the duties which the sages
saw in the hymns are described in detail in the Vedas. Perform them constantly
and without fail, you lovers of truth. This is your path to the world of good
deeds.
The sacrificial fire
has to be lit and when the flames of the fire burn brightly, then only should
one offer his oblations with faith between the two portions of melted butter.
He whose Agnihotra sacrifice is not followed by the
sacrifice of the new moon and of the full moon, by the four month’s sacrifice, by the rituals performed
in the harvest season, and is not attended by guests, is without the customary
oblations, is without ceremonies to all the gods, or who gives offerings
contrary to the rules laid down in the scriptures, such conduct of his destroys
his future up to seven births. The sacrificial fires have to be lit within
ourselves and constantly fed by always speaking the truth, for if we do not
speak the truth but indulge in untruthfulness and falsehood; we will put out
the flame of sacrifice.
The following are the seven moving flames of fire: the black, the terrific, the swift as mind,
the very red, the very smoky coloured, the spark blazing, and the divine shaped.
Whosoever performs works, whosoever makes his offerings when
these flames of fire are shining and who makes his offerings at the proper
time, these offerings of his, in the form of the rays of the sun, lead him to
that world where the one Lord of the gods abides, to the abode of the Supreme
Brahm.
The radiant offerings invite him with the words,” come,
come”, and carry the sacrificer by the rays of the sun, honouring him and
saluting him with the pleasing words: “This is your holy world of Brahma which
you have won through your good deeds.”
The boats of the
eighteen sacrificial forms, consisting only of rituals, are said to be inferior
karma, because they are devoid of knowledge, and are, therefore, unsteady,
unstable and unreliable. Those who are deluded by such rituals, thinking that
this alone will lead them to the good and who delight in them, such people fall
again and again into old age and death.
People who live in
ignorance, but who consider themselves to be wise in their own esteem, and who
think of themselves as learned, are actually deluded. Such people suffer all
kinds of troubles, and go about like blind men led by one who is himself blind.
The people who are immature live mostly in ignorance. They
think they have attained their aim without actually have done so. Those who
only perform rituals, they get attached to those rituals and do not understand the truth because of their attachment to
the rituals. They, therefore, fall down miserable when the fruits of their
merits from their previous births are exhausted.
These men are deluded since they regard only sacrifices and
good works or works of merit as most important. They do not know any other good.
After enjoying their stay in the high place of heaven, which was won by their
good deeds, and after their merit is exhausted; they come back to this world or
to a still lower one.
But those who practice austerity and faith, in solitude,
those tranquil knowers, who lead the life of a mendicant, depart from this
world, freed from sin, through the door of the sun, to the abode of the
Immortal, Imperishable Person, the Param Atma, the Supreme Brahm.
Having carefully seen and examined the worlds won by works,
a seeker of Brahm should arrive at non attachment, he should become non
attached. The world that is not made is not won by what is done. Karma or work
results only in achieving the transitory, the temporary, and not the permanent
eternal. For seeking the knowledge of the permanent eternal, of the Supreme Brahm,
the seeker should go humbly and respectfully to a teacher who is learned in the
scriptures and who is established in Brahm, who has realized and attained
Brahm.
That knowing teacher,
on his part, should teach, in its very truth, that knowledge of Brahm, by which
knowledge one knows the Imperishable Person, the true, to such a seeker of
knowledge whose mind is tranquil and who has attained peace.
END OF CHAPTER
ONE
END OF PART ONE
AUM, PEACE, PEACE, PEACE
Saturday, January 25, 2014
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)