Monday, October 9, 2017

Dharma Vahini - Post 29


The Upanishadic Age

Swami writes,

"Meanwhile, the Upanishad Age dawned.
The Upanishads rejected material objectives as devoid of permanent value; they condemned them as inferior. In fact, the ritual portion (Karma-kanda) of the Vedas was transformed and revalued in the Upanishads as vehicles for the liberation of people from the bondage of birth and death and as vessels for crossing the ocean of worldly existence (samsara). 


The vision of the Upanishadic aspirant (sadhaka) breaks through this “external sensory objective world” and centres itself on the “inner world”. The Upanishadic sages (rishis) collectively confirm the nature of the highest Principle thus:

In the basic depth of this name-form world of change (nama-rupa jagath) there is the One eternal permanent being (Sat). That is the Absolute, the Highest Brahman (Para- brahman). The Highest can be grasped by means of the wisdom of yoga (jnanayoga).


Therefore,

Inquire into That; That is Brahman (Thadhvijijnaasasva; thadh Brahma).

This is knowledge of Brahman (Brahma-vidya) taught by the Upanishads (the Vedanta). 

Besides, the Upanishads also declare:

The Vedas, though mainly concerned with the human objective of attaining heaven, also provide the basic training for achieving liberation (moksha). 

The attainment of the Absolute does not depend entirely or solely on mastery of this knowledge of Brahman (Brahma-vidya). It is beyond the reach of study, scholarship, or intellectual conquest. Only by devotion (upasana) it can be realized.

If the scholar, with all the weight of learning, also gets immersed in devotion, his life is indeed sanctified!
 
Before such aspirants, the Lord will be manifest in His real glory. This is the meaning of the following declaration in the Brihadaranya Upanishad about the bond between the individual and the Universal (jivi and the Paramatma):

The Universal is the individual’s highest goal, highest wealth, highest elevation, deepest joy.

Eshosya parama gathih-Eshosya paramaa sampath; Eshosya paramo lokah-Eshosya para- manandah.

The Taithiriya Upanishad proclaims thus:

The Highest Atma (Paramatma) is the source of contentment, for He is the embodiment of the purest emotion (rasa). Attaining Him, the individual (jivi) can be immersed in joy. If the Highest Atma is not shining in the firmament of the heart, who is to taste, who is to live? He feeds all, with bliss (ananda). "


Author's note

Dear All,

Right from post 1 in the first theme "Purpose of Human birth" till now and also all future posts have one underlying essence which is the essence of that supreme God without name, without form, without attributes who is the essence / the subject of the entire upanishads. 

If readers can go back to posts 13 to posts 18 in the theme "Vedas and Vedanta", they can read through one single question raised by the author from all themes posted in the blog and then the author has tried to give you the ONE answer to all questions, all the curiosity as to "WHAT GOD REALIZATION IS ALL ABOUT'.

The answer to the above question is what Upanishad is all about.

The answer is pregnant in the following verses



The Isavasya Upanishad says that the whole Universe is pervaded by Isvara or God, who is both within and without it. He is the moving and the unmoving, He is far and near, He is within all these and without all these.

The Kena Upanishad says that the Supreme Reality is beyond the perception of the senses and the mind because the senses and the mind can visualize and conceive only the objects, while Reality is the Supreme Subject, the very precondition of all sensation, thinking, understanding, etc. No one can behold God because He is the beholder of all things.


The Kathopanishad has it that God is the Root of this Tree of world existence. The realization of God is regarded as the Supreme blessedness or Shreyas, as apart from Preyas or temporal experience of satisfaction.


Love.