Verse 3
(He whose manifestations are themselves nothing
but the Reality alone appearing as the delusory objects of the world.
Direct enlightenment, through “Tat Twam Asi” the
Mahavakya or ‘Great Vedic statement’, is imparted to those who have surrendered
to Him.
After having such a direct experience, never
again shall the realized one return to this ocean of worldly existence.
To that “Liberated One”, the Revered Form of the
Guru, do I offer my salutation, He is the Revered Form of Sri Dakshinamurthy.)
The main
points of discussion in this verse, line by line are:
i.
the Jagat, Brahman and Maya
ii.
Surrender & Enlightenment
through Atma Vichar or Self-Enquiry
iii.
Freedom from Transmigration &
Rebirth
iv.
All this is attained by the Grace of
the Guru.
We will take
up the first line of the verse today for contemplation.
He whose manifestations are themselves nothing but the Reality
alone appearing as the delusory objects of the world.
Relationship
between Jagat, Brahman and Maya
This Pada has the first main point. As
mentioned in the opening verse, the universe is Brahman Himself
manifested in the form of a multitude of names and forms.
The big
point made here is that from Reality, only Reality can arise; the names and
forms are merely unreal appearances over the Reality.
Maya’s
connection with these manifestations is to veil the Reality from the
manifestations. That is the delusory nature of Maya at work. Maya’s purpose
is to keep our attention fixed on the names and forms and take it away from the
Reality which is found in the Existence, Knowledge and Bliss aspects of the
manifestations.
Jagat appears
delusory only because Brahman is veiled from us by Maya. The Jagat is not
delusory in itself, but made to appear delusory because of our ignorance of Brahman.
From
standpoint of reality, whatever form you see, appears real, but is unreal. We
cannot find a real basis. We find all the forms. Forms are not real. The
reality because of which the form exists is real. This applies to the entire
universe.
Whatever we
look at seems real, but upon analysis we discover that it is unreal. The form
cannot exist without the contents. There must be some underlying reality
because of which the form exists. You cannot discover this underlying reality
using a microscope. You need to discover through someone’s help who has the
knowledge of the reality, who has understood the TRUTH.
One of the Mahavakyas is the essence of the
first line of the current verse which says- “Brahman is the only
reality who appears as various limited forms”
The Truth
about this world is that the Reality, which is imperceptible to the senses,
appears as this world when looked at through the senses. The ordinary man sees
only the appearance and attributes complete reality to it. At the same time, he
sees also the changeability of the appearance, but he shuts his eyes to it. All
spiritual paths attempt first to show the Reality behind the appearance. When
looked at from the Reality itself, there is no appearance either.
To take the
disciples to the Truth, phenomenal illustrations are often made use of.
For example,
take the gold and the ornament. The ordinary man, at the first glance, sees
only the ornament. But on second thought, he admits that it is made of gold. He
still lays greater emphasis on the form rather than on the gold because he
relies on his sensual perceptions.
Thus, having
been shown gold in its pure formless nature, he is asked to look at the
ornaments from the standpoint of gold. Then he sees nothing but gold in the
ornaments. Even in the appearance it is the gold that appears and not the
ornament. An 'ornament' is an 'ornament' only by convention, but it is only
gold.
Now applying
the illustration to the Self and the world, having separated the world
including your own body, senses and mind from the Self, you are shown the Self
in its pure nature. Taking your stand in that pure Self, if you look at the
world, you see the whole world as nothing but your own real Self. This is how
you are helped to experience the Truth of the aphorism: 'All is Brahman'. The object of Vedanta is not to help you not to
perceive the appearance; but to help you to see the essence, even when
perceiving the appearance through the senses.
Pure gold
comprehends all ornaments. It is formless, imperceptible and is by itself no
ornament. The ornament is gold in some form, and is perceptible. When you put
an ornament in a crucible and apply heat to it, it melts. Then the ornament
part disappears, and the gold alone remains over. Of course, this gold also
appears in the form of the crucible. You cannot help this if you look through
your eyes. Pure gold is formless and imperceptible. Having transcended
objectivity, it is the Reality itself.
There is no
superimposition
at any time.
Even the
thought that there is superimposition,
is a
superimposition.
There is no
serpent in the rope
at any time.
There is no
world in the Reality
at any time.
The Earth is
not pot.
But the pot
is Earth.
Consciousness
is not the object.
But the
object is Consciousness.
The wave and
the ocean are both objects as such.
But in
essence both are water, one and the same.
“World of
objects viewed from self by the master, who sees in and through them, the
brilliance, Glow, Beauty and the effulgence of ever-present SELF everywhere”
This line
echoes the same truth as the first line of today’s strotram depicts. This line
was explained in the satsangh concluded.
Love.