Chapter IV
The Miracle of Miracles
The children of India (Bharathiyas) believe that they are, each one, the Atma, the eternal Self. They are aware that the Atma cannot be cut in twain by the sword, that fire cannot burn It, that water cannot wet It, and that the wind cannot dry It.
The Atma has no bounds. Its centre is in the body, but, its
circumference is nowhere. Death means the Atma
has shifted from one body to another. This is the belief that every Indian has
firmly in mind.
The Atma is not subject to material or worldly limitations or laws. By
Its very nature, It is free; It is Unbound; It is Purity; It is Holiness; It is
Fullness.
But, since it is
associated with material, inert, bodies, It imagines that it is also a product
of material composition. This is the wonder, the mystery, the miracle that It
manifests! To unravel this mystery and explain this miracle are beyond the
capacity of anyone.
Atma is unbound, eternal, full
How could the Full (purna) Atma get entangled in the delusion that It is “not full” (a-purna), “a fraction”, “incomplete”?
Some people might say that the Indians (Bharathiyas)
who declare that the awareness of incompleteness itself can never arise are
attempting to wriggle out of an impossible situation.
They might say that this
is but a stratagem to cover up their ignorance of the Truth. How can the Pure,
the Unpartitionable, lose Its nature to the slightest extent? The Indians are
simple and sincere, and their nature is seldom artificial.
They would never attempt
to wriggle out of a situation by resorting to specious arguments. They have the
courage to encounter in a brave way any problem before them.
Therefore, the answer to
the question posed is: The delusion cannot happen! There is no basis for the
error of imputing “incompleteness” for the “complete”. The “full” entity called
Atma can never imagine Itself as
“wanting” or “less than full” or feel that It is limited or controlled by the
material sheath whose core It is.
Everyone knows that they
feel they are the body. Can anyone announce how this feeling arose and
persisted? No one can offer to answer this question.
For, to say, as some do,
that it is the will of God, is no answer at all. The plain statement, “I do not
know” conveys the same meaning, as the statement “It is the will of God”.
One is no wiser at the
latter statement than after hearing the first. What remains is this: “The Atma in the individual (jivatma) is eternal, immortal, full.
There is no death; what appears so is the shifting of its center.”
Summary- Essence
If today’s portion of
Swami’s writing has to be explained, then one has to take up any of the
Upanishads or Vedanta treatise and write down the essence of that entire
treatise.
The first part of today’s post has been elaborated in the second chapter of Bhagwad Gita
Here the unseen has been explained by means of the seen to indicate its nature. The changeless Self is explained with the aid of ever changing world which is familiar to Arjuna and others. In the world of change, objects meet their end by means of instruments of destruction like weapons, fire, water and wind.
Therefore, the soul can never be destroyed by the elements of earth in the form of weapons or by the elements of water, fire and air and so it is sheer ignorance to lament for it.
Continuing the import of the previous verse, The Lord says that if a thing cannot be annihilated by any means of destruction discovered by man such an object must be everlasting. Since the Self is indestructible, it is necessarily everlasting.
That which is
everlasting, or eternal will pervade everywhere. All-pervading indicates that
It has only itself all around It and it is unconditioned by anything other than
Itself.
That which is eternal and
all-pervading must be stable meaning no change can ever happen to It. That
which is stable is immovable. Mobility or moving implies the transfer of an
object or person from one set of time and place to another set of time and
place where they were not there already.
Since Self is
all-pervading there cannot be any place or period of time where It was not
there before. As the Self is unconditioned by the concept of time It is said to
be ancient.
When Swami writes the lines “The “full” entity called Atma can never imagine Itself as “wanting” or “less than full” or feel that It is limited or controlled by the material sheath whose core It is”, it takes us to the shanti mantra of the Isavasya Upanishad
This mantra explains that Brahman is complete and whole and the universe, caused by Brahman is also complete and whole.
Brahman remains complete/Purnam,
changeless, even while He creates this universe, with Brahman being the efficient, material and the instrument cause for
this creation to emerge.
Thus, as Swami writes,
“There can never be a delusion for the SELF to be incomplete/A purna” ever.
Love.