Swami Vivekananda is an Universal Being and so also stands his Universal Messages. He is regarded as an incarnation of Lord Shiva and called as Modern Prophet,Patriotic-Saint,Seer etc. He declared: "MY IDEAL IS TO PREACH MANKIND THEIR DIVINITY AND HOW TO MAKE IT MANIFEST IN EVERY MOMENT OF LIFE." His 150th Birth Anniversary Celebrations are observed from 2010 to 2014. Let us rekindle our aspirations and draw inspiration from his Life, Writings, Speeches,Stories etc. May He bless all .
HOME
LIFE EVENTS
LETTERS
STORIES/ PARABLES/ ANECDOTES
ARTICLES
KARMA YOGA, BHAKTI YOGA, RAJA YOGA, JNANA YOGA
CHICAGO ADDRESSES
VIVEKANANDA'S SPEECHES & WRITINGS
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
SWAMIJI 150 CELEBRATION NEWS AND VIDEOS
VIVEKANANDA RATHA YATRAS
PHOTOS AND VIDEOS GALLERY
YOUTH & WOMEN INSPIRATION
SWAMI VIVEKANANDA LITERATURE
28.9.13
20.9.13
NATIONAL YOUTH DAY CELEBRATION:2014
On the occasion of 150th Birth Anniversary Celebration Ramakrishna Math, Chennai is conducting National Youth Day-2014 through its Tamil Magazine Sri Ramakrishna Vijayam. About 12 lakhs students of classes 3rd to 7th standard and 8th to +2 & College will be participating. Below given quotations of Swami Vivekananda for different groups of students to memorise.
14.9.13
12.9.13
9.9.13
REASON AND RELIGION
TODAY IS GANASH CHATURTHI. MAY LORD GANESH, THE GOD OF KNOWLEDGE BLESS YOU WITH DEVOTION AND KNOWLEDGE.
A sage called Nârada
went to another sage named Sanatkumâra to learn about truth, and Sanatkumara
inquired what he had studied already. Narada answered that he had studied the
Vedas, Astronomy, and various other things, yet he had got no satisfaction.
Then there was a conversation between the two, in the course of which
Sanatkumara remarked that all this knowledge of the Vedas, of Astronomy, and of
Philosophy, was but secondary; sciences were but secondary. That which made us
realise the Brahman was the supreme, the highest knowledge. This idea we find
in every religion, and that is why religion always claimed to be supreme
knowledge. Knowledge of the sciences covers, as it were, only part of our
lives, but the knowledge which religion brings to us is eternal, as infinite as
the truth it preaches. Claiming this superiority, religions have many times
looked down, unfortunately, on all secular knowledge, and not only so, but many
times have refused to be justified by the aid of secular knowledge. In
consequence, all the world over there have been fights between secular
knowledge and religious knowledge, the one claiming infallible authority as its
guide, refusing to listen to anything that secular knowledge has to say on the
point, the other, with its shining instrument of reason, wanting to cut to
pieces everything religion could bring forward. This fight has been and is
still waged in every country. Religions have been again and again defeated, and
almost exterminated. The worship of the goddess of Reason during the French
Revolution was not the first manifestation of that phenomenon in the history of
humanity, it was a re-enactment of what had happened in ancient times, but in
modern times it has assumed greater proportions. The physical sciences are
better equipped now than formerly, and religions have become less and less
equipped. The foundations have been all undermined, and the modern man,
whatever he may say in public, knows in the privacy of his heart that he can no
more "believe". Believing certain things because an organised body of
priests tells him to believe, believing because it is written in certain books,
believing because his people like him to believe, the modern man knows to be
impossible for him. There are, of course, a number of people who seem to
acquiesce in the so-called popular faith, but we also know for certain that
they do not think. Their idea of belief may be better translated as
"not-thinking-carelessness". This fight cannot last much longer without
breaking to pieces all the buildings of religion.
The question is: Is
there a way out? To put it in a more concrete form: Is religion to justify
itself by the discoveries of reason, through which every other science
justifies itself? Are the same methods of investigation, which we apply to
sciences and knowledge outside, to be applied to the science of Religion? In my
opinion this must be so, and I am also of opinion that the sooner it is done
the better. If a religion is destroyed by such investigations, it was then all
the time useless, unworthy superstition; and the sooner it goes the better. I
am thoroughly convinced that its destruction would be the best thing that could
happen. All that is dross will be taken off, no doubt, but the essential parts
of religion will emerge triumphant out of this investigation. Not only will it
be made scientific — as scientific, at least, as any of the conclusions of
physics or chemistry — but will have greater strength, because physics or
chemistry has no internal mandate to vouch for its truth, which religion has.
People who deny the
efficacy of any rationalistic investigation into religion seem to me somewhat
to be contradicting themselves. For instance, the Christian claims that his
religion is the only true one, because it was revealed to so-and-so. The
Mohammedan makes the same claim for his religion; his is the only true one,
because it was revealed to so-and-so. But the Christian says to the Mohammedan,
"Certain parts of your ethics do not seem to be right. For instance, your
books say, my Mohammedan friend, that an infidel may be converted to the
religion of Mohammed by force, and if he will not accept the Mohammedan
religion he may be killed; and any Mohammedan who kills such an infidel will
get a sure entry into heaven, whatever may have been his sins or
misdeeds." The Mohammedan will retort by saying, "It is right for me
to do so, because my book enjoins it. It will be wrong on my part not to do
so." The Christian says, "But my book does not say so." The Mohammedan
replies, "I do not know; I am not bound by the authority of your book; my
book says, 'Kill all the infidels'. How do you know which is right and which is
wrong? Surely what is written in my book is right and what your book says, 'Do
not kill,' is wrong. You also say the same thing, my Christian friend; you say
that what Jehovah declared to the Jews is right to do, and what he forbade them
to do is wrong. So say I, Allah declared in my book that certain things should
be done, and that certain things should not be done, and that is all the test
of right and wrong." In spite of that the Christian is not satisfied; he
insists on a comparison of the morality of the Sermon on the Mount with the
morality of the Koran. How is this to be decided? Certainly not by the books,
because the books, fighting between themselves, cannot be the judges. Decidedly
then we have to admit that there is something more universal than these books,
something higher than all the ethical codes that are in the world, something which
can judge between the strength of inspirations of different nations. Whether we
declare it boldly, clearly, or not — it is evident that here we appeal to
reason.
Now, the question
arises if this light of reason is able to judge between inspiration and
inspiration, and if this light can uphold its standard when the quarrel is
between prophet and prophet, if it has the power of understanding anything
whatsoever of religion. If it has not, nothing can determine the hopeless fight
of books and prophets which has been going on through ages; for it means that
all religions are mere lies, hopelessly contradictory, without any constant
idea of ethics. The proof of religion depends on the truth of the constitution
of man, and not on any books. These books are the outgoings, the effects of
man's constitution; man made these books. We are yet to see the books that made
man. Reason is equally an effect of that common cause, the constitution of man,
where our appeal must be. And yet, as reason alone is directly connected with
this constitution, it should be resorted to, as long as it follows faithfully
the same. What do I mean by reason? I mean what every educated man or woman is
wanting to do at the present time, to apply the discoveries of secular
knowledge to religion. The first principle of reasoning is that the particular
is explained by the general, the general by the more general, until we come to
the universal. For instance, we have the idea of law. If something happens and
we believe that it is the effect of such and such a law, we are satisfied; that
is an explanation for us. What we mean by that explanation is that it is proved
that this one effect, which had dissatisfied us, is only one particular of a
general mass of occurrences which we designate by the word "law".
When one apple fell, Newton was disturbed; but when he found that all apples
fell, it was gravitation, and he was satisfied. This is one principle of human
knowledge. I see a particular being, a human being, in the street. I refer him
to the bigger conception of man, and I am satisfied; I know he is a man by
referring him to the more general. So the particulars are to be referred to the
general, the general to the more general, and everything at last to the
universal, the last concept that we have, the most universal — that of
existence. Existence is the most universal concept.
We are all human
beings; that is to say, each one of us, as it were, a particular part of the
general concept, humanity. A man, and a cat, and a dog, are all animals. These
particular examples, as man, or dog, or cat, are parts of a bigger and more
general concept, animal. The man, and the cat, and the dog, and the plant, and
the tree, all come under the still more general concept, life. Again, all
these, all beings and all materials, come under the one concept of existence,
for we all are in it. This explanation merely means referring the particular to
a higher concept, finding more of its kind. The mind, as it were, has stored up
numerous classes of such generalisations. It is, as it were, full of
pigeon-holes where all these ideas are grouped together, and whenever we find a
new thing the mind immediately tries to find out its type in one of these
pigeon-holes. If we find it, we put the new thing in there and are satisfied,
and we are said to have known the thing. This is what is meant by knowledge,
and no more. And if we do not find that there is something like it, we are
dissatisfied, and have to wait until we find a further classification for it,
already existing in the mind. Therefore, as I have already pointed out,
knowledge is more or less classification. There is something more. A second
explanation of knowledge is that the explanation of a thing must come from
inside and not from outside. There had been the belief that, when a man threw
up a stone and it fell, some demon dragged it down. Many occurrences which are
really natural phenomena are attributed by people to unnatural beings. That a
ghost dragged down the stone was an explanation that was not in the thing itself,
it was an explanation from outside; but the second explanation of gravitation
is something in the nature of the stone; the explanation is coming from inside.
This tendency you will find throughout modern thought; in one word, what is
meant by science is that the explanations of things are in their own nature,
and that no external beings or existences are required to explain what is going
on in the universe. The chemist never requires demons, or ghosts, or anything
of that sort, to explain his phenomena. The physicist never requires any one of
these to explain the things he knows, nor does any other scientist. And this is
one of the features of science which I mean to apply to religion. In this
religions are found wanting and that is why they are crumbling into pieces.
Every science wants its explanations from inside, from the very nature of
things; and the religions are not able to supply this. There is an ancient
theory of a personal deity entirely separate from the universe, which has been
held from the very earliest time. The arguments in favour of this have been
repeated again and again, how it is necessary to have a God entirely separate
from the universe, an extra-cosmic deity, who has created the universe out of
his will, and is conceived by religion to be its ruler. We find, apart from all
these arguments, the Almighty God painted as the All-merciful, and at the same
time, inequalities remain in the world. These things do not concern the
philosopher at all, but he says the heart of the thing was wrong; it was an
explanation from outside, and not inside. What is the cause of the universe?
Something outside of it, some being who is moving this universe! And just as it
was found insufficient to explain the phenomenon of the falling stone, so this
was found insufficient to explain religion. And religions are falling to
pieces, because they cannot give a better explanation than that.
Another idea connected
with this, the manifestation of the same principle, that the explanation of
everything comes from inside it, is the modern law of evolution. The whole
meaning of evolution is simply that the nature of a thing is reproduced, that
the effect is nothing but the cause in another form, that all the
potentialities of the effect were present in the cause, that the whole of
creation is but an evolution and not a creation. That is to say, every effect
is a reproduction of a preceding cause, changed only by the circumstances, and
thus it is going on throughout the universe, and we need not go outside the
universe to seek the causes of these changes; they are within. It is
unnecessary to seek for any cause outside. This also is breaking down religion.
What I mean by breaking down religion is that religions that have held on to
the idea of an extra-cosmic deity, that he is a very big man and nothing else,
can no more stand on their feet; they have been pulled down, as it were.
Can there be a religion
satisfying these two principles? I think there can be. In the first place we
have seen that we have to satisfy the principle of generalisation. The
generalisation principle ought to be satisfied along with the principle of
evolution. We have to come to an ultimate generalisation, which not only will
be the most universal of all generalisations, but out of which everything else
must come. It will be of the same nature as the lowest effect; the cause, the
highest, the ultimate, the primal cause, must be the same as the lowest and
most distant of its effects, a series of evolutions. The Brahman of the Vedanta
fulfils that condition, because Brahman is the last generalisation to which we
can come. It has no attributes but is Existence, Knowledge, and Bliss —
Absolute. Existence, we have seen, is the very ultimate generalisation which
the human mind can come to. Knowledge does not mean the knowledge we have, but
the essence of that, that which is expressing itself in the course of evolution
in human beings or in other animals as knowledge. The essence of that knowledge
is meant, the ultimate fact beyond, if I may be allowed to say so, even
consciousness. That is what is meant by knowledge and what we see in the
universe as the essential unity of things. To my mind, if modern science is
proving anything again and again, it is this, that we are one — mentally,
spiritually, and physically. It is wrong to say we are even physically
different. Supposing we are materialists, for argument's sake, we shall have to
come to this, that the whole universe is simply an ocean of matter, of which
you and I are like little whirlpools. Masses of matter are coming into each
whirlpool, taking the whirlpool form, and coming out as matter again. The
matter that is in my body may have been in yours a few years ago, or in the
sun, or may have been the matter in a plant, and so on, in a continuous state
of flux. What is meant by your body and my body? It is the oneness of the body.
So with thought. It is an ocean of thought, one infinite mass, in which your
mind and my mind are like whirlpools. Are you not seeing the effect now, how my
thoughts are entering into yours, and yours into mine? The whole of our lives
is one; we are one, even in thought. Coming to a still further generalisation,
the essence of matter and thought is their potentiality of spirit; this is the
unity from which all have come, and that must essentially be one. We are
absolutely one; we are physically one, we are mentally one, and as spirit, it
goes without saying, that we are one, if we believe in spirit at all. This
oneness is the one fact that is being proved every day by modern science. To
proud man it is told: You are the same as that little worm there; think not
that you are something enormously different from it; you are the same. You have
been that in a previous incarnation, and the worm has crawled up to this man
state, of which you are so proud. This grand preaching, the oneness of things,
making us one with everything that exists, is the great lesson to learn, for
most of us are very glad to be made one with higher beings, but nobody wants to
be made one with lower beings. Such is human ignorance, that if anyone's
ancestors were men whom society honoured, even if they were brutish, if they were
robbers, even robber barons, everyone of us would try to trace our ancestry to
them; but if among our ancestors we had poor, honest gentlemen, none of us
wants to trace our ancestry to them. But the scales are falling from our eyes,
truth is beginning to manifest itself more and more, and that is a great gain
to religion. That is exactly the teaching of the Advaita, about which I am
lecturing to you. The Self is the essence of this universe, the essence of all
souls; He is the essence of your own life, nay, "Thou art That". You
are one with this universe. He who says he is different from others, even by a
hair's breadth, immediately becomes miserable. Happiness belongs to him who
knows this oneness, who knows he is one with this universe.
Thus we see that the
religion of the Vedanta can satisfy the demands of the scientific world, by
referring it to the highest generalisation and to the law of evolution. That
the explanation of a thing comes from within itself is still more completely
satisfied by Vedanta. The Brahman, the God of the Vedanta, has nothing outside
of Himself; nothing at all. All this indeed is He: He is in the universe: He is
the universe Himself. "Thou art the man, Thou art the woman, Thou art the
young man walking in the pride of youth, Thou art the old man tottering in his
step." He is here. Him we see and feel: in Him we live, and move, and have
our being. You have that conception in the New Testament. It is that idea, God
immanent in the universe, the very essence, the heart, the soul of things. He
manifests Himself, as it were, in this universe. You and I are little bits,
little points, little channels, little expressions, all living inside of that
infinite ocean of Existence, Knowledge, and Bliss. The difference between man
and man, between angels and man, between man and animals, between animals and
plants, between plants and stones is not in kind, because everyone from the
highest angel to the lowest particle of matter is but an expression of that one
infinite ocean, and the difference is only in degree. I am a low manifestation,
you may be a higher, but in both the materials are the same. You and I are both
outlets of the same channel, and that is God; as such, your nature is God, and
so is mine. You are of the nature of God by your birthright; so am I. You may
be an angel of purity, and I may be the blackest of demons. Nevertheless, my
birthright is that infinite ocean of Existence, Knowledge, and Bliss. So is
yours. You have manifested yourself more today. Wait; I will manifest myself
more yet, for I have it all within me. No extraneous explanation is sought;
none is asked for. The sum total of this whole universe is God Himself. Is God
then matter? No, certainly not, for matter is that God perceived by the five
senses; that God as perceived through the intellect is mind; and when the
spirit sees, He is seen as spirit. He is not matter, but whatever is real in
matter is He. Whatever is real in this chair is He, for the chair requires two
things to make it. Something was outside which my senses brought to me, and to
which my mind contributed something else, and the combination of these two is
the chair. That which existed eternally, independent of the senses and of the
intellect, was the Lord Himself. Upon Him the senses are painting chairs, and
tables, and rooms, houses, and worlds, and moons, and suns, and stars, and
everything else. How is it, then, that we all see this same chair, that we are
all alike painting these various things on the Lord, on this Existence,
Knowledge, and Bliss? It need not be that all paint the same way, but those who
paint the same way are on the same plane of existence and therefore they see
one another's paintings as well as one another. There may be millions of beings
between you and me who do not paint the Lord in the same way, and them and
their paintings we do not see.
On the other hand, as
you all know, the modern physical researches are tending more and more to
dernonstrate that what is real is but the finer; the gross is simply
appearance. However that may be, we have seen that if any theory of religion
can stand the test of modern reasoning, it is the Advaita, because it fulfils
its two requirements. It is the highest generalisation, beyond even
personality, generalisation which is common to every being. A generalisation
ending in the Personal God can never be universal, for, first of all, to
conceive of a Personal God we must say, He is all-merciful, all-good. But this
world is a mixed thing, some good and some bad. We cut off what we like, and
generalise that into a Personal God! Just as you say a Personal God is this and
that, so you have also to say that He is not this and not that. And you will
always find that the idea of a Personal God has to carry with it a personal
devil. That is how we clearly see that the idea of a Personal God is not a true
generalisation, we have to go beyond, to the Impersonal. In that the universe
exists, with all its joys and miseries, for whatever exists in it has all come
from the Impersonal. What sort of a God can He be to whom we attribute evil and
other things? The idea is that both good and evil are different aspects, or
manifestations of the same thing. The idea that they were two was a very wrong
idea from the first, and it has been the cause of a good deal of the misery in
this world of ours — the idea that right and wrong are two separate things, cut
and dried, independent of each other, that good and evil are two eternally
separable and separate things. I should be very glad to see a man who could
show me something which is good all the time, and something which is bad all
the time. As if one could stand and gravely define some occurrences in this
life of ours as good and good alone, and some which are bad and bad alone. That
which is good today may be evil tomorrow. That which is bad today may be good
tomorrow. What is good for me may be bad for you. The conclusion is, that like
every other thing, there is an evolution in good and evil too. There is
something which in its evolution, we call, in one degree, good, and in another,
evil. The storm that kills my friend I call evil, but that may have saved the
lives of hundreds of thousands of people by killing the bacilli in the air.
They call it good, but I call it evil. So both good and evil belong to the
relative world, to phenomena. The Impersonal God we propose is not a relative
God; therefore it cannot be said that It is either good or bad, but that It is
something beyond, because It is neither good nor evil. Good, however, is a
nearer manifestation of It than evil.
What is the effect of
accepting such an Impersonal Being, an Impersonal Deity? What shall we gain?
Will religion stand as a factor in human life, our consoler, our helper? What
becomes of the desire of the human heart to pray for help to some being? That
will all remain. The Personal God will remain, but on a better basis. He has
been strengthened by the Impersonal. We have seen that without the Impersonal,
the Personal cannot remain. If you mean to say there is a Being entirely
separate from this universe, who has created this universe just by His will,
out of nothing, that cannot be proved. Such a state of things cannot be. But if
we understand the idea of the Impersonal, then the idea of the Personal can
remain there also. This universe, in its various forms, is but the various
readings of the same Impersonal. When we read it with the five senses, we call
it the material world. If there be a being with more senses than five, he will
read it as something else. If one of us gets the electrical sense, he will see
the universe as something else again. There are various forms of that same
Oneness, of which all these various ideas of worlds are but various readings,
and the Personal God is the highest reading that can be attained to, of that
Impersonal, by the human intellect. So that the Personal God is true as much as
this chair is true, as much as this world is true, but no more. It is not
absolute truth. That is to say, the Personal God is that very Impersonal God
and, therefore, it is true, just as I, as a human being, am true and not true
at the same time. It is not true that I am what you see I am; you can satisfy
yourself on that point. I am not the being that you take me to be. You can
satisfy your reason as to that, because light, and various vibrations, or
conditions of the atmosphere, and all sorts of motions inside me have
contributed to my being looked upon as what I am, by you. If any one of these
conditions change, I am different again. You may satisfy yourself by taking a
photograph of the same man under different conditions of light. So I am what I
appear in relation to your senses, and yet, in spite of all these facts, there
is an unchangeable something of which all these are different states of
existence, the impersonal me, of which thousands of me's are different persons.
I was a child, I was young, I am getting older. Every day of my life, my body
and thoughts are changing, but in spite of all these changes, the sum-total of
them constitutes a mass which is a constant quantity. That is the impersonal
me, of which all these manifestations form, as it were, parts.
Similarly, the
sum-total of this universe is immovable, we know, but everything pertaining to
this universe consists of motion, everything is in a constant state of flux,
everything changing and moving. At the same time, we see that the universe as a
whole is immovable, because motion is a relative term. I move with regard to
the chair, which does not move. There must be at least two to make motion. If
this whole universe is taken as a unit there is no motion; with regard to what
should it move? Thus the Absolute is unchangeable and immovable, and all the
movements and changes are only in the phenomenal world, the limited. That whole
is Impersonal, and within this Impersonal are all these various persons
beginning with the lowest atom, up to God, the Personal God, the Creator, the
Ruler of the Universe, to whom we pray, before whom we kneel, and so on. Such a
Personal God can be established with a great deal of reason. Such a Personal God
is explicable as the highest manifestation of the Impersonal. You and I are
very low manifestations, and the Personal God is the highest of which we can
conceive. Nor can you or I become that Personal God. When the Vedanta says you
and I are God, it does not mean the Personal God. To take an example. Out of a
mass of clay a huge elephant of clay is manufactured, and out of the same clay,
a little clay mouse is made. Would the clay mouse ever be able to become the
clay elephant? But put them both in water and they are both clay; as clay they
are both one, but as mouse and elephant there will be an eternal difference
between them. The Infinite, the Impersonal, is like the clay in the example. We
and the Ruler of the Universe are one, but as manifested beings, men, we are
His eternal slaves, His worshippers. Thus we see that the Personal God remains.
Everything else in this relative world remains, and religion is made to stand
on a better foundation. Therefore it is necessary, that we first know the
Impersonal in order to know the Personal.
As we have seen, the
law of reason says, the particular is only known through the general. So all
these particulars, from man to God, are only known through the Impersonal, the
highest generalisation. Prayers will remain, only they will get a better
meaning. All those senseless ideas of prayer, the low stages of prayer, which
are simply giving words to all sorts of silly desire in our minds, perhaps,
will have to go. In all sensible religions, they never allow prayers to God; they
allow prayers to gods. That is quite natural. The Roman Catholics pray to the
saints; that is quite good. But to pray to God is senseless. To ask God to give
you a breath of air, to send down a shower of rain, to make fruits grow in your
garden, and so on, is quite unnatural. The saints, however, who were little
beings like ourselves, may help us. But to pray to the Ruler of the Universe,
prating every little need of ours, and from our childhood saying, "O Lord,
I have a headache; let it go," is ridiculous. There have been millions of
souls that have died in this world, and they are all here; they have become
gods and angels; let them come to your help. But God! It cannot be. Unto Him we
must go for higher things. A fool indeed is he who, resting on the banks of the
Gangâ, digs a little well for water; a fool indeed is he who, living near a
mine of diamonds, digs for bits of crystal.
And indeed we shall be
fools if we go to the Father of all mercy, Father of all love, for trivial
earthly things. Unto Him, therefore, we shall go for light, for strength, for
love. But so long as there is weakness and a craving for servile dependence in
us, there will be these little prayers and ideas of the worship of the Personal
God. But those who are highly advanced do not care for such little helps, they
have wellnigh forgotten all about this seeking things for themselves, wanting
things for themselves. The predominant idea in them is — not I, but thou, my
brother. Those are the fit persons to worship the Impersonal God. And what is
the worship of the Impersonal God? No slavery there — "O Lord, I am
nothing, have mercy on me." You know the old Persian poem, translated into
English: "I came to see my beloved. The doors were closed. I knocked and a
voice came from inside. 'Who art thou?' 'I am so-and-so' The door was not
opened. A second time I came and knocked; I was asked the same question, and
gave the same answer. The door opened not. I came a third time, and the same
question came. I answered, 'I am thee, my love,' and the door opened."
Worship of the Impersonal God is through truth. And what is truth? That I am
He. When I say that I am not Thou, it is untrue. When I say I am separate from
you it is a lie, a terrible lie. I am one with this universe, born one. It is
self evident to my senses that I am one with the universe. I am one with the
air that surrounds me, one with heat, one with light, eternally one with the
whole Universal Being, who is called this universe, who is mistaken for the
universe, for it is He and nothing else, the eternal subject in the heart who
says, "I am," in every heart — the deathless one, the sleepless one,
ever awake, the immortal, whose glory never dies, whose powers never fail. I am
one with That.
This is all the worship
of the Impersonal, and what is the result? The whole life of man will be
changed. Strength, strength it is that we want so much in this life, for what
we call sin and sorrow have all one cause, and that is our weakness. With
weakness comes ignorance, and with ignorance comes misery. It will make us
strong. Then miseries will be laughed at, then the violence of the vile will be
smiled at, and the ferocious tiger will reveal, behind its tiger's nature, my
own Self. That will be the result. That soul is strong that has become one with
the Lord; none else is strong. In your own Bible, what do you think was the
cause of that strength of Jesus of Nazareth, that immense, infinite strength
which laughed at traitors, and blessed those that were willing to murder him?
It was that, "I and my Father are one"; it was that prayer,
"Father, just as I am one with you, so make them all one with me."
That is the worship of the Impersonal God. Be one with the universe, be one
with Him. And this Impersonal God requires no demonstrations, no proofs. He is
nearer to us than even our senses, nearer to us than our own thoughts; it is in
and through Him that we see and think. To see anything, I must first see Him.
To see this wall I first see Him, and then the wall, for He is the eternal
subject. Who is seeing whom? He is here in the heart of our hearts. Bodies and
minds change; misery, happiness, good and evil come and go; days and years roll
on; life comes and goes; but He dies not. The same voice, "I am, I
am," is eternal, unchangeable. In Him and through Him we know everything.
In Him and through Him we see everything. In Him and through Him we sense, we
think, we live, and we are. And that "I," which we mistake to be a
little "I," limited, is not only my "I," but yours, the
"I" of everyone, of the animals, of the angels, of the lowest of the
low. That "I am" is the same in the murderer as in the saint, the
same in the rich as in the poor, the same in man as in woman, the same in man
as in animals. From the lowest amoeba to the highest angel, He resides in every
soul, and eternally declares, "I am He, I am He." When we have
understood that voice eternally present there, when we have learnt this lesson,
the whole universe will have expressed its secret. Nature will have given up
her secret to us. Nothing more remains to be known. Thus we find the truth for
which all religions search, that all this knowledge of material sciences is but
secondary. That is the only true knowledge which makes us one with this
Universal God of the Universe.
SOURCE: The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda; Volume-1
Lectures and Discourses
3.9.13
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)