Purna Yoga
By
YOGA we can rise out of falsehood into
truth, out of weakness into force, out of pain and grief into bliss, out of
bondage into freedom, out of death into immortality, out of darkness into
light, out of confusion into purity, out of imperfection into perfection, out
of self-division into unity, out of Maya into God. All other utilisation of
Yoga is for special and fragmentary advantages not always worth pursuing. Only
that which aims at possessing the fullness of God is Purna Yoga; the Sadhaka of
the Divine Perfection is the Purna Yogin. Page -61 universe and as the universe; in the universe He appears to be its Soul and
Lord, as the universe He appears to be the motion or process of the Will of the
Lord and to become all the subjective and objective results of the motion. All
the states of the Brahman, the transcendent, the continent, the universal, the
individual are informed and sustained by the divine Personality. He is both the
Existent and the state of existence. We call the state of existence the
Impersonal Brahman, the Existent the Personal Brahman. There is no difference
between them except to the play of our consciousness; for every impersonal
state depends upon a manifest or secret Personality and can reveal the
Personality which it holds and veils, and every Personality attaches to itself
and can plunge itself into an impersonal existence. This they can do because
Personality and Impersonality are merely different states of self-consciousness
in our Absolute Being. Page-62 upper world are
expressed or try to express themselves under different conditions. Pure in
their own homes, they are in this foreign country subject to perverse, impure
and disturbing combinations and workings. The ultimate object of life is to get
rid of the perversity, impurity and disturbance and express them perfectly in
these other conditions. Our life on this earth is a divine poem that we are
translating into earthly language or a strain of music which we are rendering into
words. Being in Sat is
one in multiplicity, one that regards its multiplicity without being lost or
confused in it and multiplicity that knows itself as one without losing the
power of multiple play in the universe. Under the conditions of mind, life and
body, ahamkāra is born, the subjective or objective form of
consciousness is falsely taken for self-existent being, the body for an
independent reality and the ego for an independent personality; the one loses
itself in us in its multiplicity and it recovers its unity, finds it difficult,
owing to the nature of mind, to preserve its play of multiplicity. Therefore
when we are absorbed in the world, we miss God in Himself, when we see God, we
miss Him in the world. Our business is to break down and dissolve the mental
ego and get back to our divine unity without losing our power of individual and
multiple existence in the universe. Consciousness in Chit is luminous, free, illimitable and effective; that which it is aware of as Chit (jñāna-śakti) it fulfils infallibly as Tapas (kriyā-śakti); for Jnana Shakti is only the stable and comprehensive, Kriya Shakti only the motional and intensive form of one self-luminous Conscious Being. They are one power of conscious force of God (Chit-Shakti of Sat- Purusha). But in the lower hemisphere, under the conditions of mind, life and body, the luminousness becomes divided and broken up into uneven rays, the freedom trammelled by egoism and unequal forms, the effectiveness veiled by the uneven play of forces. We have, therefore, states of consciousness, non-consciousness and false consciousness, knowledge and ignorance and false knowledge, effective force and inertia and ineffective force. Our business is by renouncing our divided and unequal8 individual force of action and thought into the one, undivided universal Chit-Shakti of Kali to replace our egoistic activities by Page-63 the play in our body of the universal Kali and thus exchange blindness and
ignorance for knowledge and ineffective human strength for the divine effective
Force. Inferior mankind gravitates downward from mind towards life and body; average mankind dwells constant in mind limited Page-64 by and looking towards life and body; superior mankind levitates upward either
to idealised mentality or to pure idea, direct truth of knowledge and
spontaneous truth of existence; supreme mankind rises to divine beatitude and
from that level either goes upward to pure Sat and Parabrahman or remains to
beatify its lower members and raise to divinity in itself and others this human
existence.
II PARABRAHMAN, MUKTI AND HUMAN THOUGHT SYSTEMS
Page -65 not become
anything you are not already, nor does the universe cease to operate. It only
means that God throws back out of the ocean of manifest consciousness one stream
or movement of Himself into that from which all consciousness proceeded. Therefore to lust after becoming
Parabrahman is a sort of luminous illusion or sattwic play of Maya; for in
reality there is none bound or none free and none needing to be freed and all
is only God's Lila, Parabrahman's play of manifestation. God uses this sattwic
Maya in certain egos in order to draw them upwards in the line of His special
purpose and for these egos it is the only right and possible path. Page -66 not Atman or
un-Atman or Maya; not Personality or Impersonality; not Quality or Non-Quality;
not Consciousness or Non-Consciousness; not Bliss or Non-Bliss; not Purusha or
Prakriti; not god nor man nor animal; not release nor bondage; but something of
which all these are primary or derivative, general or particular symbols.
Still, when we say Parabrahman is not this or that, we mean that It cannot in
its essentiality be limited to this or that symbol or any sum of symbols; in a
sense Para- brahman is all this and all this is Parabrahman. There is nothing
else which all this can be. Parabrahman being Absolute is not subject to logic,
for logic applies only to the determinate. We talk confusion if we say that the
Absolute cannot manifest the determinate and therefore the universe is false or
non-existent. The very nature of the Absolute is that we do not know what it is
or is not, what it can do or cannot do; we have no reason to suppose that there
is anything it cannot do or that its Absolute- ness is limited by any kind of
impotency. We experience spiritually that when we go beyond everything else we
come to something Absolute; we experience spiritually that the universe is in
the nature of a manifestation proceeding, as it were, from the Absolute; but
all these words and phrases are merely intellectual terms trying to express the
inexpressible. We must state what we see as best we can, but need not dispute
what others see or state; rather we must accept and in our own system locate
and account for what they have seen and stated. Our only dispute is with those
who deny credit to the vision or freedom and value to the statements of others;
not with those who are content with stating their own vision. You will find disputants questioning your system on the Page-67 ground that it is not consistent with this or that Shastra or this or that great authority, whether philosophers, saints or Avatars. Remember then that realisation and experience are alone of essential importance. What Shankara argued or Vivekananda conceived intellectually about existence or even what Ramakrishna stated from his multitudinous and varied realisations, is only of value to you so far as you are moved by God to accept and renew it in your own experience. The opinions of thinkers and saints and Avatars should be accepted as hints but not as fetters. What matters to you is what you have seen or what God in His universal personality or impersonally or again personally in some teacher, Guru or path-finder undertakes to show to you in the path of Yoga.
Page-68 say "This is not the Ramayana", "This is not the Iliad" and yet, looking at the comparative adequacy of the expressions which do succeed in catching something of the original spirit and intention, wert the same time to say "This is Valmikie", "This is Homer". There is no other difference except this of standpoint. The Upanishads speak of the Absolute Parabrahman as Tat; they say Sa when they speak of the Absolute Parapurusha. Page-69 |