Begin your puja, with a prayer for spiritual
elevation with heart full of love and devotion.
"O Master!
Thou art the Real Goal of human life.
We are yet but slaves of wishes
Putting bar to our advancement.
Thou art the only God and power
To bring us up to that stage."
The second commandment has reference to the
prayer which we offer. The prayer has three
parts. The first refers to our goal, which is
the Highest or Ultimate Calmness beyond all our
gross experiences. The second part has reference
to the obstacles or impediments to the
attainment of that Goal or God. Master is the
Highest kind of existence and it is Him we have
to reach. The wishes which are impediments to
our return to or experience of God are those
which are other than our legitimate duties. We
have each of us our duties and these duties are
cast on us by our very conditions of common
life. In a sense they are our svadharma which
should not be given up. As Sri Krishna has
stated it is necessary to do one's own duty
rather than not do it. It is necessary not to do
other person's duties (paradharma) which alone
cause fear to each one of us. If we know this
then we will not venture to do other people's
duties. This in a sense is a wish as
distinguished from duty (dharma). These wishes
may pertain to all that is not necessary for our
attaining the Highest State. The third part of
the prayer shows that God or Master alone can
lead us to That State carrying us through all
impediments and obstacles which we have created
between the Highest State and ourselves, thanks
to lifelong attachment to 'wishes', desires and
other extraneous things.
Briefly the Master has sketched how we have
descended by three steps. Firstly there was that
Highest State of Calm (this, of course, is the
true bliss-transcendent state). This is the
Highest Reality and essence. The creation starts
with essence descending and due to this descent
we have the heat generated during this process.
This gathers particles which have the essence,
however, as the nucleus, but forming rings round
it. Those drops or droplets gather together and
form circles and circles, and forming into
rivers finally become like an ocean of heat. The
samsara sagara or the ocean of samsara thus
forms with extreme heat outside, though the
inward Calm Essence is present.
The outer rings with heat thus give us the
experience of suffering and loss of calm. The
search for calmness or peace of mind thus is set
up. It is true that many persons think that this
heat of the outer is the world of joys or ananda,
but as we have said it is but the inversion of
the Highest Bliss. It is necessary to reinvert
the whole being. This is done by piercing
through the outer shells or rings and arriving
at the central nucleus of Calm Essence within.
This is what the Master does when the prayer is
offered. Thus almost immediately after the
prayer we have the experience of the inward calm
in this Marga because the Master without any ado
removes the obstacles that are in the form of
many activities around particles that form the
rings. This is the first step of the initiation.
The Master says the prayer implies the
relationship of Master and servant. The servant
fully relies on the power of the Master who is
established in the Highest State and is absorbed
in It always. The servanthood (dasya) implies
that he permits himself to be used as the Master
likes, that is for the purpose of not getting
service from him, but for the purpose of raising
his person to the Highest condition. It has been
said that once the individual surrenders himself
to the Highest, the Highest then trains the
servant for freedom and Divine work. At the
beginning the individual is called a servant who
is in training for his own good, to achieve the
calm and the state of utter freedom in God. The
yoga is the Master's. Indeed it is well-known
that our Master always speaks of service to his
abhyasis rather than of getting service from
them.
Prayer is the most efficacious method, for it
releases the conditions that bring about in the
most simple way the realization. Some prefer a
long prayer but whatever may be the prayer if it
does not contain the essential conditions of
fixing the goal of prayer, of oneself and of
what one seeks, the means or selection of the
means, and does not realize that one must be
prepared to eschew the impediments which could
be eschewed by one leaving the rest to be
removed by the Master, it is not a complete
prayer or a right one.
There is a reference to Puja or worship. The
idea of worship is essential to all religions.
The God to be worshipped, of course, should be
the Highest. The Highest alone can grant us the
peace that passeth understanding and which is
the Original or Ultimate Source. God is
omnipervasive or everywhere. Worship involves
the realization that man is in need of
worshipping adoring some one; we all seek in
worship those who are better than ourselves.
Hero-worship owes its strength to this need for
an object of worship. This instinctive need
which everyone feels shows that man is not all
but needs the Highest. What we seek is the
Master or leader and ourselves are but his
followers or servants. Sectarian names are not
very important provided we are able to grant to
those names the meaning of Omnipervasiveness.
Since our worship is at the heart and
concentration is at the heart it follows that
the Omnipervasiveness of God includes His being
within the heart. That is why the centre of the
Calm is to be visualized or imagined at the
heart. In a sense Omnipervasiveness will
preclude the fixing of form of God in any manner
except as the Transcendent Calm Central
Principle at the heart which begins to break
through or unwind the knots or circles that have
made for the separation and distance between the
individual and the Divine.
Though one may start with the traditional
worship that each one has inherited, yet once
this abhyasa is taken up one gets to the subtler
worship of the Divine and surely attains the
Highest State in the shortest possible time.
Prayer finally is the expression of one's
utter willingness and acceptance of the life of
surrender to the Ultimate as the goal and means
of attainment.
(2)
The prayer is an oral and mental act of
self-offering to the Highest Being. Its purpose
must be defined. That purpose must state the
object of the prayer which is an instrument so
to speak seeking the fulfilment of that aim. Men
have all kinds of goals. Our ancients usually
said that man has four aims: Artha (wealth and
power), Kama (pleasures and enjoyments), Dharma
(life of law and justice) and Moksha (liberation
from all kinds of bondage and attainment of
release from birth and death). President
Eisenhower seems to be right in calling these
food, family, friendship and freedom. All beings
have needs of these four kinds. Most men are
seekers of wealth and pleasure which is of
course legitimate when such wealth and pleasure
are for the support of one's life in simplicity
and truthfulness. Thus necessary needs of the
body and its comfort are legitimate and they are
to be conditioned by the principle of respect
for other people's similar needs which is law.
However, these are but means to the primary
necessity of freedom from the bondage that
develops in the use and pursuit of these ends.
They tend to become ends in themselves rather
than means to the highest end of man - his
freedom from death and birth or rather freedom
from birth after death. Both have been sought.
There have been men who have again and again
sought physical immortality or freedom from
death. They have sought it through alchemy
(rasa), through mercurial and other
preparations. They have sought it through
hathayoga and lately through the help of the
vijnana (supermind). But the real goal is not
these but God Himself, not merely His
Experience, but Himself. The upanishad calls Him
the Immortal Person (Purana Purusa, Amrtam).
Therefore the Master is the ultimate godhead,
who in this samstha is called the Guru. All our
masters are Himself since it is through Him and
by Him is all these transmission done. It is His
Power that is working out the subtle changes in
us, transforming us so as to enable our knowing
Him, seeing Him and then entering into Him with
our Real Being. Jnatum, Drastrum Ca Tattvena
pravestum Ca as the Gita Acharya said.
God thus is our goal (upeya). The
Paramapurusartha or supreme goal greater than
even freedom from birth-death cycle. Shri Ram
Chandraji has thus laid great stress on this
most important goal of life. In this he has
followed the Vedic seer who affirmed that God is
greatest wealth (rayi) a wealth which is
undiminishing and infinite Achyuta, Ananta and
Amrta. Thus Sri Ramanuja also affirmed that the
Brahma or God is the goal of human life and in
fact all life.
The means or Upaya is also He. This is what
is expressed in the last part of the prayer, for
He alone has the power to lead us. Indeed God is
God because he is the Power and the only Power
which could take us to that state of his
Paramapada, Supreme Abode (dhama) from which
there is no return, even as the Gita-acharya
says. Other powers can lead us to their abodes
but the Supreme Being alone can lead us to His
abode. This is very important to remember for
the Supreme Being is one only and all other
powers are subordinate to Him unless He Himself
wills it or commands it. Therefore God who is
the Ultimate alone is the Power that can take us
to that state of His. All teachers are commanded
to take one to that state by Him. But if the
teachers are not competent or have not the Adesa
then it cannot be done by them. In our samstha
we find, the transmitted force by the Master is
the Highest Consciousness of God Himself that is
capable of leading one through all the images of
the created private world of ours. Thus
superconsciousness is higher than the vijnana or
supermind, even as it is above everything such
as mind and the senses. The yogas which use the
human mind fail, and surely those which use the
prana and others also fail. It is not quite
clear whether the supermind will succeed, as it
is but a penultimate mind and not the Supreme
Being Himself. Indeed the intermediating of the
mind of any kind is ruled out, for these are but
formations of that Power in Its Ksobha or
creative manifestations.
The Supreme Being or God and Master alone can
lead us to that Goal. In the ancient Veda it is
said that Agni who is the divine will alone
leads us to that Highest State, because he knows
the devious ways and can surmount the crooked
way of descent of man (jatavedas) and turn us to
the true path (supatha) that is subtle and
direct, to the Centre. Our Master who is one
with God is verily the Knower of the paths of
descent and ascent and, therefore, can
individually lead every individual to that
Highest State whatever may be the crookednesses
that have developed in him. He is the God of the
entire Universes (visvani deva). All this is
significantly brought out by the simple and
direct prayer. Thou art the only God and Power
that brings us to that state (of Thine).
The second part of the prayer states that we
(I) are (am) yet but slaves of our (my) wishes
putting bar to our (my) advancement. The prayer
could be made in the singular or plural
nominative as when one prays alone or in Satsang
or congregation. This is very important since it
assumes that man has desires and precisely those
that offer obstacles to one's attainment of the
Highest State or God. These are Pratibandhakas
or obstacles which are very difficult to remove
or abolish. We know that our desires of wealth
and pleasure are varied, some of them are
legitimate but when in excess they turn out to
be illegitimate and even misery - producing not
only to others but to oneself ultimately. The
search for wealth and pleasure has been
condemned and renunciation had also been such as
to lead to excess of renunciation, that is even
of the legitimate. The result has been two fold
obstacles due to excess of seeking and excess of
renouncing. The middle path, however, cannot be
arrived at by our mentality that is incapable of
Samatva (equableness). Secondly, desires are of
two kinds those that lead towards the goal and
desires that are turned away from the goal. If
the goal is constantly before one's vision, then
those desires that lead upto it are integrated
with it. These desires cease to be our desires
but are Divine Desires (satsamkalpa of God or
satyasamkalpa). The desires that have become our
peculiar difficulties on the path are desires
which are personal or private and seeking to
satisfy our human and animal nature. These
belong to the private universe which
unfortunately has been for all practical
purposes cut off from the Divine Universe. When
we turn to God these private desires act as
brakes to our turning and moving into God and
check our progress. This is due to our habits of
society and community no less than to our own
individual cravings for satisfaction. Indeed the
ego itself acts as a brake as it is feeding on
these desires and manifests itself through them.
We have our plant-ego, animal-ego and even when
we develop a supermental-ego it will proceed to
develop systems of autonomous functioning of
spheres of desires. This we have if we observe
ourselves, plant desires (torpor and stability
call tamas), animal desires (as activity and
movement and perpetuation of desires called
rajas) and mental desires (of having and
possessing and growing consciously).
Consciousness itself becomes a kind of
desire-result. But since this consciousness that
we have is but consciousness of limitation and
consciousness of need for a fuller experience,
the Ultimate is something very different from
this type of consciousness. This obviously
cannot be the nature of the Ultimate Being which
is infinite and omnipervasive and indivisible
and Ultimate depending on no other status or
state beyond it. Our desires have also been
habituated in the sense that we have all been
brought up to cultivate desires. Thus very
innocuous mottoes such as 'Aim High' and so on,
leave the definition of 'high' out and thus men
are pursuing the worldly height which brings out
the results of such ambition, sorrow, defeat and
collapse of ideals of the outer region. It has
been clearly shown through history that ideals
of infinite extension of power and rule over
Nature and Man has met with defeat invariably.
Outer power has a tendency to inflict self
defeat and dissolution, for it is not the
intrinsic goal of man. True religious and
spiritual life seeks inward discovery of God
rather than objectification of the personality
of God or of oneself. Desires are thus the
central problem for man.
Ignorance of one's true nature may be said to
be the cause of wrong desire. Ignorance of one's
present condition also is the second cause of
wrong desire. Men do not know which is right
desire and which is wrong desire. We are in a
world in which perhaps the wrong desire appears
to be right desire and right desires are said to
be wrong. Surely the 'right' of Buddha had the
inward-turn whereas the same 'right' of modern
man is outward-turn and the tables of
interpretation have been clearly turned. It
seems to be a capital truth that there is a
peculiar process of Vivarta or inversing or
upturning in the human mind itself which
periodically makes the right appear as wrong and
wrong appears as right. The meaning however, in
this inversion does not remain the same as in
formal logic. It is precisely the business or
task of the Supreme Consciousness to reverse or
inverse this inversion and lead to the proper
spiritual perception of the reality. It is a
task which the Divine Consciousness alone can
perform since it alone will modify the workings
of the ego which is the maintainer of the system
of inversions through habits ingrained by
desires of particular outward going type. Thus
the obstacles for ascent of the individual to
the awareness and experience of reality are
capable of being overcome or crossed over by the
Divine Consciousness working through man's heart
and carrying him to the higher centres or
spheres of reality experience.
All men are aware more and more in a world
that is expanding and becoming one in saying
that the 'old' man is no longer enough and that
the 'old' mentality is a bar to higher and
larger work of God. Both in the material and in
the spiritual sense man is inadequate and
confused. Expansion of his desires only develops
ambitions which cause more and more
estrangements and conflicts. The upward radical
transformation. The fixed ego of ours has to
become a plastic and spiritual vehicle of the
Divine Nature.
Desires centre round the ego and reinforce it
and, therefore, they have to be seen as
obstacles to ultimate realization of God who is
the Ultimate. God indeed is transcendent to all
our conceptions of Him.
Therefore, the Prayer starts with the
statement of our Goal (upaya-purushartha); the
impediments to that goal are stated next so as
to seek God as the helper and power to reach
Him. Lastly, He is sought as the means (upaya).
Vedanta indeed stated that God is both the means
and Goal of man.
In this connection ancient seers of the South
have found that the great system founded by Sri
Narayana and sponsored by Sri Krishna called the
Pancharatra stated that true prayer has to
contain the essential ingredient of integral
surrender. This self-surrender to God should
contain the basic limbs of (i) Anukulasamkalpa
(willing the helpful), (ii) Pratikulavarjana
(renunciation or abandoning of that which
impedes or obstructs of realization); (iii)
Goptrtvavaranam the choice or choosing of the
goal proper to our endeavour); (iv) Mahavisvasa
(faith supreme in the Guru or Master or God that
He is competent to save); (v) Atmanikshepa
(offering of the soul itself or placing it at
His disposal); and lastly (vi) Karpanya (utter
dependence on God for everything). Sri Ramanuja
and Venkatanatha called this nyasavidya. In the
Prayer given by Sri Ram Chandraji we have in
fact, the stating of the third limb
Goptrtvavaranam, first then the
Pratikulavarjanam, and thirdly the utter
dependence on God and placing of oneself under
the Master for the change and growth and
development and attainment (Atmanikshepa).
It is thus seen to be the simplest prayer
which has a direct appeal to God for a direct
approach.
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