SWAMIJI’S TIME - J.K. SIVAN
Before considering further how devotion to
duty helps us in our spiritual progress, let me place before you in a brief
compass another aspect of what we in India mean by Karma.
In every religion there
are three parts: philosophy, mythology, and ritual.
Philosophy of course is
the essence of every religion;
mythology explains and
illustrates it by means of the more or less legendary lives of great men,
stories and fables of wonderful things, and so on;
ritual gives to that
philosophy a still more concrete form, so that every one may grasp it — ritual
is in fact concretised philosophy.
This ritual is Karma; it
is necessary in every religion, because most of us cannot understand abstract
spiritual things until we grow much spiritually. It is easy for men to think
that they can understand anything; but when it comes to practical experience,
they find that abstract ideas are often very hard to comprehend. Therefore
symbols are of great help, and we cannot dispense with the symbolical method of
putting things before us. From time immemorial symbols have been used by all
kinds of religions. In one sense we cannot think but in symbols; words
themselves are symbols of thought. In another sense everything in the universe
may be looked upon as a symbol. The whole universe is a symbol, and God is the
essence behind. This kind of symbology is not simply the creation of man; it is
not that certain people belonging to a religion sit down together and think out
certain symbols, and bring them into existence out of their own minds. The
symbols of religion have a natural growth. Otherwise, why is it that certain
symbols are associated with
certain ideas in the mind of almost every one? Certain symbols are universally
prevalent. Many of you may think that the cross first came into existence as a
symbol in connection with the Christian religion, but as a matter of fact it
existed before Christianity was, before Moses was born, before the Vedas were
given out, before there was any human record of human things. The cross may be
found to have been in existence among the Aztecs and the Phoenicians; every
race seems to have had the cross. Again, the symbol of the crucified Saviour,
of a man crucified upon a cross, appears to have been known to almost every
nation. The circle has been a great symbol throughout the world. Then there is
the most universal of all symbols, the Swastika.
At one time it was thought that
the Buddhists carried it all over the world with them, but it has been found
out that ages before Buddhism it was used among nations. In Old Babylon and in
Egypt it was to be found. What does this show? All these symbols could not have
been purely conventional. There must be some reason for them; some natural
association between them and the human mind.
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