SWAMIJI'S TIME: J.K SIVAN
THE THEORY OF RELIGION
Before going into the Yoga
aphorisms I shall try to discuss one great question, upon which rests the whole
theory of religion for the Yogis. It seems the consensus of opinion of the
great minds of the world, and it has been nearly demonstrated by researches
into physical nature, that we are the outcome and manifestation of an absolute
condition, back of our present relative condition, and are going forward, to
return to that absolute. This being granted, the question is: Which is better,
the absolute or this state? There are not wanting people who think that this
manifested state is the highest state of man. Thinkers of great calibre are of
the opinion that we are manifestations of undifferentiated being and the
differentiated state is higher than the absolute. They imagine that in the
absolute there cannot be any quality; that it must be insensate, dull, and
lifeless; that only this life can be enjoyed, and, therefore, we must cling to
it. First of all we want to inquire into other solutions of life. There was an
old solution that man after death remained the same; that all his good sides,
minus his evil sides, remained for ever. Logically stated, this means that
man's goal is the world; this world carried a stage higher, and eliminated of
its evils, is the state they call heaven. This theory, on the face of it, is
absurd and puerile, because it cannot be. There cannot be good without evil,
nor evil without good. To live in a world where it is all good and no evil is
what Sanskrit logicians call a "dream in the air". Another theory in
modern times has been presented by several schools, that man's destiny is to go
on always improving, always
struggling towards, but never reaching the goal. This statement, though
apparently very nice, is also absurd, because there is no such thing as motion
in a straight line. Every motion is in a circle. If you can take up a stone,
and project it into space, and then live long enough, that stone, if it meets
with no obstruction, will come back exactly to your hand. A straight line,
infinitely projected must end in a circle. Therefore, this idea that the
destiny of man is progressing ever forward and forward, and never stopping, is
absurd. Although extraneous to the subject, I may remark that this idea
explains the ethical theory that you must not hate, and must love. Because,
just as in the case of electricity the modern theory is that the power leaves
the dynamo and completes the circle back to the dynamo, so with hate and love;
they must come back to the source. Therefore do not hate anybody, because that
hatred which comes out from you, must, in the long run, come back to you. If
you love, that love will come back to you,
completing the circle. It is as
certain as can be, that every bit of hatred that goes out of the heart of a man
comes back to him in full force, nothing can stop it; similarly every impulse
of love comes back to him.
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