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Ishavasyam
THE
Isha Upanishad in its very inception goes straight
to the root of the problem the Seer has set out to resolve; he starts at once
with the two supreme terms of which our existence seems to be composed and in a
monumental phrase, cast with the bronze of eight brief but sufficient words, he
confronts them and sets them in their right and eternal relation.
Īśāvāsyamidam sarvam yat kiñca jagatyām jagat. Isha and Jagat, God and
Nature, Spirit and World, are the two poles of being between which our
consciousness revolves. This double or biune reality is existence, is life, is
man. The Eternal seated sole in all His creations occupies the ever-shifting
universe and its innumerable whorls and knots of motion, each called by us an
object, in all of which one Lord is multitudinously the Inhabitant. From the
brilliant suns to the rose and the grain of dust, from the God and the Titan in
their dark or their luminous worlds to man and the insect that he crushes
thoughtlessly under his feet, everything is His temple and mansion. His is the
veiled deity in the temple, the open householder in the mansion; for Him and His
enjoyment of the multiplicity and the unity of His being, all were created and
they have no other reason for their existence. For habitation by the Lord is all
this, everything whatsoever that is moving thing in her that moves.
The problem of a perfect life upon earth, a life free from
those ills of which humanity seems to be the eternal and irredeemable prisoner
and victim, can only be solved, in the belief of the Vedantins, if we go back to
the fundamental nature of existence; for there alone can we find the root of the
evil and the truth of the remedy. They are here in the two words Isha and Jagat.
The inhabitant is the Lord; in this truth, in the knowledge of it by our minds,
in the realisation of it by our whole nature and being is the way of escape for
the victim of evil, the prisoner of limitation and death. On the other hand.
Nature is a fleeting and inconstant motion preserved by the harmonious fixity of
the laws
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which governs her particular motions. This subjection and
inconstancy of Nature is the secret of our bondage, death, limitation and suffering.
We who entangle ourselves in the modalities of Nature must realise, if we would
escape from her confounding illusion, the other pole of our existence, unqualified
Spirit or God. By rising to the God within us we become free and stand liberated
from the bondage of the world and the snare of death. For God is freedom. God
is immortality. Mṛtyum
tīrtvā amṛtam
aśnute. Crossing
over death, w^ enjoy immortality.
This relation of Nature and Spirit, World and God, on which
the Seer fixes. Nature the mansion. God the occupant, is their practical not
their essential relation. Conscious existence is Brahman, single and
indivisible. Spirit and Nature, World and God are one; anejadekam manaso
javīyaḥ, — they are
One unmoving swifter than mind. But for life whether bound or free and for the
movement from bondage to freedom, this One must always be conceived as a double
or biune term in which God is the reverse side of Nature, Nature the obverse
side of God, our conscious existence. The distinction has been made by Spirit
itself in its own being for the object which the Seer expresses in the single
word vāsyam; God has thrown out His own being in the spatial and temporal
movement of the Universe, building up forms in His mobile, extended
self-consciousness which He conceives as different from His still and eternal,
occupying and enjoying self-consciousness, so that He as soul, the subject, may
have an objective existence which it can regard, occupy and enjoy, the
householder of its self-mansion, the God of its self-temple, the King of its
self-empire. In this cosmic relation of Spirit to Nature the word Isha expresses
the perfected and absolute freedom, eternally uninfringed with which the Spirit
envisages the object and occupies its kingdom. The World is not a material shell
in which Spirit is bound nor is Spirit a roving breath of things ensnared, to
which the object it inspires is a prison-house. The indwelling God is the Lord
of His creations and not their servant or prisoner; as a householder is lord of
his dwelling-places to enter them and go forth from them at his will and to pull
down what he has built up whenever it ceases to
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please him or be serviceable to his needs, so the Spirit is
free to enter or go forth from its bodies and has power to build, destroy and
rebuild whatever it pleases in this universe. The very universe itself It is
free at any moment to destroy and recreate. God is not bound; He is the entire,
free and unopposed master of His creations.
This word 'Isha', the Lord is placed designedly at the
opening of this great strain of Vedantic thought to rule as with a master-tone
all its rhythms. It is the key to everything that follows in the eighteen verses
of the Upanishad. Not only does it contradict all mechanical theories of the
Universe and assert the pre-existence, omnipotence, majesty and freedom of the
transcendent Soul of things within, but by identifying the Lord of the universe
with the Spirit in all bodies, it asserts the greatness, freedom and secret
omnipotence of the soul of man that seems here to wander thus painfully
entangled and bewildered. Behind all the veils of his nature, the soul in man
also is master, not slave, not bound but free. Grief, death and limitation are
instruments of some activity it is here to fulfil for its own delight, and the
man is not bound to his instruments; he can modify them, he can reject, he can
change. If, then, we appear as though bound, by the fixed nature of our minds
and bodies, by the nature of the visible universe, by the dualities of grief and
joy, pleasure and pain, by the chain of cause and effect or by any other chain,
shackle or tie whatsoever, the bondage is a semblance and can be nothing more.
It is Maya, a willed illusion of bondage, or it is Lila, a self-chosen play at
bondage. Like a child pretending to be this or that and identifying itself with
its role, the Purusha, this divine inhabitant within, may seem to forget his
freedom, but even when he forgets, the freedom is still there, self-existent,
therefore inalienable. Never lost except in appearance, it is recoverable even
in appearance. The game of the world-existence is not a game of bondage alone,
but equally of freedom and the liberation from bondage.
(Incomplete)
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