Ethics, Karma, and Interdependence

Similar documents
Self-knowledge Lecture Seven. Knowledge and Truth

Calm Abiding. The Nine Stages of Meditative Concentration

Esoteric Discipline of the Mind

Imagination, Inspiration, Intuition

THE SECRET OF WORK. By Swami Vivekananda

Yoga: More than Just an Exercise

Swami: Well! You look so full of joy today!

Sitting in the Silence

Origins. Indus River Valley. When? About 4000 years ago Where?

Vedanta Center of Atlanta. Br. Shankara. What Patanjali Means by Power and Freedom July 22, 2018

The Bhagavad Gita and Self-Realization. 3rd in the Series. Renunciation and Yoga by Action. Dr. M. W. Lewis. San Diego,

A-level Religious Studies

D2D Atma Gynam (Gyan) / Vicharanai (Vichar) Series: Bhagavad Gita. The Vichars for Chapter 1 [Sorrow of Arjuna]

Selections from the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali

Om namo bhagavate vasudevaya [...] satyam param dhimahi

Yoga Sutras of Patanjali Questions Presented by Swami Jnaneshvara Bharati

Buddhism. What are you? I am awake. Wednesday, April 8, 2015

Reflections on Zen Meditation

Becoming A Brilliant Star. Hinduism. Compiled by. William G. Huitt. Originally Developed Revised April Overview

CHAPTER-VI. The research work "A Critical Study of the Eightfold Noble Path" developed through different chapters is mainly based on Buddhist

Patanjali s Yoga Sutras. By: Parinita Yogesh

Ramana Bhaskara Speech delivered in Visakhapatnam, dated

VEDANTA CENTER OF ATLANTA. Br. Shankara Swami Vivekananda's Raja Yoga November 12, 2017

Sounds of Love. Bhakti Yoga

Birthday Song. Swami Suryadevananda. Introduction. Tune & Chorus. First Birth

LORD SIVA THE MASTER YOGIN

Avadhuta Upanishad. Om! May He protect us both together; may He nourish us both together; May we work conjointly with great energy,

Attaining Inner Peace

The Precepts. Rev. Koshin Schomberg

VEDANTA CENTER OF ATLANTA. Self discovery. Self actualization. Self realization

Early Buddhist Doctrines VEN NYANATILOKA

Advancing in Yoga through detached work (6.1-4)

The Sufi Path of Self-knowledge Lecture Six. Divine Love

ANAASAKTI YOGA Krishna regarded King Janaka as an ideal person because he ruled his kingdom with this sense of Anaasakti and detachment, and thereby a

VEDANTIC MEDITATION. North Asian International Research Journal of Social Science & Humanities. ISSN: Vol. 3, Issue-7 July-2017 TAPAS GHOSH

Talk 5 The Bhagavad Gita. Perennial Philosophy.Ashville Heswall June 2012

The Yoga of Meditation Chapter 6 (Part 2 of 2)

J i v a n M u k t i & L a w o f K a r m a

FAITH IT MISTAKE IT... OR FAKE IT... The Faith That Pleases Our King. COLOSSIANS 2:5-8 HEBREWS 11:1-6 ff 2 nd CORINTHIANS 5:7

Attributes of True Ahmadis

Karma Yoga: The Yoga Of Action By Vivekananda Swami, Swami Vivekananda READ ONLINE

YAMAS & NIYAMAS. Exploring Yoga s Ethical Practice

Wk10 Wednesday, May 30. Today. Final Paper BG 18 Wrap up: BG, course

Purpose of Creation in Eastern Philosophy Hinduism in the beginning was darkness and chaos, which was the unmanifest form of the Supreme Being. Out of

How to Behave When Struck by Illness

20. God s Love is like Sunshine

THE FIFTH TRACK OF SPIRITUAL JOURNEY by Ramananda Prasad, Ph.D.; Founder, American Gita Society

Understanding Islam Series One: The Big Picture

The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali: Chapter 1

The universe is without beginning and in it

How to grow a good life and happiness

Nine Great Benefits of Reading and Reflecting Over the Qur'ân

Living a Spiritual Life: 5. Overcoming the Ego

Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda. Volume 1 PATANJALI'S YOGA APHORISMS APPENDIX REFERENCES TO YOGA. By Swami Vivekananda. Shvetâshvatara Upanishad

Song of Spiritual Experience

The Sat-Guru. by Dr.T.N.Krishnaswami

The powers of the mind are like rays of light dissipated; when they are concentrated they illumine. Swami Vivekananda. Introduction to Yoga

Editorial: On Freedom and Necessity

Chapter 2--How Should One Live?

YOGA VASISTHA IN POEM

Fasting in Ramadan. I have certainly vowed to the Most Merciful abstention (ṣawm). [Sūrah Maryam, 19:26]

Tafsir Ibn Kathir Alama Imad ud Din Ibn Kathir

Relative Merits of Samatha and Vipassana Techniques of Meditation.

The Meaning and Purpose of Yoga by Bhole Prabhu *

Meera interviews Vijaybhai, a Hinduism teacher at the Swaminarayan temple, Kenton, Harrow, on the path of Bhakti yoga.

Fully Alive JOHN MAIN OSB. Meditatio

Fully Alive JOHN MAIN OSB. Meditatio

SPIRITUAL PRECEPTS of Swami Brahmananda ( ) Direct disciple of Sri Ramakrishna First President of the Ramakrishna Order

A Study of the Concept of Suffering in Sānkhya-Yoga Philosophy

THE PRINCIPLES OF THE BHAGAVADGITA

Jnana, Dharma and Bhakti. The Hindu Way of Life and Three Paths to Moksha

Adoration (Editorial - Ramakrishna Order)

The Yoga of Action Chapter 3 (1 of 2)

LAM RIM CHENMO EXAM QUESTIONS - set by Geshe Tenzin Zopa

CHAPTER IX A SELECTION OF THE WORDS OF THE SUFIS

Principles and Frameworks Of Yogic Management

8 Limbs of Yoga. 3. Asana postures practiced in yoga, body is a temple, preparation for meditation

Ramana Bhaskara Speech delivered in 1995

Today, Veda which is the embodiment of the

WHY. Why do bad things happen to good people? Dr. Candidasa dasa

Satsang with Sri Swami Viditatmananda Saraswati

Ramana Bhaskara Speech delivered in Chinchinada, dated

Humility موقع دين الا سلام. website

STUDY CIRCLE THE VARNA ASHRAMA SYSTEM DATE: SATURDAY, 15 TH APRIL 2017

WHAT IS SUFISM Ali Ansari June 8, 07

Ibn Al-Bawab's Copy of the Holy Quran Dr. Iyad Salem Al-Samerraie& Zaed Hatim Al-Samerraie

YOGA FOR A HALE AND HEARTY BODY: THE EIGHT FOLD PATH TO DELIVERANCE

cetovimutti - Christina Garbe 1

Yoga Sutras. The Sayings of Patanjali. A New English Version. by Bart Marshall

Kriya Yoga and the Future of the World

Spiritual Studies Institute

The 36 verses from the text Transcending Ego: Distinguishing Consciousness from Wisdom

Sounds of Love Series. Path of the Masters

UPUL NISHANTHA GAMAGE

What is YOGA? by AiR

Practice Assignments for God is Breath Class 10

Tafsir Ibn Kathir Alama Imad ud Din Ibn Kathir

Explaining Some Benefits of Fasting in Ramadan 1

Sri Swami Muktananda ji

Transcription:

Ethics, Karma, and Interdependence

Let s ask God to help us to self-control: for one who lacks it, lacks His Grace. The undisciplined person doesn t wrong himself alone but sets fire to the whole world. Discipline enabled Heaven to be filled with light; discipline enabled the angels to be immaculate and holy. The peacock s plumage is his enemy. The world is the mountain, and each action, the shout that echoes back. This discipline and rough treatment are a furnace to extract the silver from the dross Jalal al-din Muhammad Rumi

It is related that Ibn al-mubarak said, We have greater need of a little bit of refinement than a lot of knowledge. I heard Muhammad bin al-husayn say that bin al-mubarak said, We sought for right conduct once the teachers of right conduct had left us. It is said that if one has three traits, one is never a stranger. They are avoiding doubters, behaving well, and restraining oneself from causing harm. Al Qushayri, Al-Risalah: Principles of Sufism

Some foolish impatient students take to concentration practice this is preliminary concentration, not real meditation yet without in any manner undergoing any preliminary training in ethics. This is a serious blunder. Ethical perfection is a matter of paramount importance. Concentration without purity of mind is of no avail. There are some occultists who have concentration but they do not have good character. That is the reason why they do not make any progress in the spiritual line. Swami Sivananda, Concentration and Meditation

The divine Law commands one to the duty of servanthood. The Way, the inner reality is the contemplation of divine lordship. Outward religious practice not confirmed by inner reality is not acceptable. Inner reality not anchored by outward religious practice is not acceptable. Divine Law brings obligation upon the creation, while the Way is founded upon the free action of the Real. The divine Law is that you serve Him. The Way is that you see Him. The divine Law is doing what you have been ordered to do. Haqiqah is bearing witness to what He has determined and ordained, hidden and revealed. I heard Abu Ali al- Daqqaq say that God's saying [in the Opening Chapter] iyyaka nabudu "You we worship" preserves the outward practice, the divine Law. Iyyaka nastain "to You we turn for help" establishes the inner reality, the Way. Know that religious obligation is a spiritual reality in that it was made necessary by His command. And spiritual reality, as well, is a religious obligation, in that the realizations of Him were also made necessary by His command. Al-Qushayri, Al-Risalah: Principles of Sufism

God Almighty and Glorious has said, The sight (of the Prophet of the time of his Ascension), did not deviate nor overstep the bounds (53:17). This is said to mean, He maintained the conduct proper to the Divine Presence. The Most High also said, Save yourselves and your families from the fire (66:6). According to the commentary of Ibn Abbas, this means, Teach them the stipulations of the divine law and refined behavior. Ali bin Ahmad al-ahwazi informed us from Ayisha that the Prophet said, The child owes it to his parent to make good his name, his upbringing, and his education in conduct. It is related that Said bin al- Musayyib said, Whoever does not know what rights God Almighty and Glorious has over him and has not been educated in His command and prohibition is cut off from right behavior. It is reported that the Prophet said, God Almighty and Glorious had educated me in refined behavior and made good my education. The essence of adab, the most beautiful and fitting, refined behavior, is the gathering together of all good traits. The adib, the refined person, is he in whom are gathered all these good characteristics. From this is taken the word maduba, banquet, a name for the coming together (of such people). I heard Abu Ali al-daqqaq say, Through his obedience the servant attains to paradise. Through refined conduct in obedience he attains to God. I also heard him say, I saw someone who, during the prescribed prayer before God, wanted to stretch his hand to his nose to remove something that was in it. His hand was seized! Al Qushayri, Al-Risalah: Principles of Sufism

I heard Abu Hatim al-sijistani say that al-jalajili al-basri said, For the testimony of unity (tawhid) to be in force, faith is prerequisite, for whoever has no faith cannot testify to the unity. For faith to be in force the divine law is prerequisite, for whoever does not hold to the divine law has no faith and cannot testify to the unity. For the divine law to be in force refined conduct is prerequisite, for whoever has not refined his conduct cannot hold to the divine law, has no faith, and cannot testify to the unity Ibn Ata said, Adab, refined behavior, is to hold fast to the commendable things. When asked, What is the meaning of this? he replied, It means you behave properly toward God both in secret and in public. If you are like that, you are a man of refined culture even if you are a foreigner. Then he recited: When she conversed, her speech was all graciousness, And when she kept silent, her silence was all fair. Al Qushayri, Al-Risalah: Principles of Sufism

[Al-Jurayri] said that whoever does not establish awe of duty and vigilance in his relationship to God will not arrive at disclosure of the unseen or contemplation (mushahadah) of the divine. Al-Qushayri, Al-Risalah: Principles of Sufism

I heard Abu Hatim al-sijistani say that Abu-l-Nasr al-tusi al- Sarraj said, People have three levels of refinement. For the people of this world, refinement largely consists of eloquent speech and rhetoric, among with the memorization of sciences, of the names of kings, and of the poetry of the Arabs. For the people of the next world, refinement largely consists of training the ego and disciplining the body, preserving the limits of the law and abandoning desires. For the elite, refinement largely consists of cleansing the heart of vices, guarding inner secrets, being faithful to one s promises, protecting the present, not turning aside in thought along with refined behavior in the stations of the search, in the moments of presence with God, and in the stages of closeness to God. Al Qushayri, Al-Risalah: Principles of Sufism

The Four Principles of Karma 1. Actions produce related consequences. 2. The consequences are greater than the actions. 3. You cannot receive the consequence without committing its corresponding action. 4. Once an action is performed, the consequence cannot be erased. Yet remember, in accordance with Gnosticism: A superior law always overcomes an inferior one.

Arjuna said: 1. Renunciation of actions, O Krishna, Thou praisest, and again Yoga! Tell me conclusively which is the better of the two. The Blessed Lord said: 2. Renunciation and the Yoga of action both lead to the highest bliss; but of the two, the Yoga of action is superior to the renunciation of action. 3. He should be known as a perpetual Sannyasin who neither hates nor desires; for, free from the pairs of opposites, O mighty-armed Arjuna, he is easily set free from bondage! 4. Children, not the wise, speak of knowledge and the Yoga of action or the performance of action as though they are distinct and different; he who is truly established in one obtains the fruits of both. 5. That place which is reached by the Sankhyas or the Jnanis is reached by the (Karma) Yogis. He sees who sees knowledge and the performance of action (Karma Yoga) as one. 6. But renunciation, O mighty-armed Arjuna, is hard to attain without Yoga; the Yoga-harmonised sage proceeds quickly to Brahman! 7. He who is devoted to the path of action, whose mind is quite pure, who has conquered the self, who has subdued his senses and who has realised his Self as the Self in all beings, though acting, he is not tainted. Bhagavad-Gita: Yoga of Renunciation of Action

8. I do nothing at all thus will the harmonised knower of Truth think seeing, hearing, touching, smelling, eating, going, sleeping, breathing, 9. Speaking, letting go, seizing, opening and closing the eyes convinced that the senses move among the sense-objects. 10. He who performs actions, offering them to Brahman and abandoning attachment, is not tainted by sin as a lotus leaf by water. 11. Yogis, having abandoned attachment, perform actions only by the body, mind, intellect and also by the senses, for the purification of the self. 12. The united one (the well poised or the harmonised), having abandoned the fruit of action, attains to the eternal peace; the non-united only (the unsteady or the unbalanced), impelled by desire and attached to the fruit, is bound. 13. Mentally renouncing all actions and selfcontrolled, the embodied one rests happily in the nine-gated city, neither acting nor causing others (body and senses) to act. Bhagavad-Gita: Yoga of Renunciation of Action

Iradah, the will to find God, is the beginning of the path of spiritual travelers, the first title given to those who are determined to reach God Most High. This attribute is only called iradah because will is the preface to every undertaking. What the servant does not will, he does not carry out. Since this is the start of the enterprise of one who travels the path of God Almighty and Glorious, it is called 'will' by analogy to the resolution involved at the beginning of everything else. According to etymology, the disciple is 'he who possess will,' just as the knower is 'he who possesses knowledge' because the word belongs to the class of derived nouns. But in Sufi usage, the disciple is he who possesses no will at all! Here, one who does not abandon will cannot be called a disciple, just as, linguistically, one who does not possess will cannot be called a disciple. Al Qushayri, Al-Risalah: Principles of Sufism

When this exists, that comes to be; with the arising of this, that arises. When this does not exist, that does not come to be; with the cessation of this, that ceases. Majjhima Nikāya 79:8 Interdependence: Dependent Arising [The body and mind] cannot come to be by their own strength, Nor can they maintain themselves by their own strength; Relying for support on other states They come to be with others as condition. They are produced by something other than themselves. Buddhaghosa, Vissudhimagga 18:36 Now this has been said by the Blessed One: One who sees dependent arising sees the Dhamma; one who sees the Dhamma sees dependent arising. Majjhima Nikāya 28:28

That which arises dependently We explain as emptiness. This [emptiness] is dependent designation. Just this is the middle way. Because there is no phenomenon That is not dependently arisen, There is no phenomenon That is not empty. Nāgārjuna, Mūlamadhyamakakārikā 24.18-19

Do not imagine that you are a great initiate and that you only have to sit in meditation and enter into Samadhi. You will have a terrible downfall. Even after years of practice, you will find you have not progressed an inch forward because there are deep within you lurking desires and cravings which are far beyond your reach. Be humble. Make a searching analysis of your heart and mind. Even if you are really a first-class aspirant, think you are an aspirant of the lowest class and practice the eightfold steps. The more time you spend in the first steps, Yama and Niyama, ethics, the less will be the time needed to attain perfection in meditation. It is the preparation that takes very long, but do not wait for perfection in ethics in order to take the higher practices of the path. Try to get established in ethics and at the same time practice the other steps. The two must go hand in hand, then, success will be rapid. Swami Sivananda