THIRTEEN
The Lord of the Sacrifice
WE HAVE, before we can proceed further, to gather up all
that has been said in its main principles. The whole of the Gita's gospel of
works rests upon its idea of sacrifice and contains in fact the eternal
connecting truth of God and the world and works. The human mind seizes
ordinarily only fragmentary notions and standpoints of a many-sided eternal
truth of existence and builds upon them its various theories of life and ethics
and religion, stressing this or that sign or appearance, but to some entirety
of it it must always tend to reawaken whenever it returns in an age of large
enlightenment to any entire and synthetic relation of its world-knowledge with
its God-knowledge and self-knowledge. The gospel of the Gita reposes upon this
fundamental Vedantic truth that all being is the one Brahman and all existence
the wheel of Brahman, a divine movement opening out from God and returning to
God. All is the expressive activity of Nature and Nature a power of the Divine
which works out the consciousness and will of the divine Soul master of her
works and inhabitant of her forms. It is for his satisfaction that she descends
into the absorption of the forms of things and the works of life and mind and
returns again through mind and self-knowledge to the conscious possession of
the Soul that dwells within her. There is first an involving of self and all it
is or means in an evolution of phenomena; there is afterwards an evolution of
self, a revelation of all it is and means, all that is hidden and yet suggested
by the phenomenal creation. This cycle of Nature could not be what it is but
for the Purusha assuming and maintaining simultaneously three eternal poises
each of which is necessary to the totality of this action. It must manifest
itself in the mutable, and there we see it as the finite, the many, all
existences, sarvabhūtāni.
It appears to us as the finite personality of these million creatures with
their
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infinite diversities and various
relations and it appears to us behind these as the soul and force of the action
of the gods, – that is to say, the cosmic powers and qualities of the Divine
which preside over the workings of the life of the universe and constitute to
our perception different universal forms of the one Existence, or, it may be,
various self-statements of personality of the one supreme Person. Then, secret
behind and within all forms and existences, we perceive too an immutable, an
infinite, a timeless, an impersonal, a one unchanging spirit of existence, an
indivisible Self of all that is, in which all these many find themselves to be
really one. And therefore by returning to that the active, finite personality
of the individual being discovers that it can release itself into a silent
largeness of universality and the peace and poise of an immutable and
unattached unity with all that proceeds from and is supported by this
indivisible Infinite. Or even he may escape into it from individual existence.
But the highest secret of all, uttamam
rahasyam, is the Purushottama. This is the supreme Divine, God, who
possesses both the infinite and the finite and in whom the personal and the
impersonal, the one Self and the many existences, being and becoming, the
world-action and the supracosmic peace, pravrtti
and nivrtti, meet, are
united, are possessed together and in each other. In God all things find their
secret truth and their absolute reconciliation.
All truth of
works must depend upon the truth of being. All active existence must be in its
inmost reality a sacrifice of works offered by Prakriti to Purusha, Nature
offering to the supreme and infinite Soul the desire of the multiple finite
Soul within her. Life is an altar to which she brings her workings and the
fruits of her workings and lays them before whatever aspect of the Divinity the
consciousness in her has reached for whatever result of the sacrifice the
desire of the living soul can seize on as its immediate or its highest good.
According to the grade of consciousness and being which the soul has reached in
Nature, will be the Divinity it worships, the delight which it seeks and the
hope for which it sacrifices. And in the movement of the mutable Purusha in
Nature all is and must be interchange; for existence is one and its divisions
must found themselves on
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some law of mutual dependence,
each growing by each and living by all. Where sacrifice is not willingly given,
Nature exacts it by force, she satisfies the law of her living. A mutual giving
and receiving is the law of Life without which it cannot for one moment endure,
and this fact is the stamp of the divine creative Will on the world it has
manifested in its being, the proof that with sacrifice as their eternal
companion the Lord of creatures has created all these existences. The universal
law of sacrifice is the sign that the world is of God and belongs to God and
that life is his dominion and house of worship and not a field for the
self-satisfaction of the independent ego; not the fulfilment of the ego, – that
is only our crude and obscure beginning, – but the discovery of God, the
worship and seeking of the Divine and the Infinite through a constantly
enlarging sacrifice culminating in a perfect self-giving founded on a perfect
self-knowledge, is that to which the experience of life is at last intended to
lead.
But the
individual being begins with ignorance and persists long in ignorance. Acutely
conscious of himself he sees the ego as the cause and whole meaning of life and
not the Divine. He sees himself as the doer of works and does not see that all
the workings of existence including his own internal and external activities
are the workings of one universal Nature and nothing else. He sees himself as
the enjoyer of works and imagines that for him all exists and him Nature ought
to satisfy and obey his personal will; he does not see that she is not at all
concerned with satisfying him or at all careful of his will, but obeys a higher
universal will and seeks to satisfy a Godhead who transcends her and her works
and creations; his finite being, his will and his satisfactions are hers and
not his, and she offers them at every moment as a sacrifice to the Divine of whose
purpose in her she makes all this the covert instrumentation. Because of this
ignorance whose seal is egoism, the creature ignores the law of sacrifice and
seeks to take all he can for himself and gives only what Nature by her internal
and external compulsion forces him to give. He can really take nothing except
what she allows him to receive as his portion, what the divine Powers within
her yield to his desire. The egoistic soul in a world of sacrifice is as if a
thief or robber who takes what these Powers bring to him and has no mind to
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give in return. He misses the
true meaning of life and, since he does not use life and works for the enlargement
and elevation of his being through sacrifice, he lives in vain.
Only when the
individual being begins to perceive and acknowledge in his acts the value of
the self in others as well as the power and needs of his own ego, begins to
perceive universal Nature behind his own workings and through the cosmic godheads
gets some glimpse of the One and the Infinite, is he on his way to the
transcendence of his limitation by the ego and the discovery of his soul. He
begins to discover a law other than that of his desires, to which his desires
must be more and more subordinated and subjected; he develops the purely
egoistic into the understanding and ethical being. He begins to give more value
to the claims of the self in others and less to the claims of his ego; he
admits the strife between egoism and altruism and by the increase of his
altruistic tendencies he prepares the enlargement of his own consciousness and
being. He begins to perceive Nature and divine Powers in Nature to whom he owes
sacrifice, adoration, obedience, because it is by them and by their law that
the workings both of the mental and the material world are controlled, and he
learns that only by increasing their presence and their greatness in his
thought and will and life can he himself increase his powers, knowledge, right
action and the satisfactions which these things bring to him. Thus he adds the
religious and supraphysical to the material and egoistic sense of life and
prepares himself to rise through the finite to the Infinite.
But this is only
a long intermediate stage. It is still subject to the law of desire, to the
centrality of all things in the conceptions and needs of his ego and to the
control of his being as well as his works by Nature, though it is a regulated
and governed desire, a clarified ego and a Nature more and more subtilised and
enlightened by the sattwic, the highest natural principle. All this is still
within the domain, though the very much enlarged domain, of the mutable, finite
and personal. The real self-knowledge and consequently the right way of works
lies beyond; for the sacrifice done with knowledge is the highest sacrifice and
that alone brings a perfect working. That can only come when he perceives that
the self in him and the self in others are one being and this self is
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something higher than the ego, an
infinite, an impersonal, a universal existence in whom all move and have their
being, – when he perceives that all the cosmic gods to whom he offers his
sacrifice are forms of one infinite Godhead and when again, leaving all his
limited and limiting conceptions of that one Godhead, he perceives him to be
the supreme and ineffable Deity who is at once the finite and the infinite, the
one self and the many, beyond Nature though manifesting himself through Nature,
beyond limitation by qualities though formulating the power of his being
through infinite quality. This is the Purushottama to whom the sacrifice has to
be offered, not for any transient personal fruit of works, but for the soul's
possession of God and in order to live in harmony and union with the Divine.
In other words,
man's way to liberation and perfection lies through an increasing
impersonality. It is his ancient and constant experience that the more he opens
himself to the impersonal and infinite, to that which is pure and high and one
and common in all things and beings, the impersonal and infinite in Nature, the
impersonal and infinite in life, the impersonal and infinite in his own
subjectivity, the less he is bound by his ego and by the circle of the finite,
the more he feels a sense of largeness, peace, pure happiness. The pleasure,
joy, satisfaction which the finite by itself can give or the ego in its own
right attain, is transitory, petty and insecure. To dwell entirely in the
ego-sense and its finite conceptions, powers, satisfactions is to find this
world for ever full of transience and suffering, anityam asukham; the
finite life is always troubled by a certain sense of vanity for this
fundamental reason that the finite is not the whole or the highest truth of
life; life is not entirely real until it opens into the sense of the infinite.
It is for this reason that the Gita opens its gospel of works by insisting on
the Brahmic consciousness, the impersonal life, that great object of the
discipline of the ancient sages. For the impersonal, the infinite, the One in
which all the impermanent, mutable, multiple activity of the world finds above
itself its base of permanence, security and peace, is the immobile Self, the
Akshara, the Brahman. If we see this, we shall see that to raise one's
consciousness and the poise of one's being out of limited personality into this
infinite and impersonal Brahman is the first
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spiritual necessity. To see all beings
in this one Self is the knowledge which raises the soul out of egoistic
ignorance and its works and results; to live in it is to acquire peace and firm
spiritual foundation.
The way to bring
about this great transformation follows a double path; for there is the way of
knowledge and there is the way of works, and the Gita combines them in a firm
synthesis. The way of knowledge is to turn the understanding, the intelligent
will away from its downward absorption in the workings of the mind and the
senses and upward to the self, the Purusha or Brahman; it is to make it dwell
always on the one idea of the one Self and not in the many-branching conceptions
of the mind and many-streaming impulses of desire. Taken by itself this path
would seem to lead to the complete renunciation of works, to an immobile
passivity and to the severance of the soul from Nature. But in reality such an
absolute renunciation, passivity and severance are impossible. Purusha and
Prakriti are twin principles of being which cannot be severed, and so long as
we remain in Nature, our workings in Nature must continue, even though they may
take a different form or rather a different sense from those of the
unenlightened soul. The real renunciation – for renunciation, sannyāsa, there must be – is not
the fleeing from works, but the slaying of ego and desire. The way is to
abandon attachment to the fruit of works even while doing them, and the way is
to recognise Nature as the agent and leave her to do her works and to live in
the soul as the witness and sustainer, watching and sustaining her, but not
attached either to her actions or their fruits. The ego, the limited and
troubled personality is then quieted and merged in the consciousness of the one
impersonal Self, while the works of Nature continue to our vision to operate
through all these “becomings” or existences who are now seen by us as living
and acting and moving, under her impulsion entirely, in this one infinite
Being; our own finite existence is seen and felt to be only one of these and
its workings are seen and felt to be those of Nature, not of our real self
which is the silent, impersonal unity. The ego claimed them as its own doings
and therefore we thought them ours; but the ego is now dead and henceforth they
are no longer ours, but Nature's. We have achieved by the
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slaying of ego impersonality in
our being and consciousness; we have achieved by the renunciation of desire
impersonality in the works of our nature. We are free not only in inaction, but
in action; our liberty does not depend on a physical and temperamental
immobility and vacancy, nor do we fall from freedom directly we act. Even in a
full current of natural action the impersonal soul in us remains calm, still
and free.
The liberation
given by this perfect impersonality is real, is complete, is indispensable; but
is it the last word, the end of the whole matter? All life, all
world-existence, we have said, is the sacrifice offered by Nature to the
Purusha, the one and secret soul in Nature, in whom all her workings take
place; but its real sense is obscured in us by ego, by desire, by our limited,
active, multiple personality. We have risen out of ego and desire and limited
personality and by impersonality, its great corrective, we have found the
impersonal Godhead; we have identified our being with the one self and soul in whom
all exist. The sacrifice of works continues, conducted not by ourselves any
longer, but by Nature, – Nature operating through the finite part of our being,
mind, senses, body, – but in our infinite being. But to whom then is this
sacrifice offered and with what object? For the impersonal has no activity and
no desires, no object to be gained, no dependence for anything on all this
world of creatures; it exists for itself, in its own self-delight, in its own
immutable eternal being. We may have to do works without desire as a means in
order to reach this impersonal self-existence and self-delight, but, that
movement once executed, the object of works is finished; the sacrifice is no
longer needed. Works may even then continue because Nature continues and her
activities; but there is no longer any further object in these works. The sole
reason for our continuing to act after liberation is purely negative; it is the
compulsion of Nature on our finite parts of mind and body. But if that be all,
then, first, works may well be whittled down and reduced to a minimum, may be
confined to what Nature's compulsion absolutely will have from our bodies; and
secondly, even if there is no reduction to a minimum, – since action does not
matter and inaction also is no object, – then the nature of the works also does
not matter. Arjuna, once having
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attained knowledge, may continue
to fight out the battle of Kurukshetra, following his old Kshatriya nature, or
he may leave it and live the life of the Sannyasin, following his new
quietistic impulse. Which of these things he does, becomes quite indifferent;
or rather the second is the better way, since it will discourage more quickly
the impulses of Nature which still have a hold on his mind owing to past
created tendency and, when his body has fallen from him, he will securely
depart into the Infinite and Impersonal with no necessity of returning again to
the trouble and madness of life in this transient and sorrowful world, anityam asukham imam lokam.
If this were so,
the Gita would lose all its meaning; for its first and central object would be
defeated. But the Gita insists that the nature of the action does matter and
that there is a positive sanction for continuance in works, not only that one quite
negative and mechanical reason, the objectless compulsion of Nature. There is
still, after the ego has been conquered, a divine Lord and enjoyer of the
sacrifice, bhoktāram yajñatapasām, and there is still an
object in the sacrifice. The impersonal Brahman is not the very last word, not
the utterly highest secret of our being; for impersonal and personal, finite and
infinite turn out to be only two opposite, yet concomitant aspects of a divine
Being unlimited by these distinctions who is both these things at once. God is
an ever unmanifest Infinite ever self-impelled to manifest himself in the
finite; he is the great impersonal Person of whom all personalities are partial
appearances; he is the Divine who reveals himself in the human being, the Lord
seated in the heart of man. Knowledge teaches us to see all beings in the one
impersonal self, for so we are liberated from the separative ego-sense, and
then through this delivering impersonality to see them in this God, ātmani atho mayi, “in the Self
and then in Me.” Our ego, our limiting personalities stand in the way of our
recognising the Divine who is in all and in whom all have their being; for,
subject to personality, we see only such fragmentary aspects of Him as the
finite appearances of things suffer us to seize. We have to arrive at him not
through our lower personality, but through the high, infinite and impersonal
part of our being, and that we find by becoming this self one in all in
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whose existence the whole world
is comprised. This infinite containing, not excluding all finite appearances,
this impersonal admitting, not rejecting all individualities and personalities,
this immobile sustaining, pervading, containing, not standing apart from all
the movement of Nature, is the clear mirror in which the Divine will reveal His
being. Therefore it is to the Impersonal that we have first to attain; through
the cosmic deities, through the aspects of the finite alone the perfect
knowledge of God cannot be totally obtained. But neither is the silent
immobility of the impersonal Self, conceived as shut into itself and divorced
from all that it sustains, contains and pervades, the whole all-revealing
all-satisfying truth of the Divine. To see that we have to look through its
silence to the Purushottama, and he in his divine greatness possesses both the
Akshara and the Kshara; he is seated in the immobility, but he manifests
himself in the movement and in all the action of cosmic Nature; to him even
after liberation the sacrifice of works in Nature continues to be offered.
The real goal of
the Yoga is then a living and self-completing union with the divine
Purushottama and is not merely a self-extinguishing immergence in the
impersonal Being. To raise our whole existence to the Divine Being, to dwell in
him (mayyeva nivasisyasi), to
be at one with him, unify our consciousness with his, to make our fragmentary
nature a reflection of his perfect nature, to be inspired in our thought and
sense wholly by the divine knowledge, to be moved in will and action utterly
and faultlessly by the divine will, to lose desire in his love and delight, is
man's perfection; it is that which the Gita describes as the highest secret. It
is the true goal and the last sense of human living and the highest step in our
progressive sacrifice of works. For he remains to the end the master of works
and the soul of sacrifice.
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