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INTRODUCTION
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It
may be useful in approaching an ancient Scripture, such as the Veda,
Upanishads or Gita to indicate precisely the spirit in which we
approach it and what exactly we think we may derive from it that is
of value to humanity and its future. First of all, there is
undoubtedly a Truth one and eternal which we are seeking, from which
all other truth derives, by the light of which all other truth finds
its right place, explanation and relation to the scheme of knowledge.
But precisely for that reason it cannot be shut up in a single
trenchant formula, it is not likely to be found in its entirety or in
all its bearings in any single philosophy or scripture or uttered
altogether and for ever by any one teacher, thinker, prophet or
Avatar. Nor has it been wholly found by us if our view of it
necessitates the intolerant exclusion of the truth underlying other
systems; for when we reject passionately, we mean simply that we
cannot appreciate and explain. Secondly, this Truth, though it is one
and eternal, expresses itself in Time and through the mind of man;
therefore every Scripture must necessarily contain two elements, one
temporary, perishable, belonging to the ideas of the period and
country in which it was produced, the other eternal and imperishable
and applicable in all ages and countries. Moreover, in the statement
of the Truth the actual form given to it, the system and arrangement,
the meta- physical and intellectual mould, the precise expression
used must be largely subject to the mutations of Time and cease to
have the same force; for the human intellect modifies itself always,
continually dividing and putting together it is obliged to shift its
divisions continually and to rearrange its synthesis; it is always
leaving old expression and symbol for new or, if it uses We
hold it therefore of small importance to extract from the Gita its
exact metaphysical connotation as it was understood by the men of the
time,—even if that were accurately possible. That it is not
possible, is shown by the divergence of the original
commentaries which have been and are still being written upon it;
for they all agree in each disagreeing with all the others, each
finds in the Gita its own system of metaphysics and trend of
religious thought. Nor will even the most painstaking and
disinterested scholarship and the most luminous theories of the
historical development of Indian philosophy save us from inevitable
error. But what we can do with profit is to seek in the Gita for the
actual living truths it contains, apart from their metaphysical form,
to extract from it what can help us The thought of the Gita is not pure Monism although it sees in one unchanging, pure, eternal Self the foundation of all cosmic existence, nor Mayavada although it speaks of the Maya of the three modes of Prakriti omnipresent in the created world; nor is it qualified Monism although it places in the One his eternal supreme Prakriti manifested in the form of the Jiva and lays most stress on dwelling in God rather than dissolution as the supreme state of spiritual consciousness; nor is it Sankhya although it explains the created world by the double principle of Purusha and Prakriti; nor is it Vaishnava Theism although it presents to us Krishna, who is the Avatar of Vishnu according to the Puranas, as the supreme Deity and allows no essential difference nor any actual superiority of the status of the indefinable relationless Brahman over that of this Lord of beings who is the Master of the universe and the Friend of all creatures. Like the earlier spiritual synthesis of the Upanishads this later synthesis at once spiritual and intellectual avoids naturally every such rigid determination as would injure its universal comprehensiveness. Its aim is precisely the opposite to that of the polemist commentators who found this Scripture established as one of the three highest Vedantic authorities and attempted to turn it into a weapon of offence and defence against other schools and systems. The Gita is not a weapon for dialectical warfare; it is a gate opening on the whole world of spiritual truth and experience and the view it gives us embraces all the provinces of that supreme region. It maps out, but it does not cut up or build walls or hedges to confine our vision. There have been other syntheses in the long history of Indian thought. We start with the Vedic synthesis of the psychological being of man in its highest flights and widest rangings of divine knowledge, power, joy, life and glory with the cosmic existence of the gods, pursued behind the symbols of the material universe into those superior planes which are hidden from the physical sense and the material mentality. The crown of this synthesis was in the experience of the Vedic Rishis something divine, transcendent and blissful in whose unity the increasing soul of man and the eternal divine fulness of the cosmic godheads meet perfectly and fulfil themselves. The Upanishads take up this crowning experience of the earlier seers and make it their starting-point for a high and profound synthesis of spiritual knowledge; they draw together into a great harmony all that had been seen and experienced by the inspired and liberated knowers of the Eternal through- out a great and fruitful period of spiritual seeking. The Gita starts from this Vedantic synthesis and upon the basis of its essential ideas builds another harmony of the three great means and powers, Love, Knowledge and Works, through which the soul of man can directly approach and cast itself into the Eternal. There is yet another, the Tantric, which though less subtle and spiritually profound, is even more bold and forceful than the synthesis of the Gita,—for it seizes even upon the obstacles to the spiritual life and compels them to become the means for a richer spiritual conquest and enables us to embrace the whole of Life in our divine scope as the Lila of the Divine; and in some directions it is more immediately rich and fruitful, for it brings , forward into the foreground along with divine know- ledge, divine works and an enriched devotion of divine Love, the secrets also of the Hatha and Raja Yogas, the use of the body and of mental askesis for the opening up of the divine life on all its planes, to which the Gita gives only a passing and perfunctory attention. Moreover it grasps at that idea of the divine perfectibility of man, possessed by the Vedic Rishis but thrown into the background by the intermediate ages, which is destined to fill so large a place in any future synthesis of human thought, experience and aspiration. We
of the coming day stand at the head of
a new age of development which must lead to such a new and larger
synthesis. We are not called upon to be orthodox Vedantins of any of
the three schools or Tantrics or to adhere to one of the theistic
religions of the past or to
1 All the Puranic tradition, it must be remembered, draws the richness of its contents from the Tantra. 2 The cosmic Play. instead of building it out of our own being and potentialities. We do not belong to the past dawns, but to the noons of the future. A mass of new material is flowing into us; we have not only to assimilate the influences of the great theistic religions of India and of the world and a recovered sense of the meaning of Buddhism, but to take full account of the potent though limited revelations of modern knowledge and seeking; and, beyond that, the remote and dateless past which seemed to be dead is returning upon us with an effulgence of many luminous secrets long lost to the consciousness of mankind but now breaking out again from behind the veil. All this points to a new, a very rich, a very vast synthesis; a fresh and widely embracing harmonisation of our gains is both an intellectual and a spiritual necessity of the future. But just as the past syntheses have taken those which preceded them for their starting-point, so also must that of the future, to be on firm ground, proceed from what the great bodies of realised spiritual thought and experience in the past have given. Among them the Gita takes a most important place. Our object, then, in studying the Gita will not be a scholastic or academical scrutiny of its thought, nor to place its philosophy in the history of metaphysical speculation, nor shall we deal with it in the manner of the analytical dialectician. We approach it for help and light and our aim must be to distinguish its essential and living message, that in it on which humanity has to seize for its perfection and its highest spiritual welfare. |