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The Life Divine
Chapter II The Golden Rule of Life — Enjoyment and Renunciation
The first line of the Seer's first couplet has given us very briefly and suggestively the base and starting-point of the whole thought of the Upanishad; the second line of the same couplet opens to us, with equal brevity, with equal suggestiveness the consummation of the whole thought of the Upanishad. The rest of the eighteen slokas fill out, complete, play variations; they add much thought that is necessary to avoid error, to perceive supplementary and collateral truths or to guide oneself aright in the path that has been hewn out or to walk with unstumbling footsteps through the doors that have been opened to us ; but all the practical need of man and the central gist of the Seer's thought about human life is compressed into these two lines with their few brief words and their thousand echoes . All the underlying Vedantic conceptions which we have had to bring out in our first chapter, have had reference to the three great practical factors of the human problem as it presented itself to Vedantic thinkers, the reality of spiritual freedom, the appearance of material bondage and the means of escape out of the appearance and into the reality, out of matter into Spirit, out of Nature into God. But these expressions, freedom and bondage, are intellectual, ideal or spiritual terms. This human being though he lays hold on intellect as a guide and aspires to ideality and spirit, does not live centred in those superior movements of consciousness; brain leads his thought when it can, but he lives in the heart and lives in it, too, besieged by the nerves and body. His mentality is, therefore, emotional, sensational and temperamental, not intellectual or ideal, and the practical aspect of his own problem is not limitation or infinity, but the pressure of pain, grief, sorrow and suffering and the possibility of escape from these, his ruthless and omnipresent persecutors. He could even be content for a while with death and limitation if, free from this admixture of pain and suffering, his short span of life and circumscribed sphere of action could be assured of that limited happiness which the race at large is vainly pursuing. It was the agony of this problem that seized on Buddha and drove him from his kingly home and rich domestic joys to wander through the world as a beggar and ascetic; to escape from the insistent pain, grief and suffering of the world the Lord of Pity discovered for man the eightfold path, the law of compassion and self-sacrifice, the heavenly door of renunciation and the silent and blindly luminous haven of Nirvana. The Seer of the Upanishad sets before himself the same problem but arrives at a very different solution: for he proceeds not from pity, but from a clear strength and a steady knowledge, perceiving the problem but not overpowered by it, samahita, dhira. Dwelling in a world of grief, pain, death and limitation , anityam asukham imam lokam prapya, yet irresistibly impelled by Nature to aspire after joy, immortality and freedom, bound not to renounce that apparently impossible ideal on peril of forfeiting our highest, most consoling and most exalting impulses, how are we to reconcile this ineffugable contradiction or to escape from this unending struggle? This is the problem which the Seer solves in three brief words, tena tyaktena bhunjithah, again a monumental phrase whose echoes travel the whole of existence. It is because it provides the true practical basis for the solution he is going to suggest that he has preferred to announce at the outset the immediate and active relation of our twofold existence, God inhabiting Nature, rather than the remoter essential relation, God and Nature one Brahman. For the first practical step towards freedom must always be to distinguish between the Inhabitant and the habitation and withdraw from the motion towards the Lord of the motion. It is in the motion that these shadows of limitation, grief and death appear; the Inhabitant is free, blissful and immortal. To escape, then, we must turn from the world to the Master of the world; in ordinary religious parlance, we must renounce the world in order to find and possess God. So also the Gita, after describing our condition, arrived in this transient and troubled world, anityam asukham imam lokam prapya, immediately points out the remedy, bhajasva mam. Turn and cleave rather to me, the Lord. But the world was made by its Lord for divine habitation and possession; the object of the renunciation, therefore, cannot be to turn away utterly from the world after abandoning it in itself and in the lower consciousness, but to conquer and repossess it through the divine Krishna and in the supreme and all-blissful conscious being of the Lord. Nivasisyasi mayyeva. Thou shalt dwell in Me utterly, in My illimitable being and not in a limited and mortal experience of the world. To form the basis of the rule of life which the Seer enunciates, we have, then, this practical corollary from the language of his first line:— To escape from grief, death and limitation we must renounce the world, to enjoy bliss, freedom and immortality we must possess ourselves in the Lord; but since His object in manifesting is habitation of the universe and not its destruction, the bliss must be enjoyed in this universe, through the Lord, and not in the Lord apart from and exclusive of life in the universe. This is the difference, the capital difference between the Buddhistic solution — with all those later solutions affected and governed by Buddhistic thought, such as Mayavada and monastic Christianity — and the ancient answer of Hinduism to the problem put to man by life. These say, "Abandon life, put away all possession and enjoyment; absolute asceticism is thy only salvation"; that said, "Abandon the world that you may possess and enjoy it." One is an escape, the other a recoil and an aggression; one is a divorce, the other a reconciliation. Both solutions are heroic; but one is a mighty heroism of difficult retreat and flight; the other a mightier heroism of self-perfection and conquest. The one is the retreat of the Ten Thousand; the other is Caesar's movement from Dyrrhachium to [Pharsalia]. One path culminates in Buddha, the other in Janaka and Srikrishna. The language of the Seer is perfectly framed, as in the first line, to bring about a confrontation of two giant opposites. Tyaktena in the instrumental case suggests a means, and the very first word after tyaktena, undivided from it by any other vocable or particle, the word which gives the object and work of this instrument, the word which sets ringing from the outset the conclusive note and culminating cry of the Upanishad and is suggested again and again in jijiviset, in ko mohah kah sokah, in amrtam, in kalyanatamam, in raye, is [ ...]4 bhunjithah, Thou shouldst enjoy. Tyaga and bhoga, renunciation and enjoyment, have always been presented to us as the two conflicting ideals of human life and thought, - inevitably, for they are the two master impulses of Nature - both of them eternal if not imperishable and through the ages they have perplexed and tormented humanity by their perpetual companionship and always unfinished and inconclusive strife, dividing us into Puritan and Pagan, Stoic and Epicurean, worldling and ascetic, and perpetuating an opposition that rests on a false division
4 Illegible words vision of a double unity, maintaining a strife that can lead to no final victory. The Seer has deliberately brought these two great opposites and enemies together and using a pointed and unequivocal language, has put them side by side no longer as enemies but as friends and mutual helpers; his aim is by a fearless and puissant confrontation to reconcile and wed them eternally to each other, as he has already in the first line confronted, reconciled and eternally wedded the two apparent opposites, Spirit and world-Nature. Had he said not "tyaktena"
but "tyagena bhunjithah ", from which we might have concluded that he pointed us
to renunciation of the world for the enjoyment of God aloof from the world,
there would then have been no real confrontation and no great monumental phrase
but only a skilful verbal turn of words pointing a contrast rather than
effecting a reconciliation. But the instrument of the enjoyment is not
renunciation in itself and for itself but the world we have renounced, tena, and
the enjoyment is not the self-sufficient joy of renunciation and escape, but the
enjoyment of Spirit in the world, the Lord in the motion. By means of all that
is thing of world in this moving universe we are to enjoy God and, through Him,
no longer as now apart from Him, to enjoy His universal motion, - all this that
is moving thing in her that moves becomes the instrument of a divine delight,
because the world is God and part of His totality, so that by possessing and
enjoying Him we possess and enjoy world also. Enjoyment is to be reconciled The ascetic gospel of renunciation is incomplete by itself; the Pagan gospel of enjoyment is incomplete by itself. Renunciation and enjoyment of the world must be reconciled by substituting inward for outward bliss, the bliss that goes from within outward for the pleasure which seeks to appeal from without inward, joy of God in the form and name of things for joy of the finite appearance and the isolated idea. The reconciliation is to be effected through the consummate experience of Ananda. the divine beatitude at which we arrive by true seeing in the kingdom of the pure Idea, satyadharmena drstya.
Let us examine successively this renunciation and this enjoyment. We see, first, that tena
refers back to the expression in the first line, so wide, so carefully
comprehensive, idam, sarvam yat kinca jagatym jagat, by which the absolute unity
of the Inhabitant is affirmed. We are to abandon utterly the world; we are to
renounce every least or greatest detail of phenomenal existence, whether held by
us in possession or aimed at in our desire; we are to surrender everything
whatsoever that we have or may hope to possess or dream of possessing in the
universe. We see that the demand in this second line is as sweeping and
unsparing as the all-comprehensive description in its base and predecessor. We
are to keep back nothing; all that is dearest to us in our outward environment,
wife, children, home, friends, wealth, country, position, fame, honour, success,
the respect of men, the love of those we cherish, - all that is dearest to us in
our inward life ; our loves, hates, jealousies, ambitions, sins, virtues,
principles, opinions, tastes, preferences, ideals, - these and all we are, our
body, life, mind, soul, personality, ego, all, all have to be sacrificed and
laid upon a single altar. We must keep back nothing either of our outer or of
our inner wealth; for if, professing to make the complete surrender, we
consciously and willingly keep back one doit or farthing, we are thieves before
God, committing the Biblical sin of Ananias and Sapphira, - stena eva sah, -
conscious or half-conscious hypocrites, - mithyacarah sa ucyate, - and, even if.
the holding back be unwilled or unconscious, still are we imperfect sadhakas not
yet having the right to grasp our crown, For the natural principle of this
surrender is precise : - But since the renunciation asked of us is not the objective renunciation, — although that too is not excluded so far as it is necessary for the real surrender, — since it is not an outward process of flight from the objects of pleasure, it can only be, in essence, an inner sacrifice to the Master of the world, to Ish, the Lord. Since there is only One Lord in multitudinous bodies and to Him the entire world belongs, everything that is offered to the enjoyment not of the one Lord of the world, but to the mind, senses, body as part of the motion, the jagat, is an ignorant sacrifice on a false altar. It may be justified by the great cosmic ignorance so long as that principle of consciousness keeps its hold on us, but it can never bring the supreme good or the divine bliss. A perverse and broken movement, it brings a perverse and broken result.5 So long as we feel ourselves to be at all separate existences from God and others, anyan, we are here as His deputies and instruments to receive out of what the world possesses so much as the Lord of the world sends or brings to us, and to offer them up not to our mind and senses but to the Master of the Universe seated in ourselves and in others, bhoktaram yajnatapasam sarvalokamahesvaram. He is the true enjoyer of all sacrifices and works of askesis, the mighty lord of all the worlds. For this reason the Gita directs us to offer up as an utter sacrifice to the Supreme all our actions, all our efforts, all our enjoyments, yat tapasyasi, yat karosi, yad asnasi. Demanding nothing for ourselves, but receiving for Him all that He wills to give us through the action of others or our own, we are to refer them all to Him again for His acceptance. Even what we do, we are to do not for our sake, but for God's sake, not for our personal and self-regarding aims, but for what we see, rightly or wrongly, in the light we have, to be His aim in us, concentrating on the action, not reaching out to its fruit. This rule of life is the greatest we are capable of while still at work in the ignorance and moving subject to the dualities; but if we wish to go beyond, we must proceed to a yet more unsparing sacrifice. The Gita begins with the sacrifice to God of our desires and the fruits of our action: but it goes on to the giving up into God, mayi samnyasya, of action itself and even the least internal or external movement towards action, sarvarambhah; it insists, above all and to the end, on the supreme renunciation of the ego-sense, the ahankara as the one all-satisfying and divine sacrifice demanded by the ego-transcendent Universal Being from the ego-besieged and ego-ridden human soul. We must. in this consummation, fall perfectly passive in mind, life and body and allow the Divine Power to use them from above, as a man uses a machine, wields a sword or hurls a ball to its mark . These formulae of the Gita are
5 Gita also, the true sense of the inner sacrifice imposed on the seeker by the Isha Upanishad. It is the sacrifice of the lower or motional parts of our being to the higher or divine part - the offering of jagat into the Lord. The renunciation demanded of us is an inner sacrifice, effected in the surrender to God of all desire and attachment. of all self-will and self-action. and of all ego-sense and separate personality. Desire and attachment to possessions have to be cast and dissolved into the mould of a desireless and all-possessing bliss (Ananda or Jana); self-will and self-action cast and dissolved into the mould of a Divine action of the universal Shakti or World Force (Chit or Tapas) which shall use the mind, body and life as a passive, obedient and perfected instrument: ego-sense cast and dissolved into the mould of divine and undivided being (Sat) which regards itself as one in all things and the multiplicity of minds, lives and bodies as only a varied motion of its own divine unity. This divine being, force and bliss constitute the higher part of man's being centred in the principle of Ananda: they represent the direct, unveiled and unperverted action of the free and blissful Sachchidananda. To this last and supreme Immortality (Amrita) these lower mortal parts of man must be given up as the victims of a high and ultimate spiritual sacrifice in the upward movement of world-Nature. Renunciation once determined for us in its spirit and type, we arrive naturally at the other term of this great reconciliation, the enjoyment pointed at in bhunjithah. To understand the place and relation of the Seer's gospel of divine immortality and bliss in the thought and development of Hinduism, we must return for a moment to the fundamental Hindu idea of sacrifice. For it is in the light of this original idea of sacrifice that we must understand the ancient transition from Veda to Vedanta. Sacrifice to the gods was from the earliest times the central idea of the Hindu religion, under the name of renunciation, sacrifice to God still remains its whole spirit and teaching. The gods, Masters of natural forces, act in Nature under God in the motional being of the Master of all and distribute their energies to individual movements and creatures; from their store, the individual receives whatever he possesses of capacities, desires and enjoyments; at their hands he must seek whatever, not possessing, he desires firmly to acquire. But the principle of Nature, that great motion and complex rhythm, stands in the harmony and interdependence of the individual and general, jagatyam jagat; the individual, therefore, can neither gain what he has not nor keep what he has except by sacrifice of his personal energies and possessions into the world-substance and the world-energies By expenditure of what he has, offering it into the general stream of the corresponding force or substance in the perpetual flux and movement of Nature, he is kept safe by the gods as he increases. If it is my purpose to improve my muscular strength I must first consent to an output, an expenditure in exercise of the strength I already have, allowing it to escape as energy into the world-sum of energy, sacrificing to Vayu and Prithivi; I must accept temporary loss of power, weariness and exhaustion, losing a little that I may gain more; them, what I have given is taken up by the deities in the Jagati and, if the sacrifice has been properly conducted, returned increased, doubled, trebled or even decupled to the giver. As it is in our physical, so it is in our mental and emotional being. I must pour love from myself in feeling and action into the world-stream of love, sacrificing to Mitra; then only what I have given may return to me increased, doubled, trebled, decupled in the love and affection of others or in my own enlarged capacity for loving. The rule, being fundamental and universal, holds good with all internal and external possessions and holdings, the dhanani of the Rigveda "Foster by sacrifice the gods," says the Gita, "and let those gods foster you; fostering each other ye, shall attain the supreme good, - param sreyah." Attaining the supreme good we pass beyond the gods and come to God; we leave Veda to arrive at Vedanta or, rather, fulfil Veda in Vedanta. Then we are no longer content to sacrifice this or that possession, giving a share, making reservations, but offer unreservedly and unconditionally the supreme sacrifice, yielding up on the highest of all altars all that we are and possess; we give no longer to Agni, Indra, Varuna or Mitra, but to the supreme and universal Lord, bhoktaram yajnatapasam. Then. too. we receive in return not wealth, nor cattle nor horses nor lands nor empire, not joys nor powers nor brilliances nor capacities, but God Himself and the world with all these things in them as trifles and playthings for the soul to enjoy as God enjoys, possessing them and yet not possessing, wholly unbound by possession. Renunciation of some kind, voluntary or involuntary, is the condition of all growth and all existence: by expenditure acquisition. by sacrifice security, by renunciation enjoyment. this is God's universal law of sacrifice. The gods who are Powers of Nature, receiving our due sacrifice, give us the partial gains and enjoyments which come within their jurisdiction; God, receiving our due sacrifice, gives us Himself and in Himself everything that exists in Nature or beyond it. There is a common agreement in the different schools of Hinduism that to the man who has renounced, God gives Himself" in return for his renunciation; our difficulty has been to settle among our many conflicting conceptions what that is which God in soul existence intends to reveal as His very self and to what, therefore, we are called to aspire. The ascetic sees Him in impersonal Being and actionless peace; he believes therefore that we receive in return for renunciation release from phenomena and the bliss of the unconditioned Brahman. The devotee sees Him in divine Personality; he hopes to get, in return for what he offers, Shiva or Rama, Krishna or Kali. Some aspire to the Pure and Bright Stillness beyond, others like the Tantriks, seeing Him as Universal Power, attempt to acquire and feel Him here in a superior and divine power and mastery, yet others would have God in Himself and yet God playing also in His garden of the universe. The reason of these differences lies in our human variation of temperament — for we live in heart and temperament — and therefore of knowledge and approach — for with us mental being seated in the heart temperament determines our knowledge and action, — variations produced by the differently distributed motion in us of Prakriti, of Jagati, of the process of our world-nature. According to our nature we seek God. It is always, in fact, by some principle in Avidya itself that we are moved to exceed Avidya. Even as a man approaches me, says the Gita, precisely in that spirit and in that way I accept and possess him. Ye yatha mam prapadyante tams tathaiva bhajamyaham. The spirit in which the Seer would have us approach the Lord, is an all-embracing universality and the way he chooses for us is to embrace the all-blissful One in the world and in transcendence of the world, as the unity and as the multiplicity, through Vidya and through Avidya, in the Spirit and in the world, by God above Nature and by Nature in God. Ishwara, Brahman, the Life-principle Matarishwan, the Bright and Pure Stillness, the supreme and absolute Personality, the triple Purusha, Surya, Sach-chidananda, Agni, — successively he presents to us in the course of his thought these names, aspects or images of the Eternal, not [ . . .]6 we may accept one and exclude others, but for our soul experience to embrace them all in a multiple and blissful unity. Everywhere he reconciles, everywhere he includes, seeking [ . . . ]6 and no( to divide. In this world he gives us the supreme felicity and in that world our joy shall not be other. Why should we refuse to God in ourselves any form of His divine sweetness? There is no dragon watching at the gates of God to deny to us any of the fruits of Paradise; the law of divisiblity and opposition ceases when we have shaken from our necks His leaden yoke of Avidya. But in these initial couplets the Seer is insisting especially on a divine life in this world, iha, as the necessary basis of the fulfilment which is held in store for us at the end of the utter and perfect sacrifice. All that we have renounced to Him, action and struggle, thought and knowledge, the rose and the breeze and the moonlight, bird and beast and human being, man and woman and children and land and houses and gold and silver and oxen and raiment, books and poetry and learning and science, mind, body and life are, when renounced, to become the material, instrument and medium of a divine enjoyment, objectively, by all that He keeps for us or gives back to us physically during and after the discipline of renunciation, subjectively, by the whole universe and all that it contains, possessed through a man's senses so far as God in him accepts their action and in a man's soul by sympathy and identity with all beings and with universal Nature. Still, these things will always remain the instrument of enjoyment; the object of the enjoyment, the true object of all bhoga for the liberated soul, is God, - not Nature, although God in Nature and through Nature. We shall enjoy God in and through His universal manifestation, but always God and never the universe falsely experienced as a thing existent and enjoyable for its own sake, apart from God and different from Him. The possession of God in the world-transcending height of His being does not exclude possession of God in His world-containing wideness. To the liberated soul there is. no high and base, hul only one equal divine bliss and perfection. In Ihe ideal of the Seer we do not cast life and mind and body into an eternal sleep: removal from universe is not prescribed as a
6 One or two illegible words necessary condition before we can lake possession of the supreme and ineffable bliss of the Brahman The Seer asserts on the contrary a liberated bliss in the world and in human life. "He whose Self has become all existences, how shall he be deluded, whence shall he have grief" so rings his cry of triumphant freedom; it docs not run "He whose Self is dead to the knowledge of all becomings". The most powerful support and argument of purely ascetic philosophies is the Buddhistic idea, foreign to Vedic Hinduism, that true freedom and true bliss are impossible in the universe and can only become possible if we escape out of it into some world-shunning secrecy of being, whether Nihil or Nirvana. The soul handling objects, it is thought, must be attracted to them; or else the freedom from attraction is so difficult and so rare that it is presumptuous to reckon on it as a practical possibility; in Samadhi the spirit is blissful and free, awaking from Samadhi it is bound to feel or be always susceptible to [ . . . ]7 touches of limitation and of grief; the duality of pain and grief is an irrevocable law of the universe and where there is bliss in the world, there must also be as its companion grief in the world, for unmixed bliss is only possible where mind and its laws are excluded. These are the fundamental ideas of Asceticism and if they were true with this scope and this force, the very foundations of the thought in the Isha Upanishad would be vitiated and annulled; but, although generally held and insisted on by numbers of great saints and lofty thinkers, they are an instance of partial truths, perfectly valid, even perfectly general in their own province, carried in practice beyond their province and so by a false extension becoming, like all exaggerated truths, the foundation of error. They are perfectly true in the field where they apply but they apply only in the limits of mind and so long as the soul is subjected in the world to mind and its processes. But it is not a fact that mind is the supreme principle in the world and its movement and processes the dominant and in-effugable motion and process of the universe. It is only true that mind is the present centre of humanity and to humanity therefore seems, falsely, the supreme principle of the active universe. It is no doubt extremely difficult, without divine aid, for man to escape from mind and, living in the world, yet to remain superior to the mental duality of joy and grief, pleasure and pain, which is the ordinary
7 Illegible word law of our mundane existence. The difficulty of the escape is the justification of Sannyasa. But the escape, though difficult, is not only possible, it is the one real road to our self-fulfilment as the human type of God-existence upon this earth, evam tvayi nanyatheto'sti. It is possible because the supreme principle and movement of the universe is not mind; the supreme principle is Sat working out through Chit in Ananda, Infinite Being working out through Infinite Force in Infinite Beatitude. The Upanishads demand of us, and not only the Isha but the Taittiriya and other Upanishads, not to dwell in mind untouched by its laws, which would be a laborious and improbable achievement, but to raise ourselves beyond mind through Surya or pure Idea into Ananda and live centred in that principle. From this superior centre, seated free, imperial, svarat, samrat, in the mountain citadel of our existence, we can, remaining in the universe, yet govern our use of a subject and no longer rebellious mind, life and body by the process and laws of our blissful spirit and our divine Nature. The superior movement then controls and uses the lower for its own purposes. But since the principle of the superior movement is unmixed bliss, our purposes and activities also must be purposes and activities of unmixed bliss. If we are released only on the levels of mind, then indeed sleep of Samadhi is our only safe and perfect state, for coming out of that sure refuge and retreat, we are again naked in mind and exposed to the efforts of mind to recover its natural supremacy in its own kingdom. Rising to Ananda, liberated in Ananda, living in Ananda, there is no such peril. The kingdom of heaven imposes the will of God on the kingdom of earth, the parardha takes possession of the aparardha,. Sachchidananda seizes and revels in the ecstacy of a liberated Manas, Prana and Annam. In opposition, therefore, to the Buddhistic declaration of the omnipresence of grief and pain outside Nirvana, we have in the Vedanta the soul's declaration of its ultimate and eternal independence: To live in the world is not necessarily to live in the duality of grief and joy. The soul seated in Ananda. even though it lives the life of the universe, possesses as its dominant principle unmixed bliss and can use in this world and this human life mind, life and body, sarvam idam, as instruments of God-enjoyment without enduring the dominion of their dualities. For the rest, these truths arc a matter of experience. Those who have attempted to enjoy the universe before renunciation and, escaping from that error and delusion, have afterwards enjoyed God in the universe after renunciation, know, know with a silent and inexpressible rapture, the alteration and seizing revolution, the immense and ineffable change, the seated sublimity and all-penetrating intensity of that bliss of the Brahman towards which the Upanishad points our faltering and doubt-besieged footsteps. Before renunciation we enjoyed Nature ignorantly as a thing in itself and we worshipped mind and the things of the mind, followed after body and the things of the body, indulged in life and the things of the life; after renunciation we enjoy with knowledge, not the rose, but God in colour and petal and perfume, not a poem but God in the beauty of sound and the beauty of words, not food, but God in taste and in vital satisfaction. That which before renunciation was pleasure, has become after renunciation bliss: pleasure which was transient, mutable and fading, has become bliss lasting and inalienable; pleasure which was uncertain, because dependent on circumstances and objects, has become bliss self-existent and secure; pleasure which was uneven, strained towards preference, balanced by dislikes, has become bliss equal and universal; pleasure which was even at its highest impure and haunted, held with difficulty and insecurely against a background of loss, deficiency and pain, has become bliss pure, satisfying and perfect as God Himself. Before renunciation we besought objects to yield us a petty joy we did not ourselves possess; after renunciation we perceive in the object and receive from it the immeasurable bliss eternally seated in ourselves. Before renunciation, we enjoyed with desire, seeking and effort; after renunciation we enjoy desirelessly, not in the satisfaction of desire, but in eternal possession, not as anis, struggling to gain possession of what does not belong to us, but as is, already possessing all that the world contains. Before renunciation we enjoyed, with egoism, only what the greedy but easily tired mind and senses could grasp, possessing for ourselves and that too only with our own lame, limited and selfish enjoyment; after renunciation we enjoy, without ego-sense, all that we outwardly possess, all that others possess and all that none but God possesses, and we enjoy it not only with our own enjoyment but with the individual and collective enjoyment of all our fellow beings animate and inanimate and with the divine enjoyment of God in the universe. Finally, we enjoyed before renunciation many separate things all of a limited pleasurableness; after renunciation we enjoy one thing in its multiplicity which is all-blissful everywhere. Such is the enjoyment in the world to which the Seer points us in the word, bhunjithah; and we have always in addition, — for that transcendence is the condition of this secure universality. — the bliss of the Lord's pure being in His self-existence beyond and above the motion of the universe. |