Sri
Ramana Maharshi, Sri Ramanasramam
Tiruvannamalai, South India.
Worship
is only self-enquiry
1.
The purpose of worshipping the impersonal Supreme Being is never to
forget "I am Brahman," (Brahman = the Supreme
Reality)because the meditation "I am Brahman" comprises
sacrifice, gifts, penance, ritual, yoga, and worship. The only way to
overcome any obstruction that may happen to your meditation is to
forbid the mind to dwell on it and to introvert the mind into the
Self and so witness unconcernedly all that is happening; there is no
other method. Do not even for a moment lose sight of the Self. Fixing
the mind on the Self or the "I" abiding in the Heart is the
perfection of yoga, meditation, wisdom, devotion, japa (repeating one
of God’s names or repeating a mantra) and worship. Since the
Supreme Being abides as the Self, constant surrender of the mind by
absorption in the Self is said to comprise all forms of worship.
If
only the mind comes under control, all else is controlled. The mind
is itself the life current; the ignorant say that in form it looks
like a coiled serpent. The six subtle centres are merely mental
pictures and are meant for beginners in yoga. Vedantists consider it
a sacrilege to regard the One creating, sustaining and absorbing
Supreme Self as a conceptual deity like Ganapati, Brahma, Vishnu,
Rudra, Maheswara, and Sadasiva. We project ourselves into the idols
and worship them because we do not understand true inward worship.
Therefore, the Knowledge of the Self, which knows all, is Knowledge
in perfection.
2.
Distracted as we are by various thoughts, if we continually
contemplate on the Self, which is Itself God, this single thought
will in due course replace all distraction and itself ultimately
vanish; the pure Consciousness that alone finally remains is the
realization of God. This is liberation. Never to be heedless of one’s
own all perfect, pure Self is the acme of yoga, wisdom and all other
forms of spiritual practice. Even though the mind wanders restlessly,
concerned in external matters, and so becomes forgetful of its own
Self, one should be alert and think thus, "The body is not I.
Who am I?" Enquire in this way, turning the mind backward to its
primal state. The enquiry "Who am I?" is the only method of
putting an end to all misery and ushering in supreme beatitude.
Whatever and however it may be said, this is the whole truth in a
nutshell.
By Swami Vivekananda, Address at the
Rameshwaram Temple.
The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda Vol
III, Published by Advaita Ashram, Mayavati, Himalayas.
Real Worship
It
is in love that religion exists and not in ceremony, in the pure and
sincere love in the heart. Unless a man is pure in body and mind, his
coming into a temple and worshipping Shiva is useless. The prayers of
those that are pure in the mind and body will be answered by Shiva,
and those that are impure and yet try to teach religion to others
will fail in the end. External worship is only a symbol of internal
worship; but internal worship and purity are the real things. Without
them, external worship would be of no avail. Therefore you must all
try to remember this.
This
is the gist of all worship –to be pure and to do good to others.
People
have become so degraded in this Kali Yuga that they think they can do
anything, and then they can go to a holy place, and their sins will
be forgiven. If a man goes with an impure mind into a temple, he adds
to the sins that he had already, and goes home a worse man than when
he left it. Tirtha (place of pilgrimage) is a place which is full of
holy things and holy men. But if holy people live in a certain place,
and if there is no temple there, even that is a Tirtha. If unholy
people live in a place where there may be a hundred temples, the
Tirtha has vanished from that place. And it is most difficult to live
in a Tirtha; for if sin is committed in an ordinary place it can
easily be removed, but sin committed in a Tirtha cannot be removed.
This is the gist of all worship – to be pure and to do good to
others.
He
who sees Shiva in the poor, in the weak, and in the diseased, really
worships Shiva; and if he sees Shiva only in the image, his worship
is but preliminary. He who has served and helped one poor man seeing
Shiva in him, without thinking of his caste, or creed, or race, or
anything, with him Shiva is more pleased than with the man who sees
Him only in temples.
Those
who serve the servants of God are His greatest servants.
A
rich man had a garden and two gardeners. One of these gardeners was
very lazy and did not work; but when the owner came to the garden,
the lazy man would get up and fold his arms and say : “How
beautiful is the face of my master”, and dance before him. The
other gardener would not talk much, but would work hard, and produce
all sorts of fruits and vegetables which he would carry on his head
to his master who lived a long way off. Of these two gardeners, which
would be more beloved of his master? Shiva is that master, and this
world is His garden, and there are two sorts of gardeners here; the
one who is lazy, hypocritical, and does nothing, only talking about
Shiva’s beautiful eyes and nose and other features; and the other,
who is taking care of Shiva’s children, all those that are poor and
weak, all animals, and all His creation. Which of these would be the
more beloved of Shiva? Certainly he that serves His children. He who
wants to serve the father must serve the children first. He who wants
to serve Shiva must serve His children – must serve all creatures
in this world first. It is said in the Shastras (scriptures) that
those who serve the servants of God are His greatest servants. So you
will bear this in mind.
Let
me tell you again that you must be pure and help any one who comes to
you, as much as lies in your power. And this is good Karma. By the
power of this, the heart becomes pure (Chitta-shuddhi), and then
Shiva who is residing in everyone will become manifest. He is always
in the heart of everyone. If there is dirt and dust on a mirror, we
cannot see our image. So ignorance and wicked ness are the dirt and
dust that are on the mirror of our hearts. Selfishness is the chief
sin, thinking of ourselves first. He who thinks, “I will eat first,
I will have more money than others, and I will possess everything”,
he who thinks, “I will get to heaven before others, I will get
Mukti (liberation) before others” is the selfish man. The unselfish
man says, “I will be last, I do not care to go to heaven, I will
even go to hell if by doing so I can help my brothers.”
Unselfishness
is the test of religion
This
unselfishness is the test of religion. He who has more of this
unselfishness is more spiritual and nearer to Shiva than anybody
else, whether he knows it or not. And if a man is selfish, even
though he has visited all the temples, seen all the places of
pilgrimage, and painted himself like a leopard, he is still further
off from Shiva.
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