All glories to Sri Guru and Gauranga
Srila Bhakti Rakshak Sridhar Dev-Goswami Maharaj
His Divine Grace Srila Bhakti Raksaka Sridhar Maharaj
Founder-Acharya of the Sri Chaitanya Saraswat Math
Subjective Evolution Of Consciousness
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This world is sometimes pushing forth and sometimes
withdrawing. In the same way that a heart expands and contracts again and
again, the whole universe expands and contracts. Regrouping within the
one, and again manifest as the many - the one and the many - the evolution
and dissolution of the material universe takes place. As a heart expands
and contracts, the whole universe is manifest and withdrawn.
One ancient literature of India, the Manu Samhita,
begins by describing the creation. In that book, it is written how, before
the creative movement began, the tatastha potency of the Lord was
in eqilibrium. Tatastha means equilibrium. Everything was in darkness,
fully enveloped by ignorance. There was no possiblility of estimation;
no symptoms of reality existed by which any conjecture or inference about
the nature of reality would have been possible. And that state of being
was unknowable: science has no capacity for investigating the nature of
that stage of existence. We can only say from here that it was completely
immersed in deep sleep. The analogy of deep sleep may give us some conception
of that period: Material existence was at that time as if in sound sleep.
At that time, movement began from within the spiritual
plane, and light came. Light was seen by the suddenly awakened seers, the
sages present at the moment of creation. That light was pre-existent, but
at that moment the awakened seers received the vision to see light. They
began to see. The first conception of this material world after light was
water. The light revealed a moving substance like water seen by the sages.
That primal light is compared with personality.
That light, or personality, first gave birth to onlookers - to the feelers
of material existence - and then to an objective substance like water.
The conscious world is represented by light and the first objective reality
is represented by water. Then the seeds of consciousness are sown in the
causal water which is the shadow of that light. Although the actual element
of water was created long after this, the first conception of matter is
compared to water because water is an accommodating, moving solution. The
Sanskrit word for water - apa - means "of lower conception." In this way,
the lower creation began.
Then, in connection with the seeds of consciousness
and primal water, the next production was known as mahat-tattva:
the energy of consciousness represented by light, mixed with matter as
a mass. When the mass of matter is infused with the energy of light-consciousness,
that is known as mahat-tattva.
After further development, that entity was divided
into many units of ego. First there is a mass ego as a whole. The element
of conglomerate ego is called mahat-tattva; and from that conglomerate
a watery objective substance evolves - by the influence of consciousness.
That objective substance expresses itself in five main ways: as substance
that can be seen, smelled, tasted and touched and heard. These fivefold
elementary substances are the primitive principles of material existence,
known as fire, earth, water, air and sky (ether, space).
The Awakening Of The Awareness "I AM"
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In a primitive state when the individual egos are
massed together as a common whole, that conglomerate false ego, the primitive
sense of awarenes that "I am", develops from a state of equilibrium. It
evolves, it differentiates into innumerable individual units of localised
awareness. Just as an atom can be broken down into subatomic particles,
electrons, protons, neutrons and so on, the conglomerate ego gradually
breaks into its component individual egos: jiva souls. Their position
is tatastha; marginal and undetectable. From that subtle, undetectable
plane of marginal energy, consciousness first develops into the detectable
plane as a whole, and then innnumerable individual spiritual units are
manifest from that lump of ego, or mahat-tattva. Gradually, the
other elements of creation develop within this negative plane of exploitation
- negative, because here every living being feeds on the bodies of others.
Consciousness is producing everything. Consciousness
is eternal; this world is not eternal. So many times the sun, the Earth,
and the solar systems disappear, and again spring up. We are in the midst
of such thought in eternity. The sun, the moon, and all the planets appear
and vanish: they all die and then again they are created. We are told by
the sages who spoke the literature of the Veda to view things from this
viewpoint: not only this living body I have, but the human race, the animals,
the trees, the entire Earth, and even the sun, will all vanish, and again
spring up. Creation, dissolution, creation, dissolution - it will continue
forever in the domain of misconception. At the same time, there is another
world which is eternal - the land of Sri Krishna. We are requested to enter
there, to make our homes in that plane which neither enters into the jaws
of death, nor suffers any change.
In Vrindavana, the land of Sri Krishna, everything
is conscious, though some things are posing in a passive way. But they
are all conscious: the Yamuna river, the cows, the trees, the fruit - everything
is conscious, spiritual; but they pose in different ways. Being able to
contact the conscious characteristic in everything, the Aryans saw all
of nature as conscious and personal, and addressed everything as conscious
beings.
The Aryans, the spiritually developed persons of
former times, used to see everything as consciousness. Everything is a
person. The great rishis, whose thinking is highly developed, address whatever
they find within the environment as if they were all persons. In the Vedas,
the ancient scriptural inheritance of India, we find that the sages are
always in the midst of so many persons in their natural surroundings; in
the background everything we experience is a person. It is all personal.
And so the rishis with such a vision of reality used to address everything
as a person: the trees, the mountains, the sun, the moon, the ocean. They
are conscious persons in some mixed stages of consciousness; a person suffering
karma. "Person" means not a fully developed spiritual person at present,
but a person in a mixed, worldly condition.
The Awakening of Brahma, The Imagineer Of The Universe
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The first position of a soul in the material world
will be like that of Brahma, the creator. Then his karma may take him to
the body of a beast like a tiger, where he is surrounded by a tigerish
mentality, or to the body of a tree or creeper, where different impressions
may surround him. In this way, one becomes involved in action and reaction.
The case is complex; to analyze the details of the history of a particular
atom is unnecessary. We are concerned with the general thing: how the transformation
of the material conception springs from pure consciousness.
Everything is conscious. As the present scientists
say everything is matter, we have real cause to think that everything is
consciousness.
Matter does not evolve into a human form and brain
and then produce the idea of "soul;" rather the soul contains within it,
in one negligible portion, the conception of matter. Like an eczema, it
is a disease. The concept of a "material world" exists like an eczema in
a wholesome body.
This is the understanding given by the Veda, the literature
of ancient India. It would certainly be a wonderful miracle if stone could
produce the soul, but it is easier and more reasonable for us to think
that the soul has produced the conception of stone. In the soul, there
are many conceptions, and one conception is that of stone.
The conscious world is very near and the material
world is very far off. Try to conceive of reality along these lines: Soul,
Spirit, Consciousness, is nearer to you and you are a child of that
soil. Matter is far, far away from you. But when we go to observe "objective
reality" the interrupting planes of shadowy mundane consciousness are so
close together that we don't see the nature of the spiritual reality, just
as when you put your hand over your eye, you can't see your hand. But if
the hand is one foot away, we can see it very clearly.
Although the Buddhists and atheists argue that
consciousness is a material thing, I say that there is no material thing.
If I am to answer the question of whether or not consciousness is produced
from matter, then I shall say that nothing is material. Whatever I feel,
it is only a part of consciousness. Everything is an idea. We are connected
only with consciousness from the beginning to the end of our experience.
Beyond consciousness, we cannot go. Everything is an idea: the stone, the
tree, the house, the body - all are ideas. The plane of consciousness is
very much closer to us than we perceive. We are involved only with ideas.
Everything within our experience is only part of our mind.
The Ideal World
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Everything in Vrindavana, the land of Krishna, is
Krishna conscious. Every tree, creeper and shrub. Their consciousness may
be understood in this way: if a man meditating does not move about and
harm anybody, that does not mean he is paralyzed; he is simply in a passive
mood. So also in Vrindavana, service may be rendered to the Lord in a passive
mood. The Yamuna river is absorbed in rendering service in a passive mood.
Then there is also Govardhan hill in Vrindavana. That is also a kind of
pose. How this is so can be understood by the analogy of a drama. In a
drama in the theatre, an actor may play the part of a dead man. As his
body is being carried, he can't say anything, he can't move - but that
does not mean he is dead. Similarly, a meditative devotee may assume a
passive role as a creeper, a shrub, or a tree in Vrindavana, in order to
enhance the drama of Sri Krishna's daily pastimes.
Here in this material world a particle of sand
is nothing; it is ignored. But there, everything is well-attended. In Vrindavana
there is no ignorance. No interest of anything is ignored there; everything
is harmonised within the Divine Pastimes of Sri Krishna, and therefore
the conception of Vrindavana in Krishna consciousness is the highest concept
of full-fledged theism. The ancient literature Srimad Bhagavatam says:
"Whenever Krishna sets His feet like lotus petals on the ground within
Vrindavana, the Earth Goddess personified says, "My fate is fulfilled,
I have achieved my highest fortune." For in Vrindavana the earth, the very
dust, feels the pleasure of the highest type of conjugal love merely by
the touch of His lotus feet. Wherever Krishna puts His footsteps, the Earth's
joy knows no bounds. By His touch, the Earth feels the most intense type
of ecstacy.
Srila Bhakti Sundar Govinda Maharaj
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