Discrimination of the Mahavakyas
There are four Mahavakyas, or
great statements in the Upanishads, which have a profound significance as
pointers to Reality.
The Mahavakyas |
These Mahavakyas convey the
essential teaching of the Upanishads, namely, Reality is one, and the
individual is essentially identical with it.
‘Consciousness is Brahman’
In the sentence, ‘ Prajnanam
Brahma’ or Consciousness is Brahman, a definition of Reality is given. The best
definition of Brahman would be to give expression to its supra-essential
essence, and not to describe it with reference to accidental attributes, such as
creatorship etc. That which is ultimately responsible for all our sensory
activities, as seeing, hearing, etc., is Consciousness. Though Consciousness
does not directly see or hear, it is impossible to have these sensory
operations without it. Hence it should be considered as the final meaning of
our mental and physical activities. Brahman is that which is Absolute, fills
all space, is complete in itself, to which there is no second, and which is
continuously present in everything, from the creator down to the lowest of
matter. It, being everywhere, is also in each and every individual. This is the
meaning of Prajnanam Brahma occurring in the Aitareya Upanishad.
‘I Am Brahman’
In the sentence, ‘ Aham
Brahmasmi,’ or I am Brahman, the ‘I’ is that which is the One Witnessing
Consciousness, standing apart form even the intellect, different from the
ego-principle, and shining through every act of thinking, feeling, etc. This
Witness-Consciousness, being the same in all, is universal, and cannot be
distinguished from Brahman, which is the Absolute. Hence the essential ‘I’
which is full, super-rational and resplendent, should be the same as Brahman.
This is not the identification of the limited individual ‘I’ with Brahman, but
it is the Universal Substratum of individuality that is asserted to be what it
is. The copula ‘am’ does not signify any empirical relation between two
entities, but affirms the non-duality of essence. This dictum is from the
Brihadaranyaka Upanishad.
‘That Thou Art’
In the Chhandogya Upanishad
occurs the Mahavakya, ‘ Tat Tvam Asi’ or ‘That thou art’. Sage Uddalaka
mentions this nine times, while instructing his disciple Svetaketu in the
nature of Reality. That which is one alone without a second, without name and
form, and which existed before creation, as well as after creation, as pure
Existence alone, is what is referred to as Tat or That, in this sentence. The
term Tvam stands for that which is in the innermost recesses of the student or
the aspirant, but which is transcendent to the intellect, mind, senses, etc.,
and is the real ‘I’ of the student addressed in the teaching. The union of Tat
and Tvam is by the term Asi or are. That Reality is remote is a misconception,
which is removed by the instruction that it is within one’s own self. The erroneous
notion that the Self is limited is dispelled by the instruction that it is the
same as Reality.
‘This Self is Brahman’
The Mahavakya, ‘Ayam Atma
Brahma’ or ‘This Self is Brahman’, occurs in the Mandukya Upanishad. ‘ Ayam’
means ‘this’, and here ‘thisness’ refers to the self-luminous and non-mediate
nature of the Self, which is internal to everything, from the Ahamkara or ego
down to the physical body. This Self is Brahman, which is the substance out of
which all things are really made. That which is everywhere, is also within us,
and what is within us is everywhere. This is called ‘Brahman’, because it is
plenum, fills all space, expands into all existence, and is vast beyond all
measure of perception or knowledge. On account of self-luminosity,
non-relativity and universality, Atman and Brahman are the same. This
identification of the Self with Absolute is not any act of bringing together
two differing natures, but is an affirmation that absoluteness or universality
includes everything, and there is nothing outside it.
Continue to read:
The Philosophy of the Panchadasi by Swami
Krishnananda
Mahavakyas by Gurudev
Swamiji Sivananda
A Call to
Liberation by Swami Chidananda
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