Our World Viewpoint
Each one of us has our own
individual world viewpoint, the way we see the world. If we were born in a very
rich family, we see the world in a certain way. If we were born in a very poor
family, we see the world in another way. If we were born a Hindu, we have a
certain world viewpoint. If we were born a Muslim, we have another one. During
the cold war, if we lived in the West, we saw the world from one point of view;
if we were living in Russia, from another point of view.
Unfortunately these different
points of view, which usually depend upon our circumstances of birth,
frequently lead to clash and to quarrel. But actually, there is less difference
between those of us born in different circumstances than we would think. We all
think we are individuals, we all think we are separate from other individuals
and that God is somewhere else.
The real difference we
actually have is with the scriptures and the saints. They are the ones that
have a radically different point of view than we do. And often throughout
history we have treated the saints and prophets like enemies—persecuted them
and sometimes even put them to death. But even when we worship them, honour
them, love them, we don’t recognise how different our viewpoint is from theirs.
We see everything as separate. They see the oneness of all things.
We talk about the oneness of
all things, but we don’t see it. Why don’t we see it? Because there is a
tremendous force within us that doesn’t want to see it from that point of view.
There is a tremendous force within us that wants to be separate, that wants
what we want. We don’t want to be the same as everyone and everything else.
When this is discovered, then, so to speak, the gauntlet is thrown down. We are
called on to face up to what we profess. Do we really want God, do we really
want the saint’s point of view or do we not?
If we do, there is a battle to
be fought. Our teachers tell us that the Puranas are only about us. The battle
between good and evil is not some battle outside, but it is a battle that each
one of us has to fight within ourselves. And it is literally a fight to the
death. That force of separation has no intention of giving up easily. Kill it
one place; it appears in another. Kill it there; it appears somewhere else in
another form. It is a never-ending battle and a battle that all the scriptures
tell us can only be won when, one way or another, we take refuge in the Lord.
But however we view it, the
real battle of life is not with those who think differently from us, the real
battle of life is against our limited view of ourselves. We must fight this
battle until we achieve the world viewpoint of the scriptures and the saints.
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