The Supreme
Consciousness,
and How Metaphysical Reality Manifests itself
I was recently asked to try to explain some ideas about the subjective evolution of consciousness as seen by the followers of a branch of mysticism and devotion known as Gaudiya Vaishnavism.
In 1986, working at Guardian of Devotion Press, we successfully published a book titled, "Subjective Evolution of Consciousness," By Bhakti Rakshak Shridhar.
Shridhar Mahārāja appreciated our work and had it translated into Bengali and published in India.
Our book sold modestly in the United States. The 1990s were a time of great prosperity in America. Perhaps new ideas about introspection and spiritual life were not as welcomed as were new ideas on prosperity and success. Our press could not survive the economic model of the 90s and the "Me" generation.
Strangely, the book survived in translation. Given new openings in the Soviet Union just after the Gorbachov years of Perestroika, people took a new interest in "yoga" and spiritual ideas.
30 years after its publication, I was invited to Russia to explain some of the ideas in "Subjective Evolution."
I was astonished and pleased that anyone remembered the subject of that treatise published so long ago.
This year I was again invited by a great mystic and yoga Swāmī His Divine Grace B.B. Avadhuta Mahārāja to lecture on the conclusions of Subjective Evolution of Consciousness.
As a serious young man I worked hard on Subjective Evolution...
Before and After
...and it was good to have a chance to meet with my oldfriend and publishing partner, Bhakti Sudhir Goswami with whom I had many rewarding conversations on ontology and reality.
In the course of my lecture series I faced a number of difficult questions. What is consciousness? How can we understand the relationship between infinite consciousness and the finite souls, according to the progessive bhatki yoga school. How does the metaphysical reality manifest itself?
I was encouraged, once again by Avadhuta Maharaja, to continue writing on these themes. This blog article is an extension of that encouragement, and perhaps will be taken up as a book project at a later date.
The idea that the universe is expanding is known as the Big Bang theory. The theory has also been applied to the spiritual universe, in the teachings of Śrī Caitanya. According to this analysis which amplifies the truths found in the Upanishads, the Absolute Infinite expands infinitely, first as the quadruple manifestations of Godhead and then in an infinite variety of spiritual worlds or Vaikuṇṭhas.
In 1986, working at Guardian of Devotion Press, we successfully published a book titled, "Subjective Evolution of Consciousness," By Bhakti Rakshak Shridhar.
Shridhar Mahārāja appreciated our work and had it translated into Bengali and published in India.
Our book sold modestly in the United States. The 1990s were a time of great prosperity in America. Perhaps new ideas about introspection and spiritual life were not as welcomed as were new ideas on prosperity and success. Our press could not survive the economic model of the 90s and the "Me" generation.
Strangely, the book survived in translation. Given new openings in the Soviet Union just after the Gorbachov years of Perestroika, people took a new interest in "yoga" and spiritual ideas.
30 years after its publication, I was invited to Russia to explain some of the ideas in "Subjective Evolution."
I was astonished and pleased that anyone remembered the subject of that treatise published so long ago.
This year I was again invited by a great mystic and yoga Swāmī His Divine Grace B.B. Avadhuta Mahārāja to lecture on the conclusions of Subjective Evolution of Consciousness.
As a serious young man I worked hard on Subjective Evolution...
Before and After
...and it was good to have a chance to meet with my oldfriend and publishing partner, Bhakti Sudhir Goswami with whom I had many rewarding conversations on ontology and reality.
In the course of my lecture series I faced a number of difficult questions. What is consciousness? How can we understand the relationship between infinite consciousness and the finite souls, according to the progessive bhatki yoga school. How does the metaphysical reality manifest itself?
I was encouraged, once again by Avadhuta Maharaja, to continue writing on these themes. This blog article is an extension of that encouragement, and perhaps will be taken up as a book project at a later date.
The idea that the universe is expanding is known as the Big Bang theory. The theory has also been applied to the spiritual universe, in the teachings of Śrī Caitanya. According to this analysis which amplifies the truths found in the Upanishads, the Absolute Infinite expands infinitely, first as the quadruple manifestations of Godhead and then in an infinite variety of spiritual worlds or Vaikuṇṭhas.
The
individual conscious being known as jīva
or individual soul is a “Separated Infinitesimal Particle” of the Absolute
who expands Himself into an infinite variety of transcendental forms.
Krishna Dās
Kavirāja Goswāmi’s records the teachings of Śrī Caitanya Mahāprabhu in his
Caitanya Caritamṛta.
There, Śrī
Caitanya elaborates on the inner meaning of the Oṁ Purnaṁ Vedic-Upanishadic verse, where it is written that the
infinite has the power to expand infinitely.
He teaches, "Bhagavan
Śrī Kṛṣṇa is the nondual
Absolute Truth, the Supreme Personality of Godhead. Although He is one, He
maintains different personal expansions and energies for His pastimes.” [1]
“The Supreme Personality of Godhead, Bhagavan
Śrī Kṛṣṇa expands into many forms. Some are personal expansions, and some are separate
expansions. Thus He performs pastimes in both the spiritual and material
worlds. The spiritual worlds are the Vaikuṇṭha planets, and the material
universes are brahmāṇḍas, gigantic
globes governed by the creator (Brahmā).
“Expansions
of the Godhead’s personal self (for example, the quadruple manifestations of Saṅkarṣaṇa,
Pradyumna, Aniruddha, and Vāsudeva) descend as incarnations from Vaikuṇṭha to
this world. The separated expansions (vibhinnāṁśa)
are living entities. Although they are expansions of Kṛṣṇa they are counted
among His different potencies.” [2]
Bhaktivedānta Swāmi Prabhupāda in a taped lecture available
here: https://prabhupadavani.org/transcriptions/661203ccny/
explains this teaching from Caitanya Caritamṛta further:
“Here Lord Caitanya is describing about the various
forms of Kṛṣṇa. This is very important subject. How Kṛṣṇa is all-pervading, He
is describing.
kṛṣṇera
svarūpa-ananta, vaibhava-apāra
cic-chakti,
māyā-śakti, jīva-śakti āra
Kṛṣṇera svarūpa ananta.
The transcendental forms of Kṛṣṇa are innumerable, vaibhava, and His opulence, that is also
innumerable. Nobody can estimate. How many forms are there of Kṛṣṇa or how much
opulent He is, nobody can estimate; nobody can measure. This is inconceivable.
The first proposition. Cic-chakti māyā-śakti jīva-śakti
āra. And His potencies are also unlimited, out of which, three
potencies are generally accepted = cit-śakti,
spiritual potency; material potency; and marginal potency. These three
potencies I have described many times. Cit-śakti,
the spiritual potency, is a manifestation of the spiritual world, and material
potency is a manifestation of this material world, and the marginal potency, we
are, we living entities.
Śrīla Prabhupāda continues, “We are marginal potency. Why it is marginal? Because although we belong
to the spiritual potency, but we have got tendency to come into contact of this
material potency. Therefore it is called marginal, "this way or that
way." That a slight independence which is there in every living entity, he
can use that, and he may select either to live in the spiritual potency or in
the material potency. Therefore the living entities are called marginal
potency. So parāsya śaktir vividhaiva śrūyate
[Cc. Madhya 13.65, purport].
Although the energies of the Supreme Lord are innumerable---nobody can count or
measure---but they are divided into three.
vaikuṇṭha,
brahmāṇḍa-gaṇa-śakti-kārya haya
svarūpa-śakti
śakti-kāryera-kṛṣṇa samāśraya
“Now, Lord Caitanya says, Vaikuṇṭha. Just like this
universe is a jagad-aṇḍa, is a big round ball,
aṇḍa. Aṇḍa means egglike, just like egg is
round. Therefore it is called brahmāṇḍa.
It is a round ball. Every planet is round, and the universe is also round, and
the Vaikuṇṭhas are also round, all round. Vaikuṇṭha, brahmāṇḍa-gaṇa-śakti-kārya haya.
So all these universes, the universe which we experience... There are
innumerable universes that we cannot see.
We can see only one universe, and in
one universe there are innumerable planets. Similarly, there are innumerable
universes, and in each universe there are innumerable planets. This information
we get from Brahma-saṁhitā.
yasya
prabhā prabhavato jagad-aṇḍa-koṭi-
koṭiṣv
aśeṣa-vasudhādi vibhūti-bhinnam
tad
brahma niṣkalam anantam aśeṣa-bhūtaṁ
govindam
ādi-puruṣaṁ tam ahaṁ bhajāmi
[Bs.
5.40]
That brahma-jyotir,
in that brahma-jyotir
there are all these universes and Vaikuṇṭhas. All, they are resting in that brahma-jyotir. Just like in the sunshine so
many planets are resting, similarly, in the brahma-jyotir,
the personal shining of Lord Kṛṣṇa, in that shining which is called brahma-jyotir, all the universes and Vaikuṇṭha
planets or universes, they are all resting. And the universes, the material universes
are only one-fourths in quantity of the Vaikuṇṭha universes. All the universes
taken together of this material world, it is only one-fourths in comparison to
the other Vaikuṇṭha, or spiritual, universes. Vaikuṇṭha,
brahmāṇḍa-gaṇa-śakti-kārya haya.
Now, these universes and the brahmāṇḍas, or the Vaikuṇṭhas, they are
manifestation of the energy of the Supreme Lord.
God is all-pervading. "God is
all-pervading" does not mean God has lost His identification. This is the
mistake of the impersonalists. "Because God is everywhere, God is
all-pervading; therefore there should not be any particular existence of
God." This is impersonalism. But
this is material thought. They do not study Vedic literature properly.
In the Vedic literature it is said, pūrṇasya pūrṇam ādāya pūrṇam evāvaśiṣyate [Īśo
Invocation]. Just like I have several times explained before you that in the spiritual absolute identity, one minus
one equal to one and one plus one equal to one.
So although innumerable energies are coming out of
the supreme body of the Supreme Lord, still He is full.
There is no loss of energy. Just like we can have
some material example = the sun. We do not know for how many millions of years
the sunshine and temperature is coming out of the sun planet, but still the sun
is the same. There is no loss of temperature. So if in a material object this
is possible, that in spite of distributing heat and light from the sun disk for
millions and millions of years, the sun disk is still of the same temperature,
there is no loss of temperature---this is a material thing---so why in the
spiritual body of the Supreme there will be any loss?
This is a material idea, that "Because God has
become all-pervading, therefore He has lost Himself." Why He should lose
His identity? This is confirmed in the Vedic literature = pūrṇasya pūrṇam ādāya pūrṇam evavaśiṣyate.
If you take from the... He is so full that if you take the whole thing from
Him, still, He is whole. Pūrṇasya pūrṇam ādāya pūrṇam
evāvaśiṣyate.
So as described here, kṛṣṇa svarūpa ananta vaibhava apāra.
So although He is transmitting innumerable energies and although He is
expanding Himself in innumerable forms, still, He is one. Still, He is the same
and one.
That is the spiritual conception, or absolute
conception. Absolute is not relative. "Because something has being taken
away, therefore it is something less"---it is relative. It is not
absolute. This idea is relative.
I have got in my pocket ten dollars. So I have taken
two dollars. Now it is eight dollars. This is relative truth. This is not
absolute idea.
Oṁ Purnam adaḥ purṇam idam... |
Absolute idea is that pūrṇasya pūrṇam ādāya pūrṇam evāvaśiṣyate [Īśo
Invocation]. Avaśiṣyate means the balance is
still full. Whatever you may take, the balance is still.
daśame
daśamaṁ lakṣyam
āśritāśraya-vigraham
śrī-kṛṣṇākhyaṁ
paraṁ dhāma
jagad-dhāma
namāmi tat
In the Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam
there are twelve cantos. In the Tenth Canto the appearance of Kṛṣṇa and His
activities are mentioned, in the Tenth Canto.
Before studying Krishna's pastimes in the 10th Canto it is important to understand the ontology of the first 9 Cantos. |
And before Lord Kṛṣṇa's activities and life is
mentioned, there are nine cantos. So why?
Now, daśame daśamaṁ lakṣyam āśritāśraya-vigraham.
Now, to understand Kṛṣṇa, we have to understand what is this creation, how this
creation is going on, what are the activities, what are spiritual knowledge,
what is philosophy, what is renunciation, what is liberation. All these things
we have to learn very nicely. After learning these perfectly, then you can
understand Kṛṣṇa. So in the nine cantos of the Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam, all these different nine
manifestation of His energies are described.
If we can understand... Just like if we can study the
sunshine, the energy of the sun, then we can estimate the value of sun =
"Oh, what sort of temperature is there." So if you want to study God,
if you want to know God, then you must first of all study His energies. God is
all-pervading by His energy.
You study. Just the scientists, what they are
studying? They are studying a portion of the energy of God, only a portion of
the energy of God. That is also not perfectly. So the energy is so vast and immense
that one cannot study even the energy. Therefore those who are studying about
God, after finishing the study of the energies, they are at a loss to
understand how so much energy can be emanated from the person.
Therefore they cannot conceive any personal idea of
God. The energy is so vast and immense that they are bewildered in the energy.
And how such great amount of energy can emanate from a person they cannot
conceive, because they compare with their own energy. Because I am limited... I
have got this body, I have got my personality, but my energies are limited. But
we cannot understand that the Unlimited has got unlimited energy.”
The teachings of Caitanya Mahāprabhu as further
explained by Śrīla Prabhupāda are subtle and require not only thought and
meditation in bhakti-yoga, but spiritual dedication to further realize. Let’s return to a more “Upanishadic” version.
Gitopanishad
confirms this version of the eternal transcendental nature of the soul as
follows, where Bhagavan Śrī Krishna affirms: “The living entities in this world
are My eternal atomic parts. Because of conditioned life, they are struggling
hard with the six senses, including the mind.” [3]
Krishna
continues his discourse on the eternal transcendental nature of the jiva
“For the soul
there is never birth or death. Having once been, he never ceases to be. He is
unborn, eternal, ever-existing, undying, primeval. He is not slain when the body is
slain.” [4]
The soul can
never be cut into pieces, nor can he be burned by fire, nor
moistened by
water, nor withered by the wind. [5]
“This
individual soul is unbreakable and insoluble, and can be never be burned nor dried. He
is everlasting, all-pervading, unchangeable, immovable, and eternally the
same.[6]
It is important to keep in mind the relationship between the
infinitesimal particle of consciousness, or jīva
ātma, and the Supreme Soul or Paramātmā. According to the Upanishadic
version, we can understand the jivātmā as a subatomic particle of a ray of
Paramātmā, the Supreme soul.
“As
innumerable sparks emanate from a fire, so all the jīvas with their particular characteristics
emanate from the Paramātma, along with the gods, planets, animate and
inanimate beings.” [7]
In his
explanation of Vedānta before the followers and sannyāsīs of the Śankarācārya
school, Caitanya Mahāprabhu began his refutation of Advaita monism with an
explanation of this idea from the Upanishads:
“The Supreme
Absolute Truth, or Bhagavan Śrī Kṛṣṇa is like a great blazing fire, and the
living entities are like small sparks of that fire. [8]
Śrīla
Prabhupāda comments in his purport on this verse: "Although
sparks and a big fire are both fire and both have the power to burn, the
burning power of the fire and that of the spark are not the same. Why should
one artificially try to become like a big fire although by constitution he is
like a small spark? It is due to ignorance. One should therefore understand
that neither the Supreme Personality of Godhead nor the small spark-like living
entities have anything to do with matter, but when the spiritual spark comes in
contact with the material world his fiery quality is extinguished. That is the
position of the conditioned souls. Because they are in touch with the material
world, their spiritual quality is almost dead, but because these spiritual
sparks are all Kṛṣṇa's parts and parcels, as the Lord states in the
Bhagavad-gītā (mamaivāḿśaḥ), they
can revive their original position by getting free from material contact.
This
is pure philosophical understanding. In the Bhagavad-gītā the spiritual sparks
are declared to be sanātana
(eternal); therefore the material energy, māyā,
cannot affect their constitutional position.
Someone may argue,
"Why is there a need to create the spiritual sparks?" The answer can
be given in this way: Since the Absolute Personality of Godhead is omnipotent,
He has both unlimited and limited potencies. This is the meaning of omnipotent.
To be omnipotent, He must have not only unlimited potencies but limited
potencies also. Thus to exhibit His omnipotency He displays both. The living
entities are endowed with limited potency although they are part of the Lord.
The Lord displays the spiritual world by His unlimited potencies, whereas by
His limited potencies the material world is displayed. In the Bhagavad-gītā (7.5) the Lord says:
apareyam itas tv anyāḿ prakṛtiḿ viddhi me parām
jīva-bhūtāḿ mahā-bāho yayedaḿ dhāryate jagat
"Besides these
inferior energies, O mighty-armed Arjuna, there is another, superior energy of
Mine, which comprises all living entities who are exploiting the resources of
this material, inferior nature." The jīva-bhūta,
the living entities, control this material world with their limited potencies.
Generally, people are bewildered by the activities of scientists and
technologists.
"Due to māyā they think that there is no need of
God and that they can do everything and anything, but actually they cannot.
Since this cosmic manifestation is limited, their existence is also limited.
Everything in this material world is limited, and for this reason there is
creation, sustenance and dissolution. However, in the world of unlimited
energy, the spiritual world, there is neither creation nor destruction.
"If the Personality of
Godhead did not possess both limited and unlimited energies, He could not be
called omnipotent.
Aṇor aṇīyān mahato
mahīyān: "The Lord is greater than the greatest and smaller than the
smallest."
He is smaller than the smallest in the form of the living
entities and greater than the greatest in His form of Kṛṣṇa. If there were
no one to control, there would be no meaning to the conception of the supreme
controller (īśvara), just as there is
no meaning to a king without his subjects.
If all the subjects became king,
there would be no distinction between the king and an ordinary citizen. Thus
for the Lord to be the supreme controller there must be a creation to control.
The basic principle for the existence of the living entities is called cid-vilāsa, or spiritual pleasure.
The
omnipotent Lord displays His pleasure potency as the living entities. The Lord
is described in the Vedānta-sūtra (1.1.12) as ānanda-mayo 'bhyāsāt. He is by nature
the reservoir of all pleasures, and because He wants to enjoy pleasure, there
must be energies to give Him pleasure or supply Him the impetus for pleasure.
This is the perfect philosophical understanding of the Absolute Truth."
There is a very clear line here between the ancient wisdom teachings of the Upanishads, the Vedantic interpretation of Śrī Caitanya and his followers and the explanation given by Bhatkivedānta Swāmi.
Consciousness exists. God exists. God is Great. We are small. The living entities who emanate from the Supreme Reality do so as particles of particles of spiritual energy. As such they are like subatomic spiritual particles.
The idea that the jīva is conscious atomic spiritual energy is reasserted
again and again in the Upanishads wherein it is explained that the soul is
infinitesimal:
Here’s the Śvetāśvatara
Upaniṣad: “If we divide the tip of a hair into one hundred parts and then take
one part and divide this into another one hundred parts, that ten-thousandth
part is the dimension of the living entity. And this living entity is capable
to attain the unlimited Lord.”[9]
Of course the uppermost tip of a hair may be understood metaphorically to mean mathematical point
which recedes infinitesimally.
Dividing the infinitesimal thousands of times is
a mathematical impossibility. It is not that the soul may be identified physically through an electron microscope by splitting hairs. The point is to develop our understanding of how
insignificant the tiny soul is in comparison with the absolute infinite.
By
recognition of our smallness, we may come to a higher understanding, one that
involves humility and ultimately, surrender.
The spiritual
teacher who initiated me on this path, on this journey to surrender was His
Divine Grace Bhakti Rakshak Śrīdara Dev Goswāmī.
Śrīdhara
Mahārāja refers to the above quote from the Upanishads as follows in his teachings he says of this calculation of one ten thousandth of the tip of a hair:
"It
has been suggested for us to understand our position. That there is one hair,
if you cut the hair into a hundred pieces, and again one piece into a hundred
pieces, again that piece to a hundred … infinitely small, infinitesimal. Try to
realise you, then you will come to the reality. "Oh, I am so small. Then
how can I stand without some help from outside?"
So your real inner hankering will come for
atma-nivedanam. "I want a support, I want a support. Otherwise I can't
stand independently. I am so small." That sincere, intense desire, that
will takes us to some support, atma-nivedanam.
First dainyam (humility), to find out the real
meanness of the self, and necessarily there will come a natural search for some
support, atma-nivedanam. Then goptrtve varanam (embracing the Lord's
guardianship), and when we get some sort of support, most earnestly to embrace
that. "That without You I am nowhere so I can't leave You, goptrtve
varanam, and You must protect me."[10]
[1]
অদ্ৱয-জ্ঞান-তত্ত্ৱ কৃষ্ণ — স্ৱযḿ ভগৱান্
[2] স্ৱাংশ-ৱিভিনাংশ-রূপে
হঞা ৱিস্তার অনন্ত
ৱৈকুণ্ঠ-ব্রহ্মাণ্ডে
করেন ৱিহার স্ৱাংশ-ৱিস্তার চতুর্-ৱ্যুহ,
অৱতার-গণ
ৱিভিন্নাংশ জীৱ তাঞ্র শক্তিতে গণন
svāṁśa-vibhināṁśa-rūpe
hañā vistāra ananta
vaikuṇṭha-brahmāṇḍe
karena vihāra svāṁśa-vistāra catur-vyuha,
avatāra-gaṇa
vibhinnāṁśa jīva tāñra śaktite gaṇana (Cc. Madhya 22.8-9)
[3] ममैवांशो
जीव-लोके जीव-भूतः सनातनः
मनः-षष्ठानीन्द्रियाणि
प्रकृति-स्थानि कर्षति
mamaivāṁśo
jīva-loke jīva-bhūtaḥ sanātanaḥ
manaḥ-ṣaṣṭhānīndriyāṇi
prakṛti-sthāni karṣati
(Bhagavad-gītā
15.7)
[4]
न जायते म्रियते वा
कदाचिन्
नायं
भूत्वा भविता वा न भूयः
अजो
नित्यः शाश्वतो ऽयं पुराणो
न
हन्यते हन्यमाने शरीरे
na
jāyate mriyate vā kadācin
nāyaṁ
bhūtvā bhavitā vā na bhūyaḥ
ajo
nityaḥ śāśvato 'yaṁ purāṇo
na
hanyate hanyamāne śarīre
(Bhagavad-gītā 2.20)
[5]
नैनं छिन्दन्ति शस्त्राणि
नैनं दहति पावकः
न
चैनं क्लेदयन्त्य् आपो न शोषयति मारुतः
nainaṁ
chindanti śastrāṇi nainaṁ dahati pāvakaḥ
na
cainaṁ kledayanty āpo na śoṣayati mārutaḥ
(Bhagavad-gītā 2.23)
[6]
अच्छेद्यो ऽयम् अदाह्यो
ऽयम् अक्लेद्यो ऽशोष्य एव च
नित्यः
सर्व-गतः स्थाणुर् अचलो ऽयं सनातनः
acchedyo
'yam adāhyo 'yam akledyo 'śoṣya eva ca
nityaḥ
sarva-gataḥ sthāṇur acalo 'yaṁ sanātanaḥ
(Bhagavad-gītā
2.24)
यथाग्नेः
क्षुद्रा विस्फुलिङ्गा व्युच्चरन्त्येवम् एवास्मादात्मनः
सर्वे
प्राणाः सर्वे लोकाः सर्वे देवाः सर्वाणि भूतानि व्युच्चरन्ति
yathāgneḥ
kṣudrā visphuliṅgā vyuccarantyevam evāsmādātmanaḥ
sarve
prāṇāḥ sarve lokāḥ sarve devāḥ sarvāṇi bhūtāni vyuccaranti
(Bṛhad-āraṇyaka Upaniṣad 2.1.20)
[8]
ঈশ্ৱরের তত্ত্ৱ যেন
জ্ৱলিত জ্ৱলন জিৱের স্ৱরূপ যৈছে স্ফুলিঙ্গের কণ
īśvarera
tattva yena jvalita jvalana jivera svarūpa yaiche sphuliṅgera kaṇa (Cc. Ādi 7.116)
বালাগ্র-শত
ভাগস্য শতধা কল্পিতস্য চ
ভাগো
জিৱঃ স ৱিজ্ঞেযঃ স চানন্ত্যায কাপ্তে
bālāgra-śata
bhāgasya śatadhā kalpitasya ca
bhāgo
jivaḥ sa vijñeyaḥ sa cānantyāya kāpte (Śvetāśvatara Upaniṣad 5.9)
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Quote courtesy of Julie Cluer https://www.facebook.com/search/top/?q=julie%20cluer%20posts
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