The Religions Book

(ff) #1

104 THE ULTIMATE REALITY


All this is Brahman...
He is my Self
within the heart,
smaller than
a corn of rice...
Chandogya Upanishad
14th Khanda

Understanding Brahman
The Upanishad dialogue about the
fig seed is followed by a second,
which attempts to give us some
sense of what Brahman might be
like. A bowl of water is brought and
the son is asked to taste the liquid
from different parts of the bowl. It
tastes pure throughout. Salt is
then dissolved in the water. Now,
although the appearance remains
the same, all of the water tastes of
salt. In the same way, Brahman,
the absolute reality, is unseen but
present everywhere.
The Mundaka Upanishad uses
a different image for Brahman. Just
as thousands of sparks fly from a
large fire and then fall back into it,
so innumerable beings are created
from Brahman, “the imperishable,”
or “Great One,” which is described
as unborn, breathless, mindless,


and pure—but bringing forth
breath, mind, and all the senses.
“Its heart is the whole world. Truly,
this is the Inner Self of all.”
In this understanding, the way
we experience the world through
the senses, viewing it as consisting
of objects separate from ourselves,
is not the absolute truth; there is a
reality that underlies and sustains
everything, which is invisible and
within our innermost self.

Karma and reincarnation
In the earlier Vedic religion, it was
believed that the act of offering
sacrifices to the gods maintained
the sense of order in the universe.
The Upanishads internalized that
process. They claimed that reality
is to be found as an absolutely
simple, still point, deep within the
self. And that reality is universal,

not individual. Just as making a
sacrifice in the correct way was
thought to align the self with the
universal order, so being aware
of Brahman as the true self is to
align yourself with reality itself.
Hindus believe that karma
(actions) produce consequences
—both good and bad—not just
in the external world, but also for
the person who performs them.
Hinduism developed an idea of
reincarnation in which the self
takes on a succession of bodies
over the course of many lifetimes.
The form each life takes is
determined by karma from the
previous life. However, knowledge
that “atman is Brahman” can
release a person from the constant
cycle of birth, death, and rebirth
(which is known as samsara).
Karma is generated by the actions
of the physical body and the
subtle mental body (such as an
individual’s thoughts and feelings),
but the person who is aware of the
atman, and therefore of Brahman,
residing deep within the self, will
transcend the level of the two
bodies (physical and subtle mental)
at which karma operates.

An endless cycle of lives is what lies
before us, unless we can be released
from the suffering of reincarnation
through the realization of the true
nature of atman or Brahman.

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