Sri Sathya Sai Speaks, Vol 14 (1978 - 80)
52
The saadhaka and the scholar

Contents 
EVERY animate being has to attain fulfilment; that is the destiny, however hard, however long, the journey. When and how are determined by the nature of the cumulative effects of many lives. The effects are shaped not only by the actions but even more by motives that induce them. The present condition of each is the consequence of past actions and motives. Present actions and motives mould the future. Each one builds his own fortune or misfortune. But, can we assert that others are superfluous, that one need not and should not seek help from another? In order to attain fulfilment in the spiritual field, the help of those who have mastered the path is very necessary. The guidance can be transmitted only from one heart to another heart. It can be done only when intimate kinship is established between the seeker and the saint. Texts and commentaries, guide books and maps only breed doubts, discords, and discussions. Reasons can develop only skill and cleverness. Experience achieved through intuition alone is valid in the realm of the spirit. For intuition to be illumination, the layers of egoism and its evils have to be penetrated and destroyed.
A Guru will be of great help in this adventure. The power has to flow from the reservoir to the receptacle. He who has reached the goal can alone guide the pilgrim to it. Without him, the aspirant can only wander in the wilds. Some Gurus initiate the pupil into a manthra (mystic formula) and advise repetition of the same. But, they do not emphasise the innate Divine Reality of the pupil which they cannot ignore even for a moment, nor do they insist on the 'moral regeneration, so necessary for clarifying his inner faculties.
God is in the least as well as in the vast
The manthra-granting Guru is the Dheeksha Guru (initiating preceptor); the personalityrecasting guru is the Siksha Guru (guiding preceptor). It is this latter guru that is reverentially praised in thousands of ways in the holy texts. He removes the faults in vision and destroys the darkness of ignorance. He reveals the Atma to the individual and makes him free. The Guru Poornima is dedicated to such gurus. Poornima (the Full Moon day) celebrates the fulfilment that is the goal of all life. We have the Vedhic axiom that "this is full, that is full; when fullness is taken from fullness, the remainder is fullness." This refers to the fullness of quality (guna) and not of quantity. A block of candy is as sweet as a tiny piece taken from it; a drop of sea water has the same taste as the entire sea. God is present in this fullness in the atom as well as in the Cosmos. He is Sath-Chith-Anandha (Being, Awareness Bliss) in the least as well as in the vast. Both are full of God. He cannot be partly in one and wholly in another. He is indivisible.
This day is dedicated for thanksgiving to the guru, for, the Moon (the presiding deity of the mind) today is full, clear, cool and bright! He has no blemish or dullness which diminishes His Glow. The guru too is pictured and praised today as unblemished, bright and affectionate. He is full of devotion and the sense of surrender to God. He is tolerant and truly peaceful. He is the living example and embodiment of the virtues he desires us to develop.
God within is the Guru of Gurus
The study of texts might remove some wrong notions and induce some right resolutions. But it cannot confer the Vision of Reality. Meditation is key to the Athmic treasure that is the real wealth of the individual. Meditation can progress and gain victory only when one wins the affection of great souls and obey their instructions. In fact, God, the God within, is the Guru of Gurus. His Grace can make the blind see, the lame walk and the dumb speak. By a mere touch, He can demolish the sins of the past and erect the basis for peace and joy. God can be adored, worshipped and even-imagined or pictured by man only in human form, so long as the consciousness as man persists, so long as man cannot escape from this necessity. How can he travel beyond his limits? He can visualise God only as man, with super-human or supra-human power, wisdom, love, compassion. He can never describe or delineate the formless, the attributeless, the qualityless. It is only by means of form and attribute that one can pray, adore, worship or feel the presence. And the form has to be human. Little minds with no faith may argue that God cannot come as Man but in fact God can be recognised only as Man by human. This explains the statement, "Dhaivam manusha ruupena" - "God through human form," found in the scriptures. The sum total of spiritual experience is "Knowing oneself." This does not mean the knowledge of one's capabilities and skills, wants and wishes, strength and weakness. It means the knowledge of who one is, what one really is. Shankaracharya has summarised this knowledge in three lines - Brahma Sathyam (God is Truth), Jagath mithya (Creation is an illusion), Jeevah Brahmaiva na para (the Jeeva - the individual - is Brahma only, is God only, not else). Every 'become' has its source in 'being.' Being is God. God and the Individual are the undifferentiated One. So human-ness is holy; it is neither mean or low. It has the status of God, though clouded and contaminated.
Vyasa helped mankind to earn peace
For this faith to strike deep roots in our minds and to keep us fixed in that belief, a guru is needed. Vyasa is the first Guru who demarcated the path and the goal. So he is associated with the Poornima day. Vyasa means the person who has elaborated and expanded knowledge of truth, that is to say, the universal eternal energy. Vyasa composed the Mahabharatha, the 18 Puranas and the Bhagavatha and helped mankind to earn peace and happiness, and to learn ways of fruitful adoration of God. Vyasa has also narrated stories of the human incarnations of Godhead. The three Gunas - sathwa, rajas and thamas (purity, passionately active and ignorant)- - have differentiated all beings into divine, human and demonic persons. Men are intelligent, curious and full of wonder, full of awe and the attitude of reverence. They are the only beings who have the longing to know themselves and to succeed in that effort. There is a legend about the Truth. The Gods approached Ishvara and pleaded with Him to keep the knowledge of Truth away from men and demons, for it would make them irresistible. So, it was hidden in the unreachable heights of the Akasha (the sky). The demons lost interest in this kind of knowledge but men suffered agony in its absence. So, Ishvara hid it in the Ocean and finally, when human yearning became overwhelming, Ishvara planted it in the heart of every human being. But even there, it was not easily available for man. He had to penetrate through the evils of the five elements that comprise the gross body, the sheaths of the subtle body and the causal body, to have a vision of the indwelling Atma.
The scholar is polluted by ego
To have the vision of God, one should become the master, for he alone can have access to the treasure-chest, the master of the senses and all other faculties. He should not be the servant of the senses and of the whims and fancies of the emotions and passions. The servant has access only to the cheap and perishable junk of the house-hold. The treasure-chest cannot be viewed by eyes blinded or befogged by egoism, greed and envy. Guru Poornima is the day when you decide to become masters of your senses and intellect, emotions and passions, thoughts and feelings, by sadhana (spiritual discipline). Even during dhyana (meditation), the ego will obstruct you. Niveditha asked for advice from Vivekanandha to gain one-pointedness during dhyana. Vivekanandha said, "Do not allow Margaret Noble to come between you and God," Margaret Noble was herself. "Niveditha" means "Offering." So Vivekanandha explained, "offer yourself fully to God." This total dedication cannot emerge from scholarship. The scholar is polluted by ego; he delights in putting pros and cons against each other; he raises doubts and disturbs faith. They mix the secular and the worldly with the spiritual and the other-worldly. They worship God in order to extract worldly gain. But prayers to God have to be for spiritual progress. Therefore, engage yourselves in sadhana, without delay or dilatoriness. Cultivate virtues; be free from evil habits, thoughts, words and deeds. Grow in love and greet Nature with love. This is the way to Anandha. This is the message for Guru Poornima.
A man is made or marred by the company he keeps. A bad fellow who falls into good company is able to shed his evil quickly and shine forth in virtue. A good man falling into evil company is overcome by the subtle influence and he slides down into evil. The lesser is overpowered by the greater.
– Sri Sathya Sai Baba
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