The Brahman
In the
Vedantic
(and
subsequently Yogic) schools of Hinduism, Brahman is
the signifying name given to the concept of the unchanging, infinite,
immanent and transcendent reality that is the Divine Ground of all being. It
is regarded as the source and sum of the cosmos, that constricted by time,
space, and causation, as pure being, the "world soul."
Thus, it was deemed a singular substrate from which all that is arises, and
debuts with this verse:
Great indeed are the Gods who have
sprung out of Brahman. Atharva Veda
However, as the centuries passed and the first
Upanishads (the primary Vedantic scriptures that putatively serve
as commentaries on the original liturgical books of the Vedas) were written,
the concept of Brahman fittingly grew in scope and
complexity. Soon, the ancient writers of the Upanishads, around the 1st
millennium BCE, insisted that brahman, in addition to being material,
efficient, formal and final causes of the cosmos, was also utterly beyond
all four senses of origin. Essentially, it is also beyond being and
non-being alike, and thus does not quite fit with the usual connotations of
the word God and even the concept of monism. It is said that brahman
cannot be known, that we cannot be made conscious of it, because
brahman is our very consciousness. Brahman is also not restricted to
the usual dimensional perspectives of being, and thus enlightenment,
moksha,
yoga
,
samadhi,
nirvana, etc. in the Hindu
perspective is not merely coming to know brahman, but to realise one's 'brahman-hood',
to actually realise that one is and always was brahman. Indeed, closely
related to the Self concept of brahman is the idea that it is synonymous
with jiva-atma, or individual souls, our atman
(or soul) being readily identifiable with the greater soul of Brahman.
Connected with the ritual of pre-Vedantic Hinduism,
brahman signified the power to grow, the expansive and self-altering
process of ritual and sacrifice, often visually realized in the sputtering
of flames as they received the all important ghee (clarified butter) and
rose in concert with the
mantras
of the Vedas. Brahmin came to refer to the highest of the four
castes, the Brahmins, who by virtue of their purity and priesthood are held
to have such powers.
Brahman and Atman
Philosopher mystics of
the Upanishads identify Brahman, the world soul, with atman, the inner
essence of the human being, or the human soul. In the Hindu pantheon,
Brahman should not be confused with the first of the Hindu Trimurti
(= trinity) of Brahma (the Creator),
Vishnu (the Preserver)
and Shiva (the Destroyer). Brahma is, like the other gods,
Ishwar, or manifested Brahman, fundamentally ego-conscious, whereas
Brahman is without ego, without existence and beyond. Ishwar is also
known as Saguna Brahman, or God with personal attributes.
The Ultimate Truth is expressed as Nirguna
Brahman, or God without form, or God without personal attributes. All
personal forms of God such as Vishnu or Shiva are different aspects of God
in personal form or God with attributes, Saguna Brahman. God's energy is
personified as Devi, the Divine Mother.
For Vaishnavites who follow Ramunjacharaya's philosophy,
Devi is Lakshmi, who is the Mother of all and who pleads
with Vishnu for mankind who is entrenched in sin. For Shaivites,
Devi is Parvati. For Shaktas, who worship
Devi, Devi is the personal form of God to attain the impersonal Absolute,
God. For them, Shiva is personified as God without attributes.
In the Advaita school,
the mystic phrase that is seen to be the only possible (and still thoroughly
inadequate) description of Brahman that humans, with limited minds and
being, can entertain is the Sanskrit word Sacchidānanda, which is
combined from sat-chit-ānanda, meaning "truth -
knowledge - bliss".
Enlightenment and Brahman
While Brahman lies behind the sum total of
the objective universe, some human minds boggle at any attempt to explain it
with only the tools provided by reason. Brahman is beyond the senses, beyond
the mind, beyond intelligence, beyond imagination. Indeed, the highest idea
is that Brahman is beyond both existence and non-existence, transcending and
including time, causation and space, and thus cannot ever be known in
the same sense as one traditionally 'understands' a given concept or object.
Imagine a person who is blind from birth
and has not seen anything. Is it possible for us to explain to him the
meaning of the color red. Is any amount of thinking or reasoning on his part
ever going to make him understand the sensation of the color red ? In a
similar fashion the idea of Brahman cannot be explained or understood
through reasoning or any form of human communication. Brahman is like the
color red. Those who can sense it cannot explain or argue with those who
have never sensed it.
Hindus also regard Brahman as the all pervading
consciousness which is believed to be the basis of all the animate and
inanimate entities and material. It is believed that the universe is not
just conscious, but that universe is consciousness, and this
consciousness is Brahman. Hindus believe that human consciousness has
forgotten its identity, that of Brahman, as if a drop of water from a vast
ocean thought itself separate, and that the only path to merge back into
that Brahman or supreme consciousness is through the paths of
devotion, moral living, and/or
meditation
,
often expressed in various systems of Hindu spiritual practices known as
yogas.
If one seeks Brahman, Atman seeks truth
and accepts it no matter what it is. Atman accepts all truths of the
self/ego, and thus is able to accept the fact that it is not separate from
its surroundings. Then Atman is permanently absorbed into Brahman. This is
how one forever escapes karma and the cycle of rebirth.
Adapted
with permission from
Wikipedia.