VEDA-THE REVEALED
WISDOM
The Srutis are
called the Vedas, or the Amnaya. The Hindus have received their
religion through revelation, the Vedas. These are direct intuitional
revelations and are held to be Apaurusheya or entirely superhuman,
without any author in particular. The Veda is the glorious pride of the
Hindus, nay, of the whole world! The term Veda comes from the root 'Vid',
to know. The word Veda means knowledge. When it is applied to scripture,
it signifies a book of knowledge. The Vedas are the foundational
scriptures of the Hindus. The Veda is the source of the other five sets
of scriptures, why, even of the secular and the materialistic. The Veda
is the storehouse of Indian wisdom and is a memorable glory which man
can never forget till eternity. The Vedas are the eternal truths
revealed by God to the great ancient Rishis of India. The word Rishi
means a Seer, from dris, to see. He is the Mantra-Drashta, seer
of Mantra or thought. The thought was not his own. The Rishis saw the
truths or heard them. Therefore, the Vedas are what are heard (Sruti).
The Rishi did not write. He did not create it out of his mind. He was
the seer of thought which existed already. He was only the spiritual
discoverer of the thought. He is not the inventor of the Veda.
THE UNIQUE GLORY OF THE
VEDAS
The Vedas represent the
spiritual experiences of the Rishis of yore. The Rishi is only a medium
or an agent to transmit to people the intuitional experiences which he
received. The truths of the Vedas are revelations. All the other
religions of the world claim their authority as being delivered by
special messengers of God to certain persons, but the Vedas do not owe
their authority to any one. They are themselves the authority as they
are eternal, as they are the Knowledge of the Lord. Lord Brahma, the
Creator, imparted the divine knowledge to the Rishis or Seers. The
Rishis disseminated the knowledge. The Vedic Rishis were great realised
persons who had direct intuitive perception of Brahman or the Truth.
They were inspired writers. They built a simple, grand and perfect
system of religion and philosophy from which the founders and teachers
of all other religions have drawn their inspiration. The Vedas are the
oldest books in the library of man. The truths contained in all
religions are derived from the Vedas and are ultimately traceable to the
Vedas. The Vedas are the fountain-head of religion. The Vedas are the
ultimate source to which all religious knowledge can be traced. Religion
is of divine origin. It was revealed by God to man in the earliest
times. It is embodied in the Vedas. The Vedas are eternal. They are
without beginning and end. An ignorant man, may say how a book can be
without beginning or end. By the Vedas, no books are meant. Vedas came
out of the breath of the Lord. They are not the composition of any human
mind. They were never written, never created. They are eternal and
impersonal. The date of the Vedas has never been fixed. It can never be
fixed. Vedas are eternal spiritual truths. Vedas are an embodiment of
divine knowledge. The books may be destroyed, but the knowledge cannot
be destroyed. Knowledge is eternal. In that sense, the Vedas are
eternal.
DIVISIONS OF THE VEDAS
The Veda is
divided into four great books: the Rig-Veda, the Yajur-Veda,
the Sama-Veda and the Atharva-Veda. The Yajur-Veda is
again divided into two parts, the Sukla and the Krishna. The Krishna or
the Taittiriya is the older book and the Sukla or the Vajasaneya is a
later revelation to sage Yajnavalkya from the resplendent Sun-God. The
Rig-Veda is divided into twenty-one sections, the Yajur-Veda into one
hundred and nine sections, the Sama-Veda into one thousand sections and
the Atharva-Veda into fifty sections. In all, the whole Veda is thus
divided into one thousand one hundred and eighty recensions. Each Veda
consists of four parts: the Mantra-Samhitas or hymns, the Brahmanas or
explanations of Mantras or rituals, the Aranyakas, and the Upanishads.
The division of the Vedas into four parts is to suit the four stages in
a man's life. The Mantra-Samhitas are hymns in praise of the Vedic God
for attaining material prosperity here and happiness hereafter. They are
metrical poems comprising prayers, hymns and incantations addressed to
various deities, both subjective and objective. The Mantra portion of
the Vedas is useful for the Brahmacharins. The Rig-Veda Samhita is the
grandest book of the Hindus, the oldest and the best. It is the Great
Indian Bible, which no Hindu would forget to adore from the core of his
heart. Its style, the language and the tone are most beautiful and
mysterious. Its immortal Mantras embody the greatest truths of
existence, and it is perhaps the greatest treasure in all the scriptural
literature of the world. Its priest is called the Hotri. The Yajur-Veda
Samhita is mostly in prose and is meant to be used by the Adhvaryu, the
Yajur-Vedic priest, for superfluous explanations of the rites in
sacrifices, supplementing the Rig-Vedic Mantras. The Sama-Veda Samhita
is mostly borrowed from the Rig-Vedic Samhita, and is meant to be sung
by the Udgatri, the Sama Vedic priest, in sacrifices. The Atharva-Veda
Samhita is meant to be used by the Brahma, the Atharva-Vedic priest, to
correct the mispronunciations and wrong performances that may
accidentally be committed by the other three priests of the sacrifice.
The Brahmana portions guide people to perform sacrificial rites. They
are prose explanations of the method of using the Mantras in the Yajna
or the sacrifice. The Brahmana portion is suitable for the householders.
There are two Brahmanas to the Rig-Veda-the Aitareya and the Sankhayana.
"The Rig-Veda", says Max Muller, "is the most ancient book of the world.
The sacred hymns of the Brahmanas stand unparalleled in the literature
of the whole world; and their preservation might well be called
miraculous." The Satapatha Brahmana belongs to the Sukla-Yajur-Veda. The
Krishna-Yajur-Veda has the Taittiriya and the Maitrayana Brahmanas. The
Tandya or Panchavimsa, the Shadvimsa, the Chhandogya, the Adbhuta, the
Arsheya and the Upanishad Brahmanas belong to the Sama-Veda. The
Brahmana of the Atharva-Veda is called the Gopatha. Each of the
Brahmanas has got an Aranyaka. The Aranyakas are the forest books, the
mystical sylvan texts which give philosophical interpretations of the
rituals. The Aranyakas are intended for the Vanaprasthas or hermits who
prepare themselves for taking Sannyasa. The Upanishads are the most
important portion of the Vedas. The Upanishads contain the essence or
the knowledge portion of the Vedas. The philosophy of the Upanishads is
sublime, profound, lofty and soul-stirring. The Upanishads speak of the
identity of the individual soul and the Supreme Soul. They reveal the
most subtle and deep spiritual truths. The Upanishads are useful for the
Sannyasins. The subject matter of the whole Veda is divided into Karma-
Kanda, Upasana-Kanda and Jnana-Kanda. The Karma-Kanda or Ritualistic
Section deals with various sacrifices and rituals. The Upasana-Kanda or
Worship-Section deals with various kinds of worship or meditation. The
Jnana-Kanda or Knowledge-Section deals with the highest knowledge of
Nirguna Brahman. The Mantras and the Brahmanas constitute Karma-Kanda;
the Aranyakas Upasana-Kanda; and the Upanishads Jnana-Kanda.
THE ESSENCE OF THE VEDAS
Live in the spirit of the
teachings of the Vedas. Learn to discriminate between the permanent and
the impermanent. Behold the Self in all beings, in all objects. Names
and forms are illusory. Therefore sublate them. Feel that there is
nothing but the Self. Share what you have,-physical, mental, moral or
spiritual,-with all. Serve the Self in all. Feel when you serve others,
that you are serving your own Self. Love thy neighbour as thyself. Melt
all illusory differences. Remove all barriers that separate man from
man. Mix with all. Embrace all. Destroy the sex-idea and body-idea by
constantly thinking of the Self or the sexless, bodiless Atman. Fix the
mind on the Self when you work. This is the essence of the teachings of
the Vedas and sages of yore. This is real, eternal life in Atman. Put
these things in practice in the daily battle of life. You will shine as
a dynamic Yogi or a Jivanmukta. There is no doubt of this. |