Preface
The Brhadaranyaka Upanishad, or the great forest of knowledge, as the significance of this title would suggest, is a veritable mine of wisdom, with its six chapters touching upon the internal meaning of almost every phase of human life. The word 'Upanishad' is supposed to connote a secret instruction or a hidden doctrine, secret and hidden in the sense that it purports to reveal the invisible background or reality behind the visible forms of temporal existence. It is evident that things are not what they seem. And the Upanishad is a record of the unfolding of the mystery that lies behind phenomena.
The subject of the Brhadaranyaka Upanishad rises into a crescendo of importance, heightening its encompassing gamut of theme after theme, right from the very commencement until the conclusion of the Fourth Section of the First Chapter, rising in its pitch at this stage somewhat like the Ultimate Revelation at the level of the Eleventh chapter of the Bhagavadgita, which blossoms gradually through its earlier chapters.
Literally as a wide-ranging forest, one can discover in the Brhadaranyaka Upanishad new visions through its different sections or cantos, and perhaps we can find it anything anywhere. However, since the student might well feel more at home through teachings presented in the form of a well-tended garden rather than a thick jungle of information, the arrangement of the lectures, which form the substance of this book, is patterned to follow a logical ascent o subjects, keeping aside matters of a secondary character or importance to a later consideration as a sort of a sequel, so that the thread of the narration of similar themes is maintained without breaking the same with an interruption by some other subject which is not very relevant to the contemplation hand. Thus, these lectures follow a procedure as detailed below:
There is a continuity from the beginning of the Upanishad till the Fifth Section of the First Chapter. Then, the trend of the lectures proceeds directly there-from to the Fourth Section of the Second Chapter, and thence to the end of the Fifth Chapter. The left-out sections of the First Chapter and the beginning three sections of the Second Chapter are then touched upon after the description of the Fifth Chapter is over. Also, in these discourses, a study of the Sixth chapter of this Upanishad, though very interesting and even important as an esoteric teaching on certain essential aspects of human life considered as necessary steps interesting and even important, is omitted altogether, since one would feel that this part of the Upanishad is not going to fit into the normal course of present-day human thinking.
The first Section of the sixth Chapter is concerning the importance of the Prana and the functions of the different sense-organs; and the essentials of this subject have already been considered elsewhere in this work. Thus, this is not repeated again as a fresh study. The Second Section o the Sixth Chapter concerns the narration of the famous Panchagni-vidya, which occurs also in the Chhandogya Upanishad. Since an entirely new publication, known as Vaishvanara-Vidya, expounded by the author, includes this subject and is available to the public as a separate treatise, the same is not discussed again in the present work. The Third and the Fourth Sections of the Sixth Chapter relate to certain mystic rituals performed in connection with attainment of material prosperity and the living of a family life. The same are not taken up here for study, as their significance cannot be understood by a mere reading for oneself without proper personal initiation and the requisite spiritual background.
The entire series of these lectures being, as usual, an unpremeditated, on the spot speaking by the author, the conversational tone has been maintained to keep up the intimate touch, which we feel would make this highly indigestible topic more digestible. Though the author himself has touched up the manuscript of the First and Second Chapters, the other three Chapters were edited by his disciples, as his feeble eyesight would not permit him to go through this portion of the manuscript of the lectures. Thus, the reader might discover a little difference in these sections, rather unavoidably.
A study of this book would be found easier if it is taken up side by side by side with any standard edition of the Upanishad, preferably containing the original Sanskrit text with an intelligible translation, inasmuch as the lectures constitute a widespread exposition of the in-depth intention of the teachings rather than a translation or just an annotation of the text.
We have a firm hope that this unique publication will serve as a standard guide to everyone who aspires to delve into the profundities of this superb scripture.
From the Jacket
Swami Krishnananda is a highly respected philosophical writer, especially on metaphysics, psychology and sociology. Swamiji's books are known the world over a excellent presentations of answers to the daily questions that arise in the day-to-day confrontations of a human being.
Swami Krishnananda was the General Secretary of The Divine Life Society from 1961 until 2001. Swamiji was a direct disciple of His Holiness Swami Sivananda, founder of this Institution. Swamiji attained Mahasamadhi on 23rd November, 2001.
Invocatory Prayer | v |
Preface | vii |
Introduction | xi |
|
|
|
|
The Universe as a Sacrificial Horse | 3 |
|
|
The Creation of the Universe | 11 |
|
|
The Superiority of the Vital Force Among All Functions | 48 |
|
|
Creation from the Universal Self | 84 |
|
|
Prajapatis Production of the World | |
as Food for Himself | 157 |
|
|
|
|
The Conversation of Yajnavalkya and | |
Maitreyi on the Absolute Self | 167 |
|
|
Madhu-Vidya: The Honey Doctrine | 194 |
|
|
The Line of Teachers and Pupils | 210 |
|
|
|
|
Sacrificial Worship and its Rewards | 211 |
|
|
The Man in Bondage and His Future at Death | 227 |
|
|
The Resort of the Performers of the Horse Sacrifice | 239 |
|
|
The Unknowability of Brahman | 244 |
|
|
Renunciation, the Way to Know Brahman | 247 |
|
|
Brahman, the Universal Ground | 251 |
|
|
The Nature of the Inner Controller | 255 |
|
|
The Unqualified Brahman | 267 |
|
|
Many Gods and One Brahman | 280 |
Eight Different Persons and Their | |
Corresponding Divinities | 291 |
Five Directions in Space, Their Deities and Supports | 304 |
The Self | 314 |
Man Compared to a Tree | 318 |
|
|
|
|
Inadequate Definitions of Brahman | 322 |
|
|
Concerning the Soul | 342 |
|
|
The Light of Man is the Self | 355 |
The Different States of the Self | 360 |
The Self in Dream and Deep Sleep | 382 |
The Self at Death | 409 |
|
|
The Soul of the Unrealised after Death | 417 |
|
|
The Supreme Self and the Supreme Love | 476 |
|
|
|
|
Brahman the Inexhaustible | 478 |
|
|
The Three Principal Virtues | 485 |
|
|
Brahman as the True or the Real | 495 |
|
|
Brahman as the True or the Real | 495 |
|
|
The Real Explained | 500 |
|
|
The Divine Person | 515 |
|
|
Brahman as Lightning | 519 |
|
|
The Veda Symbolised as a Cow | 521 |
The Universal Fire | 524 |
|
|
The Course after Death | 526 |
|
|
The Supreme Austerities | 533 |
|
|
The via media of Attitude | 537 |
|
|
Meditation on the Life-Breath | 539 |
|
|
The Sacred Gayatri Prayer | 542 |
|
|
Prayer to the Sun by a Dying Person | 553 |
|
|
|
|
The Threefold Creation | 563 |
The Self Identified with the Sixteenfold | |
Prajapati, the Time Spirit | 577 |
The Three Worlds and the Means of Winning Them | 584 |
Father's Benediction and Transmission of Charge | 586 |
The Unfailing Vital Force | 592 |
|
|
The Threefold Character of the Universe | 600 |
|
|
|
|
A Progressive Definition of Brahman | 607 |
|
|
The Vital Force Embodied in a Person | 636 |
|
|
The Two Forms of Reality | 645 |
|
|
Chapter I - The Absolute and the Universe | 657 |
Chapter II - The Supreme Goal of Life | 676 |
Chapter III - Divine Immanence and the Correlativity of all Things | 681 |
Chapter IV - The Inner Reality | 689 |
Chapter V - The Principles of Meditation | 693 |
Chapter VI - The Spiritual and the Temporal | 697 |
Conclusion | 701 |
Notes | 703 |
Preface
The Brhadaranyaka Upanishad, or the great forest of knowledge, as the significance of this title would suggest, is a veritable mine of wisdom, with its six chapters touching upon the internal meaning of almost every phase of human life. The word 'Upanishad' is supposed to connote a secret instruction or a hidden doctrine, secret and hidden in the sense that it purports to reveal the invisible background or reality behind the visible forms of temporal existence. It is evident that things are not what they seem. And the Upanishad is a record of the unfolding of the mystery that lies behind phenomena.
The subject of the Brhadaranyaka Upanishad rises into a crescendo of importance, heightening its encompassing gamut of theme after theme, right from the very commencement until the conclusion of the Fourth Section of the First Chapter, rising in its pitch at this stage somewhat like the Ultimate Revelation at the level of the Eleventh chapter of the Bhagavadgita, which blossoms gradually through its earlier chapters.
Literally as a wide-ranging forest, one can discover in the Brhadaranyaka Upanishad new visions through its different sections or cantos, and perhaps we can find it anything anywhere. However, since the student might well feel more at home through teachings presented in the form of a well-tended garden rather than a thick jungle of information, the arrangement of the lectures, which form the substance of this book, is patterned to follow a logical ascent o subjects, keeping aside matters of a secondary character or importance to a later consideration as a sort of a sequel, so that the thread of the narration of similar themes is maintained without breaking the same with an interruption by some other subject which is not very relevant to the contemplation hand. Thus, these lectures follow a procedure as detailed below:
There is a continuity from the beginning of the Upanishad till the Fifth Section of the First Chapter. Then, the trend of the lectures proceeds directly there-from to the Fourth Section of the Second Chapter, and thence to the end of the Fifth Chapter. The left-out sections of the First Chapter and the beginning three sections of the Second Chapter are then touched upon after the description of the Fifth Chapter is over. Also, in these discourses, a study of the Sixth chapter of this Upanishad, though very interesting and even important as an esoteric teaching on certain essential aspects of human life considered as necessary steps interesting and even important, is omitted altogether, since one would feel that this part of the Upanishad is not going to fit into the normal course of present-day human thinking.
The first Section of the sixth Chapter is concerning the importance of the Prana and the functions of the different sense-organs; and the essentials of this subject have already been considered elsewhere in this work. Thus, this is not repeated again as a fresh study. The Second Section o the Sixth Chapter concerns the narration of the famous Panchagni-vidya, which occurs also in the Chhandogya Upanishad. Since an entirely new publication, known as Vaishvanara-Vidya, expounded by the author, includes this subject and is available to the public as a separate treatise, the same is not discussed again in the present work. The Third and the Fourth Sections of the Sixth Chapter relate to certain mystic rituals performed in connection with attainment of material prosperity and the living of a family life. The same are not taken up here for study, as their significance cannot be understood by a mere reading for oneself without proper personal initiation and the requisite spiritual background.
The entire series of these lectures being, as usual, an unpremeditated, on the spot speaking by the author, the conversational tone has been maintained to keep up the intimate touch, which we feel would make this highly indigestible topic more digestible. Though the author himself has touched up the manuscript of the First and Second Chapters, the other three Chapters were edited by his disciples, as his feeble eyesight would not permit him to go through this portion of the manuscript of the lectures. Thus, the reader might discover a little difference in these sections, rather unavoidably.
A study of this book would be found easier if it is taken up side by side by side with any standard edition of the Upanishad, preferably containing the original Sanskrit text with an intelligible translation, inasmuch as the lectures constitute a widespread exposition of the in-depth intention of the teachings rather than a translation or just an annotation of the text.
We have a firm hope that this unique publication will serve as a standard guide to everyone who aspires to delve into the profundities of this superb scripture.
From the Jacket
Swami Krishnananda is a highly respected philosophical writer, especially on metaphysics, psychology and sociology. Swamiji's books are known the world over a excellent presentations of answers to the daily questions that arise in the day-to-day confrontations of a human being.
Swami Krishnananda was the General Secretary of The Divine Life Society from 1961 until 2001. Swamiji was a direct disciple of His Holiness Swami Sivananda, founder of this Institution. Swamiji attained Mahasamadhi on 23rd November, 2001.
Invocatory Prayer | v |
Preface | vii |
Introduction | xi |
|
|
|
|
The Universe as a Sacrificial Horse | 3 |
|
|
The Creation of the Universe | 11 |
|
|
The Superiority of the Vital Force Among All Functions | 48 |
|
|
Creation from the Universal Self | 84 |
|
|
Prajapatis Production of the World | |
as Food for Himself | 157 |
|
|
|
|
The Conversation of Yajnavalkya and | |
Maitreyi on the Absolute Self | 167 |
|
|
Madhu-Vidya: The Honey Doctrine | 194 |
|
|
The Line of Teachers and Pupils | 210 |
|
|
|
|
Sacrificial Worship and its Rewards | 211 |
|
|
The Man in Bondage and His Future at Death | 227 |
|
|
The Resort of the Performers of the Horse Sacrifice | 239 |
|
|
The Unknowability of Brahman | 244 |
|
|
Renunciation, the Way to Know Brahman | 247 |
|
|
Brahman, the Universal Ground | 251 |
|
|
The Nature of the Inner Controller | 255 |
|
|
The Unqualified Brahman | 267 |
|
|
Many Gods and One Brahman | 280 |
Eight Different Persons and Their | |
Corresponding Divinities | 291 |
Five Directions in Space, Their Deities and Supports | 304 |
The Self | 314 |
Man Compared to a Tree | 318 |
|
|
|
|
Inadequate Definitions of Brahman | 322 |
|
|
Concerning the Soul | 342 |
|
|
The Light of Man is the Self | 355 |
The Different States of the Self | 360 |
The Self in Dream and Deep Sleep | 382 |
The Self at Death | 409 |
|
|
The Soul of the Unrealised after Death | 417 |
|
|
The Supreme Self and the Supreme Love | 476 |
|
|
|
|
Brahman the Inexhaustible | 478 |
|
|
The Three Principal Virtues | 485 |
|
|
Brahman as the True or the Real | 495 |
|
|
Brahman as the True or the Real | 495 |
|
|
The Real Explained | 500 |
|
|
The Divine Person | 515 |
|
|
Brahman as Lightning | 519 |
|
|
The Veda Symbolised as a Cow | 521 |
The Universal Fire | 524 |
|
|
The Course after Death | 526 |
|
|
The Supreme Austerities | 533 |
|
|
The via media of Attitude | 537 |
|
|
Meditation on the Life-Breath | 539 |
|
|
The Sacred Gayatri Prayer | 542 |
|
|
Prayer to the Sun by a Dying Person | 553 |
|
|
|
|
The Threefold Creation | 563 |
The Self Identified with the Sixteenfold | |
Prajapati, the Time Spirit | 577 |
The Three Worlds and the Means of Winning Them | 584 |
Father's Benediction and Transmission of Charge | 586 |
The Unfailing Vital Force | 592 |
|
|
The Threefold Character of the Universe | 600 |
|
|
|
|
A Progressive Definition of Brahman | 607 |
|
|
The Vital Force Embodied in a Person | 636 |
|
|
The Two Forms of Reality | 645 |
|
|
Chapter I - The Absolute and the Universe | 657 |
Chapter II - The Supreme Goal of Life | 676 |
Chapter III - Divine Immanence and the Correlativity of all Things | 681 |
Chapter IV - The Inner Reality | 689 |
Chapter V - The Principles of Meditation | 693 |
Chapter VI - The Spiritual and the Temporal | 697 |
Conclusion | 701 |
Notes | 703 |