Guru-Tattwa
Gurur-brahma
Gurur-vishnu Gurur-devo Maheshwarah!
Gurureva Param Brahma Tashmai Sriguruve Namah!
Gurureva Param Brahma Tashmai Sriguruve Namah!
“Guru is Brahma (the Creator of the Universe), Guru is
Vishnu (the Protector), Guru is Lord Maheshwara (the Destroyer), Guru verily is
the Supreme Brahman (the Absolute); Prostration to that Guru.” This verse is
from the famous Guru-Gita which is in the form of a dialogue between Goddess Uma
and Lord Siva, in the Sanatkumar Samhita in the Skanda Purana. The first half of
the second line ‘ Gurureva Param Brahma (Guru verily is the Supreme Brahman)’ is popularly chanted
as ‘Gurusaksat Param Brahma’ which means Guru is the manifestation of
Supreme Brahman.
The verse sums up the relation of one’s spiritual
preceptor and the God he worships with the Absolute that transcends all
relationship. It establishes in no uncertain terms the sameness in essence of
the three entities namely Guru, God and Self. To the neophyte in the spiritual
path, this may appear to be unbelievable and irrational
but this is the true path which he has to understand and digest, sooner
or later, before he can make any appreciable progress in his march towards the
Goal.
Many may be familiar with the two terms ‘Guru’ and
‘God’ and may not have heard about ‘the Absolute’ at all. Their
conception of Guru is limited to the physical personality of the spiritual
teacher. What they understand by the term ‘God’ may be some super human
person residing in some far-off world in space, in charge of the welfare of the
good and punishment of the evil in this world. These are not wrong ideas. They
are correct as far as they go; but they do not give the full significance of the
two terms ‘Guru’ and ‘God’ that has to be comprehended properly by a
spiritual seeker.
The highest truth is always couched in the most cryptic and
enigmatic terms in the scripture, just as we keep very valuable gems locked up
in strong steel-boxes, placed in equally strong if not stronger encasements one
within the other, one such expression is the oft-quoted Rig-vedic Mantra ‘Ekam
Sat Vipra Bahudha Vadanti’. The Absolute is one, the wise call it by different
names. All the remaining Mantras in the Vedas and other scriptures may be said
to be a commentary on this central Vedic teaching. This manifested world,
consisting of countless universe with umpteen names and forms is really the
Absolute itself. The apparently divergent universe is in fact an organic whole,
just like our body consisting of different limbs is one complete whole by itself
non-different from ourselves, nobody feels that his hands are separate from him.
Similarly the sense organs and the mind-, are considered non-different from
himself, although for certain empirical dealings, he speaks about them as though
they are different parts. The most awe-inspiring fact that the Vedas reveal is
that this world is God himself. It is His body, the Virat Purusha. It is His
cosmic form. As my body is non-different from me, even so this world as the body
of God is the same as God who Himself is the manifestation of the transcendent
Absolute.
Therefore, we come to the conclusion that one’s spiritual
preceptor and the God one worships, are in essence identical, being the
manifestations of non-dual Absolute, the former a visible manifestation
perceived through the sense-organs and later an invisible one conceived through
one’s intellect and experienced in one’s heart. To the sincere and faithful
devotee the invisible God does also manifest himself in visible forms.
The Puranas are replete with instances of God descending down to our
physical plane assuming various names and forms and fulfilling certain cosmic
functions when needs arise. These Puranas and epics are great scriptures
explaining the truths of the Upanishads which are unapproachable to the
worldly-minded. They are not cock and bull stories intended for the old,
orthodox and unintelligent. Their importance especially to the spiritual
seeker, is revealed in a famous verse which says that Vedas dread those persons
who approach them without a preliminary knowledge of the epics and Puranas. A
clear understanding of the implied meaning of these scriptures is a ‘must’
for a seeker for his successful grasp of the higher truths hidden in the Vedas.
This most important instruction about the essential non-difference of the
spiritual teacher, God and the non-dual Absolute is given to us in one of the
verses in praise of Lord Dakshinamurti, which says that God, Guru and the Atman
are different only in their names and forms and that they mean and represent the
one, non-dual Supreme Absolute, whose body is all-pervasive like the ether.
The necessity of a spiritual preceptor in flesh and blood
and an omniscient, omnipresent and omnipotent God who can be conceived by the
mind and therefore worshipped and meditated upon, besides the eternal, non-dual,
transcendental Absolute who is beyond the reach of the mind and speech and whose
manifestations are the first two, to the spiritual aspirant, can not be
overemphasized. Hence, it has become a tradition among the aspirants to pay the
greatest respect and adoration to one’s spiritual instructor, equivalent to
that they bestow on the Deity, their object of daily worship. Some ultra-modern
Acharyas in their over-anxiety to decry everything that is old and traditional,
and to bring in something new to their listeners, undermines the importance of
Guru in Self Realization. They bring before their audience hair-splitting
arguments and very subtle reasoning to convince them about their revolutionary
theories. They seem to forget that in their very act of denying the necessity of
a Guru, they themselves act as a Guru to their listeners and thereby they
nullify their own theory.
To quote again from Guru-Gita, three verses (60, 61 and 62)
explain how Guru illumines the highest truth of the identity of the Atman and
Brahman, the individual Soul and the Supreme Soul, contained in the mahavakya
‘TAT TWAM ASI’ and thus helps the disciple in the realization of the
non-dual Absolute.
The subject
matter of the preceding paragraphs
and much more is beautifully condensed in the opening verse of
‘Shruti-Sura-Samuddharanam’ by Sage Totakacharya -:
Trailokyanathharim- idam- uddarasattvam;
Saktestanujatanayam pameshtikalpam.
Saktestanujatanayam pameshtikalpam.
Jimutamukta- vimalambara- charuvarnam;
Vasistham- ugratapasam pranatosmi nityam.
A crude rendering of this verse in English is as
follows: “I always offer obeisance to the great Sage Vyasa who is God Hari
himself, the Lord of the three worlds, worthy of praise, the embodiment of pure
Sattva Guna, the grandson of Shakti, equal to Brahma the creator, of beautiful
colour like the pure sky free of all clouds, a descendant of Sage Vasishtha, and
of extreme penance.”
Scholars differ in the interpretation of this verse. Some
would say that all the epithets used there in quality Sage Vyasa who is invoked.
Some other opines that it is Lord Vishnu and Sage who are referred to by the
Acharya. Still others argue that Brahman the Absolute, Lord Hari, its Saguna
aspect and Sage Veda Vyasa who is none other than the Lord, all the three are
invoked in this opening verse. We have for example the following verse:
A chatur-vadano Brahma;
Dvibahuraparo Harih.
A bhala-lochanah Sambhuh;
Bhagawan Badarayanah.
Dvibahuraparo Harih.
A bhala-lochanah Sambhuh;
Bhagawan Badarayanah.
“Sage
Vyasa is God himself, he is Brahma without four faces, he is another Vishnu
without two hands, and he is Lord Siva without the third eye on the forehead.”
A very popular Dhyana Sloka among the devotees says:
Vyasaya Vishnurupaya
Vyasaroopaya Vishnave;
Namo vai Brahmanidhaye
Vashishthaya Namo Namah.
Vyasaroopaya Vishnave;
Namo vai Brahmanidhaye
Vashishthaya Namo Namah.
At the
same time another stanza says ‘Vyaso Narayanah Sakshat’ and also
Sankaram Sankaracharyam
Keshavam Badarayanam;
Sutra-Bhasya Kritau vande
Bhagavantau Punah Punah.
Keshavam Badarayanam;
Sutra-Bhasya Kritau vande
Bhagavantau Punah Punah.
Gurupurnima is known as Vyasa Purnima also. Guru is Vyasa Himself. Guru
is not the cage of flesh and bones. He is living God. He is absolute incarnate,
clinging to his physical frame and seeing everything in his physical set up is
mere ignorance.
. To experience the Guru’s
Grace, one must see Guru as a supreme being, supra-ultra divinity, the
manifestation of the Absolute Brahman and see his presence at all times, in all
places and in all conditions and act accordingly is the real Guru Worship on the
sacred occasion of Guru Purnima. Om
Shanti!!
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