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Edited by
KAREL WERNER
CURZON PRESS
Curzon Press Ltd. 1994
Curzon Press Ltd.
St Johns Studios
Church Road
Richmond
Surrey TW9 2QA
First published 1989
This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2005.
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ISBN 0-203-98574-5 Master e-book ISBN
Abbreviations viii
Editors Preface xi
Glossary 183
Contributors 191
Note on the Papers and Acknowledgments 193
vii
ABBREVIATIONS
A Nikya
AA Nikya Atthakath
Akb
AP Agni
Asl
ASS nandrama Sanskrit Series (Poona)
AU Aitareya
AV Atharva Veda
B Buddhacarita
BEFEO Bulletin de lcole franaise dextrme orient (Paris)
BI Bibliotheca Indica (Calcutta)
BP Bhgavata
BrahP Brahma
BrP
BU
CU Chndogya
D Dgha Nikya
DA Dgha Nikya Atthakath (commentary)
Dh Dhammapada
Dhs
ERE Encyclopaedia of Religions and Ethics
GP
GU Garbha
ICANAS International Congress of Asian and North African
Studies
IIJ Indo-Iranian Journal
It Ittivuttaka
ix
IU
K
KaU
KeU Kena
L Lalita Vistara
LS Lankvatra Stra
M Majjhima Nikya
MA Majjhima Nikya Atthakath
MaiU Maitr
MaU
Mhb Mahbhrata
Mhvs Mahvastu
Miln Milindapaha
MP
MuH
N Nidnakath
NP Nrada
PP Padma
PPS Praj Pramit Stra
Pr Pretakalpa
Ps
PsS Pupatastra
PTS Pli Text Society
PU
RV Veda
S Samyutta Nikya
Sn Suttanipta
S Ramanujans Speaking of iva
Su Surevaras
T St Teresas Interior Castle
Ta Tandulaveyliya
TSS Trivandrum Sanskrit Series
TU Taittirya
Ud Udna
Vibh
Vism Visuddhimagga
VP
x
Vs
YS Yoga Stra
Ysm
THE EDITORS PREFACE
subsequent Symposia till the present day and is likely to remain so as long
as it stays available and the Symposia continue.
The success of a one-theme conference was repeated in 1981 with the
Seventh Symposium dedicated to symbolism in Indian religions. It is hoped
that a second collection of papers from the Symposia may be launched by
Curzon Press in due course, the bulk of its contents to be formed by the
papers of this Symposium.
With the project now well established and unlikely to falter even if the
regulars were faced with a need to take some new decisions, the convener
announced, during the Eighth Symposium (1982), his decision to retire from
his responsibility. Sensing the air of disbelief among the participants he
added that the Tenth Symposium would seem to be the suitable occasion
for this change. When he repeated his decision during the Ninth Symposium,
it was obvious that the message had sunk in and steps were being taken to
secure continuity. Thus it was that at the Tenth Symposium a committee of
three was ready at hand to start preparations for the next one. The
Thirteenth Symposium, the last one to date (1987), had Bhakti as its theme
and the level of the contributions would warrant their publication in yet
another volume if the reception of the present one and of the envisaged
volume on symbolism justifies it.
The benefits the Symposia have brought and continue to bring to those
attending are testified to by their steady number, which hovers around or
above thirty. Many papers read at a Symposium found their way into
respectable academic magazines and not a few contributions, successfully
presented at a later stage to an international conference or at a guest
appearance in an overseas University, were first read and discussed at a
Symposium and finalized subsequently under the influence of the feedback
obtained there. This has been possible, because each speaker has nearly two
hours at his disposal for the reading and discussion of his contribution, a
feature which has been one of the main attractions of the Symposia. One or
two newly-appointed lecturers thus gained their first experience of
presenting their work to a learned forum and having it discussed in an
unusually relaxed atmosphere at the Symposium and could proceed further
afield from there with confidence. At an early stage research students
supervised by participants were allowed to attend and from time to time one
of them was invited to present a report on his or her work, again a valuable
experience for their future progress.
The editor trusts that the reader will forgive him for dwelling at some
length on the history of the Symposia before embarking on an explanation
of the theme of the present collection.
When planning the Symposium on Indian mysticism the editor sent a
fairly extensive synopsis of his introductory paper, Mysticism as Doctrine
and Experience, to the prospective contributors so that they could relate to
it if they thought that the presentation of their subject matter would benefit
xiv PREFACE
from it in some way, but it was not made a condition. In some contributions
this relation is clearly reflected, in others it is not obvious at a first glance,
while some were written outside, or without the knowledge of, the framework
outlined in the introductory paper. Yet, in the editors view, the
applicability of the structural patterns in mystical experiences and in the
mystic paths in different traditions and schools as outlined in the
introductory paper extends even to those written without knowledge of it.
The introductory paper traces the beginnings and development of
mysticism in Europe from Orphic times in ancient Greece till the Middle
Ages, taking into account Oriental, Judaic and New Testamental influences,
and shows how mysticism was approached from three distinct angles: as
doctrine, as experience of being face to face with or in union with the
transcendent, and as a practical path to that achievement. The path itself
was seen since medieval times as leading through three stages: of
purification, unification and illumination. Towards the end the paper turns
to the vexed question of the ontological contents or otherwise of the
ultimate mystical experience and suggests possible lines of investigation of
this problem.
The next paper examines, in historical succession, schools of Indian
spirituality and shows how the basic pattern of doctrine, experience and
path can be identified, in different degrees of mutual proportion, in virtually
all of them. Next comes a research paper which analyses the oldest Vedic
evidence for the existence of an accomplished person outside the
mainstream of the Vedic tradition and finds that this often misunderstood
figure of a long haired wandering sage was indeed an ancient example of an
accomplished Yogi, the specificaly Indian variety of mystical achievement.
Even in the brief account of him in the single hymn analysed in the
paper a path is referred to, the experience is described in terms of being
penetrated by gods, illumination is also mentioned and purification can be
presupposed since the sage is described as a sweet and most uplifting
friend of all beings. His addressing of other people as mortals, thereby
implying his own immortality, points to elements of a doctrine which would
hardly have been put into any kind of clearly formulated shape in the
hymnic period, although even at that time some explanatory comments or
more extensive narratives must have accompanied the condensed messages
contained in the sacred poetry.
The following contribution first points out that the term mysticism, if
applied to the experience, must implicitly mean that there is in it
also knowledge. This goes against the prevailing Western notion of
mystical experience, because of its insistence that knowledge is the result of
sense perception plus reasoning. But in the mystical experience
of the ultimate equals full knowledge of the ultimate by higher perception.
It next contrasts the mystical, i.e. direct, knowledge with
ankaras rational approach to the ultimate knowledge and, in a courageous
PREFACE xv
hints at an important, but not yet very much researched problem of tension
between liberation from or within . The next piece, also
comparative in nature, is a refreshingly controversial, non-academic, but
well-informed investigation of the value of Yoga and Jungs congenial
work in the context of modern life written by a professional man and one-
time mature student of Sanskrit who underwent Freudian psychoanalysis.
The modern Indian scene is represented by a paper which contrasts three
very different present-day mystics of India and seeks to find what they have
in common. In the point of doctrine, they represent a wide variety of
possible approaches, from conservative traditionalism to excessive
eclecticism, but they all stress the predominance of the experience, even
though achieved by a variety of methodical approaches or paths. The
threefold division, albeit not systematically demontrated by the author,
clearly applies to all of them, although the ambiguity and the marginal
character of the purificatory procedures in Rajneeshs case could alert us at
the outset to the problem of selection of examples for academic analysis of
mystical movements which can be reasonably regarded as genuine.
Academic impartiality cannot entirely do away with some kind of sifting
procedure which, of course, implies a certain value judgementa question
not directly tackled by the papers of this collection.
The book ends with an article which attempts to single out the
characteristic constituents of different approaches to the transcendental goal
within different religions and to make visible their overlaps, polarities and
contradictions by suggesting a model which would cover all mystical
traditions and enable their typology. Although the model had, by the
authors own admission, a long period of gestation, its presentation is
purely schematic or skeletal with examples presented in the form of
catchwords presupposing the readers broad acquaintance with the scene of
comparative religion ancient and modern. The authors expectation that
readers will be so taken by his model that they will by their own effort
supply the missing flesh on the skeleton is probably too optimistic, but to
anyone studying any system the model can become very useful as a tool for
the preliminary analysis of terms and concepts of that system and their
specific meaning within it.
1
MYSTICISM AS DOCTRINE AND
EXPERIENCE
Karel Werner
When writing about mysticism, it is still necessary first to explain what one
means by that expression. Some years ago Rufus M.Jones complained that
mysticism in common speech usage is a word of very uncertain
connotation.1 That this is still the case is well illustrated by the entry in The
Concise Oxford Dictionary which defines the term by deriving it from the
word mystic as noun, thus: one who seeks by contemplation and self-
surrender to obtain union with or absorption into the Deity, or who believes
in spiritual apprehension of truth beyond the understanding, whence -ism
m. (often derog.). The trouble is that the word mystic has also an adjectival
meaning, to quote again from the Dictionary, spiritually allegorical, occult,
esoteric; of hidden meaning, mysterious, mysterious and awe-inspiring.
The derivative noun mysticism apparently acquired some overtones
particularly from the area of occult sciences and hence its uncertain
connotation.
This difficulty with the word mysticism, though perhaps not peculiar to
English, is nevertheless not present in all languages. German for instance
has two expressions: der Mystizismus, which refers to occult pursuits of
all kinds, including those responsible for the Oxford Dictionarys bracketed
designation and die Mystik, which is reserved for mans bona fide
experiences of the divine or the ultimate reality, or at least for experiences
genuinely believed, by those who have had them, to have penetrated into
that dimension.
Why English has not produced a less ambiguous term for genuine
mystical pursuits is not easy to see, especially as England is not lacking in
authentic mystical tradition. As R. Otto once remarked when invited to
lecture on mysticism in this country, for a foreigner to come and tell an
English audience about mysticism was to bring owls to Athens (meaning
coals to Newcastle).2 Be that as it may, it will remain for some time
obligatory for every historian of religion dealing with the subject to attempt
to contribute to the clarification of the term.
Mystical writings are probably as old as writing itself, but writings on
mysticism are an innovation of this century, so the subject is young. It
2 WERNER
or anyone can come into perfect contact with it. And mysticism is also, of
course, a name for the paranoid darkness in which unbalanced people
stumble so confidently.10 Here we can see how the ambiguity of the term
mysticism receives a further twist, covering for Scharfstein also the area of
mental aberration (hinted at, for different reasons, also by Zaehner, as we
have seen). Scharfstein later elaborates on this theme and practically
equates psychosis and the mystic state. Yet all is not lost, because: A
mystic who remains intellectually alert, will accompany his emotional
experience, as we may non-commitally call it, by persistent reasoning.11
Besides, psychosis is involuntary and inescapable while the mystic state
tends to be voluntarygiven a suitable training it can be entered and left
almost at will. The mystic does not suffer his internal ecstasy, infinity or truth,
but creates it.12 This is not just agnosticism, but a denial of the possibility
of any ontological basis for mystical experience. Like psychosis it is held to
be only a subjective state of mind and if an objective base to it can be found,
it will be physiological, in mans nervous system,
Scharfstein shares here the reductionist approach of some scientists to
psychological facts of experience. Unlike Zaehner he does not exactly
define his position, but even so he does not leave us in doubt about his
stance when he says: I myself dislike and prefer to explain away much of
mysticism, but it is in some way essential to us and it is too natively human
ever to die.13 His often witty and lighthearted yet penetrating remarks
make a sober summary of his actual views difficult, but I think that if we try
to produce one we shall find that his stance can be described as
evolutionary positivism and formulated thus: Emotional experiences have a
certain realistic value, though not a basis in objective reality, in so far as
they prove of assistance for the survival and evolution of the species. Thus
the human emotion of love secures, better than mere instinct, procreation
and the protracted care of offspring, enabling humans to develop higher
intelligence on maturity. The emotional experience of oneness could in this
way be interpreted as a future further stage of evolution which would
replace strife, a one-time stimulant of evolution which has become too
destructive, if mystical experience were to become an achievement of a
substantial part of mankind or at least of a large lite which could command
the respect of the rest.
Although this view incorporates a preconceived positivistic bias, it does
have a worthwhile implication, for if our summary of Scharfsteins line of
thought expresses correctly the logic of the positivistic approach, then
scientific and wider academic research interest must sooner or later include
mysticism not only as a phenomenon or an object of study, but also as a
method of research. In other words the researcher studying mysticism
would adopt some kind of mystical practice. This approach is also
advocated by Staal who says: The study of mysticism, to the extent that it
has so far been undertaken, resembles the sketching of a territory that is
MYSTICISM AS DOCTRINE AND EXPERIENCE 5
Platos idea of the good as the absolute to which mens souls would aspire
and make cognitive approaches in contemplation did not prove sufficiently
evocative emotionally for the purpose of mysticism as practice. After all,
the mystery cults had always centred their rites and teachings around a god-
figure. But Olympic god-figures were becoming outdated and mystery
religions needed a more philosophical concept of god. This was provided,
paradoxically if not ironically, by Aristotle (38422 B.C.), for whom God
was a necessary deduction in his process of reasoning. Viewing the world
as real, he saw it as consisting of a hierarchy of actual substances which
required a prime mover to set and keep the world going. But being pure
form, God does not do the moving himself; he is the object of desire of
lower substances which move to achieve perfection since God is perfection
itself. Psychologically God seems to be something like pure mind and
contemplates his own perfection, which may also mean the perfection of all
things.22 Since there is something divine in man, man also has the
capacity for contemplation and can rise to the supreme act of vision
(theoria) akin to Gods, if he so chooses, for he is free and may determine his
own direction in life.23 It is clear that Aristotles theoria is far from what we
mean by theory today and it is difficult to imagine that he developed his
ideas about God purely by reasoning. I think that some measure of mystical
practice of contemplation must be assumed in his life. On the other hand, he
supplied all the rational arguments for the acceptance of the necessity of
God for many people throughout the centuries till the present day and
influenced in the same way also the mystical doctrine which enabled
8 WERNER
Although Plotinus was occupied all his life in teaching and writing down
his philosophy, it was not for him an end in itself, but the way to the One.
Philosophical speculation was prompted and inspired by the One and was
therefore the starting point of the journey to it. The starting point of the
speculation itself is not arbitrary, but is determined, as Jaspers put it when
writing about Plotinus, by the experience of our reality. In the course of
speculative thinking based on our experience a process of transcending is
initiated so that thought approaches what can be called contemplation of the
archetypal or the spiritual. Eventually the mind arrives at contemplation of
the One and recognizes it as its origin and this fills it with joy.26 In this
interpretation we can see how the process of formulating a doctrine initiates
the mystical path and how the practical steps on, and the completion of, the
mystical path in turn inform the doctrine. Doctrine and experience go here
hand in hand and since the experience transcends the world of nature and
mere speculation, the concepts used for the doctrinal formulations become
more and more vacuous and the highest is called by the entirely
nondescriptive term the One.
Besides its links to Plato and Aristotle, the mystical system of Piotinus
has clear and congenial parallels only in India where the idea of the One
beyond being and non-being, from which emanate becoming and further
stages of manifested reality by virtue of its inner dynamism, was first
expressed in a hymn of the Veda (10, 129) before 1000 B.C.27 The
hierarchical structure of the existential planes of the spiritual and material
universe appears in different elaborations both in Hindu and Buddhist
systems and the One again reappears as the only truly existing reality called
brahman in Hindu Vedntism and nyat (emptiness or voidness) in
Mahyna Buddhism. Its experience reached in contemplation is described
as the unity of being, knowing and bliss by the former and as enlightenment
by the latter.
With Plotinus all that philosophy could do for mysticism had been done,
but most (though by no means all) people need religion to start them off and
Neoplatonism tried to meet this need, but it did it incongruously and
unsuccessfully. However, there was one great successor of Plotinus, namely
Proclus (A.D. 41085), important for the transmission of the system to
Christianity in a modified form. He described the emanation process from
the One to lower planes as proceeding in triads. As in Plotinus, the human
soul in Proclus view always has the choice open to it of withdrawing into
its inner sanctuary to find God, who is immanent to it though transcendent
to the world. He describes this experience as enthousiasmos, i.e. as being
possessed by God, and in the Socratic or Platonic way as a kind of divine
madness. Proclus directly influenced pseudo-Dionysius Areopagita
(c. A.D. 500), the father of Christian mysticism.
But before this, mystical tendencies of early Christianity, informed also
by the Judaic tradition which in turn drew at that time from Hellenistic
10 WERNER
The inevitable conclusion is that one gets to know God by becoming God
or by being directly and intimately united with him.
The other example is from St Gregory the Great (A.D. 540604):
The soul beholds something beneath His brightnessnot that which God
is, but that which is under HimLight cannot be seen as it is. If the mind
could not see it at all, it would not even see that it is afar off; and if it
perceived it perfectly, it would not see it as though through darkness.
Therefore, because it is not altogether seen, nor againaltogether unseen, it is
rightly said that it is seen from afar. (Morals on Job XXXI, 101)33 The
passage seems authentic enough to reveal a mystic, but St Gregory had
papal responsibilities for the multitudes of believers in theological dogmas
and he already held the dogma which ruled out the possibility of seeing God
in this life. The question now is: did the pope interpret the mystics highest
experience in the light of the dogma or did the doctrinal stricture held by
the pope impede the mystics progress to the final stage of via unitiva? The
quoted passage does look like a description of via illuminativa. This raises a
further important question for the comparative study of mysticism, namely
that of the stages of mystical experience and their identification in different
mystical authors within one tradition as well as in different traditions.34
The richness of the stream of European mysticism continued for several
centuries, also in Protestant Christianity and, of course, from early times it
has been abundant in Eastern Christendom. It seems to have subsided in more
recent times, but it has by no means dried up. Accounts of mystical
experience in our time are being collected and some remarkable reports
have also come out of Eastern Europe, particularly from Soviet labour
camps.35 Material for research will probably never be in short supply. But
what general conclusions can we draw from this examination?
First, I think, it is clear that there is nothing specifically European and
Christian about mysticism as such. Its beginnings in the twilight of Greek
history may point to its even older origin in Indo-European antiquity, which
would explain the developed Indo-ryan mysticism in the Vedas and the
fact that traces of mysticism can also be detected in other less-documented
areas of Indo-Euorpean tradition. But the fact that mystical trends can be
found also in different cultures of the Semitic group, to say nothing of the
Chinese example, points clearly to the universality of the phenomenon of
mysticism. Of the Semitic traditions the Judaic one contributed substantially
to the formation of the European form of mysticism, but other traditions had
MYSTICISM AS DOCTRINE AND EXPERIENCE 15
of human emotional life which in turn is derived from the biology of the
nervous system and it would be denied any possibility of objective
reference or ontological validity. This is Scharfsteins position, referred to
earlier. There are rival theories in sciences also, and further reduction
brings biological forces down to the level of physical forces to which alone
is ascribed true reality. (This picture of a mechanisitic universe frightens
even some scientists back into adopting, sometimes only privately, a
traditional religious faith. The more thoughtful ones embark on the study of
philosophy or Eastern mysticism.)
The room for manoeuvre between these two pitfalls is very small and the
task of working out an acceptable position which would be a
methodological help is a formidable one. I would like to formulate a few
suggestions outlining the general direction in which a solution could be
sought:
1. There is an ontological basis to mystical experience which is also, in
various symbolical disguises, the object of religious faith as well as of
philosophical quest.
2. Mystical experience is a suprasensory and supraintellectual, i.e.
intuitive, apprehension of that ontological reality and it proceeds in stages of
approximation, culminating in cognitive experience of being ontologically
united with it.
3. Conceptual descriptions of the ultimate mystical experience are
inadequate and provide only partial impressions of its ontological basis,
never a global view. When guided by an analytical approach they are
without contents, suggesting voidness or nothingness, while
psychologically the experience has fullness of contents describable in terms
of being, knowledge or intelligence and bliss.
4. The dimension of the ultimate reality is beyond the world of external
objects and its counterpart, mans sensory apparatus with its co-ordinating
intellect, and is therefore transcendent, while the experience of union with
it is reached through the process of inner cognition which gives it the
character of immanence.
5. Metaphysical descriptions of the ultimate reality, when informed by an
analytical approach, ascribe to it the character of impersonality; when
guided by the psychological contents of the ultimate experience of fullness,
they suggest a superstructural unit not dissimilar, though vastly superior, to
the human personality; in religious terms it becomes the infinite personality
of God. The ultimate ontological dimension may therefore unite
dichotomies which on the level of intellectual understanding remain
contradictory.38 (This happens to be a feature not altogether unknown to
modern science, particularly to subatomic physics.)
6. Since the practical mystical paths as developed by different traditions
show a remarkable structural unity, experimental application of mystical
techniques should be possible, especially where a high degree of doctrinal
MYSTICISM AS DOCTRINE AND EXPERIENCE 17
NOTES
33 ERE, p. 94.
34 Peter G.Moore, Recent Studies of Mysticism, Religion, vol. 3
(1973), part 2, pp. 14656. See pp. 1534.
35 Mihajlo Mihajlov, Mystical Experiences of the Labour Camps,
Kontinent 2, The Alternative Voice of Russia and Eastern Europe,
London 1978, pp. 10331.
36 W.T.Stace, Mysticism and Philosophy, London 1961, pp. 24050.
37 Moore, op. cit., pp. 14950.
38 Werner, Symbolism in the Vedas, pp. 22930.
2
MYSTICISM AND INDIAN
SPIRITUALITY
Karel Werner
Although the term mysticism is of Western origin, it has been used in the
context of Indian spiritual tradition both by European and Indian authors,
often without any attempt to define it. This is perhaps because there is, after
all, a certain broad consensus about its meaning among most scholars
concerned with religious studies despite the ambiguity of the term as it is
frequently exhibited in its popular usage and sometimes also in academic
works: we have seen on previous pages how broadly the term is employed
for example by Scharfstein.
For the purposes of this survey, however, I shall adhere to the
understanding of mysticism as it follows from the results of the
investigations in my introductory paper. In particular, I shall look at the
mystical dimension in Indian spiritual traditions from the angle of the
division of its endeavours and results into the previously discussed three
categories of doctrine, experience and path.
Furthermore I regard the threefold division of the mystical progress and
experience into the three stages as the path of purification of the heart (via
purgativa,) the path of illumination of the mind (via illuminativa) and the
path of unification of the mystic with the goal of his efforts (via unitiva) as
both useful for the purpose of theoretical study and universally valid across
the boundaries of cultures and traditions because, on analysis, all the three
components can be found in developed mysticism of any religious system.
The usefulness of the threefold division into doctrine, experience and
path lies especially in its hermeneutical value: it enables the scholar as
someome standing outside a particular mystical tradition or movement to
assess its basic nature and find out which of the three elements predominates
in it and then formulate his interpretations accordingly.
The universal applicability of this threefold division points to another
important conclusion, namely that one can assume that all mystical or
deeper spiritual systems possess a certain structural correspondence and
most likely also an identity of purpose and final goal.
From the study of various religious systems it further seems to follow that
mysticism is the heart of every developed religion lending it the dimension
20 WERNER
later used and sometimes further adapted for ritual, their original purpose
was spiritual.
In all high religions the ritualistic and ecclesiastical phase of their history
followed the original spiritual beginnings of a movement which formed
around or in the wake of a teacher who was a prophetic figure or a
spiritually enlightened personality, sometimes regarded as an incarnation of
God. Sometimes, as in Judaism, the original spiritual message was
transmitted in stages by a series of prophets who claimed to have been
called to carry out their mission directly by God who revealed his will
through them.
There is no reason why the beginnings of the Vedic religion should be
looked upon in a different way and regarded as an outcome of poetic
inspiration by natural forces with some primitive and sacrificial magic
thrown in and nothing else. The later Hindu tradition has always claimed
that the Vedas are a product of divine revelation which was transmitted to
their ancestors by ancient seers ( ) Certain were already in Vedic
times legendary ancient figures and were looked upon as path-finders
(RV 1, 72, 2; 1, 105, 15) who had won immortality and thereby become
equal in status and power to gods (RV 10.54, 4).3 They reached the heights
of immortality through the development of a special faculty of a visionary or
mystical and meditative character called dhti to whose investigation Gonda
dedicated a whole book.4 This mystical vision enabled the ancient seers to
discover and grasp the substance and meaning of the eternal law ( cf. RV
4, 23, 8) governing the whole of manifested reality as well as its emergence
from the unmanifest.5
In the process of transmitting this vision of the eternal law to their less
spiritually minded contemporaries, the seers produced their message on
more than one level.6 The transmission of a vision is not the vision itself, it
is a projection of the original vision into a specific area of human activity
and understanding. Besides the poetical, mythological and legendary
projections of this vision there was also the area of religious activity which
was very close to the heart of archaic man and was capable of exercising a
strong influence on his character and behaviour, much more so than words,
images and stories. This was ritual action. In performing a rite modelled on
mythical or cosmic events Vedic man was able to take in into himself
archetypal patterns of thought and behaviour which reflected the hierarchy
of the world order and created in him a sense of belonging and an
awareness, however dim, that the cosmic law was also the moral law which
told him what was right and wrong and that it further was also the social law
which determined his place in the structure of the ryan society.
It was only later in the course of several centuries that Vedic ritual
deteriorated into an over-elaborated system of ceremonial observances of
the late Vedic or period in which the original mystical vision
became buried. We can certainly discern evidence in many Vedic hymns
22 WERNER
for genuine mystical experiences of the ancient seers which became the
basis and starting point of the Vedic religion. It is also sufficiently obvious
that for some generations this tradition of mystical approach and cultivation
of mystical experiences was kept alive. What is more difficult is to establish
the existence of a mystical doctrine in Vedic times since that would require
the existence also of systematic expositions and interpretations of those
mystical experiences in the context of a philosophical or theological world
picture expressed in conceptually understandable terms.
However, although the language of the Vedas is poetical, symbolical and
mythological and the hymns do not aim at systematic instruction of
listeners, they nevertheless do convey a certain sufficiently clear world view
if not a systematic doctrine. They allow us to glimpse the Vedic mans
picture of an ordered universe with a vast spiritual dimension behind it. That
is expressed repeatedly by Vedic cosmogonic myths of creationthat of
the goddess Aditi, mother of all that is, has been and will be (RV 1, 89, 10),
that of the cosmic or the giant cosmic person (RV 10, 90), of
or the cosmic golden germ (RV 10, 121), of skambha, the
cosmic pillar or axis mundi (AV 10, 7) and that of the combat,
symbolizing the victory of cosmic creation over the dark demon of
stagnation, which is referred to many times throughout the Vedas. This view
of the world and its origins was later also expressed in terms almost devoid
of mythological imagery in the so-called hymn of creation (RV 10, 129)
whereby began the process of conceptualization of the Vedic vision of
reality which then continued in the and eventually produced fully
formulated mystical doctrines and philosophical systems.7
The existence of a path to immortality is quite clearly mentioned in
connection with the ancient seers who had found it, as quoted above. Once
found it must undoubtedly have been handed down and taught in some way
by the pathfinder seers to their disciples and this process would certainly
have gone on for a number of generations. The actual method can hardly be
ascertained from the hymns, but one could say with Aurobindo that it must
have been some kind of progressive self-culture and assume with Hauer
that it comprised some technique of meditative absorption.8 A personal
discipline and meditational practice have been the pillars of the mystic way
in all times and all traditions.
When eventually the elaborate structure of brahminic ritualism which
grew around and out of the original mystical vision of the ancient seers very
nearly stifled all spirituality there came a new eruption of
mystical experience which is documented in the . The approach
to the transcendent through the worship of gods was largely brushed aside
and a direct encounter with the ultimate reality was sought. In the final
break-through it amounted to an overwhelming and all-embracing
experience expressed in bold statements such as I am brahman (aham
brahmsmi, BU 1, 4, 10). you are that, (tat tvam asi, CU 6, 15, 3) and I am
MYSTICISM AND INDIAN SPIRITUALITY 23
all this ( = this whole universe: aham evedam sarvam, CU 7, 25, 1). This
certainly appears to be a genuine expression of an experience of unio
mystica if ever there was one. It came as a culmination of a search which
involved both intellectual questioning and a strong emotional need for
security and certainty in face of an uncertain world in which man was the
victim of successive deaths. As a result the final experience found a ready
expression in what we can classify as the metaphysical gnosticism of the
. The philosophical search progressed far enough by then to be able
to supply adequate and appealing metaphysical terms to the mystic to
express himself when his experience overwhelmed him and also to the
thinker when he later tried to express his mystical experience in a more
systematic and intellectually graspable way.
As is well known, this search proceeded first into the cosmic dimension
and its inspiration must have been derived from the distant echoes of the
Vedic cosmogonical mythology, all pointing in the direction of the original
unity as the source of the cosmic diversity. That unity, which was
understood to be the source and the directing agency of everything that is,
was called by Yjavalkya, at a certain stage, the imperishable (
BU 3, 8, 811), but eventually it obtained the name brahman which became
universally accepted.
When the line of inquiry turned from the cosmic perspective to the inner
dimension of mans own personality, brahman was found again lurking
behind all life functions and mental faculties, behind the mind and behind
the heart (BU 4, 2, 17). And in the course of further search it was
eventually discovered to be mens very essence, his inner self (tman, BU 4,
2, 4,). This was a great discovery which was new to most participants in the
dialogues of the older , but it was readily accepted. The great
unborn tman, the inmost self of man, was identical with brahman, the
source and essence of the whole of universe as well as all beings and
things.
One could argue that this identification was first achieved as a result of a
philosophical speculative process which was then translated into
contemplative mystical experience, or one can take the opposite view and
regard the experience of the unio mystica as primary and as preceding the
conceptual understanding which followed only afterwards and led to the
brahman-tman doctrine in its familiar formulation. It is, of course, equally
possible that the two went together. My impression is that the experience
which prompted the three statements quoted above preceded the conceptual
elaboration and understanding of the doctrine of unity. In any event, in the
early we have, for the first time and side by side, both the
experience and the doctrine and we have here, also for the first time, a clear
formulation of the ontological nature of the final experience of the
true knowledge of the ultimate: to know brahman is to be brahman
(MuU 3, 2, 9). True knowledge is here understood as being beyond the
24 WERNER
approaches found full and elaborate expression. On the one hand we have
the tri kya doctrine of layers of reality converging in the dharmakya and
on the other we are faced with the overwhelming hierarchy of cosmic
buddhas and bodhisattvas presided over by di Buddha. The dichotomy
and the inevitable coexistence of the personal and the impersonal in the
attempted conceptual and symbolical descriptions of the experience of the
ultimate reality again make their unavoidable appearance.
The mystical doctrines of the Mahyna have quite a number of features
which were developed in a somewhat similar way and almost
simultaneously by European mystical theology based as it was on the
Neoplatonic philosophy as transmitted by pseudo-Dionysios Areopagita. It
is hardly possible to imagine a better example of corresponding
development in two mystical traditions, although there is some possibility
of earlier Indian influence on the formation of the doctrines of
Neoplatonism as was hinted at in the previous paper.
Within the Hindu tradition mysticism as doctrine and experience as well
as path reached its new peak in ankaras system of Advaita Vednta. The
experience of oneness dominated ankaras thinking and his understanding
of older sources, particularly the , and it completely determined
his doctrinal formulations which largely overshadowed ankara as practical
mystic and teacher of a Yoga path. In his commitment to a specific doctrinal
formulation ankara was dependent on Gaudapda, his teachers teacher, on
Bdryana, the founder of Vedantism, and possibly on an older tradition of
Varaha sahodara .14 It would therefore be difficult to decide whether
ankaras uncompromising monism was an outcome of his experience for
which he found confirmation in his predecessors interpretations of the
or whether his previous acceptance of monism on philosophical
grounds found subsequent support in the overwhelming experience of
oneness in samdhi. The , of course, contain materials which
enabled other schools also to claim their support for their own different
interpretations. It has, however, been an undisputed tenet within ankaras
school for centuries that this world of diversity is false; reality, myself
included, is non-dual brahman ; the evidence of it is vednta [ = ],
gurus as well as direct experience.15
I think that we have here an almost inextricable symbiosis of doctrine and
experience, but what is important is that ankara most emphatically insisted
on the actual realization of personal experience without which the doctrine
means nothing. One has to know the truth directly; all else, including verbal
knowledge of the doctrine, is still within the sphere of ignorance. Again: to
know brahman is to be brahman. The practical way to this realization is the
way of knowledge which became known as Jna Yoga. ankaras Yoga
path follows in many details the older schemes of Yoga training as known
particularly from Patajalis account, but it also has its own specific
techniques of developing the discriminatory faculty of the mind whereby it
MYSTICISM AND INDIAN SPIRITUALITY 29
could sift through its experiences and eliminate from them those which are
concerned with transitory, unreal features as compared with those which
point to the eternal and real.
The inevitable differences in descriptions of the ultimate and its real
nature, well known already from the themselves, led quite
naturally to the establishment of different schools of Vedntism of which
there are at least five. The most important one after ankaras is
Advaita of . In it the previously mentioned popular path of
Bhakti received an elaborate doctrinal backing in which a certain relative or
qualified status is allowed for individual beings also in the context of
ultimate reality which is conceived in personalized terms. Thus Vedntism,
like Buddhism, reflects the ineffability of the ultimate experience which
does not lend itself to simple descriptions.
That does not mean that clear-cut descriptions are necessarily entirely
wrong as opponents in the polemics of rival schools would have us believe;
rather it indicates the simpler fact that the ultimate truth is bigger than
words and that therefore every logically straightforward and consistent
description of its experience must appear to be a simplification. This, in
turn, does not mean that such a description is entirely useless, since it does
convey a certain idea about the ultimate to the totally inexperienced and
may act as an encouragement and motivation for entering the mystic path. A
variety of descriptions addresses a variety of minds according to their
dispositions.
There have been objections to this kind of interpretation of differing
mystical doctrines and the consequent claim of a common core in all
mystical traditions. S.T.Katz expressed it bluntly saying that mysticism
promises something for everybody if not everything to everybody.16 But
that is an ill-founded criticism. The differing interpretations merely express
the infinite richness of the ultimate which must be bigger than individual
minds which can therefore approach it from a large variety of starting
points. Various simplified descriptions of the ultimate goal become wrong
only if taken literally and if they are individually believed in to the
exclusion of other descriptions. That can happen only when the doctrine,
accepted on authority, becomes more important than the experience, which
means that the mystic path is not really being followed. Then we are in the
province of theological or philosophical polemics. These do occur also, of
course, among historians of religions if they bring into their inquiry personal
preferences or beliefs.
With Mahyna Buddhism and Vedntism Indian spirituality reached its
peak, particularly in the elaboration of mystical doctrines. But the whole
process of mystical endeavours did not stop there. Although Buddhism
eventually disappeared from the Indian scene to flourish elsewhere, Yoga
and broader mystical movements as well as doctrinal creativity have
continued to live in India till modern times as shown by the lives and work
30 WERNER
NOTES
X.136
THE ASCETIC
1. The longhaired ascetic bears the fire; the longhaired ascetic bears the
toxic drink; the longhaired ascetic bears the two worlds; the longhaired
ascetic is everything; the heavenly light to behold! The longhaired
ascetic is called this light.
2. The hermits have the wind as their girdle. They wear soiled brown
garments. They go along the path of the wind, when the gods have
entered them.
3. Made ecstatic due to our hermit-state, we have mounted upon the
winds. Only our bodies do you mortals perceive!
4. Through the air he flies, looking down upon all forms. The hermit for
every gods benefaction is established as a friend.
5. The winds horse, Vyus friend and also one who is impelled by the
gods is the hermit. Both oceans he inhabits: the one that is eastern and
the western.
6. Going in the path of Apsarases, Gandharvas, beasts, the longhaired
ascetic is aware of their intent, a friend most sweet, most exhilarating.
36 WERNER
7. Vyu stirred the draught for him, Kunannam ground it, when the
longhaired ascetic along with Rudra drank the poison from the goblet.
The hymn vividly describes the orgiastic practices of the old Vedic times,
still un-ennobled by the thirst for liberation which moved the ascetics of the
Buddhist time, still banished into rude forms of medicinemanship
(Medizinmn-nertum). The hymn speaks of longhaired ecstatics (kein,
muni,) clad in brown dirt, who enter the winds course, when the gods enter
them, who drink, poison (ecstacy-producing medicaments?) with Rudra
from a cup. In drunken rapture we have ascended the carriage of the wind.
You mortals can see only our bodies.The winds steed, the Storm gods
friend, the ecstatic is god-driven. He inhabits both seas, that in the east and
the western one. He wanders on the path of the Apsarases, Gandharvas,
wild animals.9
differed entirely from the Brahminic student, because his experiences were
not connected either with the sacrifice or with any of the rites ancillary to it
or to other ritual procedures. But he quite obviously succumbed to the
Oldenbergs tentative suggestion (which he did not care to quote or refer to)
when he wrote: his ecstasy, it seems, is due to a potent draught which, with
Rudra, he drinks from a goblet, perhaps a reference to the use of some
poison to produce exhilaration or hypnosis.16
Eliade, as an historian of religion and explorer of the dimension of the
sacred, was much more open to Yoga and the spiritual values of Indian
culture in general and fought consistently against the image which the
nineteenth century created of so-called inferior societies in particular.17
Yet even he looked at Indian spiritual experience from an evolutionistic
standpoint. He started his book with an exposition of Patajalis Yoga and
when he came to consider its prehistory, he was looking for the evidence of
elements he knew from the later classic Yoga of Patajali. He thought that
he had found rudiments of it in the Vedas.
In his investigations Eliade made the mistake of not taking into account
the different nature of his two sources separated by more than a thousand
years of linguistic development. When tackling our hymn he apparently
approached it with preconceived ideas, some of them stemming from his
earlier preoccupation with Siberian shamanism. The kein is to him only an
ecstatic who but vaguely resembles the Yogi. the chief similarity being his
ability to fly through the airbut this siddhi is a magical power that is
found everywhere. The hymns references to the horse of the wind, the
poison drunk with Rudra and to the gods whom he incarnates [sic!] point
for him rather to a shamanizing technique. He did not analyse the hymn
carefully and produced only a hasty, inaccurate and misleading paraphrase
of it. Yet he was also struck by it and found the description of the keins
ecstasy significant. He expressed his appreciative impressions as follows:
The muni disappears in spirit; abandoning his body, he divines the
thoughts of others; he inhabits the two seas. All of these are experiences
transcending the sphere of the profane, are states of consciousness cosmic
in structure, though they can be realized through other means than
ecstasy.18 Those other means he referred to are the three last stages of
Patajalis Yoga, namely concentration , meditation (dhyna) and
enstasis (samdhi) which can be deliberately used for acquiring siddhis or
miraculous powers.19 Enstasis is an expression coined by Eliade which
he used to distinguish samdhi from the lower technique of ecstasy.
Eliades arbitrary distinction between the achievement of a Yogi of
Patajalis school of classical Yoga and of a muni of Vedic times is based
on his understanding of mauneya (verse 3), i.e. the sages state of mind or
achievement (which Maurer translates clumsily hermit-state), as being a
shamanistic ecstasy, and possibly drug-induced at that. It is highly unlikely
that Eliade ever saw or tried to read the original of the hymn. All he wrote
40 WERNER
theory, was one: That soma is not the only hallucinogen referred to in the
is clear from the long-hair hymn.23 It is a sad reflection on the
level of critical re-examination, or the lack of it, of old clichs, which the
remark of Oldenbergs has become, that the drug theory has found common
acceptance among teachers of Sanskrit like Maurer. In his comment to
verse 2 of his translation, given above, he says: toxic drink refers to
some sort of narcotic substance used by the ascetics to induce a trance-like,
ecstatic state. And his observation to verse 7 elaborates: This passageis
the oldest reference to the Rudra-iva cult of traditional Indian civilisation,
which has always been characterised by wild, frenzied rites and revelry
involving the consumption of intoxicating beverages and hallucinatory
drugs. (Cf. my note 4.) Such sweeping assertions, which lack
substantiation and are not backed by references to any research work, are
unworthy of an academic.
The common fallacy of all such interpretations of the material is
their disregard for the highly symbolical character of the Vedic texts and
thereby for the deeper meaning of their mythological background. Their
protagonists appear to have always sought only the most obvious and
virtually literal explanation which one could be forgiven for calling a kind
of (academic) fundamentalism.
A more cautious and less extreme view of our hymn was expressed by
Geldner: The song describes the trance-state of an ascetic ecstatic
Oldenberg (Religion 404) goes too far in stressing the rough features of a
wild medicine-man. The muni possesses fully the external signs of the later
Yogi and of the god iva.24 In this statement he was long before preceded
by Ludwig, although he did not quote him. Ludwig, moreover, recognized
in the image of Rudra drinking the poison a reference to the myth about the
churning of the cosmic ocean and to iva drinking the poison halhala
which has been separated from the ocean first, to be followed later by the
drink of immortality. That is why he suggested that one should see in Rudra
a Yogi.25
There are other, perhaps less important, interpretations of our hymn like
that of Sharma who regards the keins as the forerunners of the
and as such the earliest dissenters from the orthodox religion26, a view
which cannot be upheld and for which there is no evidence. Neither keins
nor can be held for dissenters from the orthodox religion, because
they represented quite a different tradition outside orthodoxy or outside
Brahminic culture, as Gonda put it. Turning now to the first comprehensive
and serious attempt at a deeper understanding of this remarkable hymn by
Miller, I have to say again that bold and imaginative as it is, her
interpretation which came quite near to unveiling the true character of the
longhaired sage, still failed to do full justice to him, for two reasons.
Firstly, she was too much influenced by Eliades views and secondly she,
too, looked at the hymn with a certain evolutionistic biasas already the
42 WERNER
title of her paper, Forerunners of Yoga, indicates. Like others before her
she spoke about the ecstatic state of the munis and although she admitted
that it contains an element of luminosity characteristic of the later Yogi
experiences she found, clearly under the influence of Eliade, also some
marked similarities between shamanism and the munis experiences. She
judged them apparently by her understanding of the Patajalis elaborate
scheme of the stages of samdhi when she further wrote: The munis
experiences cannot even be regarded as simple states of samdhithey still
belong to the lowest part of the created cosmos. She evidently believed
that further evolution was necessary to bring our wandering sage of Vedic
time from his supposedly primitive mentality to the advanced spirituality of
Patajalis time.
But as in almost everybody elses case, the underlying strength of the
hymns evidence influenced even her to the point where she appears to have
become inconsistent with her own statements. She very nearly ascribed to
the sage the highest possible development of mans spirituality when she
recognized that he possessed detachment from life leading to its mastery
and even admitted that he is not merely master of the two worlds, mind and
matter, but he has penetrated into svar, the spiritual world or level of
cognition.27 She was further tempted by the view of Bose who interpreted
the drinking of poison by the sage in Rudras company as a symbol of
taking, on himself, the worlds suffering. This is a suggestion which is not
unsound, because in the myth about the churning of the cosmic ocean iva
drinks the poison in order to save other gods and the whole world from
destruction. Yet Miller shrinks back from the temptation of what would
appear to be spurious reasons. She must have known about the awareness in
the Vedas of the meaning of sacrifice and self-sacrifice for the benefit of the
world which is expressed mythologically by the original sacrifice of the
in the process of world creation (RV 10, 90). Yet she finds Boses
idea as striking a slightly dramatic note not quite in keeping with the
Indian spirit for whom tragedy has no place.28 This remark is off the mark,
for if a spiritually advanced being undergoes suffering in order to help
others, there may be in it a dramatic note, but it is quite in keeping with the
Indian spiritas the myth about churning the cosmic ocean and drinking
the poison, or even the story of the Buddhas life before enlightenment and
other instances showbut there certainly is no tragedy in it.
The approach to the interpretation of this hymn should be free from
prejudice and preconceived ideas and theories about the evolution of
religious experiences of mankind. All high religions recognize a
transcendental and ultimate source of spirituality (be it called God, tman,
Tao, , the Holy or any other name) which itself does not undergo
evolution and can reveal itself or be experienced fully in different times and
situations and in different stages of mans mental or intellectual
development, without being linked together by any kind of evolutionary
THE LONGHAIRED SAGE 43
1. The longhaired one carries within himself fire and poison and both
heaven and earth. To look at him is like seeing heavenly brightness in
its fullness. He is said to be light itself.
2. The sages, girdled with the wind, are clad in dust of yellow hue. They
follow the path of the wind when the gods have penetrated them.
3. Uplifted by our sagehood we have ascended upon the winds. You
mortals see just our bodies.
44 WERNER
4. The sage flies through the inner region, illuminating all forms below.
Given to holy work he is the companion of every god.
5. Being the winds horse, the Vyus companion and god-inspired, the
sage is at home in both oceans, the eastern and the western.
6. Wandering in the track of celestial beings and sylvan beasts, the
longhaired one, knowing their aspiration, is a sweet and most uplifting
friend.
7. For him Vyu churned, even pounded that which is hard to bend, as the
longhaired one drank the poison with the cup, together with Rudra.
context where it was not influenced by the later Hindu image of a stern
guru. The ability to read other beings hearts is among the Yogic powers
(siddhis) listed by Patajali as well as being a quality which was said to have
been possessed by the Buddha in an unequalled measure and used by him
particularly when instructing and helping his pupils and listeners on the
path of their moral and spiritual progress and well-being.
7. This last verse of the hymn presents some real difficulties to
interpreters, as the history of its misrepresentation testifies. Help is
available if one draws on the materials contained in the . The image
of churning and pounding connects this verse, as already mentioned earlier
in this paper, with the myth of churning the cosmic ocean to obtain
the drink of immortality. The myths, though usually recorded
relatively late, have undoubtedly a long history and some may be very
ancient indeed and therefore the allusion to one of them in the RV need not
be surprising.29 If one takes Vyu to stand again for universal life, one may
understand the first part of the verse as stating that having reached harmony
with the universal life, the sage also reached immortality, the highest goal
of spiritual life. The second part of the stanza then indicates that he did so
while still active in (drinking from) the stream of mortal (poisonous) life
in the material world through having a material body (represented probably
by the image of the cup). One can paraphrase the situation in Buddhist
terminology: having realized , he remains active in
untouched by its defilements.
In the legend poison is released as a by-product during the
process of churning the cosmic ocean, before the drink of immortality is
won, and it thus symbolizes the unavoidable phenomenon of death within
the manifested universe ( is the realm of Mra). Only when death
is overcome by ones spiritual power is true immortality obtained. The gods
do not manage to do so in the legend. Only iva is capable of drinking the
poison without harm and he is, significantly enough, the popular Hindu
symbol of spiritual progress through Yoga. As the Vedic Rudra was the
same as or developed into iva, the image of drinking poison in his
company suggests the spiritual achievement gained by Yoga and as iva
saved by his deed the gods and other beings from the deadly poison, the
image suggests also the idea of assistance which the longhaired sage gives
or is capable of offering to others. But he does not do so as a saviour, as
Bose would have it, for he is not and has not become a god or divine
incarnation; he is still a man who has reached accomplishment and thereby
the realms of immortality, but who can only assist the world rather than
save it, an idea which again points in the direction of the later Mahyna
Buddhist teachings as expressed in the Bodhisattva doctrine.
Thus what clearly emerges from this unique hymn is a picture, not of an
orgiastic drug-addict, but of the noble figure of a spiritual hero, an ideal
THE LONGHAIRED SAGE 47
which has been the focal point of spiritual aspirations in India throughout
millenia and which has retained its appeal up to the present day.
APPENDIX
or, better, two planes of existence, the higher and the lower, i.e. the
spiritual and the material.
svar meaning brightness, light, splendour, bliss, happiness and also the
sun, bright space and bright sky; it symbolizes the highest realm,
possibly the element of enlightenment itself.
jyoti light, also inner light, insight, enlightenment.
muni Grassman translates Bsser which is not even compatible with his
own dictionary which gives ein Begeisterter, Verzckter. The last
expression was used by Oldenberg and Geldner, but it was not a
happy choice. The English equivalent would be the ecstatic and it
does not convey the root meaning of the word pointing as it does to a
silent meditative life (mauneya). In the absence of a congenial
English expression sage seems to be the best rendering.
vtaraana girdled with the wind. It probably indicates that they did not
wear any girdles, because, going naked, they did not need them, the
wind blowing round their naked waists.
mala taken as a noun in Instr. Sg., it means that the sages were wrapped
in dirt, dust or soil whose predominant colour was pianga, yellow,
which is still true of the Indian plains. This again indicates that they
went about naked. Miller suggests that it could mean that the sages
have donned the perishable vehicle of earth, the body, with all its
impurities (Reappraisal, p. 104) which is not altogether impossible.
Most translators obviously take mala to be an adjective in the Acc. Pl.,
in which case robes has to be supplemented and we get the
traditional yellow robe of Hindu and Buddhist mendicants. This is,
however, not at all necessary. In view of the ancient custom of Jain
ascetics to go naked which survived with their digambara sect till
modern times, most ancient unorthodox sages were most likely
following the same trend.
devaso Griffiths translation where gods have gone before is
more appealing, but there does not seem to be grammatical support
for it, as yad stands for when and not where. The overall sense of
the verse is practically the same in either case, expressing the
capacity of the sages to communicate on the level or in the dimension
of divine intelligences. This is the path of the wind, the breath of
gods.
4. patati vv /
mnir devsya devasya skh //
5. /
ubha y ca //
apparently fully at the sages disposal, and Vyu the higher lifes
force or the very essence of life with which the sage is in harmony.
samudra the image of the ocean, usually meaning the cosmic ocean,
i.e. the space in its entirety, including the inner space, stands in the
Vedas and virtually all of Indian mythology for spheres of existence
and for layers of the mind, both cosmic and individual, since they
overlap (cf. also RV 1, 159, 4). The interpretation of eastern as
spiritual and western as material is supported also by the fact that
prva also means upper (particularly in compounds, like
prvakya, the upper part of the body) and that apara then means
low or even inferior.
6. Apsarsm cran/
ktasya skh svdr //
keta from the root kit=cit expresses the dynamic drive of the mind or
heart, hence it means will, intention, desire, inclination, motivation,
aspiration (Pli cetan is also used in this sense); the expression
ketasya vidvn no doubt means that he knows his own hearts
movements as well as the longings and aspirations or motivations of
other beings. This is further strengthened by the phrase wandering in
their track which has also the figurative meaning of being able to
trace them mentally which is a siddhi called dibba cakkhu in the Pli
Canon.
NOTES
The term mysticism suggests a view about ultimate reality in which this
reality is known in direct experience and about the relation of this reality to
the world in our ordinary experience which is based on sense perception,
intellection and various processes of reasoning involved in intellection.
No equivalent of the term mysticism exists in Sanskrit and its use with
regard to what we find in the may be misleading: The dominant
philosophical tradition in the West insists that the term is non-cognitive so
that it has no place in any epistemological investigation, cognition being
defined as knowing by sense perception and reasoning. But as far as the
are concerned, the fact that mystical viewing of reality is not a
process of intellection does not mean that what we know in such viewing is
only a state of feeling and not of knowledge.
Mystical viewing amounts to what we call direct experience, in English
usually termed intuition. It is accepted that it may illumine life in some
way, but what it delivers does not qualify for the name knowledge. But
the teachers claim that what they know in such experience is
knowledge (vidy,) indeed such knowledge is higher (para) compared to
the knowledge derived from sense perception and reasoning which is called
lower (apara). It is higher because the understanding of reality one gets
here is such that it can illumine any other kind of understanding of reality
that we have. It is also higher because experience here is not indirect, not
knowledge about, but knowing by being: there is no distance between
the reality known and the knowledge of it, no intermediaries like the senses
and the intellect. This is expressed by such Sanskrit terms as tdtmya or
tadkrita : one knows something because one is it or becomes it. A
mundane example of the difference is knowing hunger by being hungry as
distinct from knowing it by watching someone who behaves in a fashion
that is indicative of hunger.
The human capacity that enables one to be conscious of reality in this
direct fashion is called in Sanskrit bodhi as distinct from the term buddhi
(intellect) which knows that something is so and so by making it an object
of investigation to which one turns ones attention as an investigating
54 BOWES
subject. The term bodhi was used in this sense in Mahyna philosophical
literature for expounding its own non-dualism. , not being
technical philosophy, do not actually use a special term for direct
knowledge, except in KU where the phrase pratibodha viditam occurs in
that sense.
I feel justified in using the Buddhist term bodhi for direct knowledge in
the , because it appears later also in Hindu literature. Buddhism
shared a common cultural background with the rest of the spiritual-religious
thinking in India and many other terms were so shared, especially between
Mdhyamika and Yogcra varieties of Buddhism and Hindu Advaitism.
The point is to stress that mystical viewing is knowledge, because human
beings, participating in tman or the principle of conscious functioning that
is itself self-conscious, are equipped with the capacity to know things
directly just as they are equipped with the senses and the intellect to know
about things.
Since ultimate reality can only be one, some people believe that all
mystical experience must be the same, although its interpretations may
differ in different cultures. I do not share that view and believe that there
are descriptions of different types of mystical experiences even in the
. If the reality being experienced by X, Y and Z in common is the
same in some genuine sense of same, it does not mean that X, Y and Z
necessarily have the same experience of it. The one and the same man, Mr
Smith, is experienced by his wife, children, friends, neighbours, employees
and competitors, but not only can their accounts of what Mr Smith is like as
a person differ, they can have genuinely different experiences of him each
of which is valid. This is so because Mr Smith, although one person, has
many facets and experiencing him involves one or more of these facets.
Only when a simple thing like a mathematical point is involved can it be
said that the content of different experiences of the same thing be thought to
be the same, in the sense of being carbon copies. What is called ultimate
reality is acknowledged to be infinite, i.e. beyond all measure of whatever
magnification can be devised by the human mind, and absolute, i.e. not
limited by the reality of anything else on which its being would be
dependent in some fashionthat is to say, limitless. Surely, a reality like
that should not be thought to be one thing or as simple as a mathematical
point, and there must be more than one way of experiencing it which is
genuine and valid if there is more than one way even in respect of things
which are finite and limited.
The unity and oneness of the ultimate reality is in no way impugned
because men experience it in diverse ways just as the unity and oneness of
Mr Smith is not in jeopardy because different people experience him
differently.
In a scheme where mystical experience means Gods self-revelation to
man there may be some justification for claiming that there is only one kind
THE AND ANKARAS VEDNTA 55
fourth state called turya which is above all this; in it everything becomes
one (advaitam) beyond the distinction of conscious and unconscious and is
unthinkable, unspeakable etc,
tman is thus not to be identified exclusively with its ultimate state of
being beyond all distinctions, nor even as pure consciousness (cit), a
description most often resorted to, but it is to be seen at work in phenomenal
and dream reality as well. It is only the fourth stage which absorbs all
distinctions, but it does not negate them as operating at lower levels; this
also has to be experienced if tman is to be known in the fullness of its
being as the ultimate reality. [Turya is] not that which cognizes the
internal [objects], not that which cognizes the external [objects], not what
cognizes both of them, not a mass of cognition, not cognitive, not non-
cognitive (MaU, 7).1 Because tman is all, this same indescribable
infinite energy brings forth, by an act of voluntary self-limitation, the finite
and the limited world within the expanse of its own limitless being.
The BU talks about two forms of reality: Verily there are two forms of
brahman, the formed and the formless, the mortal and the immortal, the
unmoving and the moving, the manifest existent (sat) and the unmanifest
that (tat) (BU 2, 3, l).2 I believe that this twofold nature of brahman or the
two modes of its being are talked about on the basis of actual experience of
brahman as both formed and formless, as the quotations below will show.
The idea is not that there are two brahmans, but that the same brahman has
opposite characteristics to be realized in distinctive types of mystical
experience, and the fact that such opposing experiences of the same reality
are possible is itself a mystical realization.
First the formless. This is an experience of infinite and limitless being
wherein all particulars are absorbed, including the separate sense of the
experiencing subject, so that this experience cannot properly be said to
qualify as knowledge or consciousness. It cannot be described, because the
language of description requires that there be a reality which is limited by
the presence of another for the sake of description. To begin with the
experiencing subject takes his stand on the world of plurality of which he is
conscious, but then it disappears into indifferentiation and loses its separate
identity: As these flowing rivers tending towards the ocean, on reaching
the ocean, disappear, their name-shape broken up, and are called simply the
ocean, even so of this seer, these sixteen parts tending towards the person,
on reaching the person, disappear, their name-shape broken up, and are
called simply the person. That one is without parts, immortal (PU 6, 5).3
This formless experience is described by Yjavalkya to Maitreyi: As a
lump of salt thrown in water becomes dissolved in water and there would
not be any of it to seize forth as it were, but wherever one may take it it is
salty indeed, so, verily, this great being, infinite, limitless, consists of
nothing but knowledge. Arising from out of these elements one vanishes
away into them. When he has departed there is no more knowledge. Then
THE AND ANKARAS VEDNTA 59
said Maitreyi: In this, indeed you have bewildered me, Venerable Sir, by
saying that when he has departed there is no more knowledge. Then
Yjavalya said: Certainly I am not saying anything bewilderingFor
where there is duality as it were, there one smells another, there one sees
anotherWhereeverything has become the self, then by what and whom
should one smellhearby what and whom should one understand? By
what should one know that by which all this is known? By what, my dear,
should one know the knower? (BU 2, 4, 1314).4
There (in that state) a father is not a father, a mother is not a mother, the
worlds are not the worlds, the gods are not the gods, the Vedas are not the
Vedas. There a thief is not a thiefan ascetic not an ascetic. He is not
followed by good, he is not followed by evil, for then he has passed beyond
all the sorrows of the heart (BU 4, 3, 22).5
To give the final example of the undifferentiated: That, O Grg, the
knowers of brahman call the imperishable. It is neither gross nor fine,
neither short nor longneither shadow nor darkness, neither air nor space,
unattached, without tastewithout eyeswithout measure, having no
within and no without. It eats nothing and no one eats it (BU 3, 8, 8).
Verily that imperishable, O Grg, is unseen but is the seer, is unheard but
is the hearer, unthought but is the thinker, unknown but is the knower.
There is no other seer but this, no other hearer but this, no other thinker but
this, no other knower but this. By this imperishable, O Grg, is space
woven like warp and woof (BU 3, 8, 11).6
The experience of this undifferentiated formless brahman is by its very
nature non-dual in the sense of there being not two things to be
experienced. But the same give also another account of the
brahman experience which is not non-dual in the sense that there is no
second thing present in experience, but in the sense that all things in their
particularity are actually seen as permeated by the same essence which is
tman or brahman. They are non-dual with it as the waves of the sea are
non-dual with the sea, although seen also as separate items.
This non-duality of essence comes from the fact that brahman actually
becomes the world to enjoy diversity through differences of name, shape
and work. In the beginning the world was only self, in the shape of a
personHe had no delightHe desired a second. He became as large as a
woman and a man in close embrace (BU 1, 4, 1 & 3). Now this self is the
world of all beingsof the godsof the seersof the fathersof menof
animals (BU 1, 4, 16).7
There was nothing whatsoever here in the beginningHe created the
mind, thinking let me have a self (mind). Then he moved about,
worshipping. From him, thus worshipping, water was producedHe
divided himself threefoldfiresunand air (BU 1, 2, 1 & 3). At that
time it (brahman) was undifferentiated. It became differentiated by the
60 BOWES
name and form. Therefore even today all this is differentiated by the name
and form (BU 1, 4, 7).8
There are many statements throughout the in which brahman
or tman is identified with this all, because it becomes this all. In addition
there are many accounts which suggest an actual mystical experience of
diversity issuing forth from a primal unity which as an experience is the
very opposite of the one discussed earlier. Brahman becomes differentiated
as the world while remaining inexhaustible as the unity that is holding forth
all these phenomenal differences within its limitless being.
As a spider sends forth and draws in (its thread), as herbs grow on the
earth, as hair (grows) on the head and the body of a living person, so from
the imperishable arises here the universe (MuU 1, 1, 7). As from a lighted
fire laid with damp fuel, various (clouds of) smoke issue forth, even so, my
dear, the Veda, the Yajur Veda, the Sma Veda, Atharvngirasa,
history, ancient lore, sciences, , verses, aphorisms, explanations
and commentaries. From it, indeed, are all these breathed forth (BU 2, 4,
10).
And he who sees all beings in self and the self in all beings shrinks from
nothing (IU, 7).9
The self is indeed brahman, consisting of understanding, mind, life, sight,
hearing, earth, water, air, ether, light and no light, desire and absence of
desire, anger and absence of anger, righteousness and absence of
righteousness and all things (BU 4, 4, 5). He desired, let me become many,
let me be born. He performed austeritycreated all thisentered into it
(and) became both the actual and the beyond, the defined and the
undefined, both the founded and the non-founded, the intelligent and the
non-ingelligent, the true and the untrue. As the real he became whatever there
is here, that is what they call the real (TaU 2, 6, 1).10
Lastly: The self verily is the lord of all beings, the king of all kings. As
all spokes are held together in the hub and felly of a wheel just so in the self
all beings, all gods, all worlds, all breathing creatures, all these things are
held together. This can be realized in a mystical experience of one
becoming the many, but not through rational discourse, as the following
conversation makes clear:
said: This has been explained by you in the manner as
one explains: This is a cow, this is a horse. Explain to me properly the
brahman that is immediately present and directly perceived, that (you say)
is the self in all things. Yjavalkya: That is your self which is within all
things. : Which is within all things, Yjavalkya?
Yjavalkya: You cannot see the seer of seeinghear the hearer of
hearingthink the thinker of thinkingunderstand the understander of
understanding. He is your self which is in all things. Everything else is
afflicted. Thereupon kept silent (BU, 3, 4, 2).11
THE AND ANKARAS VEDNTA 61
The opponents idea that one and the same thing is both stationary and
moving, put down as illogical by ankara, in fact comes from IU: It, one,
unmoving, moves swifter than the mind. The senses do not attain it for its
being ever ahead. It stands still but outruns everything that runs. In it the
moving air supports all existence (IU 4). Obviously, ankaras brahman is
unequivocally one thing of such simplicity that it cannot be the basis from
which opposite qualities issue forth. It also appears to be of a finite, limited
nature so that undergoing modifications would mean diminution of its being
The BU, which is based on the double mystical experience of all things
both disappearing into and arising out of the one, has no problem of how all
things can arise out of brahman which nevertheless remains unchanged and
unlimited. It sets out the paradoxical character of brahman as the
inexhaustible reality which gives rise to all things and yet remains ever the
same as the full. That is full, this is full. From fullness arises fullness. If
fullness is taken away from fullness, it is fullness itself that remains
(BU 5, 1, 1). This statement itself is proof, apart from many others quoted
earlier, that ankaras statement about scriptures as denying that brahman
undergoes modifications is untrue.
ankara quotes selectively from the scriptures, which is typical of rational
activity, to establish his own idea of one reality without a second: Now
there is the instruction not so, not so (BU 2, 3, 6) and thus it is determined
that in this way, by denying the truth of the imagined aspects of brahman
the real nature of brahman is intimated, and this aggregate of all effects
which depends upon it is denied to be true by the words, not so, not so. It is
logical also that this is a repudiation of all effects as such, by the words, not
so, not so, as they are in the ultimate sense non-existent.17
Let me quote a passage to show that it does not mean that the whole
phenomenal world has been repudiated as ankara would have it: He who
knows it thus attains splendour like a sudden flash of lightning. Now
therefore there is the teaching, not this, not thisthe designation for him is
the truth of truth. Verily, the vital breath is the truth, and he is the truth of
that (BU 2, 3, 6).18
I find here no suggestion that the this or that of ordinary experience,
with which brahmanrevealed like a sudden flash of lightningcannot be
equated, is illusory or is repudiated as having imaginary being; particularly
because the vital breath (presumably the individual experiencing) is
declared to be true.
The world of this or that is the world which is experienced by
everybody. Therefore ankara is not entitled to give it the status of an
imagined object comparable to that of a flower growing in the sky or stamp
it as non-existent like the son of a barren woman. He, in fact, borrows the
Yogcra Buddhist terminology of adhysa, meaning the superimposition of
the attributes of one thing on another, to explain how the world comes to be
there: it is on the part of man a natural procedurewhich has its cause
THE AND ANKARAS VEDNTA 65
NOTES
I
After careful scrutinies from the heaven when and where to be
incarnated (paca-mah-vilocana), the Bodhisatta, mindful and conscious
6 descended therefrom into the womb of his mother. Four
II
From these miraculous birth stories of the Buddha, the Wunderkind, let us
turn to the descriptions of birth stories of ordinary human beings as given in
Hindu literature. In addition to general physiological and embryological
descriptions in medieval Hindu medical treatises,9 We have a number
of Hindu religious texts which tell us of the process of human birth in the
light of the theory of transmigration, especially in connection
with .10
BIRTH OF EXTRAORDINARY PERSONS 69
vehement winds of various sorts both inside and outside of his mothers
womb. Becuase of this suffering at birth the ordinary human being becomes
bla, meaning both stupefied and child. This is also the starting point of
further suffering caused by ignorance.
However, what is the embryo doing while still in his mothers womb
with knowledge and full memory of previous births? This can be illustrated
by a passage from the GU20 which describes the physiological development
of the embryo from the time of conception (kalaha, arbuda etc.) and which
finds its parallel in the second of the Nirukta :21
Now, in the ninth month [from the conception] he comes to possess in
entirety the distinctive marks and knowledge (jna). He calls to
memory his previous births and recognizes his karman, virtuous as well as
sinful. [Then, he laments.]
Seeing through thousands of wombs, [I have dwelt in the past, now I
remember that] I ate many sorts of food and sucked various breasts. I
repeated birth and death again and again. I am now tormented alone by the
karman, virtuous and sinful, which I have done for the sake of my
attendants. They have gone away, partaking of the fruits (of their own
karman). Alas, I sink into the ocean of suffering and find no remedy. If I am
released from this womb, I shall resort to Mahevara who destroys sins and
grants emancipation (mukti) as a result. If I am released from this womb, I
shall resort to who destroys sins and grants emancipation as a
result. If I am released from this womb, I shall study and Yoga
which destroys sins and grants emancipation as a result. If I am released
from this womb, I shall meditate upon the eternal brahman.
But when he reaches the orifice of the womb (yoni-dvara,) he is afflicted
by restraint (yantra) and expelled forcibly22 from the womb with great
difficulty. No sooner is he born than he is touched by the wind and
he neither remembers the number of births and deaths [he has experienced
in the past] nor recognizes his karman, virtuous or sinful.
This passage tells us how the embryo recalls his previous births and is so
disgusted with the pains of transmigration that he makes up his mind never
to repeat the same in future. He is intelligent enough to think of
philosophical teachings and pious enough to resort to a particular god. But
all this is reduced to naught because of the suffering at birth which makes
him a stupefied child. However, the recollection of previous births, disgust
with transmigration and determination to obtain final release on the part of
the embryo are recurring motifs in the literature. Two excerpted
examples are given here, one from the Pretakalpa of GP 6, 9ff., which is
almost parallel to BP 3, 31, 5ff., and the other from MP 32, 63ff. paralleled
by Uttarakhanda of GP 32, 63ff.23
With his head placed in his belly and his back and neck curved in his
mothers womb, he lies unable to move his limbs like a bird in a cage. Due
to the divine ordinanfce (daivt,) memory comes back to him. While calling
72 HARA
consciousness (cetan) again when he comes into contact with [outer] air.
Then my which effaces [consciousness] assails him. Then his
tman is bewildered by it and he loses his knowledge (jna). Bereft of
knowledge he (jantu) partakes then of the state of being a bla (stupefied
child).
The sublime thought (mati) on the part of the embryo to put an end to
transmigration26 may or may not be accompanied by an appeal to particular
deities. The decisive factors which cause the fatal loss of memory and
knowledge vary from text to text: the tightness of the vaginal passage in K,
contact with the outer air in K and VP, vyu in GU, parturition
wind in GP and my in MP.27
Despite minor differences these passages of Hindu religious literature
agree with each other in making responsible for the loss of
intelligence. They contrast the prenatal mental situation with the postnatal
one, while attributing to the former the blissful state of being fully furnished
with insight and to the latter its loss with misery of all sorts. The
intervenes between the two. Two Buddhist treatises have
come to my notice which describe it in a comparable manner, namely Vism
and Akb, but neither of them attributes the complete loss of insight to the
. However, it is met occasionally in some texts of the Chinese
.28
III
From the descriptions of suffering which the ordinary human beings meet
at the time of birth, let us come back to the Buddhas birth stories and
compare the two.
First, ordinary human beings are said to pass through five stages of
embryonic development, kalala, arbuda, pe, ghana and prakha29 and it
is toward the end of the prenatal period that the embryo is endowed with
consciousness (caitanya) and knowledge (jna).30 The Buddha, on the
other hand, is said to possess consciousness and knowledge from the very
beginning.31 He made the five investigations from the heaven,
entered into Mys womb, stayed there and issued therefrom, all while
being conscious and mindful (sata sampajna).
Second, the ordinary embryo experiences pain while he resides in his
mothers womb. He is confined in a dark, doorless chamber of the womb
which is often compared to hell.32 Not only is he tormented by his mothers
actions, but he torments her.33 The Buddha, however, stayed in his mothers
womb comfortably without giving her any pain.34
Third, the ordinary embryo is infested with all sorts of impurity (mala)
both in his prenatal state and at the time of delivery. The baby newly born
out of his mothers womb35 is often compared to a worm falling from a
foul-smelling sore. The Buddha is immune from impurity . He
74 HARA
and his mothers womb are compared to a gem placed on Benares muslin;
both are pure and embellish each other.36
Fourth, when an ordinary human being is born he falls on the ground like
a worm from a sore on excrements. Bereft of free will he is left in complete
dependence on others for bathing and nourishment. But the Buddha was
received by the devaputras before he reached the ground and was bathed
with two jet-streams descended from the sky.37
Fifth, an ordinary baby is laid on a dirty bed and is unable to turn around.
Insects bite him, but he cannot scratch and drive them away. The Buddha
was laid on a beautiful bed with canopies guarded by four deities with
Brahma holding an umbrella over him and ngas fanning him with their
chowries to protect him from the insects.38
The succeeding events of the Buddhas seven steps and his famous
proclamation are by themselves miraculous enough to require no further
comment.39 They are, of course, contrasted by accounts about
newly-born infants inability to move, walk and speak anything other than
inarticulate loud cries.40
However, above all these distinctive features which embellish the
Buddhas birth, a point of far greater importance seems to rest in the fact
that he is ayonija41, that is, he was born not by passing through the tightness
of his mothers yoni, but issued out of her right side ( prva). Human
beings endowed with extraordinary qualities are supposed to have an
extraordinary origin and even a particular mode of coming into existence
similar to extraordinary birth of gods and sages abounding in Sanskrit
literature.42 Indra himself is said to have been born from his mothers right
side, Aurva from the thigh, from the hand, from the head
and from the armpit.43 But, besides this intention on the part of
Buddhist authors of legends to raise their founder to the rank and dignity of
ancient gods and sages, we have an impression that this birth story may
well have been designed to release the Buddha from the suffering at birth.
If the Buddha is ayonija, he is free from which normally
brings about stupefaction. He is therefore privileged to preserve the
memory of his previous births ( )44 and the sublime thoughts (mati,
jna) which the embryo holds in his prenatal state.45 As we have seen
above, the embryo recalls the suffering of transmigration, and being
disgusted with it (nirveda,) he determines not to repeat the same in future.
This determination, blotted out by in ordinary babies is
retained by the infant Buddha thanks to his being ayonija so that he can
proclaim after his birth: In all the world I am the chief, best and foremost.
This is my last birth, and I shall never be born again. The last portion of
this proclamation gives us an impression as if it were an outgrowth of the
determination made by the embryo as seen in the previous chapter.
These points of contrast given above may illustrate some peculiarities of
devices used by the Buddhist authors of the Buddhas birth story for the
BIRTH OF EXTRAORDINARY PERSONS 75
NOTES
Berlin 1954, pp. 1578. As regards its Sanskrit usage in the Buddhist
texts, see F.Edgerton, Buddhist Hybrid Sanskrit Dictionary, New
Haven 1953, p. 577.
7 Cmara in this context is unknown to M and D. In N, however, a
white parasol is held by the Mahbrahma, also in the Sanskrit
tradition, cf. Mhvs I, 220, II & II, 22, 122; L 84, 3 & 84, 1718. Cf.
Windisch, op. cit., pp. 1306.
8 Cf. E.J.Thomas, The Life of Buddha as Legend and History, London
1927, p. 34. Cf. also B I, 11 (yoni-ajta). For Chinese versions see
Taisho I, 4b, 153c154a; III, 463c, 473c, 494a, 553a, 618a, 627a,
6867; IV, 1a, 58c. In the corresponding Chinese version of the Pli
Acchariyab- bhutasutta (M) the Bodhisatta is said to have stayed in
the right side of his mother, but not issued out from there (Taisho I,
470a). However, it is generally believed that the male embryo resides
in the mothers right side and the female one in the left. Cf. J.Jolly,
Medizin, Strassburg 1901, p. 55.
9 Cf. e.g. Jolly, op. cit., pp. 535, Windisch, op. cit., pp. 86ff. and
Reinhold F.G.Mller, Altindische Embryologie, Nova Acta Leopol
dina, Neue Folge 17, Leipzig 1955, pp. 552.
10 For Vedic references cf. P.Rolland, Un fragment mdical vdique;
Le premier du bhtotpati, Mnchener Studien
zur Sprachwissenschaft 30 (1972), pp. 12938. For Jaina embryology
cf. C.Caillat, Sur les doctrines mdicales dans le Tandulaveyliya,
Indologica Taurinensia 2 (1975), pp. 4555. For further references to
in Chinese and Japanese literature cf. my Japanese
article Shoku, Festschrift K.Tamaki, Tokyo 1977, pp. 667ff.
11 Pupatastra with Panchrthabhshya of , ed. R.A.Sastri,
TSS 143 (1940), p 141, lines 16ff. For the threefold division of
suffering see the I. For further references cf. M.Hara,
Indo-Iranian Journal 16 (1974), pp. 5960.
12 For this etc. cf. stra 1, 1, 7 (
kucanam gamanam iti ).
13 The phrase here tasyanucitena bhyena vyun jananvartena
may be rendered as he was touched by the unaccustomed
outer air and whirlwind (varta) which causes ones birth.
14 Or it may simply mean who is my relative?
15 We read kim akryam for kim in
conformity with the following and peyam
apeyam, although we have kim in a similar
context of the VP 6, 5, 22.
16 , The Shri Venkateshwar Press, Bombay 1910, pp.
2767; , ASS 28 (1895), pp. 5612.
17 For these influences of the mothers food and drink over the embryo
see E.Abegg, Der Pretakalpa des , eine Darstellung
BIRTH OF EXTRAORDINARY PERSONS 77
38 Cf. B 1,17 & N p. 53, lines 1617; Mhvs, 1, 220, 1112 & II, 22,
1213.
39 Cf. Windisch, op. cit., pp. 13035.
40 Cf. Pr 6, 31; 6, 29; 6, 26; 6, 32; MP 11, 17; K (TSS 143) p. 142, line
3; Su (ASS 13) 2, 198.
41 For ayonija in general, cf. Windisch, op. cit., pp. 1846. As regards
Sts birth, we have now an article by C.Bulke, La naissance de
St. BEFEO 46 (1952), pp. 10717.
42 Cf. Hara, Indra and Tapas, The Adyar Library Bulletin 39 (1975), p.
157; E.Senart, Essai sur la lgende Buddha, Paris 1882, p. 249; A.
Foucher, La vie du Buddha, Paris 1949, p. 43; A.Bareau, BEFEO 61,
p. 206.
43 Cf. B 1,10 and E.H.Johnston, note ad loc. Also Taisho 24, p.
100c101a; and R. Gnoli, The Gilgit Manuscript of the
vastu, Rome 1977, pp. 16ff. I owe this reference to the late Prof. J.
Brough.
44 Johnston translated B 1, 11 na as he was
born not ignorant but fully conscious and rightly commented:
probably it means remembering his previous births in this
connection. Windisch also often translated (Pli sata) as mit
der Erinnerung [an sein frheres Dasein], op. cit., p. 35, p. 88 etc.
45 For prenatal experiences in general cf. F.B.J.Kuiper, Cosmogony
and Conception. A Query, History of Religions 10 (1970), pp.
91138, esp. pp. 115ff. The first reference in Sanskrit literature to
prenatal experience and memory of previous births is found in RV 4,
27, 1 and AU 4,6. For studies on this story cf. also U. Schneider, Die
Komposition der , Indo-Iranian Journal 7, pp. 58
9; Der Somaraub des Manu, Wiesbaden 1971, pp. 10ff. Also:
Windisch, op. cit., pp. 62 & 91.
46 In N p. 50,. lines 213 we read only that the Bodhisatta entered his
mothers womb through her right side, but there is no mention of his
birth therefrom. Cf. also Thomas, op. cit., p. 34 and our note 8 above.
80
6
CONSCIOUSNESS MYSTICISM IN
THE DISCOURSES OF THE BUDDHA
Peter Harvey
NIBBNA
The classic description of nibbna, apparently as a metaphysical state, is
at Ud 80:
There exists, monks, that sphere (yatana) where there is neither solidity,
nor cohesion, nor heat, nor motion, nor the sphere of infinite space, nor the
sphere of infinite consciousness, nor the sphere of nothingness, nor the
sphere of neither-perception-nor-non-perception; neither this world, nor a
world beyond, nor both, nor sun and moon; there, monks, I say, there is no
coming (gati) and going (gati,) no maintenance (thiti,) no decease (cuti)
and rebirth (upapatti); that, surely, is without support, it has no functioning,
82 HARVEY
examined below in relation to the present question as well as in its own right.
Other matters must come first, however, starting with the second possibility
outlined above.
Nibbna is described as (unconstructed, unconditioned) at Ud
80 and elsewhere. How can it come about? S II, 66 gives a clue:
unsupported consciousness, shown to be a stopped consciousness,
comes about from the stopping of various such as willing. S III,
534 also describes the unsupported consciousness . Ud
80 describes nibbna as without functioning (pavatta,) while Miln 3256
makes clear that the functioning, absent in nibbna, is the functioning of
. So it seems likely that nibbnic consciousness is
unconstructed in the sense of being no longer constructed.
This is supported by S III, 867 which explains that
construct a compound of the five khandhas:
material shape into the state of material shape (rpattya) etc., but
consciousness into what is meant by consciousness (vinatthya). This
would mean that, when the suspend operation in nibbna, the
first four khandhas are not constructed into states of themselves and
consciousness is no longer constructed into what is meant by
consciousnessit is unconstructed and hardly what one would call
consciousness any more. This is in line with the equivocation, noted at the
end of the last section, over whether nibbnic consciousness is truly a form
of consciousness. That an unconstructed state can have a beginning in
time is also supported by Ps II, 1267: it says of a state of stopping
temporarily entered: Immeasurable is stopping in the sense that it is
unmoving and unconstructed.
Next comes the question: In what sense is, then, nibbnic consciousness
unborn? The clue is in Ud 801 where nibbna is described as the
leaving behind of the born (jtassa ). Being stopped,
nibbnic consciousness entails the stopping of all the other nidnas of the
paticcasamuppda, including birth (jti). In the stopped consciousness
nothing of what is born remains; it is non-manifestive like space on
which one cannot make appear (ptubhva) material shapes by painting
(M I, 1278); it is objectless and there is in it no appearance (ptubhava)
of the khandhas, a description included in S II,3 in its definition of the
birth-nidna. At Ps II, 241 nibbna is unborn because it is the stopping of
the five khandhas which are subject to birth (jtidhammato).
The above does not mean that nibbna did not exist before a buddha
attained it. One can say that while entry into nibbna (in life or at death)
is an event in time, the experience itself is timeless, neither past, present or
future (Dhs 1416, Miln 270). Moreover, whether or not any person
experiences nibbnic, unsupported consciousness at any time, the timeless
sphere of such unconstructed consciousness remains.
MYSTICISM IN THE PLI SUTTAS 89
This interpretation also means that nibbna during life, with remainder
of what is grasped at (saupdisesa,) cannot be experienced by an arahant
all the time: one cannot have objectless consciousness and perceive and act
in the world. Nibbna during life, then, must be seen as a radically
transforming experience, such as is described as the destruction of
attachment, hatred and delusion (It 389), which may be subsequently re-
entered during life. At death only this unconstructed consciousness
remains, without remainder of what is grasped at (anupdisesa).
Nevertheless, the experience of such a transforming state means that the
living arahant has greatly changed dispositions of thought and action so that
he is always one whose fires of attachment, hatred and delusion have been
extinguished.
There are two conditions, your reverence, for the attainment of signless
cetovimutti : not attending to any nimitta, and attending to the signless
element. A nimitta is a perceptual sign or meaningful indication,18 and the
items listed at A V, 3212 are surely a wide-ranging list of all the main
types of signs which may engage the attention. The signless element is a
term used for nibbna (as explained here by MA II, 352). A V, 3212 then
seems to describe a samdhi in which no attention is paid to any signs,
but attention is paid to nibbna, the signless element, i.e. it describes a
signless samdhi. As such it clearly is not nibbna, it is still a
constructed state (M III, 108).
There is another, quite intriguing description of this signless samdhi at A
V, 3189 where nanda asks the Buddha: May it be, Venerable Sir, that a
monks acquiring of samdhi is such that in solidity he is not percipient of
solidity [this formula is then repeated for
each of the items following solidity at A V, 3212]and yet he is
percipient (sa)?
The Buddha replies that there is such a samdhi in which a monk
perceives: This is the realdetachment, stopping, nibbna. The
description of this samdhi is indeed paradoxical. It is not so much that a
person just does not attend to solidity etc., but that in solidity no solidity is
perceived. It is perceived, as it were, as being empty of
solidity: saperception, cognition, recognition, interpretation, that
which classifies and labels experience (correctly or incorrectly)does not
latch on to a sign as a basis for seeing solidity as solidity. Rather, the
mind attends to or perceives nibbna, the signless element, that which does
not partake of the solidness of solidity (M I, 32930, above). Not attending
to signs of solidity etc., solidity etc. are perceived as empty of themselves,
and the mind sees through them and focuses on nibbna, the signless
element.
The explanation of the signless samdhi in Ps II, 58 sheds light on why
the mind should be able to see through phenomena as empty:
When one with great resolution gives attention [to phenomena] as
impermanent, he acquires signless liberation. When one who has great
tranquillity gives attention [to them] as dukkha, he gains desireless
liberation. When one who has great wisdom gives attention [to
phenomena] as anatta, he wins void (suat) liberation.
This means that the signless samdhi is one of a set of three states in which
there is a very strong insight into the three marks. In such states
consciousness, weary of ephemeral, unsatisfactory, conditioned states, is
wholly detached from them and views that which lies beyond them. The
signless samdhi sees through the signs of solidity etc., because there is in
it contemplation of all conditioned states as limited and
circumscribed (Psm II, 48). Vism 657
comments: both as limited by rise and fall and as circumscribed by them,
MYSTICISM IN THE PLI SUTTAS 91
while Vism 668 explains that in the signless state there is effecting the
resolution of the compact (ghana katv ): In the signless state
great insight into impermanence leads to resolving the seemingly stable and
lasting signs, presented by the senses, into a complex of components which
have weak sign-value to the grasping mind and which themselves come and
go so fast as to be insignificant and unworthy of attention. As Ps II, 36 says,
in the signless liberation, one construes (karoti) no sign in what one
contemplates.
The movement of insight up to the signless samdhi and then beyond to
nibbna is well illustrated at M III, 104ff. A monk is said to be
progressively attending to the perception of human beings, a village, the
forest, earth (or solidity; it probably refers here to a meditational kasina),
each of the formless states and signless samdhi, with each of the
perceptions being empty (sua) of the previous ones. The items
transcended here in the signless samdhi broadly correspond to those not
attended to in the signless samdhi described at A V, 3212. Both passages,
then, seem to describe the signless samdhi as one reached by a progressive
emptying in which the signs of both gross and subtle phenomena come to
be transcended or seen through. M III, 108 goes on to explain that, once the
signless samdhi is reached, the meditator goes even beyond this, thinking:
This signless samdhi is constructed and thought out (
abhisa cetayita). But whatever is constructed and thought out is
impermanent, liable to stopping. When this is known, the four cankers
are destroyed, arahantship attained and nibbna fully experienced. As has
been seen above, this means that consciousness becomes objectless,
unsupported, stopped and unconstructed. It does not even take nibbna as
object, as signless samdhi does, but transcends all objects so as to be that
which is the signless element, the desireless element, the void element,
nibbna (Ps II,48).
I know of no other single dhamma which, thus developed and made much of,
is pliable (mudu) and workable (kammaa) as is this citta. Monks, a
developed and made much of citta is pliable and workable.
After referring to this citta as also supremely quick to change (or
adapt, lahuparivatta) he continues:
Monks, this citta is brightly shining (pabhassara,) but it is stained by
adventitious stains (gantukehi upakkilesehi )Monks, this
citta is brightly shining, but it is freed (vipamutta) from adventitious stains.
There is here a clear reference to a brightly shining citta present in all
people, be they corrupt or pure, whether it is stained or pure. When
passages parallel to the quoted ones are examined, however, it becomes
clear that the citta referred to is still unenlightened and has an object.
Therefore it cannot be regarded as the nibbnic consciousness within all
beings. D I, 76, having spoken of the attainment of the fourth jhna,
continues:
With this citta thus serene, made pure (parisuddha,) translucent, without
blemish, with stains gone (vigatpakkilesa,) become pliable, workable, firm
and imperturbable, he applies and bends down his citta for[the
attainment of the six higher knowledges (abhi,) including arahantship.]
The terms pliable and workable and the use of the language of purity
show that the praised developed citta of A I, 810 is being described here.
It is also confirmed by the use of the term with stains gone which shows
that the citta in the fourth jhna, poised for the abhis, is the developed,
brightly shining citta free from adventitious stains. Nevertheless, as it
still must have an object in the first five, mundane, abhis, and as it still
has to go on to attain nibbna, it cannot yet be the objectless, unsupported,
consciousness.
To free the shining citta from stains, not just samdhi, but wisdom is
necessary. D I, 2078, commenting on the series of processes at D I, 76ff.,
classifies the fourth jhna as samdhi, but the abhis and
which follow it, as wisdom. It is also said that both samatha and vipassan
are necessary for the abhis (M I, 494). As the stain-free citta is applied
directly to the abhis, it must already have some wisdom or insight. This
is supported by D III, 101: by putting away the five hindrances, by
suppressing the stains of mind by wisdom
While D I, 76 indicates a jhnic route to freeing the shining citta from
stains, this is not the only one. At D I, 110 (cf. A V, 86) the Buddha gives a
graduated discourse on, among other things, the defilement of
sense desires. As a result the citta of the hearer becomes pliable and clear,
without hindrances. This state certainly resembles that of the citta at A I,
810. S V, 92 confirms that the suspension of the five hindrances is the
crucial, if not the only, factor in freeing the citta of stains. It specifically
refers to these hindrances as upakkilesas, impurities, just as various metals
are impurities of gold. Such stains are said to prevent citta from being
MYSTICISM IN THE PLI SUTTAS 93
pliable and workable or showing its brightly shining nature. The situation at
D I, 110, then, can be seen as one where the hearer of a discourse enters a
state which, while not an actual jhna, could be bordering on it. As it is free
from hindrances, it could be seen as access concentration with a degree of
wisdom. This then would be sufficient to render the shining citta free from
stains, though this is more typically the case in the fourth jhna with the
mind poised for the abhis, as citta is there more fully developed and
made much of.19
Another point to take note of is that, although wisdom is required to
free the shining citta from stains, one need not be an riyan person
(stream-enterer, arahant, etc.) for this stainless state to occur. D I, 110,
quoted above, continues by saying that the Buddha teaches the four riyan
truths to the person whose citta is pliable etc. so that the pure, stainless
(vitamala) dhamma-eye of the stream-enterer arises, as a clean cloth readily
takes dye. This shows that the pliable, stain-free state of citta precedes
stream-entry (which makes one an riyan person), just as it precedes the
abbhis and arahantship: it can, however, be seen as an ideal spring-
board for attaining any of these.
difference. Vism 139 says that in the mundane abhis (the first five),
impulsion lasts only a single conscious moment (ekacittakkhanika,)
being immediately followed by citta, such that the flickering
between the two is especially rapid. Thus the stainless, brightly shining citta
poised for the abhis can be seen as citta after all. It is the
shining state of mind that is rapidly flicked in and out when accomplishing
the abhis. In beautiful accord with this is the A I, 810 description of
the well-developed citta as supremely quick to change.
However the brightly shining citta is described, it is certainly an essential
component of Buddhist mysticism and may even be used as a Buddhist
basis for understanding other forms of mysticism. Other mystical traditions
also use the language of purity and light. But there is a danger that the
notion of awareness of brightly shining citta could lead to views about
tman, or even God within: the LS in fact says that the tathgata garbha
might be held to be tmanwhich it is not (p. 78).
Summarizing what has been said of the brightly shining citta and its
potential, it can be seen that there is a progressive cleansing of its surface
defilements through the four jhnas as these suspend the five hindrances
and other stains. This process culminates when the fourth jhna is
supplemented by wisdom and the bases of psychic power necessary for
the anhis. A I, 253ff. compares this state to that of purified gold which
can easily be used for many purposes. The mind in such a state can, indeed,
overcome many limitations: it can hear things at a great distance, thus
overcoming the barrier of space; it can read the minds of others, thus
overcoming the self-other barrier; it can remember previous lives of oneself
and others, thus overcoming the barrier of time; finally, and most crucially,
it can be used as the springboard for attaining freedom from the cankers.
With this last abhi, we might say, the shining nibbnic consciousness
flashes out of the womb of arahantship, being without object or support, so
transcending all limitations.24
CONCLUSIONS
It has been seen that in the early Pli material nibbna is less like a totally
other transcendent metaphysical realm and more like a revolutionizing of
consciousness gone through its mystical stages of jhnas and signless
samdhi. Nibbna has been shown to be a form of objectless, unsupported
consciousness (vina,) unaffected by the actions of and
unconstructed. Being stopped, all other nidnas such as nma-rpa and
birth stop with it so that it is unborn, non-manifestive, like empty space,
without object. Material elements and worldly contrasts find no footing in
it, it is infinite like a sunbeam which settles nowhere; it also has the shine
of wisdom.
MYSTICISM IN THE PLI SUTTAS 97
The features of the signless samdhi, in which the mind sees phenomena
as empty of themselves, and the objectless consciousness of nibbna seem
to have been taken up in the nyavda and Vijnavda literature,
respectively. But the Pli material is a long way from saying that everything
is mind-only, although most of what we experience of the world is just
our (mis)interpretation of it, and there is no indication that nibbna is seen
non-different from , since an objectless consciousness is not the
same as consciousness with an object.
The brightly shining citta, related to the theme of cosmic evolution as
well as the evolution of the individual in mystical experience, is given no
direct doctrinal interpretation in the Pli discourses, but the LS sees it as the
tathgata garbha, the Praj Pramit literature as bodhicitta, and the
Theravda commentaries as citta, the latent dynamic continuum
from which normal waking consciousness springs.
The unsupported consciousness represents consciousness as nibbna
which springs from the brightly shining consciousness which underlies
. This relationship is perhaps reminiscent of the turya
in relation to dreamless sleep. The former also seems to be objectless and
the latter is seen in Theravda as consisting purely of (brightly
shining) cittas.
My treatment of nibbna might be criticized for portraying it during life
as a particular experience, rather than an ever-present disposition of the
arahant shown by his destruction of the cankers. But this destruction first
takes place in the objectless experience of nibbna and it is the ability to
return to it which makes one an arahant and radically alters ones
dispositions to thought and action.
I would further argue that it is more useful to look at passages relating
nibbna to vina, which has a more precise meaning, than to citta.25 In
any event, there is support to be found in the contemporary Theravda
practice tradition, as well as in some forms of Mahyna Buddhism.
Speaking of the reputed arahant Acharn Mun, Maha Boowa states: Within
such a lofty condition mind rests with dhamma and dhamma with mind;
mind is dhamma and dhamma is mindThis condition is the entire
extinction of the mundane world26
Given the equivalence of dhamma and nibbna in such passages as A I,
156 and 158, the above statement seems to portray the arahants mind in a
certain state as being nibbna. It can thus be seen that an aspect of the
understanding of nibbna, which is absent in the Theravda tradition of
commentaries and Abhidhamma, is to be found in the Pli discourses and
the contemporary Theravda practice tradition.
Finally, if one would characterize the forms of mysticism found in the
Pli discourses, it is none of the nature-, God- or soul-mysticism of
F.C.Happold.27 Though nearest to the latter, it goes beyond any ideas of
98 HARVEY
NOTES
9 With both being the destruction of greed, hatred and delusion, i.e,
nibbna during life.
10 D III, 217; Vibh 64, 70ff.
11 A IV, 305.
12 Sn 137.
13 MA II, 412: nibbna.
14 Cf. M I, 14.
15 The PTS edition of the text takes this speech as still coming from
Baka, but it comes more logically from the Buddha; MA II, 413 takes
it as coming from the teacher, too.
16 S I, 6; A II, 139.
17 This error was made in the original version of this paper.
18 The meaning of nimitta is surveyed in the authors Signless
Meditations in Pli Buddhism, Journal of the International
Association of Buddhist Studies, Vol. 9, no. 1 (1986).
19 For citta to be poised for the abhis, with its shining nature
apparent, the four bases of psychic power (iddhipd) need also to be
developed; at S V, 227 it is said in connection with these: Thus with
an open citta which is not overgrown he cultivates a citta which has a
bright shine (sappabhsa).
20 D.T.Suzuki, The Stra, London 1932; Sanskrit text from
P.L.Vaida (ed.), , Dharbhanga
1973. The cited passages are also quoted by W.Rahula, Zen and the
Taming of the Bull, London 1978, p. 98.
21 Cf. the who postulated a mla-vijna as the support
of visual consciousness, etc. See A.Bareau, Les Sectes Bouddhiques
du Petit Vhicule, Paris 1955, p. 72.
22 E.Conze, The Perfection of Wisdom in 8000 Lines, Bolinas (USA)
1973, p. 84; Sanskrit from his Rome edition of the PPS.
23 Vism 458; cf. Asl 278.
24 On related matters see the authors Developing a self without
Boundaries, Buddhist Studies Review, vol. I, no. 2 (19834).
25 As R.Johansson does in The Psychology of , London 1969.
26 Ven. Phra Acharn Maha Bowa, The Ven. Phra Acharn Mun
Bhuridatta Thera, Meditation Master, Bangkok 1976, p. 140. My
thanks to Lance Cousins for pointing out this passage to me.
27 F.C.Happold, Mysticism, Harmondsworth 1970.
100
7
THE STAGES OF CHRISTIAN
MYSTICISM AND BUDDHIST
PURIFICATION: INTERIOR CASTLE
OF ST TERESA OF VILA AND THE
PATH OF PURIFICATION OF
BUDDHAGHOSA
Lance S.Cousins
There have been many attempts to define or describe the nature of mystical
experience: some have argued for a uniform mystical goal, others have
asserted the uniqueness of some particular type of mystical experience, still
others have sought to erect a hierarchy of stages or levels of mystical
experience either within one religion or across the boundaries of traditions.1
No real consensus has yet been reached.
I am convinced that to think of a single transcendental mystical
experience is in certain respects misleading. I would look at the phenomena
of mysticism in terms of a mystical way, involving a series of experiences,
some quite distinct from others. But I do not wish to prejudge whether
mystical experience in different religious and cultural contexts can be
regarded as identical. What I wish to argue is that there is considerable
similarity in the structure and stages of the mystical way as conceived in
different traditions. It is this question which I wish to explore here. I believe
that this is possible without regard to the general question as to the nature
and validity of mystical phenomena. Theistic religions tend to view the stages
of the mystical ladder as more or less supernatural and involving some kind
of contact with the divine. A psychologist might think in terms of a series
of psychological experiences or altered states of consciousness without
feeling the necessity of introducing any external criteria. In either case we
are dealing with a series of experiences or perhaps transformations which
can, I think, be examined in their own right.
The two examples chosen for this paper may seem at first sight far apart:
on the one hand, a sixteenth-century Spanish sister, a devout and loyal Roman
Catholic, a lady with little higher learning but great involvement in the
practice of spiritual life; on the other, a fifth-century Buddhist scholar,
probably not without experience on the Buddhist path, but perhaps not of its
higher stages. One would not generally think that the two would have much
in common. But this is just what seems to be of the greatest advantage to
making a comparison. No one would doubt the existence of resemblances
between Christian, Jewish and Muslim mystical traditions and explanations
102 COUSINS
for them through mutual influence would not be lacking. The same would
hardly apply if resemblances are found between Theravda Buddhism and
Catholic Christianity. It is also particularly useful to cross the gap between
theistic and non-theistic religions which is often portrayed as if it were a
yawning gulf.
St Teresa was an extremely fine observational psychologist as is evident
particularly in the Interior Castle, the work of her maturity. It contains a
wealth of fine detail and exact description which is obviously the product of
many years of introspection and careful recollection of her own experiences.
She also developed considerable skill in giving spiritual guidance and
herself drew on the experiences of her fellows in the Reformed Carmelite
communities.
We have no comparable account from a Buddhist equally experienced in
the path of his tradition, but in Buddhaghosas Visuddhimagga (The Path of
Purification) we have at least an account of the Buddhist path which enjoys
wide authority in the Theravda tradition and appears to derive from
sources based on genuine personal experience. Buddhaghosa was very
conservative and a traditionalist. His work is little more than a
systematization and reorganization of materials available to him. He can,
therefore, be relied upon, but it will be useful to supplement his account of
the Buddhist path with materials from the living tradition of Buddhist
practice.
He begins the Vism with a verse from S:
A yogi, he says, needs to know the way to purification, i.e. to nibbna. The
Buddha taught various methods and Buddhaghosa gives a number of
examples of how the path can be divided, but he points out that in the
quoted verse it is divided under the headings of morality (sla,)
concentration (samdhi) and wisdom (pa). He then elaborates the image.
A man of natural intelligence, standing on firm ground and taking up a
knife well sharpened on a stone, will be able by making an effort to
disentangle a great tangle of bamboos. Similarly a person who is by nature
intelligent, established on the firm ground of morality and taking up the
knife of insight well sharpened on the stone of concentration with the hand
of awareness will, by making an effort, be able to untangle the tangle of
craving. Based on this image Buddhaghosa structured his whole Vism on this
threefold division as well as upon a parallel sevenfold division.
St Theresa also starts with an image: I began to think of the soul as if it
were a castle of a single diamond or of a very clear crystal in which there
are many dwelling places just as in Heaven there are many mansions
MYSTICISM AND PURIFICATION 103
(T p. 7).3 We can hardly imagine the great beauty of a soul and its great
capacity. It is beyond our comprehension, for God, created us in His
image and likeness. We pay too little attention to our souls. All our
interest is centred in the rough setting of the diamond or the outer wall of
the castlethat is to say in these bodies of oursThis castlehas many
mansions, some above, others below, others at each side; and in the centre
and midst of them all is the chiefest mansion where very secret things pass
between God and the soul. As the simile is elaborated in the book it
becomes clear that progression is envisaged from the lowest and outermost,
perhaps in a spiral, to the central area where God dwells as King. St Teresa
divides this into seven stages, but is at pains to point out that each stage has
a very large number of dwelling places, making clear that the path can take
a number of different forms, but herself making the division into seven
stages the structural basis of the work.
It is probably safe to assume that the traditional Christian threefold
division of the mystical way (outlined in the introductory paper of this
collection), which would of course have been well known to St Teresa,
partly underlies her account. Since the first member of the division is
purification or via purgativa, it is natural to expect a measure of
correspondence between the earlier mansions of the Interior Castle and
Buddhaghosas initial section on morality. Neither work attempts to give a
full account. St Teresa probably assumes that the reader will have read her
other works which gave a fuller treatment of this topic and Buddhaghosa
would no doubt refer to his commentaries to Pli Nikyas. St Teresa
certainly assumes that her reader will know the distinction between mortal
or venial sin and the state of grace and she says little about such matters as
confession, repentance, penance or observation of the sacraments apart from
stressing, at intervals, their value and importance. Equally the Vism
assumes that the reader will know the detailed precepts of Buddhist training,
the different types of kamma and the conditions necessary to constitute its
full course (kammapatha) which would be capable of bringing about an
appropriate rebirth in due course. He often refers, in an abbreviated manner,
to relevant texts and lists, assuming their knowledge on the part of the
reader.
In fact there is a great deal in common between Buddhist sla and
Christian moral theory. Their differences could be accounted for by the
basic difference between a theistic and non-theistic system. But then there
is a great deal of variation on particular matters also within each of the two
traditions. But setting aside general questions it will be more appropriate to
examine what the two writers envisage as being of particular value in the
spiritual life beyond simple avoidance of wrongdoing.
For the First Mansions St Teresa particularly stresses the need for self-
knowledge, humility, courage and not giving way to doubts. To come to the
Second Mansions withdrawal from unnecessary cares and business is
104 COUSINS
needed. Those who have reached the Second Mansions have begun to
practise prayer, but are troubled by worldly habits and the bad example of
friends. Their perseverance is stretched and they need a firm resolve, and
association with others who lead a spiritual life is essential for them. Right
attitude to spiritual practice is also important and expectations of sweetness
in prayer and the like will be a serious obstacle; it is better to strive to conform
ones will to the will of God and be intent on enduring trials. In the Third
Mansions St Teresa describes people who have lived in an upright and
well-ordered way, both of body and mind (T p. 37); they avoid venial sins,
love penance, spend hours in recollection, employ their time rightly,
exercise themselves in works of charity to their neighbours, are well
ordered in their conversation and dress and govern their households well.
But they may experience dryness in their meditation due to excessive desire
for spiritual favours and there is perhaps an underlying lack of humility and
true detachment. St Teresa seems to imply that they think well of
themselves and their behaviour. We should look at our own faults, not
those of others, she writes, for many of those with well-ordered lives are
shocked at everything (T p. 43). Obedience to a good spiritual director is
of great value to them.
Buddhaghosas account of sla is very elaborate, but only some of the
more important features can be indicated here. The word is commonly
translated by morality or ethics, although its original meaning is more
like nature or character. Buddhaghosa in fact cites this meaning in
connection with canonical passages which refer to unskilful (akusala) sla,
but rejects it as the sense which the word has in the world (Vism p. 14).
The sla of the Vism is different and not unskiful. To explain it he employs
an invented etymology of sla as meaning (1) concentrating (samdhana,)
i.e. stilling the mind and settling it so that undesirable states do not occur
and (2) upholding , i.e. acting as the support or foundation for
skilful states. For the advantages of sla he refers the reader to various
canonical texts, e.g. A V, 12 describing skilful slas as having the goal and
advantage of absence of remorse which itself has the goal and advantage of
pleasant feeling (pmujja). The series continues with joy, tranquility,
happiness, concentration and various stages of insight, knowledge and
vision of liberation.
The Vism goes on to give detailed series of numerical classifications of
sla from various points of view, partly to define particular types of
observance, but mostly to suggest different degrees of observance or levels
of practice. Three examples may suffice. (1) Sla is twofold: with limits, in
which case it will be broken for the sake of gain, fame, kinsmen, limb or
life, or without limits, i.e. kept regardless of such considerations. (2) Sla is
threefold: under the overlordship (i) of self, i.e. undertaken to abandon what
is not fitting for oneself, (ii) of other people, to avoid the censure of others,
and (iii) of dhamma, to pay homage to the greatness of the dhamma. (3) It
MYSTICISM AND PURIFICATION 105
is also threefold as inferior when based on things of the world, middling when
undertaken for the sake of ones own liberation and superior if pursued for
the sake of the liberation of all beings (Vism 1016, 46f.).
The most important section on sla is, for us, the last one as it describes
its purifying (vodna). It is achieved by not breaking the precepts of
training, by penance in case of breach, by absence of sexual activity in any
guise, by removal of mental defilements such as anger, jealousy or pride
and by developing such qualities as having few wants, complete
satisfaction, renunciation, being easily looked after and having generated
effort (cf. M I, 13). One should also see the dangers in failure of sla and the
advantages of success in it.
Next follows a long section on the thirteen . According to
Buddhaghosa they are the means to develop the above qualities of having
few wants and the like in order to bring about the purifying of sla. Dhuta,
from a verb meaning to shake or wash, may refer to a person who is being
washed or cleansed or it can be an abstract noun with the sense of washing
or cleansing. , literally a limb, is often used in contexts where it
means a factor, constituent or attribute of something. The compound would
therefore mean either attributes of the person being cleansed or factors of
cleansing. Elaborating further, Buddhaghosa makes the role of the
clear by a simile: sla will be purified and vows successfully accomplished
when washed clean of stains by the water of special qualities such as having
few wants. The are, in effect, a series of special practices
involving considerable renunciation and asceticism without going to
extremes of self-mortification, e.g. eating only alms food, eating only one
meal a day, possessing only the one set of three robes, living at the root of a
tree or in the open air and sleeping without lying down. One Thai monk
described it as camping meditation. Buddhaghosa describes the particular
advantages of each of the thirteen, making clear that the purpose is very
much to induce a detached state free from expectations and preferences. He
also discusses what kind of person they are suitable for. Most of these
practices would have parallels in the Christian monastic tradition well-
known to St Teresa. Indeed. she herself touches on some of them in her
Way of Perfection.
Most of the points covered in the first three Mansions of St Teresa seem
to be paralleled in Buddhaghosa, although not always obviously so at first
sight: e.g. having few wants is used in ways equivalent to humility. The
importance of not having expectations and conforming ones will with that
of God do not appear explicitly but in various guises in the Vism.4 A
modern teacher writes: Do not think of attaining the results of what you are
doingthat they will be as you want them to beAs the old saying puts it,
Dont snatch at happiness before it is ripe, because the mind will not then
be steadfast, knowledge will not be clear, diligence and energy will
diminish, faith will deteriorate and the final result will be revulsion,
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under hallucinogenic drugs. It is known that the prior setting can have a
crucial influence on the course taken by an LSD trip. St Augustine was
determined to avoid similar phenomena.
With the Fourth Mansions St Teresa describes the Prayer of Quiet and
the Prayer of Recollection where the natural and the supernatural are
mingled. These mansions are nearer the Kings dwelling and very beautiful;
so subtle are the things seen and heard in them that the mind cannot give a
sufficiently lucid description of them to make them clear to the
inexperienced, but those who enjoy such favours will easily understand.
There is nothing ineffable about this stage. Difficulties in description are
the same as those which normally accompany any attempt to describe inner
experience.
Although St Teresa describes the Prayer of Recollection after the Prayer
of Quiet, she comments that it almost invariably begins before it, meaning
perhaps that it becomes deeper and fuller as the Prayer of Quiet becomes
deeper and more frequent: Without the display of any human skill there
seems gradually to be built a temple for the prayer already described; the
senses and all external things seem gradually to lose their hold while the
soul is regaining its lost control (T p. 59). She uses the simile of the Kings
gentle call summoning inhabitants who have strayed from the castle to
return. Then they become markedly conscious of a gentle interior
shrinking (T p. 60) like a hedgehog or tortoise retiring into itself, but while
they can do so at will, with us it is not a question of our willit happens
only by Gods favour. She suggests that God grants it to those who are
already leaving the things of the world.
At this point St Teresa remarks that one should not try to suppress
thinking prior to obtaining the absorption, because that would bring more
harm than profit. Our effort would get in the way. When His Majesty
wishes the understanding to cease, He employs it in another manner
(T p. 63).
But the main part of the discussion of the Fourth Mansions is dedicated
to the Prayer of Quiet. Its key feature is the experience of a new kind of
religious emotion. Here St Teresa distinguishes between spiritual
enjoyments (contentos) and spiritual joys (qustos) in a very careful and
precise manner (T p. 46ff.). The former are pleasant emotions aroused by
prayer and good works and stem from our own nature even if aided by
grace and they are not fundamentally different from strong pleasant
emotions in ordinary life, although they may be nobler. But they do not
make one holier and may be even connected with the passions and lead then
to intense results of an undesirable kind.
The joy or delight in God of the Prayer of Quiet is something quite
different. To make the difference between the two clear, St Teresa uses a
traditional expression: spiritual joys widen the heart whereas spiritual
enjoyments narrow it. She further uses the simile of two fountains. One is
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fed with water brought in conduits from a distance and is therefore noisy
and requires labour. It represents the spiritual enjoyments which occur
particularly in the first three Mansions. The other one draws directly from a
spring, is noiseless and represents the spiritual joys of the Fourth Mansions.
We experience the greatest peace, calm and sweetness in the inmost depth
of our being, she writes. This joy does not appear to me to originate from
the heart, but from some even more interior part, as it were from the depths
it appears to dilate and enlarge our whole interior and to benefit us in an
inexplicable manner (T p. 545).
All of this can be recognized by results: In the after effects and the
subsequent behaviour one discerns the true value of the prayer; there is no
better crucible to test it (T p. 56). If this prayer occurs frequently, the soul
will be strengthened in all virtues. St Teresa maintains that the soul is less
constrained in the service of God: there is no fear of hell or servile fear of
God; the soul has firm confidence in its destiny which is like a dilation or
enlargement of the soul, as if the fountain were equipped with some
contrivance so that its basin grew larger as the water flowed more freely.
She warns, however, that if the health is poor, interior joy may lead to
physical weakness and a kind of spiritual sleep or absorption. One person,
she writes, was in this state for eight hours; she was not unconscious nor
was she conscious of anything concerning God (T p. 66). This can easily
lead to self-deception and is quite different from the genuine case in which
there will be joy in the soul and the experience is not long-lasting, nor does
it overcome the body or produce any exterior sensation.
In the Fifth Mansions St Teresa describes the Prayer of Union. Do not
think it is a state, like the last, in which we dream; I say dream, because
there the soul seems to be, as it were, drowsy, so that it neither seems asleep
nor feels awake. Here we are all asleep, and fast asleep, to the things of the
world and to ourselves; in fact, for the short time that the condition lasts,
the soul is as if without consciousness, for it has no power to think, even
though it may desire to do so (T p. 70). It is as a death full of delight.
Hands and feet cannot move and breathing either stops or occurs without
the soul realizing it. Neither imagination nor memory nor understanding
can hinder this blessing. Essentially the soul seems to have left the body in
order to abide more fully in God. In this state the soul can neither see nor
hear nor understand. The period is always short and seems to the soul even
much shorter than it probably is (T p. 73).
St Teresa acknowledges that there are many other kinds of union which
she treats as being of diabolic origin. But they are quite different in quality.
There is not the same delight and satisfaction of soul nor the same peace
and joy. The quality is very different. It is as if the one kind had to do with
the grosser part of the body, and the other kind penetrated to the very
marrow of the bonesWhat has been said will be sufficient for anyone who
has experienced this; for there is a great difference [between the false and
MYSTICISM AND PURIFICATION 109
the true]. The clearest indication of the true union is the sense of certainty
it leaves behind. God implants himself in the interior of that soul in such a
way that, when it returns to itself, it can in no way doubt that it was in God
and God was in itAlthough for years God may never grant it that favour
again, it can neither forget it nor doubt that it has been received. St Teresa
in fact cites here the doctrine that God is in all things by presence and
power and essence. Indeed, if this certainty is absent, she would say that
union of the whole soul with God has not been experienced.
She elaborates the account of the Prayer of Union with the simile of the
silk worman ugly worm which has to die in order to become a beautiful
butterfly. It must spin its cocoon which is compared to good works
necessary to prepare for this favour. The image of the emergence of the
little white butterfly seems intended to suggest a new purified state of the
soul. But the result of union is intense dissatisfaction with worldly things
which leads to a great increase in detachment. This results in fresh trials and
renewed motivation together with a sense of exile and desire to leave the
world. A deep grief arises which without any effort on the souls part, and
even at times without the soul wanting it, seems to tear it to pieces and
grind it to powder (T p. 82). The intention seems to be to portray a further
process of purification.
Unexpectedly St Teresa goes on to suggest that this Prayer of Union is
not the real characteristic feature of the Fifth Mansions. The Lord has the
power to enrich souls in many ways and bring them to these Mansions by
many other paths than the short cut which has been described (T p. 87). In
fact, the Prayer of Union proceeds from another, much more important
union which consists in submitting ones will to the will of God. This is
shown by the two consequences of love of God and love of ones
neighbour. But then she returns again to the Prayer of Union and compares
it to a meeting between a couple prior to becoming engaged. In a secret
way the soul sees who this spouse is that she is to take (T p. 94).
In the Vism Buddhaghosa specifically excludes discussion of unskilful
and other types of samdhi on the grounds that there are too many kinds
of them for it to be practical to discuss them all. He also excludes, at
this stage, the discussion of transcendent samdhi, reserving it for a
later section, and limits himself to the definition of samdhi as skilful
one-pointedness of mind. But he devotes a large space to answering the
question how samdhi is developed which can be summarized as follows.
Having already purified sla, the meditator should remove himself from
possible distractions and approach the good friend, the giver of a
meditation subject, and receive from among the forty meditation subjects
one that suits his own temperament (Vism p. 89). Having ensured that the
monastery in which he lives is suitable to develop concentration, he should
sever any minor obstructions such as cutting nails or hair, mending robes,
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cleaning the room and so on and not overlook any of the detailed
instructions for development.
Comparing his procedures with those of St Teresa we do not seem to
meet a clear equivalent of her Prayer of Recollection, although her
description does recall Patajalis withdrawal (pratyhra) and the simile
of the tortoise is familiar to the Indian tradition. But Buddhaghosa does not
describe the process of withdrawal as such. Yet the frequently mentioned
guarding of the sense faculties and his description of jhna do imply such a
withdrawal. The latter is illustrated by the development of the nimitta in
practice. It is the stage at which the object of meditation, previously
external, becomes a fixed mental impression or an eidetic image and the
external object can be discarded. This is clearly a feature of the process of
withdrawing the mind within, though of different type than the one
described by St Teresa. We may nevertheless assume that in practice the
Prayer of Recollection would have been quite recognizable to Buddhaghosa
as part of the process of developing jhna.
With the Prayer of Quiet the case is much clearer. St Teresas description
of the distinction between spiritual enjoyments and spiritual joys makes it
quite clear that we are dealing with the jhna factors of joy (pti) and
happiness, especially the former. I have dealt with this subject extensively
elsewhere,6 so I will now only summarize the matter, Buddhist tradition
distinguishes between smisa-pti and nirmisa-pti, effectively joy derived
from the senses and joy not derived from the senses. The latter will only
be fully developed at a stage in meditation when the hindrances are
suppressed and the mind takes as its object a pure idea not in sensory form:
the Buddhaghosas semblance nimitta. Technically the senses do not
operate at this time, but in practice such moments are intermitted with some
sensory perception. Buddhaghosa elaborates different stages in the
development of this joy, of which the last is both more stable and free from
excitation. So we can loosely affirm that the access concentration (upacra-
samdhi) which precedes full jhna in the Vism account corresponds
reasonably closely to St Teresas Prayer of Quiet without necessarily ruling
out the possibility that there are also significant differences.
A modern account may make it clearer: by using one of these forms
of for controlling the heart with mindfulness, one will
gradually be able to curb the outgoing exuberance of the heart. Calm and
happiness will then arise and develop, and there will be only one thing
influencing the heart which will be a knowing of the heart alone without
any disturbance or distraction, or there will be nothing which can irritate or
disturb the heart to make it fall away from this state. This is the nature of
happiness of heart freed from all vain imaginings and thought creations.
When this state is attained, the person who is doing the practice will know
that which is wondrous in his heart, the like of which he has never
MYSTICISM AND PURIFICATION 111
improves as the higher stages of insight are developed and we may assume
that equally samdhi will advance. It may therefore be no accident that the
fifth purification involves a number of jhna-like factors.
Beginning his account of wisdom, Buddhaghosa is careful to define the
wisdom with which he is concerned as insight knowledge connected with
skilful consciousness. After giving a numerical analysis of different kinds
of wisdom in the same way as for the first two sections of the Vism he goes
on to treat the doctrinal analyses which constitute the soil, mentioned above,
in considerable detail. But we shall turn to the description of the actual
development of insight.
It begins with the purification of view which is defined as seeing mental
and physical phenomena exactly as they are and hence equivalent to insight
knowledge which comprehends to a certain degree the First Noble Truth.
The fourth purification, the one accomplished by crossing over doubt, is
defined as comprehending the conditions which give rise to phenomena and
hence as equivalent to understanding the Second Noble Truth. All of this
might be expressed in terms of realizing the worthless and relative nature of
ordinary existence and ceasing to value itnot merely conceptually but
rather as an existential realization and letting go.
The fifth purification due to knowing and seeing what is path (magga)
and what is not path is explained as equivalent to comprehending and
developing the Fourth Noble Truth, i.e. the Eightfold Path. It is achieved by
seeing the general characteristics of phenomena of impermanence, suffering
and not-self. From this arises what is called young insight
, equivalent to a direct perception of the constant rise and
fall of phenomena. At this point the Vism introduces a description of the ten
defilements of insight (Vism p. 633f.). Most of them are states which
appear in themselves desirable: joy, knowledge, tranquility, happiness,
mindfulness and equipoise are included in the last. Their danger is that the
meditator may be overwhelmed by the intensity of these experiences and
imagine that he has already obtained his goal. Only when he is able to
distinguish these tempting but illusory states from the true path is the Fifth
purification completed and only then can he continue his journey.
This may all seem far from St Teresas account of the Sixth Mansions.
Yet a great deal of it is concerned with the problems of recognizing the
exact nature of particular experiences. St Teresa gives very precise
descriptions in order to differentiate between locutions, visions and raptures
derived from God, those originating in the imagination and those coming
from the devil. While one may not agree with her cosmology it would be
foolish to dispute the accuracy of her perceptions or the genuineness of her
experience. Her account is very detailed. No less than eighty of the 206
pages of the standard Spanish edition are taken up with the Sixth Mansions.
To summarize it in brief, these Mansions begin with severe trials, both
internal and external. The soul has been wounded with love for the Spouse
MYSTICISM AND PURIFICATION 113
The fisherman seeks to get free and unwraps the coils from his arm starting
with the tail. This corresponds to the contemplations on emptiness
(sut) which characterize the seventh contemplation knowledge. Finally
the fisherman swings the snake two or three times around his head in order
to weaken it and throws it away from him. He then scrambles back up on to
dry land and stands looking back at the way he had come and thinking I am
freed from a great snake.
A modern master writes: Of the nine aspects [of insight knowledge]
not all of them occur to all aspirants. Even their occurrence does not
necessarily take place in that order. Any one of the seven may take place, to
be followed immediately by the eighth and the ninth.9 It is not clear how far
Buddhaghosa would agree with this, but the difference is perhaps fairly
typical of the kind of variation one finds between the practice tradition and
the theoretical literature.
The eighth contemplation, knowledge, is portrayed as a stage in which no
further effort is required and equipoise is well established. It is perhaps
worth mentioning that at this point the meditator can only wait for the right
conditions to occur for the break-through to the supramundane.
Buddhaghosa illustrates it with the simile of the land-finding crow which
may be carried on board ship. If there is land in sight it will go towards it. If
not, it will remain on board. Likewise if this knowledge sees nibbna, the
sphere of peace, it will abandon the whole process of conditioned things
and leap forth to nibbna. If not, it will continue with conditioned things as
its object. One might note that this is the kind of psychological situation in
which a theist would have recourse to notions of grace or supernatural
favour. The Buddhist of course interprets it in terms of the accumulation of
pram and the law of relational conditions. St Teresas Sixth Mansions and
the account given by Buddhaghosa of the sixth purification have at least
this much in common: both describe an acute rejection of ordinary worldly
life in order to make a further extraordinary leap.
For St Teresa this brings us to the Seventh Mansions where the soul
arrives by means of an intellectual vision in which the Trinity is revealed:
First of all the spirit becomes enkindled, as it were, by a cloud of the
greatest brightnessthese three Persons are distinct and yet, by a
wonderful kind of knowledge which is given to it, the soul understands as
most profound truth that all three Persons are one Substance and one Power
and one Knowledge and one God alone; so that what we hold by Faith the
soul may be said to grasp by sight, although nothing is seen by the eyes,
either of the body or of the soul, for it is no imaginary vision (T p. 182).
Henceforward they are constantly present. The soul perceives quite clearly
that They are in the interior of its heartin the very interior, in some very
deep place. Yet such a person is not entranced: In all that belongs to the
service of God it is much more alert than before; and, when otherwise
occupied, it rests in that happy companionship. Even on occasions when
MYSTICISM AND PURIFICATION 115
cessation is the unconditioned; and the fourth: path is the means to the
unconditioned. Each of these knowledges performs a particular function.
The first truth is to be comprehended, the second abandoned, the third
realized and the fourth developed. According to Buddhaghosa a single
path of knowledge accomplishes all these four functions in a single
moment. Just as a lamp performs four functions simultaneously in a single
momentit burns the wick, dispels darkness, makes light appear and uses
up the oil. This is really quite a startling statement in abhidhamma terms
and ought really to imply that the conditioned and the unconditioned are the
same thing, although of course Buddhaghosa does not draw this conclusion.
What it certainly does indicate is a state in which a knowledge arises which
is permanently impressed in the mind and involves an awareness of the
nature of the phenomenal world, abandonment of mental defilements, direct
experience of the unconditioned and the structuring of consciousness in
terms of the factors of the path and of awakening, etc. This is potentially
accessible at all times.
I do not wish to argue that the Trinity and the Four Noble Truths are
identical or even that one is a misunderstood form of the other. Both
however are statements of the relationship between the ultimate and the
temporal. They are therefore functionally similar in the present context.
Both also involve reoriented or fundamentally changed outlook and some
kind of restructuring of consciousness. With St Teresas description of the
Spiritual Marriage as such we are on less firm ground. Of course, the stream-
enterer is the breast-born son of the Buddha, heir of dhamma, he has
joined the family (gotra) of the Buddhas, and so on. Whether this amounts
to anything similar is hard to assess. The difficulty is, however, that St
Teresa does not really make clear the distinctive features of this stage.
With the effects of the two, however, we are on firmer ground. In the
words of St Teresa, there is a forgetfulness of the self which really seems
no longer to exist (T p. 193). The motivation is renewed and there is great
interior joy and much more peace. Desire for union is partly replaced by
desire to serve the Lord. Fear of death ceases and there is no longer desire
for consolations and favours. These souls have a marked detachment from
everything and a desire to be always either alone or busy with something
that is to some souls advantage. Love is increased and if negligence
occurs, the soul is awakened by God through an impulse from the interior
of the soul which awakens the faculties. The soul is almost always in
tranquility and has an unwavering certainty that it comes from God.
Compare this with the stream-enterer who is particularly characterized by
the absence of the three fetters of , often translated as
personality belief, of adherence to sla and vows as a means to liberation
and of doubt. Elaborated, this means that the view of self is removed,
attachment to the body given up, ritualism is dropped and certainty arising
MYSTICISM AND PURIFICATION 117
NOTES
type of religious experience is this encounter with the personal divine Being
within the depths of ones own soul or self. Such experiences are deeply
felt and transforming personal experiences which may alter the course of
ones whole life and through which one feels that divine reality has been
revealed to oneself. The mystical journey, the process of self-integration
and integration of the self with the reality thus revealed, culminates in
theistic mysticism in union with the divine Being.
It should be noted, however, that there are other forms of mysticism not
discussed in this paper, equally worthy of attention, from which theistic
mysticism must be distinguished.2 For example, in monistic mysticism the
mystic, rather than enjoying a relationship of communion with a personal
Deity, merges into and becomes one with a non-personal divine Principle; or
in nature mysticism the beauties of nature are seen as revealing divine
reality. Again, in Buddhist forms of mysticism, if indeed Bhuddist spiritual
experiences can be classed as such,3 the content of spiritual experience is
not reified, that is to say, the experience is not seen as referring to a union with
a substantial divine Being or Principle which has reality of its own
independent of the experience, but is seen simply as a transcendent state
entailing insight into the true nature of ourselves and reality.
The suffering brought about by the constant sense of separation from
God in theistic mysticism is well illustrated in the writings of St John of the
Cross (154291). He was a contemporary, friend and fellow Carmelite of St
Teresa and many correspondences between their writings can doubtless be
traced to mutual influence, while others seem rather to be based on the fact
that they describe what appear to be similar spiritual experiences. St Johns
prose works show a great depth of theological learning with meticulously
detailed analyses and expositions. His poetry is, by contrast, rich in colour
and texture and full of symbolic complexity (he is widely acclaimed as one
of Spains greatest poets).
St John is one of those writers who conceive of the mystical path as
consisting of more or less distinct phases of transformation or sequences of
attainment of more and more exalted levels of religious consciousness and
understanding. Like many other writers who put forward such schemes of
mystical progress, however, he emphasizes that such stages of experience
represent only a broad generalization or rough scheme; the stages intermingle
with and merge into each other so that St John does not mean to imply that
mystical experiences fall into a rigidly strict sequence. He utilizes the
classical three stages of Catholic mysticismpurgation, contemplation and
unioninterspersed with what he calls the Night of Sense and the Night of
Spirit.4 We shall be particularly concerned here with St Johns two nights.
These are both times of terrible spiritual suffering and trials. The soul
suffers great aridity and can no longer find the consolation and sweetness
that it used to have in spiritual things. It is profoundly conscious of an inner
emptiness, feeling that God has deserted it, and suffers the agonies of
LIVING BETWEEN THE WORLDS 121
separation from God and of seeing its own utter unworthiness. It feels
acutely and is painfully conscious of its own inadequacies and iniquities.
The external things of the world and of the senses also give no joy so that
the soul feels lost, wandering in darkness, unable to find stability and
happiness either in this world or in the other world. These nights of sense
and spirit are purificatory processes, leading ultimately to a deeper
knowledge of God; the soul is tested by its trials and sufferings almost to
breaking point, until a crisis is reached which will carry the mystic over the
threshold to a new and higher level of religious understanding.
The two nights are very similar in their general effects, as outlined
above, but whereas in the night of sense, which occurs after purgation and
before contemplation, the senses and imagination are purified, in the night
of spirit, after contemplation and before union, the higher faculties, that
is, the understanding, memory and will, undergo this purificatory process.
The nights are processes of transition from one form of spiritual awareness
to another, demanding great adjustments in the mystics orientation. An
interior struggle is going on between the limited life of his humanity and the
greater life of the divine which is being revealed. The mystic must die to the
limited self with all its narrow and hedonistic desires and attitudes in order
to be reborn in God. St John in fact says that the pain of the night is like
dying and that the soul must die a living death until it is transformed.5
Here already a point of interest may be noted in connection with Victor
Turners studies. As an anthropologist investigating ritual action,
particularly among the Ndembu of north-west Zambia, Turner has
developed, from his own fieldwork and from the earlier research of Van
Gennep and others on rites of passage, a concept which he calls liminality
and which has since attracted considerable interest among scholars of
religions in general. According to Turner people or objects playing a key
role in the rituals he investigated are in a liminal state, that is, they elude or
fall between the boundaries of the normal classificatory system of their
culture. They are betwixt and between the usual states or conditions
assigned by social structure or intellectual convention; a concept which, I
suspect, may elucidate the feeling of living at the interface between two
worlds shown in the experiences discussed in this paper, with their
accompanying dual emotive tone (of sorrow and joy, as shall shortly be
illustrated) and polarized frame of religious reference (this world/other
world; finitude/infinity; humanity/God).
We may leave aside here Turners particular conclusion regarding the
Ndembu, since he also demonstrates that liminality is a concept of
considerable importance for the study of religion in general and not only in
a ritual context. He lists various characteristics typical of those in a liminal
state, some of which will be seen to correspond, as we proceed, with the
evidence given by the mystics discussed in this paper. For the present we
may note that the liminal state, according to Turner, is frequently linked to
122 GREEN
death and to darkness as are the spiritual trials of St John; and that people in
liminal state often exhibit humility, acceptance of suffering, total obedience
to religious dictates, withdrawal from the usual social norms and roles of
their culture, stripping off of wordly distinctions and status in search of
simplicity and equality, and repudiation of property, privileges, material
pleasures and sexuality.
All these characteristics are marked in the Christian monastic tradition,
as Turner himself discusses, noting that Nowhere has this
institutionalization of liminality been more clearly marked and defined than
in the monastic and mendicant states in the great world religions.6 He
further uses the term communitas to refer to institutionalized liminality or
the attempt to construct a community of individuals bonded together by
liminal experience.
St Johns conception of the spiritual path is effectively illustrated in his
poem The Spiritual Canticle which uses the language and imagery of the
Song of Songs to recount the quest of the bride (the soul) for her divine
bridegroom. We are fortunate in that St John himself wrote long
commentaries on his major poems in which he explains in precise detail
how the allegories used are intended to illustrate the phases of the mystical
life. The Spiritual Canticle, he says, deals with the whole course of the
mystical path. We shall be concerned here mainly with those aspects of the
poem that deal with the two nights and with the experiences connected with
separation from God; however, as we shall see, since the stages of mystical
experience in St Johns scheme merge into each other, the experience of the
night and of separation is in fact more or less continuous. In the opening
verse of the poem the soul longs for union with the bridegroom; she has
been wounded by an arrow of love (a symbol which we shall find reflected
in the writings of St Teresa and the bhakti mystics) and cries out to the
bridegroom to reveal to her how she may find him:
A number of verses follow which describe how the bride seeks the
bridegroom with all her faculties and with the aid of angelic intercessors,
personified as shepherds and sheepfolds respectively. She cultivates virtue,
represented as journeying to the mountains, and spiritual exercises ( =
journeying to the waters); she ignores the temptations of the world ( = wild
beasts) and denies herself the pleasures and gratifications of the material
realm ( = refusing to pluck the flowers by the wayside). Although she is
able to see traces of the beauty of the Beloved in the world of nature which
LIVING BETWEEN THE WORLDS 123
he has created, this is no possible substitute for seeing him face to face. She
soon realizes that nothing less than her Beloveds presence will satisfy her;
the sight of the messengers (Gods traces in the physical world) only
increases the agony of love-in-separation:
St Johns forms of expression and symbolism here are very similar to those
used by the bhakti poets when describing the mysticism of love-in-
separation. Like those poets he makes use of romantic symbolism of the
secular love poetry of his age, adapting its techniques and style to spiritual
themes. (This is known in Spanish as divinizacon.)
St John comments on the above verses that the soul complains of Gods
absence with particular agony because it has abandoned all wordly things
on account of its consuming desire for union; yet it still has to endure the
sense of distance from God.9 We see again, then, that the soul can find no
comfort or resting place in either of the two worlds.
The heart cannot rest in peace without the possession of something, and
when its affections are placed [i.e. given to God], it has neither the
possession of itself nor of anything else; neither does it perfectly possess
what it loves. In this state its weariness is in proportion to its loss until it
shall enter into possession and be satisfied; for until then the soul is as an
124 GREEN
empty vessel waiting to be filled, as a hungry man eager for food, as a sick
man sighing for health, and as a man suspended in the air without support to
his feet.10
Compare St Teresas statement that the mystic is like a person suspended
aloft, unable to rest either on earth or in heaven; a vivid illustration of the
betwixt-and-between nature of the liminal state.
St John speaks of the trials of the dark night in terms of an inner fire
which purifies, purges and transforms the soul until it is refined like gold in
the crucible,11 and itself becomes a living flame of love.12 He adds that
when a soul is on fire with loveit will feel as if a seraph with a burning
brand had struck italready glowing as coal or rather all aflameand had
burnt it utterly. When the burning brand has thus touched it, the soul feels
that the wound it has received is delicious beyond all imaginationThe soul
beholds itself now as one immense sea of fire.13
I must state at this point that I do not by any means wish to imply that
theistic mysticism has no sense of joy or that it is unduly pessimistic
because of the tension and suffering expressed. Indeed, paradoxically, there
is a joy in the suffering itself; the night is not a wholly negative process,
for it is also a guiding Light. Mystics say that if we can learn to accept our
suffering and to empty ourselves of all worldly attachments, both of which,
incidentally, Turner finds to be attributes of the liminal state, we shall find
that our suffering is transmuted to joy and love and that we become filled with
the divine life. This is quite apart from the fact that the mystic has moments
of unitive experience when the suffering of living between the worlds is
transcended, when the two worlds seem briefly to unite as the mystic enters
into contemplative communion with God. But it seems to me that many
previous studies of mysticism have focused almost solely on the final goal,
the culmination of mystical experience, the unitive state with its associated
joy and religious bliss.
If only to redress the balance, it is important to note that in certain types
of mysticism the sense of suffering and of separation from the Deity takes
equal prominence. Indeed, in St Johns writings the night never really ends;
one enters it near the beginning of the spiritual life and never really
emerges from it, although there are moments of respite when the sufferings
are only intermittent. The trials of the soul never quite cease; they merely
reappear under different forms. The further we progress along the mystical
way the more deeply we become aware of our own shortcomings and
inadequacies and the harder and more difficult the trials and testings
become. The night does not end until the soul achieves perfect union with
God; but St John, as a Christian, holds that completely perfect union cannot
be attained in this earthly life but only in the life to come in the other world.
The theological belief that we can never fully know God in this life, then, is
crucial to the stance of this type of mysticism. The tension between this
world and the other world is more or less constant.14
LIVING BETWEEN THE WORLDS 125
Teresa also speaks of the heart being pierced by a fiery arrow or spear. She
had, in particular, one intense vision of an angel with his face all aflame,
reminiscent of St Johns seraph with the burning brand:
In his hands I saw a long golden spear and at the end of the iron tip I
seemed to see a point of fire. With this he seemed to pierce my heart
several times so that it penetrated to my entrails. When he drew it out I
thought he was drawing them out with it and he left me completely afire
with a great love for God.16
Because of this vision Teresa is often depicted in ecstasy with an angel
piercing her heart with an arrow or spear, as for example in Verninis
sculpture Ecstasy of St Teresa. She says; the soul has been wounded
with love for the spouse (T p. 69); it is conscious of having been most
delectably woundedit is certain that this is a precious experience and it
would be glad if it were never to be healed of that wound. It complains to
its spouse with words of love and even cries out aloud, being unable to help
itself, for it realizes that He is present but will not manifest Himself in such
a way as to allow it to enjoy Him, and this is a great grief, though a sweet
and delectable one (T p. 76): note here the dual emotive tone of both
agony and ecstasy. Teresa says that this distress seems to penetrate [the
souls] very bowels; andwhen He that has wounded it draws out the
arrow, the bowels seem to come with it, so deeply does it feel this love
(T p. 77). The arrow of fire makes a deep wound, not, I think, in any
region where physical pain can be felt, but in the souls most intimate depths.
It passes as quickly as a flash of lightning and leaves everything in our
nature that is earthly reduced to powder (T p. 124).
It is of this phase of the spiritual life that Teresa says that the mystic is
like a person suspended aloft, unable to come down and rest on earth or to
ascend to heaven. She elsewhere elaborates on this experience of living
between two worlds and its accompanying sense of being unable to find
repose in either one. She uses the analogy of a silkworm turning into a
butterfly to describe the spiritual death to the old self, with its attachment to
earthly things and to self-will, and the emergence of the transformed soul.
But the butterly, once it has emerged from its cocoon, knows not where to
settle and make its abodeeverything it sees on earth leaves it dissatisfied
(T p. 55). Earthly comforts are no consolation; indeed, they only increase
the souls torment. Yet no comfort can be obtained, either, from prayer or
the interior life of the soul in God, for All that (the soul) can do for God
seems to it slight by comparison with its desires (T p. 55). Everything
wearies itit can find no true rest in the creaturesas this little butterfly
feels a stranger to things of the earth, it should be seeking a new resting
place. But where will the poor little creature go? (T p. 56) The mystic is
now conscious of a strange solitude since there is not a creature on the
whole earth who can be a companion to her (T p. 125); other people, and
all earthly things, seem like shadows (T p. 127).
LIVING BETWEEN THE WORLDS 127
Teresa says that this state involves peril of actual physical death
(T p. 125), but whether we are to believe this or not, it is certain that the
intensity of the spiritual death to the limited self undergone by the mystic
can be such as to make one feel that one is near physical death. The soul at
this time also has longings for actual death, because it is so anxious to attain
complete union with God, and yet it knows that this can never be achieved
in this world (T p. 97). Although Teresa does speak of unitive experiences
which the mystic may briefly enjoy where the divine realm seems to unite
with the material world in the mystics consciousness of God, she also
holds, like St John, that we cannot fully know God in this life, and contantly
constrasts Gods glory with our own wretchedness and sin. It is not possible
to be in a continual state of absorption in God in this life (T p. 31); we must
bear crosses in one way or another for as long as we live. And if anyone
told me that after reaching this state [of union] he had enjoyed continual
rest and joy, I should say that he had not reached it at all (T p. 56)
though angelic spirits, freed from everything corporeal, may remain
permanently enkindled in love, this is not possible for those of us who live
in this mortal body (T p. 104). For Teresa, perhaps, the pain of separation
from God and the resultant longing for him are necessary if our love is to be
entirely selfless and full of humility; for the experience of love-in-
separation makes us realize that we can do nothing without God.17
This sense of unworthiness and helplesness of the embodied soul is also
emphasized by the bhakti poets. The religious position of the various bhakti
movements which arose in India from the sixth century onwards
emphasizes separation between the devotee and the Deity, in contrast to the
Advaitic model. In bhakti the human soul is seen as unable fully to
understand the Divine and the vision of the Divine in this earthly life is
necessarily incomplete. There is therefore a strong accent on love,
devotion, ecstasy, adoration and on the grace of the personal Deity. The
mystic throws himself or herself into a passionate relationship, surrendering
to and putting all trust in the Deity.
A favourite image of the bhakti poets is that of love-in-separation, with
wide employment being made of romantic and sexual metaphors. The
bhakti mystics rejected the outward forms and ossified rituals of the
Brhmanism of their time, emphasizing instead inner purity, devotion and
personal religious experience. They also rejected the class/caste system,
holding that the path of devotion was available to all regardless of social
background. The emphasis on spontaneous, immediate experience, the
rejection of accepted cultural and religious standards, the repudiation of
property, marriage, the institution of family and regard for social position
shown by many of the bhakti poets are all cited by Turner as characteristics
typical of those in a state of liminality. Indeed, Ramanujan adopts some of
Turners terminology in his analysis of the Vraaivas, noting that whereas
the religious establishment attempts to render the universe predictable and
128 GREEN
safe, for the Vraaiva poets the religious life is an unmediated vision,
unpredictable, unconditional, and therefore an example of anti-structure
according to Turners typology.18
Just as the bhakti mystics repudiated the implications of the class/caste
system, so St Teresa, in setting up her Order (the Discalced Carmelites)
upheld absence of hierarchical status, which Turner finds to be a further
characteristic of liminality, as her ideal: she had no time for the concern
with pride in ones lineage and purity of blood (limpieza de sangre) which
had reached obsessive proportions in the Spain of her time. The futilities of
worldly honour (fama) and the niceties of social etiquette and
respectability must be sublimated by followers of her rule into a concern for
true spiritual worth and equality of all before God.
Before proceeding with our discussion of the bhakti mystics we should
note that our own tendency to see the universe in terms of two worlds is
specific to our own culture, being based on the dualism of the Cartesian,
Christian and Platonic schemes, and this pattern does not usually
correspond to that of traditional Indian cosmology which speaks sometimes
of three, sometimes of seven, sometimes of other numbers of worlds,
depending on context. But for the purpose of the present discussion it seems
to me permissible to continue to speak of this world and the other world
as an heuristic device, for we find that the bhakti poets frequently give
expression to the conflict of being caught between two basic modes of
being, this world ( ) and the other world of spiritual liberation and
union with the Deity. (Cf. BU 4, 3, 9: This person has two states [of
consciousness], that of this world and that of the other world.)19 For
example, Mahdev, a member of the Vraaiva or bhakti
movement which arose in the tenth century and whose devotees have left us
a collection of lyrical poems (vacanas) describing their devotion to iva,
exclaims:
Husband inside,
lover outside.
I cant manage them both.
This world
and that other
cannot manage them both. (S p. 127)
It is said that Mahdev was married against her will. Her poems are
certainly full of reference to the contrasts between human and divine love.
From her childhood her only love was for iva as Cennamallik-rjuna, my
Lord white as jasmine, whom she represents in her poems sometimes as
her illicit lover and sometimes as her only true husband. In another poem
she says that she has fallen in love with the Beautiful One who knows no
LIVING BETWEEN THE WORLDS 129
decay nor death, who has no form nor features and uncompromisingly
exhorts that all worldly husbands who are subject to death and decay should
be thrown to the kitchen fires! (S p. 134)
At an early age Mahdev severed her ties with the world of society and
wandered as a homeless ascetic (a liminal state) in order to give her whole
self to love of iva. Perhaps we can detect the disorientation of living at the
interface between the worlds in the final lines of her next poem:
O mother I burned
in a flameless fire
O mother I suffered
a bloodless wound
mother I tossed
without a pleasure:
The flameless fire and the bloodless wound find a parallel in Teresa of
Avilas purifying inner fire and fiery arrow or spear and, indeed, can be
shown to be very widespread symbolic motifs of devotional mysticism
closely connected with the pain of love-in-separation. Compare also the
following verse by Mahdev:
I writhe(S p. 138)
He implores iva:
and elsewhere accuses his God of taking away earth from under a man
falling from the sky (S p. 62).
Bhakti, of course, was directed not only to iva but also to , most
commonly in the form of his avatra . bhakti is eloquently
expressed by Mr B said to have been a Rjput princess and now a folk
heroine. She lived in the sixteenth century and, like Mahdev, rejected the
values of the society in which she had been brought up to become a
wandering ascetic. Again, her devotion is expressed in the sensual imagery
of the mystical marriage:
nectarlike lipsThe belt of little bells round Your waist and the trinkets on
Your arms look charming and tinkle sweetly.23
I sought him, but found him not; I called him, but he gave no answer.
The watchmen found me as they went about in the city; they beat me,
they wounded me, they took away my mantle, those watchmen of the
walls.
I adjure you, O daughters of Jerusalem, if you find my Beloved, that
you tell him I am sick with love. (5, 68)
The dual emotive orientation of love-in-separation, the pain and the joy, are
well expressed in Mr Bs next poem:
Is burning my heart
And my whole body is in torment.27
These same forms of expression and symbolism are also used by many other
bhakti mystics.
Turner discusses his theory of liminality with regard to the
bhakti movement of Bengal, citing in this respect the work of Dimock who
in turn offers some illuminating remarks on this movement, which of course
is distinct from the bhakti poets discussed above, but closely related to them.
For the true love is love-in-separation expressed in poetry of
longingwith undertones suggesting the joy of unionLike Christianity
orthodox posits a separation between man and God and
expresess it in love poetry The pain of love-in-separation (viraha) is
a saving grace which fixes the mind on Godman by his nature longs for
union with God, though by the nature of the two actual union is
impossible.28
The Bengal movement base their doctrines on the Bhgavata
which describes the life of in in colourful folkloric
detail and elaborates in particular on his dalliance with the gops.
theory divided women into two classes: svaky or svy (she who is ones
LIVING BETWEEN THE WORLDS 133
own) and paraky (she who is anothers). In the BP the gops come into the
latter category; while being married to other men, so intoxicated are they by
their love for that, setting aside social opinion, they care only for their
tryst with him. This love-in-separation, which Turner calls both divine and
faintly illicit, is contrasted with licit, marital love and, according to
, is the only type that may really be called true love in the
context of the relationship between God and the soul. (It is informative to
reflect here on Mahdevs portrayal of iva as illicit lover and yet also as
true, divine husband, and on her dwelling on the contrasts between human
and divine love.) Marriage, Turner comments, represents in this scheme of
things structure which is the opposite of liminality: personal possession or
ownership of the beloved is antithetical to the liminal state of love-in-
separation.29
Eliade, perhaps thinking along similar lines, considers that the paraky
type of relationship symbolizes the rupture that every genuine religious
experience imposes; by comparison, he says, the conjugal symbolism of
Christian mysticism, in which Christ plays the part of the Bridegroom, does
not sufficiently emphasize such abandonment of all social and moral values
as mystical love implies. I am not at all sure that this is fair on Christian
mystics who, it seems to me, are by no means unaware of the tension
between the implications of their experiences and accepted social norms
and who, even when using the symbolism of the mystical marriage, seem to
be fully aware of the rupture of which Eliade speaks; and yet I think
Eliade is nearer the heart of the matter in his suggestion that the paraky
type of love is pure spontaneity, a love that exemplifies ll.30 The svaky
type of love contains an element of desire for self-satisfaction; only the
paraky type results in a selfless, spontaneous love which is for the sake of
the Beloved alone. Dimock elaborates:
the paraky condition of the gops made their love for Krishna more
pure and real. For svaky leads to kma, to desire for the satisfaction of the
self; only paraky results in the prema, the intense desire for the
satisfaction of the beloved, which is the characteristic, to be emulated by
the bhakta, of the love of the gops. It is because the love of Krishna and the
gops is paraky love that it is so intense. The pain of separation, possible
only in paraky, and the resultant constant dwelling of the minds of the
gops on Krishna, is their salvationTheir viraha, their pain of separation,
draws their interest away from worldly concerns and leads to the meditation
on Krishna which is the essence of bhakti and leads to attainment of him.31
Hence the bhakta may find joy even in the pain of separation if he or she
cares only for the happiness of the Beloved and is able to be indifferent to
contingent pains and pleasures, finding fulfillment in the all-consuming
134 GREEN
There could be no such love as this (namely the love between the soul and
God) if lover and beloved were the same. Although the jva is part of the
Bhagavatjva and Bhagavat are not the same. There is a quantitative
difference between the two. The jva shares in the qualities of, yet is
eternally distinct from, both the Bhagavat and other jvasThus, when by
bhakti the jva gains releasehe is near the Bhagavat, in a perpetual
attitude of worship of the Bhagavat; but he is notthe same.32
NOTES
1 St Teresa of Avila, The Interior Castle, London 1974, p. 125. For this
and other quotations from Teresas writings I have also consulted the
Spanish text in Santa Teresa de Jess: Obras Completas, eds. Efren
de la Madre Dios & Otger Steggink (Biblioteca de Autores
Cristianos), Madrid 1974.
2 Many of these other forms of mysticism are discussed in my doctoral
thesis A Study of Mysticism and its Forms of Expression, Stirling
1983. See also my Unity in Diversity, Scottish Journal of Religious
Studies vol. 3, no. 1 (1982).
3 Cf. Robert M.Gimello, Mysticism and Meditation, in Mysticism and
Philosophical Analysis, ed. Steven T.Katz, London 1978; also
Frederick J.Streng, Language and Mystical Awareness, ibid.
136 GREEN
4 The work by St John often called The Dark Night of the Soul is in the
original Spanish simply the Dark Night. He does not in fact refer to a
dark night of the soul as such, but to the Nights of Sense and Spirit.
The Spanish text of St Johns writings consulted by me can be found
in San Juan de la Cruz, Vida y Obras, eds. Crisogono de Jesus,
Matias del Jesus & Lucinio Ruano (Biblioteca de Autores
Cristianos), Madrid 1973.
5 St Johns own commentary on The Spiritual Canticle in
R.J.H.Steuart, The Mystical Doctrine of Saint John of the Cross,
London 1974, p. 153.
6 Victor W.Turner, The Ritual Process, London 1969, p. 107.
7 The Spiritual Canticle, v. 1, in The Collected Works of St John of
the Cross, tr. Kieran Kavanaugh & Otilio Rodriguez, London 1966.
p. 410.
8 Ibid., vv. 69, Steuart.
9 St Johns commentary, Steuart, p. 149.
10 Ibid., p. 154.
11 The Dark Night, II.vi.6, Kavanaugh & Rodriguez, p. 339.
12 Steuart, p. 116ff.
13 Ibid., p. 120.
14 Further on St John see my St John of the Cross and Mystical
Unknowing, Religious Studies 22 (1986).
15 Life, XXX, in The Complete Works of St Teresa of Jesus, tr. E.
Allison Peers, London 1946, I, pp. 199, 200, 203.
16 Life, in Peers, I, pp. 1923.
17 T pp. 74, 115. Further on St Teresa see my St Teresa of Avila and
Hekhalot Mysticism, Studies in Religion/Sciences Religieuses vol.
13, no. 3 (1984); published also in Spanish as Santa Teresa de Avila
y la Mstica Hekhalot, Homenaje a Luis Morales Oliver (Fundacion
Universitaria ), Madrid 1986.
18 A.K.Ramanujan, Speaking of iva, Harmondsworth 1978, pp. 2935,
51.
19 R.C.Zaehner, Hindu Scriptures, London 1979.
20 Mahdev in T.N.Sreekantaiya, Akka Mahdev in Women Saints of
East and West, London 1972, p. 39.
21 Mahdev in S p. 124. Four parts of the day and night means in
effect the whole of the day and night.
22 , ibid. p. 80; see also Ramanujans note to this poem,
p. 189.
23 Mr B in Lajwanti Madan, Mr B, Women Saints of East and
West, pp. 57. Son of Nanda is the title of .
24 Ibid. pp. 567.
25 Mr B in Songs of , tr. Deben Bhattacharya, New York
1978, p. 136,
LIVING BETWEEN THE WORLDS 137
We who have done some study of Yoga at University level will avoid the
vulgar error of regarding Yoga as a sort of glorified physical exercise. We
have learned Sanskrit, we can follow scholastic arguments, we know about
Patajali Yoga, Buddhist Yoga, Jain Yoga and can learnedly explain the
meaning of knowledge, karma, concentration and so on. However, it is
still difficult to take Yoga seriously as a guide to life. After all, it rests on the
unprovable theory of reincarnation and its final aim, which appears to be
the annihilation of the individual personality, is repugnant to our instincts.
So we have every encouragement to treat Yoga as a purely intellectual
constructionbut in that case the rest of our nature will be frustrated. We
can of course get emotional and moral uplift by going to those gurus and
divine incarnations who offer instant enlightenmentbut then we shall
sacrifice our intelligence. So what do we do?
What I do is to invoke the name of Jung to resolve this conflict of
opposites. Jung has many critics, but they give him the credit of having
brought mythology out of the museums and showing how ancient
mythological motifs continue to work in the minds of his modern Western
patients.
A person who visits a psychoanalyst does not go as a student or spiritual
seeker but as a neurotic. He lives in a shamefaced world of sin and
incompetence. To stay where he is is wrong and evil, but if he tries to pull
himself together, as his friends keep telling him, he may make matters
worse. He simply does not know what to do. This uncomfortable, lonely
state is very different from going to a University after doing well at
schoolbut I suggest it is a more promising beginning if we want to make
something out of Yoga.
Sin was a central preoccupation in the old Christian writers, but nowadays
it is regarded as a morbid soul-searching and inverted egoism. People will
tell you that in Hinduism there is no sin, only ignoranceeven though YS
II, 5 plainly says: avidy means taking what is impermanent, impure,
painful and not-self for permanent, pure, happy and self. Even the traditional
Protestant Christian confesses his sin in only a general way: We have done
140 HUMPHRIES
what we ought not to have done and it is left to the psychoanalyst first to
reveal and then to straighten out each individual kink or knot of the heart,
as the KaU puts it. But unless we start by admitting that there is an
evildue partly to personal sin and partly to human weaknessfrom
which we need to be delivered, our intellectual effort to understand Yoga
will be frustrated.
Here is another example where a purely intellectual approach may
mislead us. We are told that subtle discernment is needed to understand the
truth of Vednta, i.e. that brahman is real and the world is an illusion. Now
this statement obviously contradicts experience, but even if it was true one
cannot see why any subtlety would be needed in understanding it, since it is
a very short and simple sentence. The same applies to the exhortation to
practise supreme detachment. Even if this was possible (and it is not, as
points out in the Bhagavad Gt) it would be a very unsubtle procedure,
being merely a mechanical, uniform replacement of action by inaction. As
stated in YS I, 12 detachment must be combined with abhysa, practice or
application, in eliminating the activities of the mind and thus achieving the
objective of Yoga. The Yogi must be detached in one way and passionately
intent in another way. But even this does not answer the really interesting
question which iswhen should the Yogi be detached and when not? This
question is answered, not by reasoning from general principles, but by
responding to each particular case with ones whole naturerational,
aesthetic, moral, conscious, instinctiveunder guidance from a teacher, but
ultimately through self-knowledge alone. Compare the difference between a
doctor and a layman with a medicine-chest. The difficulty is not to get hold
of medicine, but to know when to use it. Theoretical study must be
combined with meticulous observation of each case of illness. Yoga and
Buddhism traditionally compare the doctors art with the way of salvation.
We need, therefore, to bring our whole nature to bear when doing Yoga,
and the thing to be eliminated is not ignorance, but perversion, addiction,
sin. Patajali says that evil is caused by (taints or afflictions) and
shapers or predispositions (we who disbelieve in
reincarnation would call them hereditary) which determine our conduct. It
is only in the highest samdhi that we even become conscious of them, but
in doing so we destroy them, and therefore this samdhi is called nirbja,
seedless, because it burns up the seeds of evil. We may compare the belief
of Socrates that if we fully know what we are doing, we shall choose what
is right. Compare also the method of psychoanalysis, whereby we are
confronted with our ancient fears and repressions in the confidence that if we
face them squarely in daylight, we shall see that they are infantile and reject
them. It is also worth comparing the with Freuds doctrine of
the id, that repository of chaotic instinctive drives which have to be lived
with and controlled if civilization is to survive.
YOGA PHILOSOPHY AND JUNG 141
self should never have got mixed up with it in the first place. But is
for both , action, and , cessation; bhoga, experience, and
apavarga, liberation. We must follow the law of our natureour and
and first experience the world before seeking release from it.
Similarly Jung says that in the first half of life we must go out into the
world and adapt ourselves to society; it is only in the second half that we
are encouraged to come to terms with our deeper self. , like the
unconscious, has the power of serving and as it were educating the
. Its operation is inscrutable and beyond our understanding. Like the farmer
in YS IV, 3 we cannot make the rice grow, we can only water the field and
leave the creative powers of nature to do the rest. in its
primal undifferentiated state (pradhna) is an awesome mystery, described
by Vysa (on YS 11, 19) as unmanifest, beyond existence and non-
existence, outside the world of growth and decay.
Jungs theory of individuation has been criticized as egotistic, but he
replies that the self, when it develops according to its own laws, ends by
being more firmly rooted in society. Similarly the Self of Yoga is
sometimes considered narrow compared with the universal tman-
brahman, and cold compared with a loving relation between soul and God.
The English translation of kaivalya as isolation does nothing to help
matters. But the realized has not defaulted in its obligationsit, or
rather the , are , they have done what needed to be done.
What happens to the after that is unknowable, but there is no
reason to think that it is restricted or deprived.
The self is a transcendental concept. This is admitted even by Jung, the
empirical observer. In Yoga transcendence is pushed so far that one
wonders how the self can have any connection with the world. The self
cannot act and, according to , it cannot even perceiveit only
reflects the state of the buddhi. It also cannot be perceived, and in this
respect it is like the Jungian self. In philosophy, perceptione.g. perceiving
a potis distinguished from apperceptionmy knowledge that I am
perceiving a pot. Normally, apperception would be regarded as evidence of
the self, but this is denied by on YS I, 4. The statement I am
acting, I am happy, etc. qualifies the buddhi, not the . The reason
is that sometimes we are happy and sometimes unhappy whereas the
would have to be always happy since it is changeless. It is interesting that
this same argument is used by Kant in discussing what he calls the
synthetic unity of apperception or the transcendental unity of self-
consciousness. Each representation or field of consciousness must have a
unity which enables me to say I think, since otherwise there would be
something unthinkable or some part of my experience which does not
belong to me. But this unity is a necessary, permanent condition of
experience. It is not the same as what Kant calls empirical or primitive
146 HUMPHRIES
have extra powers, or is it only that people think he has? Instead of leaving
the siddhis in the decent obscurity of the Sanskrit, we are seriously asking
whether they can occur in modern Europe. Once again, Jung has brought
mythology out of the museums.
148
10
THREE CONTEMPORARY INDIAN
MYSTICS: NANDAMAY,
KRISHNABAI AND RAJNEESH
John E.Mitchiner
INTRODUCTION
In this paper I shall attempt to give a general and reasonably representative
view of the several paths followed by contemporary Indian mystics. Any
selection of a single or a few present-day mystical thinkers of India will
inevitably contain a considerable degree of subjective preference: and the
present selection is no exception. My choice of these three individuals rests
partly with the fact that they each exemplify a different mystical path:
nandamay is predominantly an Advaitin, who emphasizes above all the
pursuit of jna or spiritual knowledge for the realization of brahman;
Krishnabai tends more towards the pursuit of bhakti or loving devotion,
directed in her case towards her guru Rmds as the personification of
brahman; while Rajneesh adopts a highly syncretic approachrelying
strongly upon active forms of meditationwhich does not easily fit into
any one of the traditional categories of Indian mysticism. My choice was
also influenced by my having met each of these individuals, and having
been able to hear and observe them at first hand: primarily between April
and July 1978, and in the case of Rajneesh on several further occasions.
If it be accepted that mysticism centres primarily upon experienceand
that the words in which the experiencer expresses that experience are
secondary to the experience itselfit then becomes significant to learn not
just what the experiencer says about his experience, but also how he says it,
and how differently he expresses it to different audiences or on different
occasions. Useful insights in this connection can therefore be gained by
studying not just the written teachings but also the sayings and activities of
mystics at first hand. In this paper I shall give, firstly, an outline account of
the lives as well as the teachings of these three individualswhich will it is
hoped be in any case of interest to those who may be unacquainted with any
of thembefore discussing certain more general points raised by this
account.
150 MITCHINER
NANDAMAY
nandamay Mthe Blissful Motherwas born on 30 April 1896 in the
small village of Kheora in what is now the Tripura district of Bangladesh. She
was the second of eight children: and was given the name Nirmal Sundar
. Her parents were devout brahmins and strict
followers of caste regulations. They were also poor, since her father had no
regular employment, and for that reason the only formal education which
Nirmal received amounted to less than two years in the local primary
schoolto the present day she writes little and never sees fit to read books.
On the other hand she was greatly influenced and affected as a child
by the music of krtana and by japa or the chanting of the names of God
whichas she later claimedused to induce trances and visions. In 1909,
just before her thirteenth birthday, Nirmal was married to Mohan
Chakravrtlater called Bholnthwho came from the district of Dacca:
But for the first five years of their marriage her husband travelled
throughout Bangladesh in search of work, while Nirmal lived with her
husbands sister-in-law Pramod Dev. Even after she finally went to live
with her husband in 1914, the marriage was never physically consumated,
right up to her husbands death in 1936.
From 1914 onwardsand especially after 1918Nirmal devoted
herself increasingly to sdhan or spiritual disciplines of various sorts
which included fasting and a three-year silence; there was no sudden event
or single occurrence which marked a turning-point in her spiritual career,
but merely a steady development from her childhood onwards. Her husband
was understandably at first somewhat alarmed by her increasing
concentration on spiritual pursuits, and being at one stage convinced that
she must be mentally unbalanced, he summoned first exorcists and then a
doctor. But when both were unable to treat her and instead assured him that
she was not mad but God-intoxicated, he acquiesced and let matters take
their courseand in time became one of her chief disciples. Eventually, in
1922 at the age of 26, Nirmal initiated herselfproclaiming that guru,
and mantra (teacher-initiator, pupil-initiated, and sacred words of initiation)
THREE CONTEMPORARY INDIAN MYSTICS 151
were to her one and the same; and a few months later she also initiated her
husband Bolnth. Two years later they moved to Dacca, and as news about
Nirmal spread, disciples began to gather and sit at her feet and to attend
her regular performance of krtana and pj. From 1926 onwards,
nandamay started to travel, first in Bengal and then throughout northern
India: in 1932 she abandoned Dacca as her home, and ever since then she
has led a life of travel and wandering, stopping only a few days or at most a
few weeks in any one place before moving on again as the mood takes her.
She maintains this wandering life to the present day, despite now suffering
somewhat from ill-health. Her movements are quite unpredictable, and even
her closest disciples can never know at which of her many ashrams she is to
be foundwhether at the main one at the Asi Ghat in Banaras or at such
others as those in Vrindavan, Hardwar and Dehra Dun.
As her name indicates, nandamay is considered by her followers to be
an embodiment of blissa bliss which springs from her union with
brahman and which is undisturbed by any physical or mental discomfort,
which she regards as ll or passing phases in the divine play of life, The twin
themes of lla and my play an important part in her outlook and
teachings: the changing physical world, with all its events and phenomena,
is relatively unreal and false in the sense of being a changing mask which
hides the underlying unitary reality or Oneness of existence. It is at the
same time the manifestation and play of the Divine, where the Divine hides
itself under a veil of change in order that it can again seek and find itself as
the changeless. In her teachingwhich is always verbal or practical and
never written and related to particular needs of particular individualsshe
lays greatest emphasis not only on correct knowledge but also on the
performance of sdhan of various formsespecially on japa or repetition
of the names of God, and on krtana or singing the praises of God: these
being in her view the most effective ways by which the Divine in man can
realize its true nature as the Divine as well as being the two forms of
sdhan which she herself pursued most vigorously. Mans goal, in her
view, is the realization of brahmanor rather the realization of himself as
brahman: there exists no ultimate difference between God and man, only
apparent differences which man in his ignorance believes to be realall
divine qualities already exist in man and he has only to dispel his own
ignorance and illusion in order to realize his true nature as brahman. This
realization does not, therefore, entail the transformation of the human into
the Divine since the human has in essence been the Divine all along and
does not change: divinity lies hidden in man by the veil of ignorance
which, when drawn, enables man to realize his identity with and as the
Divinejust as the waves of the sea are essentially identical with it, rising
from it and going back to it. As she said to Yognanda
when he visited her in Calcutta in 1936:
152 MITCHINER
Before I came on this earth, Father, I was the same. As a little girl, I
was the same. I grew into womanhood, but still I was the sameever
afterwards, though the dance of creation changes around me in the hall of
eternity, I shall be the same.1
nandamays vision of mans ultimate goal is thoroughly non-dualistic:
man is God, and there is no essential distinction or separation between them:
All is THAT, and where THAT is, there is no contradiction. The false as
such must vanish. How can one speak of advaita and include individuals,
the world?Where exclusively Oneness is, how can there be room left for
two?Just consider: the Infinite is contained in the finite, and the finite in
the Infinite: the Whole in the part and the part in the WholeHe who
attains and that which is attained are one and the sameThe One who is
Eternal, the tman, He Himself is the traveller on the path of immortality. He
is all in all, He alone is.2
Everything beyond this statement is merely elaboration and commentary: it
is the One who in ll multiplies Himself and, as it were, plays hide-and-
seek with Himself through the veil of myand it is mans task to raise
this veil of my and thereby find his true self as the One.
nandamay is a firm believer in karma and in the power of destiny. She
is also in several respects a traditionalist when it comes to matters of
religious practice. She gives qualified approval to the practice of saf or the
self-immolation of widows on the part of a widow who is completely
steadfast in mind and body; and she encourages the performance of daily
pj as being of great help for a sdhaka. She lays little stress on the
performance of good deeds or on giving physical and material aid or service
to others: emphasizing instead the need to destroy the ego as the root cause
of all suffering, and teaching that physical suffering and poverty can be aids
for purifying the self and realizing the One. She advocates brahmacarya or
sexual continence for the young as a cure for what she sees as the normal
and spiritual decay of the present age; she strongly sanctions arranged
marriages and family life, but only for those who feel irresistibly compelled
to that pathand even then she advocates the renunciation of sexual
activity as early as possible, holding up as her ideal the lives of the Rishis
in withdrawing from worldly activity and devoting themselves entirely to a
life of renunciation, asceticism and spiritual practice. All foreigners at her
Ashrams are treated as casteless and must eat and sleep separately from
those in the Ashrams for fear of ritual contaminationa restriction which
applies even to the Austrian-born devotee tmnanda who has now been
with nandamay for forty-four years. When questioned about it
nandamay related that she herselfby behaving unconventionally during
her own sdhanhad thereby alienated many orthodox Hindus: and so
now, while she personally treats everyone alike irrespective of caste
differences, she none the less abides by caste regulations in order not to
alienate her orthodox devotees who are still living on a level of
THREE CONTEMPORARY INDIAN MYSTICS 153
consciousness where they have not yet transcended caste feelings. One may
subjectively question the satisfactoriness of this reply: what is undeniable is
that many in the close circle of nandamays devotees are clearly
considered to beand in some cases too clearly regard themselves as
beingin a uniquely privileged position, despite her attempts to inculcate
humility and the destruction of ego; while nandamay herself has enjoyed
and continues to enjoy the patronage and respect of many high-caste and
socially prominent individualsnot least that of Kamala and Jawaharlal
Nehru, and of Indira Gandhi.
In the case of nandamay we can perhaps see the applicability of
Agehanada Bharatis contention that mystical experience does not
necessarily change the personality and behaviour of the mystic.3
nandamay claims to have hadand to live in awareness ofa mystical
experience of the essential unity and oneness of all existence: she tries to
encourage others to realize and experience this awareness, seeking to share
it not just through verbal teachings but also through silencewhich she
deems the most effective expression of her experience, as a result of which
her daily hour-long darans are frequently totally silent events. On the
other hand she still accepts and retains the basic ritual and social values
which were taught to her as a child by her Brahmin parents: these, for her, are
but manifestations of the ll, and of the veil of my, which man must
penetrate in order to perceive the Truth of himselfthey are secondary to
the mystical experience itself, and so it is of little ultimate importance
whether one rejects or accepts them. The fact that nandamay accepts them
tells us more about the psychology and social background of Nirmal
Sundar than about the mystical experience of nandamay: yet by
accepting them and encouraging their pursuit, one may say that nandamay
is implicitly tending to say that in order to gain the experience one must
follow the path of Nirmal Sundar. It is true that she does admit to there
being many paths which lead to the same goal, and that it matters little
whether one calls the One God, Krishna, Christ, brahman or whatever. Yet
she does not claim to teach all of these paths: and if one follows the point to
its logical conclusion, nandamay is essentially teaching a path not for
mankind but for those who would mould themselvesor who are already
mouldedin the stamp of Nirmal Sundar, and who are most attuned to
attain mystical experience through following the path already trodden by
nandamay herself.
The point may be self-evident but is, I think, none the less worth stating
here: namely that the mystical teacher, at least in nandamays case, is
limited in his outlook and teaching by the nature of the path which he
himself has followed in order to gain his experience. I shall again be
referring to this point at a later stage in the paper.
154 MITCHINER
KRISHNABAI
The life of nandamay is in many respects similar to that of Krishnabai,
the mystic to whom I turn next. Mtj Krishnabai was born on 20
September 1903 in the village of Haliyal near Hubli in Karnataka, the
second of six children. Her father died when she was eight years old,
leaving the family in abject poverty: Krishnabai received schooling only
from the ages of four to eight and thereafter devoted herself to helping her
mother with household work. At the age of twelve she was married to
Rao, whose father was a moderately wealthy schoolmaster and
whose mother was an avid devotee of numerous deities and Svamis: and the
next few years of Krishnabais married lifewhich were spent largely in
Bombaywere by all accounts a happy period which saw the births of two
children, Ganesh and Nryan, in her sixteenth and eighteenth years.
During this period her childhood religious devotion increased and when she
was eighteen she was initiated by the teacher Tammanna Shstri
of Hubli. When she was pregnant for the third time in 1923, she went to
visit her own family, promising to return to her husband in Bombay within
a month. But she postponed her return, and meanwhile her husband died
after a brief illness. Krishnabai was distraught with grief, not only at his
death, but also for not having been at his side when he died. She sought a
premature delivery of her child, which died within a month of its birth, and
thereafter she became increasingly detached from her relatives and from life
around her.
On the anniversary of her husbands death she resolved to put an end to
her own life and took a massive overdose of opium. She was only just saved
from death by the speedy actions of her brother-in-law. Krishnabais suicide
attempt formed, as it were, the turning-point in her life: from then onwards
she devoted herself increasingly to religious pursuits, particularly to the
chanting of mantras which she would repeat many thousands of times
daily; and her devotions were particularly encouraged by her mother-in-law
Anasykka who persuaded and accompanied her to meet a number of
religious teachers. Krishnabai was further initiated by the aiva r
Siddhruddha Svami at Hubli and then by the r Chandekar
Mahrj at Nevas. Yet neither fully satisfied her needs and she came
increasingly to believe that all gurus, and all verbal mantras, were
essentially one and the same irrespective of overt sectarian differences and
that they were merely different manifestations and play of a single true
reality. In 1928, at the age of twenty-five, she visited the Ashram of Svami
Rmds near Kasaragod in northern Kerala. Here her search ended and
after one year spent in the company of Rmds he initiated her, giving her
the Rm mantra: om r Rm jai Rm jai jai Rm; and
instructing her to look upon all beings and creatures in the
worldincluding her own relativesas manifestations of Rm. Krishnabai
was by this time deeply devoted to Rmds as her guru, and now an
THREE CONTEMPORARY INDIAN MYSTICS 155
RAJNEESH
Turning now to the third of these mystics, Rajneesh is probably the most
enigmatic, and certainly the most controversial and self-contradictory, of
the three; yet he is also in many ways the most stimulating and the most
forceful one in terms of personality and persuasiveness.
Rajneesh Chandra Mohan was born at Kucchwada in Madhya Pradesh on
11 December 1931. His father, struggling to maintain a dwindling family
business, moved the family around various parts during the boys childhood;
Rajneesh attended school in Gardarwara from 1944 to 1951, then graduated
in Philosophy from Jabalpur University in 1955, and gained a Masters
degree from Sagar University in 1957. He reputedly became enlightened in
1953 at the age of twenty-one, and during the subsequent period, in addition
to his academic studies, he also took a job for one year as Assistant Editor of
the Navabhrat, a local newspaper, besides developing a reputation as a
voracious reader and a powerful debater. From 1957 to 1966 he taught
Philosophy at the Sanskrit College in Raipur, Madhya Pradesh, and still
found time to travel to various parts of India delivering lectures and gaining
followers for his views. His teachings became increasingly pragmatic and
experientially-based, and in 1966 he left the academic sphere to found an
Ashram and to devote himself to teaching and to devising a variety of
meditational practices which he propounded since 1974 till 1981 from his
Ashram in Poona.8
It is difficult either to categorize or give any brief outline of Rajneeshs
teachings. It is also somewhat unnecessary to do so, for he made it clear
that he was generally expounding what he saw as the single mystical truth
THREE CONTEMPORARY INDIAN MYSTICS 157
I am not saying any new thing every day. The truth is very simple and it can
be said in a few lines. But if you dont hear it, I have to tell it again and
again. I go on talking to you so that one day I will be able to persuade you
to listen to the silence that has happened to me. And those who have started
understanding me, they are no more listening to my wordsthey are
listening to my presence.9
His point being that while many teachers have expressed the reality of their
experience in different ways, no experience can be realized or assessed
through relying on their words and expressions, but only by experiencing for
oneself.
Although Rajneesh did not teach any particular single path for his
followers to pursue, he did devise a number of meditational practices,
involving especially group-psychotherapy and free sexual self-expression
but not the use of drugs to which he is opposed,11 the underlying aim being
to break down the narrow barriers of selfhood and to make the individual
more aware and perceptive of both himself and others. There are numerous
dynamic meditations and Sf dances where the participants may sing,
dance, shake, scream, whirl, or do whatever comes naturally; the main aims
being to release pent-up tensions, to lose awareness of the self through
movement and thereby to penetrate to the stillness deep within oneself.
There are meditations involving humming, and concentrating the attention
on flashing psychedelic lights; there are more traditional meditations such
as vipassan; and a large number of therapy groups which range from
massage and hypnotherapy to encounterthe latter being a week-long
group activity designed to explore the personality, to release subconscious
fears and repressions which may be brought to light by other members of
the group, and thence to drop all masks and defences, leaving behind the
narrow consciousness of selfhood and growing into an awareness of the
shared life-force of the present moment. Much of the intention underlying
these meditations is to free oneself of the past and future: to concentrate on
the reality of the present instant of experience and thence, by coming fully
to terms with oneself, to go beyond ones self. The growth of love, and of
loving attitude towards others, is consequently of central importance to
many of these practices, and physical or sexual expression of this love is
not only encouraged but frequently insisted upon within the meditational
groups. In many respects, Rajneeshs overall emphasis is on a religion of
love and compassionlove in the sense of dying to the ego in order to
share the greater Reality beyond selfhood:
Love is a deep communion of two beings who are ready to be together this
moment, not tomorrow: who are ready to forget all past and future. Love is
a forgetfulness of the past and future and a remembrance of this moment, this
throbbing moment, this alive moment. Love is the truth of the moment.12
Yet Rajneesh also emphasizes that love itself is not the goal, but merely a
stage which must itself be ultimately superseded in order to reach the goal;
like all of his meditations, love is a game to be played but not taken too
seriously. He adopts a similar attitude towards life in general, and towards
money in particular, seeing these, as one might say, as a form of my
without any lasting value. Yet his attitude is one of acceptance, rather than
of rejection: all is a game, of little ultimate importance, so why not play the
THREE CONTEMPORARY INDIAN MYSTICS 159
gameif you have money, enjoy it; if you do not have money, laugh and
still enjoy it.
There are a number of prominent contradictions and inconsistencies about
Rajneesh which particularly strike the observer. He claimed on the one hand
to be no more than a guide, pointing the way to the goal and helping others
to select the path which is most appropriate for them to follow. Yet he also
adopted the traditional Hindu role of the guru as God, as the incarnation of
the goal, who is consequently himself worthy of worship. He proclaimed
that one must die to oneself, thereby growing into the divine; yet he also
encouraged his followers to lose themselves in him and to merge in loving
union with himan idea which bears close similarity to the Sf concept of
fan or self-obliteration in the teacher. He claimed that he possessed no
self or ego, that what was called Rajneesh was but a shell encasing an
embodiment of Reality or God. Yet surrounding him was a high-powered
personality cult wherein all his followers who had accepted or
renunciant initiation were obliged to carry a prominently displayed
photograph of himself. He claimed to be a master who was unaffected by
his physical surroundings. Yet in order to gain admission to his discourses,
let alone to a personal audience, it was necessary (in addition to paying a
handsome fee) to pass the test of the sniffers who turned away anyone
with the slightest scent or smell. He proclaimed that all religions were
ultimately the same and that one might as well follow one as another. Yet
he insisted that his followers should adopt a new (usually Sanskrit) name,
together with orange clothes and ml or beadsthe traditional garb of
Hindu ascetics. He emphasized the need to replace knowledge by personal
experience, yet he established his own University where it was possible to
take a PhD in such diverse subjects as meditation, acupuncture and
commune management. At times he treated all of these teachings and
practices as but another type of game, not to be taken to heart. Yet it does
make one question whether there was not still some very powerful element
of ego involved somewhere in the Rajneesh phenomenon.
What Rajneesh said over the years is voluminous and was sold in very
expensive bookswhich one may see as a further illustration of his point
about playing with money. His was basically a call for a revolution in oneself
and in ones way of life, a call to love and to find Reality or God not by
rejecting life but by penetrating to its depth:
I have given you to live in the world as totally as possible. Just by
living totally in the world you will transcend it. Suddenly you will come to
know that you are in the world but not of it. The old said: escape,
renounce. But I tell you that those who escape are not total, not wholeit is
not for you. You must live life in its totality, live it as wholly as possible.13
This was also a call to reject dogma, ritual and tradition. Rajneesh was, not
surprisingly, strongly opposed by traditionally-minded Hindus as well as by
the Indian political establishment in the form of State and Central
160 MITCHINER
DISCUSSION
Having looked at certain aspects of the teachings and personalities of these
three mystics, I shall now seek to isolate and highlight those points on
which all three are agreed, and consider the question of where experience
ends and interpretation begins.
In the first place, I would select three basic statements about the nature of
mystical experience which are agreed upon by all three of them:
THREE CONTEMPORARY INDIAN MYSTICS 161
Our three mystics clearly differ slightly on the question of the precise
nature of this identity and still more on the question of the way in
which mans ego is to be destroyed. How, then, should we satisfactorily
harmonize or account for these differencesand do they in any sense
influence the nature or validity of the experience itself?
In talking of the nature of mystical identity expressed by these mystics,
we are again considering essentially R.C.Zaehners supposed distinction
between monistic and theistic approaches17here typified respectively by,
on the one hand, nandamays and Rajneeshs total identity versus, on the
other hand, Krishnabais bhakti approach envisioning her Papa as the reality
within her which she can yet praise and wonder at. Are, then, these
approaches distinct and mutally opposed or is the latter approach, in
Ninian Smarts terminology,18 a high auto-interpretation read into, as it
were, the experience itself?
Smarts basic contention is that phenomenologically mysticism is
everywhere the same; different flavours, however, accrue to the experiences
of mystics because of their ways of life and modes of auto-interpretation.19
Reading between the lines, what Smart seems in effect to be saying is that
all mysticism is basically monistic, but is theistically interpreted by some
due to their background or dogmatic presuppositions. According to this line
of thought, therefore, we must say that the unitary monistic vision of
nandamay and Rajneesh is somehow closer to the truth than Krishnabais
bhakti approach, and closer also than all experiences expressed in theistic
terms. I am somewhat inclined to agree with Smart on this point for the
following reason: the bhakti approach necessitates an emotional response
and attitude, which is at root an individually motivated response to a given
situation that requires by definition the presence of some form of individual
identity or ego; yet this is precisely what must be eradicated by the mystic
in order to realize the fullness of his quest. We must, however, at the same
time ask whether this attitude of wonderment and praise is itself an integral
part of the experience, or a subsequent interpretation on the part of the
experiencer; and I am inclined to suspect that the latter is most probably the
case with Krishnabai who in places speaks of her experience in terms of
total identity with her Papajust as it is also the case with certain Christian
162 MITCHINER
and Sf mystics. With the latter we can, for example, point out many
instances wherein total unity and identity between man and God is spoken
of, while apologists such as Ruysbroeck and al-Ghazl argue hetero-
interpretativelyin line with their dogmatic presuppositionsthat such
experiences of seeming unity with God are to be interpreted along the lines
of only an apparent and non-absolute unity like that experienced between
lovers in a state of drunkenness.20 I would not go so far as Smart in drawing
a clear distinction between mysticism and bhakti religion but would tend to
suggest that the bhakti approach is in some measure an emotional,
and consequently an individual and non-absolute, response to
mystical experience. I would here agree more with Rajneesh, who while
laying very strong emphasis on the path of love as a means for the
dissolution of the ego, none the less also emphasizes that ultimately love
itself must be superseded by something higher. The path of love can bring
one close to the goal, but one must ultimately go beyond even that, and so
the bhakti approach can lead one to the heights, yet its inherent element of
emotionalism must be surpassed in order to attain the supreme identity.
I now turn to the question of the precise way in which mans ego is to be
destroyed in order to realize the mystical goal. As I have attempted to
indicate particularly in the case of nandamay, the path adopted and
taught by her is essentially that which she herself had earlier followed,
dependent largely on her own upbringing and psychology. And I would
suggest that much the same is also the case with both Krishnabai and
Rajneesh, namely that the particular paths and practices which they
advocate for their followers are based in large measure on those practices
followed by and suited to themselves. All three mystics affirm that the
paths do not lead automatically to the experience itself: and this in a sense
confirms Smarts contention that the mystics doctrine, as also his practices
and methods, are determined at least partly by factors other than the
mystical experience itself. Indeed, Rajneesh repeatedly proclaimed that he
taught no doctrines or dogmas and that his aim was to denounce and go
beyond all static doctrines to experiential knowledge. If we accept that, by
definition, Rajneesh, as one claiming to have experience of union or
identity with the One ultimate reality of existence, is a mystic, we may
accordingly accept Smarts point that doctrine is extrinsic and non-essential
to the mystical experience itself. The different individual practices and
beliefs of these three mystics need not, therefore, deter us from believing
that their experiences are not for that reason of the same order.
I would like to raise Agehananda Bharatis contention that mysticism has
no connection with morality and that mystical experience in no way alters
the personality or behaviour of the mystic.21 This contention is, to my
mind, untenable. It may well be the case with isolated mystical experiences
where the experiencer does not encourage or desire a repetition of the
experience or where he is content to treat the experience as an interesting
THREE CONTEMPORARY INDIAN MYSTICS 163
and enjoyable but not exceptionally significant part of his total human
experience. Yet by all accounts mystical experience involves a sense of the
loss of selfhood and of the merging of oneself with some greater reality.
Also, if any seriousness or value is attached to the experience, it follows that
the mystic will thereafter strive for a greater loss of his own sense of
selfhoodas is the central concern of these three Indian mystics, and
indeed of mystics in all major traditions.
The mystic will consequently strive to adopt an attitude throughout his
everyday life in which his sense of selfhood and his egotistic or self-seeking
tendencies are reduced to a minimum and ultimately destroyed. And this
attitude will inevitably be reflected in his behaviour and will indeed
influence the form of behaviour adopted. Clearly, if a mystic was already
striving to destroy his ego before his experience, his behaviour after that
experience will not show any marked change, merely an intensification of
the previous pattern, as would seem to be the case with nandamay in
particular. A blatant egotist, on the other hand, can only remain an egotist
after a mystical experience if he rejects the central import of his experience
and refuses to take it seriously. But if he seriously accepts its basic
implications, he will thereafter strive to curb his egotistic tendencies. It is
perhaps the twin factors of the unitive experience itself plus also the
attempt to mould oneself upon the basic dicta of that experience which
constitutes a mystic and it is questionable whether one who undergoes a
mystical experience, yet remains unconcerned to give serious consideration
to its basic unitive implication, should properly be called a mystic. This does
not, of course, deny that mystical or unitive experiences may be enjoyed by
a large number of people; but it does imply that the mystic is one who
seriously accepts the implications of that experience as influencing his
entire outlook and way of lifeas has certainly been the case with the three
mystics at present under discussion.
I would simply add by way of conclusion that the three contemporary
Indian mystics I have been considering in this paper, with their diverse
approaches and outlooks, are indicative of the fact that the serious pursuit
of mysticism in both traditional and novel forms remains a living and
potent factor in present-day India: one which ultimately derives its strength
not from any dogmatic or institutional basis, butas alwaysfrom
first-hand living experience.
NOTES
Reading through the literature on Yoga and mysticism will quickly lead us
to the realization of the ambiguity of these two terms as used by many
authors. At times it seems that almost any account of human condition and
endeavour can be fitted into them. In the context of Yoga it is expressed by
the variety of Yogas: Hatha Yoga, Bhakti Yoga, Karma Yoga, Rja Yoga,
Jna Yoga etc.
In the context of mysticism the ambiguity is underlined by the need felt
by writers to characterize its facets as done in the introductory paper to this
collection: direct experience of divine or ultimate reality; a theological or
metaphysical doctrine; and a (mystical) path leading to a (mystical) goal.
All expressions used here have an intrinsic ambiguity. So do references to
the ultimate reality as being beyond the world of external objects. The
words world, external and objects are not self-explanatory and may
harbour different meanings. Even the expression beyond is not exempt
from this ambiguity.
One way of dealing with this problem is to define ones terms very
precisely and adhere strictly to their meanings thus defined. This is the
move that most systematic schools of Yoga and some mystical doctrinal
schools have adopted. Another method would be to accept the ambiguity of
language terms as unavoidable and try to show how they are related. Such a
method is, basically, comparative; it starts with a set of different positions
as found in different systems and does not try to establish a single, possibly
correct, position.
In this paper I will try to outline a model that is concerned with the
fundamental variables of comparative religion. It will be seen that it is
applicable also to Yoga and mysticism for the simple reason that they both
are, at bottom, identical with religion, unless one would wish to define them
in a particular way which would mean using the other method instead of the
comparative one I have chosen.
When trying to understand the great traditions and teachings of the world
one is struck, sooner or later, by the realization that opposites are true. Or,
to put it another way, opposite truths apply to the human condition. We
168 RAWLINSON
have therefore no option open to us other than to come to terms with this
ambivalence.
Assuming therefore that opposites have to be embraced I propose the
following model (see Fig. 1)which is essentially simple, but has extremely
rich ramifications. It starts with two pairs of polar concepts: Hot and
Cool; Structured and Unstructured.
Hot is that which is other than oneself; that which has its own life. It is
not something that one can have access to by right. It is powerful and
breath-taking and is associated with revelation and grace. It is very similar
to Ottos numinous.
Cool is the very essence of oneself; one need not go to another to find
it. Hence one does have access to it by right. It is quiet and still and is
associated with self-realization.
The meaning of Structured is that there is an inherent order in the
cosmos and therefore in the human condition. There is something to be
discovered and there is a way of discovering it. A map is required to find
the destination.
By contrast, Unstructured teachings say that there is no gap between the
starting point and the finishing point. Method and goal are identical. We are
not separate from what is, and so no map is required. Everything is
available now and always has been.
Although these four statements of the human condition are all related,
they also conflict with each other. But they are all true. Examples from the
great traditions will be given later, but first we need to see that the two pairs
can be combined (see Fig. 2).
These combinations can be shown more clearly by using four categories
that refer to those aspects of the human condition which all teachings must
deal with in some form or another. The four are: ONTOLOGY or that
which is; COSMOLOGY or the nature of the universe; ANTHROPOLOGY
or the nature of man; and SOTERIOLOGY or the nature of liberation
(see Fig. 3).
Naturally, the types can overlap and I shall give some examples later.
But now it is useful to summarize each of the four quarters of the model
with some examples (taken from Christianity, Hinduism and Buddhism,
respectively) and some essential characteristics and images (see Fig. 4).
A few explanations may be needed. First, it is no accident that the
characteristics on the structured side are more numerous than those on the
unstructured side. Naturally, the unstructured cannot have a wealth of
qualities since it obliterates the distinction between substance and
accidents. Secondly, the characteristics of the Hot Structured and the
Cool Structured exactly complement each other. Thus awareness is cool
and dispassionate, whereas initiatory knowledge is hot, something one is
granted. Similarly, the Hot Structured path is one requiring the exercise of
will which allows the practitioner to break through the barriers that are in
YOGA, MYSTICISM AND A MODEL 169
his way in an ever-increasing series of leaps. This method requires the use
of magic, which is simply the manipulation of the laws of the cosmos in the
service of self-transformation. By contrast, the Cool Structured path is
very restrained. There is a task to be accomplished (just as in the Hot
Structured paththey are both structured, after all), but the method is
ordered and gentle. The practitioner starts on page one of the manual, so to
speak, and works his way through. Everything happens as it should in the
fullness of time. At a certain point, magical powers appear, it is true, but
they are incidental to the aim, which is balance and timing.
An instructive comparison between Hot and Cool Structured
teachings can be found in Vedic and Confucian ritual. All ritual, by
definition, is structured. But Vedic ritual, which is concerned with
participation in the sacred world of the gods, is hot; while Confucian
ritual, which aims to establish a correct relationship with the cosmic
principle, is cool.
The four categories of Hot/Cool/Structured/Unstructured form
themselves naturally into four sets of pairs. The pairs above the horizontal
line are both hot (but are also opposite, because one is structured and the
other is unstructured). The inverse is true of the pairs below the line.
Analogously, on the left of the vertical line we have the structured pairs
(one hot, one cool); and inversely on the right. By contrast, the opposite
corners of the model have nothing in common. The magician (Hot
Structured) regards the hermit (Cool Structured) as a stick-in-the-mud; the
hermit sees the magician as a tearaway. Similarly, Leap! (Hot Structured)
is the exact opposite of Let go! (Cool Unstructured). The same is true of
the other two corners; Submit! and Work! Notice, however, that Leap!
and Work! have a (structured) element in common, just as Leap! and
Submit! have (though this time it is the hot element). Similarly for
Submit! and Let go!
Another interesting set of comparisons that this model reveals is that of
the idea of a teaching itself (see Fig. 5).
All these types have attractive and dispiriting aspects to them. The great
attraction of the Cool Structured teachings is that anyone can be a
beginnerit is easy to start. The drawback is that it may take a very long
time to get to the endand there is no one to help you. Everyone has to
work on himself.
The attraction of the Cool Unstructured teachings is that the truth is
simple; the drawback is that it is very elusive. Hence the practitioner (if that
is the right word, since there cannot really be practice on an unstructured
path) is constantly failing. But because truth is his by right, he can always
try again in the very next moment. Hot Unstructured teachings share this
characteristicone is always failing. But the solution to this failure is not,
as with the Cool Unstructured to be open; rather, it is simply to ask.
(Though, naturally, being open and asking are related, because both are
170 RAWLINSON
unstructured ideals.) The reason why asking is the solution is that the central
truth of Hot Unstructured teachings is that love is freely given to all who
request it.
Finally, the attraction of Hot Structured teachings is that there is plenty
of help. Most cosmologies of this kind have the idea that the entire universe
is designed to aid the practitioner on the wayfrom the colour of the rose
to the megacosmic designs of the archangels. The drawback is that the task
is correspondingly awesome. The journey is very long and the demands are
very great. This is not an adventure to be entered lightly.
It can be noticed that both the cool teachings (structured and
unstructured) are open whereas both the hot teachings are in some sense
withheld. This is because cool teachings are regarded as mans right
typical cool ideal. By contrast, hot teachings are a gift, not a right. We
can also see from the model that unstructured teachings are completely and
instantly available, while structured teachings have to be worked through
(often on a huge timescale).
As said earlier, the four quarters of the model can easily combine. In fact,
it is somewhat artificial to separate them. A few simple examples are shown
in Fig. 6.
The first diagram represents the teaching that God creates the universe
with all its dimensions, that he is responsible for it, and that its forms
express his divine nature. The second can be summarized as follows:
Everyone is Godnow. The third in effect is saying: Ones own self, which
is identical with truth, is surrounded by layers that must be penetrated. The
fourth represents a variant of esotericism: Liberation is a great journey
through the cosmos, which is contained within oneself (and one needs
initiation to complete it).
Of course, one could apply the categories of Ontology, Cosmology,
Anthropology and Soteriology to these overlaps and thereby be far more
detailed in characterizing them. But I shall leave the reader to do it for
himself.
The model can be used in a number of ways. For example Fig. 7 represents
the teachings of the Bhagavad Gt. The first one distributes the four Yogas
to the appropriate sections of the model. The second one unites the four, so
to speak. This explains why the Gt has been the most influential text in
Indian history: it contains all the essential aspects of a spiritual teaching. Or
to put it another way, it appeals to all levels of the human condition.
(I have to admit that I have oversimplified the matter somewhat. I have
not included the material that is found in the Gt and Rja Yoga
is, strictly speaking, not a Hot Structured teaching. The two diagrams
should thus be as in Fig. 8. However, if we include the revelation of
aivarya-rpa in ch. 11, which definitely is Hot Structured, the first pair
of diagrams can be justified as genuine representations of the elements in
the Gt.)
YOGA, MYSTICISM AND A MODEL 171
throughout been concerned with what might be called Yoga and mysticism.
If the model works, this should be obvious. And other people should be able
to apply the model in their own wayand thereby use both these terms in a
variety of senseswithout the rest of us getting lost. That is what a
comparative model is designed to do.
YOGA, MYSTICISM AND A MODEL 173
Fig. 1
Fig. 2
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Fig. 3
YOGA, MYSTICISM AND A MODEL 175
Fig. 4
176 RAWLINSON
Fig. 5
Fig. 6
YOGA, MYSTICISM AND A MODEL 177
Fig. 7
Fig. 8
178 RAWLINSON
Fig. 9
YOGA, MYSTICISM AND A MODEL 179
Fig. 10
180 RAWLINSON
Fig. 11
YOGA, MYSTICISM AND A MODEL 181
Fig. 12
182 RAWLINSON
Fig. 13
GLOSSARY
as a virtually accomplished bodhisatta, awaits the suitable time for his last
birth on earth in heaven; by implication there must be other
bodhisattas, not named in the Pli sources, preparing for the Buddha career
in future world periods; in Mahyna the term bodhisattva acquires new
meanings, one of them being based on the promise of the one who embarks
on the Bodhisattva path not to enter until he has assisted all other
beings, down to the last blade of grass, to reach liberation; one can thus
assume the existence of a category of permanent bodhisattvas.
Brahmathe god creator in Hinduism; in early Buddhism Brahmas are a
cateogry of divine beings above the deva world.
brahmacaryadivine faring; living in a discipline for the sake of the
realization of the ultimate goal; in some systems narrowed down to the
meaning of celibacy.
brahmanthe divine source of the universe in the ; the sole reality
in Advaita Vednta.
, brahminpriest, member of the highest caste in the Hindu social
system; are also priestly books, a category of Vedic
scriptures.
Buddhathe Enlightened One; the Awakened One.
buddhihigher mind; intelligence; the first cosmic evolute of in the
system.
cetamind; consciousness; will.
citta, cit (Ved. kit)mind, heart; sometimes to be understood as the character
or personality of a being.
devagod; devatdeity; devaputrason of god; sometimes these three
expressions are used interchangably, meaning divine being.
dharma (Pli: dhamma)reality, truth, law, duty; teaching of reality; in
Buddhism: the teaching of the Buddha; also, particularly when used in
plural: elements of reality, phenomena, mind-objects.
dharmakyathe body of truth or the absolute reality in itself in Mahyna
Buddhism.
dhyna (Pli: jhna)meditative absorption.
(Pli: dukkha)suffering, unsatisfactoriness.
epistemologyphilosophical discipline concerned with the theory of
knowledge.
gnosisknowledge; direct knowledge, often used in the sense of
suprasensory and suprarational perception and understanding.
gopmilkmaid, cowherdess; designation for the soul engrossed in the love
for God in mysticism.
attribute, quality, natural force; in philosophy there are three
or forces of : sattva (purity), rajas (drive, energy) and
tamas (inertia).
guruteacher, spiritual preceptor.
GLOSSARY 185
PRATIMA BOWES
Department of Philosophy, University of Sussex (retired).
LANCE S. COUSINS
Department of Comparative Religion, University of Manchester.
DEIRDRE GREEN
Department of Theology and Religious Studies, Saint Davids University
College, University of Wales.
MINORU HARA
Department of Sanskrit, University of Tokyo.
PETER HARVEY
Department of Languages and Cultures, Sunderland Polytechnic.
F.W.J.HUMPHRIES
Invited lay guest speaker.
JOHN E.MITCHINER
Foreign and Commonwealth Office, London.
ANDREW RAWLINSON
Department of Religious Studies, University of Lancaster.
KAREL WERNER
School of Oriental Studies, University of Durham.
192
NOTE ON THE PAPERS AND
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Mysticism, vol. 2, no. 2 (1979). The version published here has been
slightly revised and edited, with one substantial change to which attention is
drawn in note 17.
The Stages of Christian Mysticism and Buddhist Purification: Interior
Castle of St Teresa of Avila and the Path of Purification of Buddhaghosa
was read at the Fifth Symposium on 21 April 1979 and is published here for
the first time with minor editorial changes.
Living Between the Worlds: Bhakti Poetry and the Carmelite Mystics
was delivered at the Thirteenth Symposium on 3 April 1987 and is
published here for the first time.
Yoga Philosophy and Jung was presented at the Sixth Symposium on
12 April 1980 and is published without change for the first time in this
collection.