Tuesday, January 17, 2017

"May Justice Roll Down like Waters" - a new era has begun

As of inauguration day, Friday, January 19, 2017, our nation, in concert with the forces of entropy, including rebellion from established principles of freedom and respect for all, stands poised to enter a new era of conflict and disharmony. While disobedience, whether civil or uncivil, appears on the ascendant, yet, "Autobiography of a Yogi" speaks to us some 70 years later after its original publication in 1946. We share with you to selections from near the end of chapters 31 and 32, respectively, affirming the power of truth and divine law:

“The omnipotence of spiritual law was referred to by Christ on the occasion of his triumphant entry into Jerusalem. As the disciples and the multitude shouted for joy, and cried, “Peace in heaven, and glory in the highest,” certain Pharisees complained of the undignified spectacle. “Master,” they protested, “rebuke thy disciples.”
            “I tell you,” Jesus replied, “that, if these should hold their peace, the stones would immediately cry out.”
            In this reprimand to the Pharisees, Christ was pointing out that divine justice is no figurative abstraction, and that a man of peace, though his tongue be torn from its roots, will yet find his speech and his defense in the bedrock of creation, the universal order itself.
            “Think you,” Jesus was saying, “to silence men of peace? As well may you hope to throttle the voice of God, whose very stones sing His glory and His omnipresence. Will you demand that men not celebrate in honor of the peace in heaven, but should only gather together in multitudes to shout for war on earth? Then make your preparations, O Pharisees, to overtopple the foundations of the world; for it is not gentle men alone, but stones or earth, and water and fire and air that will rise up against you, to bear witness of His ordered harmony.”

Time is coming and is here now when men and women of faith and peace must rise up and cooperate together for the greater good, affirming justice, freedom, and harmony for all God’s children, all races, nations, and faiths at whatever cost.

Paramhansa Yogananda writes in chapter 32:

Fifty years after Lahiri Mahasaya’s passing in 1895 culminated in 1945, the year of completion of this present book. I cannot but be struck by the coincidence that the year 1945 has also ushered in a new age–the era of revolutionary atomic energies. All thoughtful minds turn as never before to the urgent problems of peace and brotherhood, lest the continued use of physical force banish all men along with the problems.
            Though the human race and its works disappear tracelessly by time or bomb, the sun does not falter in its course; the stars keep their invariable vigil. Cosmic law cannot be stayed or changed, and man would do well to put himself in harmony with it. If the cosmos is against might, if the sun wars not with the planets but retires at dueful time to give the stars their little sway, what avails our mailed fist? Shall any peace indeed come out of it? Not cruelty but goodwill arms the universal sinews; a humanity at peace will know the endless fruits of victory, sweeter to the taste than any nurtured on the soil of blood.
            The effective League of Nations will be a natural, nameless league of human hearts. The broad sympathies and discerning insight needed for the healing of earthly woes cannot flow from a mere intellectual consideration of man’s diversities, but from knowledge of man’s sole unity–his kinship with God. Toward realization of the world’s highest ideal–peace through brotherhood–may yoga, the science of personal contact with the Divine, spread in time to all men in all lands.
            Though India’s civilization is ancient above any other, few historians have noted that her feat of national survival is by no means an accident, but a logical incident in the devotion to eternal verities which India has offered through her best men in every generation. By sheer continuity of being, by intransitivity before the ages–can dusty scholars truly tell us how many?–India has given the worthiest answer of any people to the challenge of time.
            The Biblical story of Abraham’s plea to the Lord that the city of Sodom be spared if ten righteous men could be found therein, and the divine reply: “I will not destroy it for ten’s sake,” gains new meaning in the light of India’s escape from the oblivion of Babylon, Egypt and other mighty nations who were once her contemporaries. The Lord’s answer clearly shows that a land lives, not by its material achievements, but in its masterpieces of man.
            Let the divine words be heard again, in this twentieth century, twice dyed in blood ere half over: No nation that can produce ten men, great in the eyes of the Unbribable Judge, shall know extinction. Heeding such persuasions, India has proved herself not witless against the thousand cunnings of time. Self-realized masters in every century have hallowed her soil; modern Christlike sages, like Lahiri Mahasaya and his disciple Sri Yukteswar, rise up to proclaim that the science of yoga is more vital than any material advances to man’s happiness and to a nation’s longevity.

The years ahead, and for the younger generations, such as my our grandchildren, a mighty task lies ahead. Last night we held a program for the 15th year that celebrates the lives of Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr. Such souls of courage, wisdom, unconditional love, and faith are much needed in these times. We cannot wait to produce such leaders: we must strive to rise to these heights and, as Dr. King, quoting the Old Testament, declared surely “justice (and peace) will roll down like waters.” (Amos 5, 6).

Communities, virtual and material, must form to demonstrate that high ideals and sustainable living is the way to happiness, peace, and simple living.

“My peace be with you,”
Swami Hrimananda


Monday, January 2, 2017

Birth Commemoration of Paramhansa Yogananda : January 5, 1893

Paramhansa Yogananda was born on January 5, 1893 in Gorakhpur, India. This excerpt in honor of his birth, appears near the end of Chapter 45, “The Bengali Joy-Permeated Mother.” The introduction to this excerpted paragraph was a quote from the words of Jesus, “Thou shalt love the Lord Thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind, and with all thy strength: this is the first commandment.”
“Casting aside every inferior attachment, Ananda Moyi Ma offers her sole allegiance to the Lord. Not by the hairsplitting distinctions of scholars but by the sure logic of faith, the childlike saint has solved the only problem in human life–establishment of unity with God. Man has forgotten this stark simplicity, now befogged by a million issues. Refusing a monotheistic love to God, the nations disguise their infidelity by punctilious respect before the outward shrines of charity. These humanitarian gestures are virtuous, because for a moment they divert man’s attention from himself, but they do not free him from his single responsibility in life, referred to by Jesus as the first commandment. The uplifting obligation to love God is assumed with man’s first breath of an air freely bestowed by his only Benefactor.”

The above excerpt from the "Autobiography of a Yogi" may be the only direct chastisement to modern society that Yogananda wrote in his now famous life story. Given humanity’s multifarious challenges in every conceivable arena of life, it is no subtle hint that our misplaced, if seemingly well intentioned priorities are, themselves, part of the cause of our problems. When you see problems everywhere, it is no surprise that they multiply.

Attempting then to solve problems only through reason, legislation or brute force merely compounds them. There is a deeper reason why “reason” is inadequate: because in appealing to reason we are appealing not only to a lower level of consciousness but we are essentially affirming the power of ego to control our destiny. This is, subconsciously or otherwise, a rejection of God’s existence, power, and grace as the sole reality and as the “solution” to all suffering.

Humankind has placed EGO on the altar of our lives and our culture. Reason is a product of the conscious mind, which, in turn, is a key aspect of the human ego. It has produced both the wonders and horrors of modern science. This “tree of the knowledge of good and evil” (meaning the secrets of this world of duality) is inadequate to solve the world’s problems, including our most pressing: lasting happiness and peace.

We offer to you the suggestion that for 2017 and on Yogananda’s birthday this week, Thursday, January 5, Yogananda’s birth commemoration, let us put “God first” in our lives. Let us commit to prayer throughout the day, and meditation, morning and night. Those who pray to Yogananda will be heard and uplifted, for this is the divine and eternal promise. “Avatara” means descent and it refers to the incarnation of a soul who has become one with God, and, is, in this sense, God. “Lift up your eyes unto the hills from whence cometh my help.” (Psalm 121)

Blessings and "Happy Birthday, Master!"

Swami Hrimananda