| God
alone does nothing. He is aboktha. Man must strive to improve
the world. Man alone, also, would not be able to do anything.
He needs the blessings of things which are called God - the
blessings of nature.
Though
spirituality and religion should not be organized, it can
be unfolded; spiritual vitality can be unfolded within the
heart of a human being, only in perfect liberty and freedom.
The world today has moved to a situation wherein nothing can
be done without organization. Even to bless the society, to
spread values of life, organization has become very important
and necessary. Organization is not in the Hindu tradition.
In Vedic days, such organizations were not there. So, if you
look for sanction of organized religion or the sanction of
Vedic books, you will find none. But as the number of people
in the society increased, the problems of the community multiplied,
then religion could no longer sustain the needs or answer
the needs of the community.
And
thus the Puranic days came when religion first started conforming
itself as an organization, centered in the various temples
in India. But even at that time, there was only a minimum
number of them--Badrinath, Benaras, Rameshwaram and Dwarka.
Then, five hundred years B.C., organization became more urgently
needed and the first Hindu who brought organization in the
religion was Lord Buddha. Buddha had to organize his team
of workers, unified as bikus, through centers called Buddha
Vihars. Within another six or seven hundred years, Buddhism
flourished and decayed and became very decadent. And thus,
the Indian spiritual atmosphere became very chaotic. Hinduism
also decayed. Buddhism also decayed. Spiritual values decayed.
It
was at that time that Adi Shankara appeared on the horizon
and brought about a certain amount of swift organization into
Hinduism. More and more temples were built and as temples
became prominent in society, they became the source of inspiration
for the community. The temples became the center from where
spiritual ideas and thought were spread into the community.
But in time even these temples could no longer inspire the
members of the community and they also reached a point of
decadence.
Again,
in the nineteenth century, Vivekananda tried to organize Hinduism
and the Ramakrishna Mission came into being. These Missions
are nuclei for developing, perpetuating and spreading spiritual
and ethical values, religious and moral ideals. There are
Christian Missions, Islamic Missions, Buddhist Missions, Hindu
Missions, and World Missions. We view them as organizations
wherein inspired people come together to work and serve in
the society for spreading spiritual values and to improve
the moral quality of life in the community.
After
Ramakrishna and Vivekananda's time, whenever the great acharyas
appeared, they got a number of followers who organized themselves
for the purpose of their own self-development. Many missions
came about. Each acharya was, in his lifetime, able to inspire
a large number of people to organize themselves so that they
were more effective in their work. These missions were established
as a result of a lot of human effort. Many social and material
sacrifices went into creating temples, schools, hospitals
and colleges. After all that, as soon as the Master leaves,
the Mission collapses; because our loyalty is to the individual
personalities and not to the ideal. The Mission's members
do not have the vision, but only the membership of the Mission.
The members are not inspired by the ideal that the teachers
stood for.
We
need a fundamental change of attitude. Otherwise we will never
be able to organize ourselves for the development of society.
We need to understand that an old vision may not suit changing
times. We must adapt the vision to the new requirements of
modern life. If that elasticity is not there in the vision,
that mission becomes redundant. It is not that the vision
was wrong, but societies are constantly changing and if the
mission and its vision is not elastic enough to accommodate
new demands of the community, the mission again fails.
Adaptability
has always been the quality of Hinduism. Hinduism has constantly
changed, has always embraced the new dimensions and demands
of society. When cultural revolutions lose this elasticity,
religion becomes a dead carcass also been lost. They think
it is only another organization with vested interests. Learn
to keep a vision. Learn to have an ideal. Discover it in yourself.
No one else can give it to you. True heroism is in living
uncompromisingly up to your ideal. The world may threaten
you. The community will not easily leave you free. But he
is the hero who defiantly stands, firmly rooted, in his own
conviction. That one, even a single individual who inspires
the entire population, is the true hero, inspiring generations
and generations thereafter. This uncompromising heroism of
living up to the ideal is the very core of our avatars.
Whether
it is Krishna or Rama, what is it that we glorify in them?
They had heroism in their life. Otherwise they were like other
human beings. We worship them, we revere them because they
had heroism to live up to their ideals. Living up to their
ideals was not easy. Jesus was crucified. Mahatma Gandhi was
shot. But what does it matter? One day everyone has to die.
You have not taken a contract that you will die in a hospital
bed, surrounded by wife and children. Once you have found
the joy and glory, why not die living up to your ideal?
That
consciousness can arise in you when the vision is clear. He
who has a vision rises to the highest. That vision is not
a contract; it is not written on paper. It must be enshrined
in the hearts and minds of everyone. And where there is a
vision, when even a single member has developed and cultivated
this courage, this heroism to live up to the vision, then
that mission cannot die. It is such a vision that can serve
the society, the community and the world at large.
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