|
VISHNU
VISHNU is one of the gods of the Trinity. Visnu represents the power
of sustenance. The other two powers manifest in the world, namely
creation and destruction are personified as Brahma and Siva respectively,
Visnu is wedded to Lakmi the goddess of wealth. The significance is
that sustencanpe or maintenance involves wealth. In order to maintain
anything the maintainer must necessarily possess wealth.
In the Visnu Purana, Sage Vyasa refers to Visnu as the Supreme all-pervading
Reality, the Reality which is the substratum of the microcosm and
macrocosm. The root 'vis', means 'to perade'. Visnu is the core of
the human personality. He is the Atman which manifests Itself through
body, mind and intellect as the individual. The same Visnu pervades
the entire cosmos as Brahman.
Visnu is said to be lying on a great serpent, Sesa or Ananta, in an
ocean of milk, ksrabdhi in heaven, Vaikuntha. He is said to be in
yogic sleep, yoganidra. The body of the serpent is coiled to form
Visnu's bed. The serpent has a thousand heads and its hood is turned
inward looking at its own coiled body. Visnu consort, Lakmi, sits
at his feet serving him.
Visnu represents the supreme within the human body; mind and intellect.
The picture of Visnu lying on the serpent-bed in the milky ocean suggests
the means of recognising the Atman, the innermost core of man's personality.
The ocean is the mind with its infinite thoughts. The milky ocean
stands for the sattvika mind. A sattvika mind is pure and serene.
It is the highest quality of the mind. The other two states of the
mind are rajasika and tamasika. The rajasika mind is ever agitated.
Tamasika is dull and stupid. When the mind is in the latter two states
man gets involved in the mundane world. Only the sattvika mind lifts
man to the higher realm of Divinity. In a sattvika mind alone can
marirecognise his Godhead.
The serpent is the ego with its many desires. In a sattvika mind the
ego is turned inward: An extroverted ego loses sight of the Divinity
within. When the same ego turns its attention inward, when its concentration
is upon the inner self instead of the outer objects of the world it
recognises the supreme Self, Atman. The thousand heads of the serpent
turning inward indicate that the thoughts are directed to single-pointed
concentration meditation upon the Atman. When man holds his mind thus
in deep meditation upon his supreme Self he realises Visnu, the all-pervading
Reality.
Visnu is shown to be in yogic sleep-yoganidra. Yoga is derived from
its root yuj, to unite. This indicates his perfect union with the
infinite Reality. Nidra means sleep. A man who is totally absorbed
in the supreme Self is asleep as it were to the happenings of the
terrestrial world, revelling in the infinite bliss of self-realisation.
He is disinterested in the experiences of the finite world.
Goddess Laksmi, the consort of Visnu, sits at his feet, serving him.
Laksmi symbolises the wealth, power and glory of this world. When
man seeks the higher Truth and is disinterested in the world the sense-objects
seek him. When Visnu is sought, Laksmi necessarily follows the seeker.
But the trouble in the world today is that people try to seek Laksmi
Directly. The moment man runs after wealth, starts desiring craving,
asking and begging for it, the object of desire leave him. That is
the law.
Visnu is the one eternal, unmanifest Reality. The manifest world of
plurality has emerged from the unmanifest Reality. Brahma, the creator
of the world is shown as emerging from the navel of Visnu while he
is lying on the serpent-bed. The navel portion represents the psychological
centre, cakra from where sound originates in the form of paravak,
transcendent speech. This inaudible sound passes through two more
stages of development, namely pasyanti and madhyama, before it becomes
audible speech, called vaikhari. This audible sound is tha quality
of space, akasa. Space is the first of the five elements, which constitutes
the entire universe. The production of sound therefore symbolises
creation. This idea of the manifested world created from the unmanifested
Reality is illustrated by Brahma emerging from the navel of Visnu.
Visnu is known to be blue in colour and clothed in yellow garb. He
wears a crown and stands upon a lotus. He has four hands. All these
are significant symbols indicating that Visnu is none other than the
supreme Self, the changeless Reality around which all the terrestrial
changes take place, the imperishable essence in the perishable world.
The blue colour of Visnu indicates His infinite stature. Blue is assciated
with the infinite since immeasurable entities like the sky or ocean
appears blue in colour. Yellow is usually attributed to the earth
for two reasons. One, the earth (silica) glows with a yellow fire
when introduced in a colourless flame; and two, anything that is buried
in the earth for a long period of time gather a yellowish colour.
Visnu, blue in colour and clothed in yellow, therefore, represents
the descent of the infinite, immeasurable, transcendental Truth to
the terrestial realm i. e. God in human form.
When the Infinite expresses through a finite form, there is a manifestation
of an individual, jiva. The individual comes in conttact with and
reacts to the world with the help of four subtle instruments in him.
They are the four constituents of his subtle body, viz manas mind,
buddhi intellect, ahankara ego and citta conditioned consciousness.
The four hands of Visnu represent them.
The crown on Visnu's head signifies his supreme sovereignty and lordship
over the entire world of plurality. He is the one who maintains and
protects all things and beings in the entire universe.
The deity stands upon a lotus. The lour represents Truth. 'Standing
upon the lotus'. Therefore, means that the ground or substratum which
supports a God-man is the Brahman i.e. a God-man is ever rooted in
the wupreme Truth.
In his four hands Visnu holds a sankha conch, cakra discus, gada mace
and padma lotus. The lotus indicates the final goal of human evolution.
By showing the lotus, Visnu invites mankind to reach this goal of
perlection by realising his pure Self within. The Lord blows his sankha
conch, calling the people of the world to lead a pure and noble life
so that they may shift their attention and interest from the material
world to the supreme Self within. This call is the whispering of the
conscience within. The conscience of man tells him to give up sensuous
appetites and extrovert living and directs him to the higher life.
But man does not heed this sacred voice from within. He continues
with his passionate living until he experiences knocks and shocks
leading to disappointment and dissatisfaction with life. The mace
in the third hand is meant as a warning to draw man's attention to
this stern law of nature. If man, despite the growing sense of restlessness
and agitations in his bosom, still persists in his sensuali indulgences
and does not turn towards the spiritual path, he meets with total
disaster, The discus is meant to show man this inevitable end that
he would reach if he were totally heedless to the warnings of nature.
On the other hand, a seeker who listens to the call from within and
follows the spiritual path leading to the Truth, does not experience
the knocks of the mace or the destruction of the discus. He lives
a life of contentment and bliss until he reaches the sacred abode
of Truth and becomes one with Visnu.
Visnu's message conveyed by his four hands is true not only with reference
to an individual but to a society, community or a nation as well.
As long as people do not heed the sacred advice of the scriptures
and take to the spiritual values of life, they meet with sorrow and
suffering in life. If this warning also is not heeded and the people
continue to live extrovertedly fulfilling merely their sense gratifications,
they are bound to meet with disaster, This is what history has been
recording from generation to generation as evidenced by the rise and
fall of nations and empires.
|