ESSENCE OF JAINISM
-By Manubhai Doshi
Chapter 2: KNOW THYSELF
He who knows one (soul), also knows all; he who knows all, knows the one.
When one talks of religion, the question may arise, :Why do we bother about
religion? Could we not be happy in this life without worrying about religion?
One may be healthy, have a lovable spouse and children that they love, may have
enough earning from job or profession and possess all the amenities that one
needs. What more
is religion going to offer?
These are legitimate questions. Let us therefore examine them. The concept
underlying these questions revolves round our body. Its health, its relations,
its well being, comforts and luxuries it can indulge into, are supposed to bring
forth happiness. Accordingly, when such situations are to our liking, we happen
to consider ourselves happy. Unfortunately however the body with which we
identify ourselves and also everything around it happen to be transitory. All
the situations are ephemeral. The happiness that we might be experiencing from
such situations, can disappear at any time. We do not know what is going to
happen the next moment. As
such our so called happiness happens to be unstable and shortlived.
Even if situations conducive to our interest were likely to continue
indefinitely, peace and happiness may not result therefrom. As poet Shelley put
it in one of his poems, we are prone to :look before and after and pine for what
is nought. Hardly any one feels satisfied with what he has. We have the tendency
to desire what we dont have. Our desires are endless and as long as desires
remain unsatisfied, no one can ever feel happy and experience real peace that
can lead to blissful pleasure. We may strive hard for achieving that pleasure
but hardly any one attains it any time during the life.
This is because we hardly try to explore who we are and what is our true nature.
Nothing against our nature is going to give us lasting happiness or real
satisfaction. Jain scriptures therefore define religion as :Vatthu Sahavo Dhammo.
It means that religion is the nature or property of matter. Without knowing
ourselves and without
realizing our own nature, we have been trying to gain happiness. No wonder that
it eludes us, because we have been trying to gain it from extraneous
circumstances. In a way, we have been dwelling, all the time, in a state of
delusion about ourselves. We can as well say that we have been pursuing a
mirage.
Herein comes the role of religion. A generally accepted definition of religion
is :Dharayati Iti Dharmah, It means that what holds (from falling) is religion.
Our remaining in the deluded state constitutes a fall and religion tends to
protect us therefrom . It teaches us that the physical body with which we
identify ourselves is live on
account of the soul that abides within it. That soul is our real self. We are
the consciousness pervading the body and our association with body terminates at
the end of life. The true nature of consciousness is to know whatever happens
without any sense of craving or aversion. It is therefore futile to be pleased
or displeased with different situations. Thus by revealing our true nature, the
religion helps in extricating ourselves from the deluded state in which we have
been entangled since the time without beginning. Religion teaches us to know
ourselves.
The quotation at the top of this chapter taken from Aacharang Sutra therefore
states that he who knows the soul, knows every thing else. This is so because
knowledge of true Self as pure, enlightened, unaging, immortal and ever blissful
soul can lead to the state of desirelessness.
This, of course, does not mean that we should not try to change an undesirable
situation; nor does it endorse inaction. As long as the soul is embodied, it
would stay active. There are different types of activities that a monk or a
layman should undertake . Religion however prescribes that every one should
undertake activities
destined for him, vigorously but without any degree of attachment. This would
mean facing any situation dispassionately without reacting in terms of
craving or aversion. In Jain terminology this is called
Jnata Drashta approach which is similar to Nishkam Karmayoga of Geeta. The
common objective is to enable one to view every situation, comfortable or
uncomfortable, with equanimity and without any way
getting agitated. That would amount to knowing
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