The ceremony of diksha or initiation is that by which the spiritual Preceptor admits one to the status of a neophyte on the path of spiritual endeavour. The ceremony tends to confer spiritual enlightenment by abrogating sinfulness. Its actual effect depends on the degree of willing co-operation on the part of the disciple and is, therefore, not the same in all cases. It does not preclude the possibility of reversion on the novice to the non-spiritual state, if he slackens in his effort or misbehaves. Initiation puts a person on the true track and also imparts an initial impulse to go ahead.
It cannot, however, keep one going for good unless one chooses to put forth his own voluntary effort. The nature of the initial impulse also varies in accordance with the condition of the recipient. But although the mercy of the good preceptor enables us to have a glimpse of the Absolute and of the path of His attainment, the seed that is thus sown requires very careful tending under the direction of the preceptor, if
it is to germinate and grow into the fruit- and shade-giving tree.
Unless our soul of his own accord chooses to serve Krishna after obtaining a working idea of his real nature, he cannot long retain the Spiritual Vision. The soul is never compelled by Krishna to serve Him.
But initiation is never altogether futile. It changes the
outlook of the disciple on life. If he sins after initiation, he may fall into
greater depths of degradation than the uninitiated. But although even
after initiation temporary set-backs may occur, they do not ordinarily
prevent the final deliverance. The faintest glimmering of the real
knowledge of the Absolute has sufficient power to change radically and
for good the whole of our mental and physical constitution and this
glimmering is incapable of being totally extinguished except in
extraordinarily unfortunate cases.
It is undoubtedly practicable for the initiated, if only he is willing,
to follow the directions of the preceptor that lead by slow degrees to
the Absolute. The good preceptor is verily the savior of fallen
souls. It is, however, very rarely that a person with modern culture feels
inclined to submit to the guidance of another specially in spiritual
matters. But the very person submits readily enough to the direction of
a physician for being cured of his bodily ailments. Because these
latter cannot be ignored without consequences that are patent to
everybody. The evil that results from our neglect of the ailments of
the soul is of a nature that paralyses and deludes our understanding
and prevents the recognitions of itself. Its gravity is not recognized
as it does not apparently stand in the way of our worldly activities
with the same directness as the other. The average cultured man is,
therefore, at liberty to ask questions without realizing any pressing
necessity of submitting to the treatment of spiritual maladies at the
hands of a really competent physician.
The questions that are frequently asked are as these: "Why should it be
at all necessary to submit to any particular person or to subscribe to
any particular ceremony for the purpose of realizing the Absolute Who
by His nature is unconditioned? Why should Krishna require our formal
declaration of submission to Himself? Would it not be more generous and
logical to permit us to live a life of freedom in accordance with the
principles of our perverted nature which is also His creation? Admitting that it is our duty to serve Krishna, why should we have to be introduced to Him by a third party? Why is it impossible for one to serve Sri Krishna directly?"
It would no doubt be highly convenient and helpful to be instructed by a good preceptor who is well-versed in the Scriptures in understanding the same. But one should never submit to another to an extent that may furnish a rascal with an opportunity of really doing harm. The bad preceptor is a familiar character. It is inexplicable how those gurus who live in open sin contrive nevertheless to retain the unquestioning allegiance of the cultured portion of their disciples.
Such being the case, can we blame any person who hesitates to submit
unconditionally to a preceptor, whether he is good or bad? It is of
course necessary to be quite sure of the bonafide of a person before we
accept him even tentatively as our spiritual guide. A preceptor should
be a person who appears likely to possess those qualities that will
enable him it improve our spiritual condition.
Those and similar thoughts are likely to occur to most persons who have
received an English education, when they are asked to accept the help
of any particular person as his spiritual preceptor. The literature,
science and art of the West, body forth the principle of the liberty of
the individual and denounce the mentality that leads one to surrender
to however superior a person his right of choosing his own course. They
inculcate the necessity and high value of having faith in oneself.
But the good preceptor claims our sincere and complete allegiance. The
good disciple makes a complete surrender of himself at the feet of the
preceptor. But the submission of the disciple is neither irrational or
blind. It is complete on condition that the preceptor himself continues
to be altogether good. The disciple retains the right of renouncing his
allegiance to the preceptor the moment he is satisfied that the
preceptor is a fallible creature like himself. Nor does a good
preceptor accept any one as his disciple unless the latter is prepared
to submit to him freely. A good preceptor is in duty bound to renounce
a disciple who is not sincerely willing to follow his instructions
fully. If a preceptor accepts as his disciple one who refuses to be
wholly guided by him, or if a disciple submits to a preceptor who is
not wholly good, such preceptor and such disciple are, both of them,
doomed to fall from their spiritual state.
No one is a good preceptor who has not realised the Absolute.
One who has realised the Absolute is saved from the necessity of walking on the
worldly path. The good preceptor who lives the spiritual life is,
therefore, bound to be wholly good. He should be wholly free from
any desire for anything of this world whether good or bad. The categories
of good and bad do not exist in the Absolute. In the Absolute
everything is good. We can have no idea in our present state of this
absolute goodness. Submission to the Absolute is not real unless it is
also itself absolute. It is on the plane of the Absolute that the
disciple is required to submit completely to the good preceptor. On the
material plane there can be no such thing as complete submission. The
pretence of complete submission to the bad preceptor is responsible for
the corruptions that are found in the relationship of the ordinary
worldly guru and his equally worldly-minded disciples.
All honest thinkers will realise the logical propriety of the position
set forth above. But most persons will be disposed to believe that a
good preceptor in the above sense may not be found in this world. This
is really so. Both the good preceptor and his disciple belong to the
spiritual realm. But spiritual discipleship is nevertheless capable of
being realised by persons who belong to this world. Otherwise there
would be no religion at all in the world. But because the spiritual
life happens to be realizable in this world it does not follow that it is
the worldly existence which is capable of being improved into the
spiritual. As a matter of fact, the one is perfectly incompatible with
the other. They are categorically different from one another. The good
preceptor, although he appears to belong to this world, is not really of
this world. No one who belongs to this world can deliver us from
worldliness. The good preceptor is a denizen of the spiritual world who
has been enabled by the will of God to appear in this world in order to
enable us to realise the spiritual existence.
The much vaunted individual liberty is a figment of the diseased
imagination. We are bound willingly or unwillingly to submit to the
laws of God in the material as well as in the spiritual world. The
hankering for freedom in defiance of His laws is the cause of all our
miseries. The total abjuration of all hankering for such freedom is the
condition of admission to the spiritual realm. In this world we desire
this freedom but are compelled against our will to submit to the
inexorable laws of physical nature. This is the unnatural state. Such
unwilling for forced submission does not admit us into the spiritual
realm. In this world the moral principle, indeed claims our willing
submission. But even morality also is a curtailment of freedom
necessitated by the peculiar circumstances of this world. The soul, who
does not belong to this world, is in a state of open or court rebellion
against submission to an alien domination. It is by his very
constitution capable of submitting willingly only to the Absolute.
The good preceptor asks the struggling soul to submit not to the laws
of this world which will only rivet its chains but to the higher law of
the spiritual realm. The pretence of submission to the laws of the
spiritual realm without the intention of really carrying them out into
practice is often mistaken for genuine submission by reason of the
absence of fullness of conviction. In this world the fully convinced
state is non-existent. We are, therefore, compelled in all cases to act
on make-believes viz. the so-called working hypotheses. (HYPOCRISY) The
good preceptor tells us to change this method of activity which we have
learnt from our experience of this world. He invites us first of all to
be really and fully informed of the nature and laws of the other world
which happens to be eternally and categorically different from this
phenomenal world. If we do not sincerely submit to be instructed in the
alphabets of the life eternal but go on perversely asserting however
unconsciously our present processes and so-called convictions against
the instructions of the preceptor in the period of novitiate we are
bound to remain where we are. This also will amount to the practical
rejection of all advice because the two worlds have nothing in common
though at the same time we naturally fail to understand this believing
all the time in accordance with our accustomed methods that we are at
any rate partially following the preceptor. But as a matter of fact
when we reserve the right of choice we really follow ourselves, because
even when we seem to agree to follow the preceptor it is because he
appears to be in agreement with ourselves. But as the two worlds
have absolutely nothing in common we are only under a delusion when we
suppose that we really understand the method or the object of the
preceptor or in other words reserve the right of assertion of the
apparent self. Faith in the scriptures can alone help us in this
otherwise unpracticable endeavour. We believe in the preceptor with the
help of the shastras when we understand neither. As soon as we are
fully convinced of the necessity of submitting unambiguously to the
good preceptor it is then and only then that he is enabled to show us
the way into the spiritual world in accordance with the method laid
down in the shastras of that purpose which he can apply
properly and without perpetrating a fatal blunder in as much as he himself happens to belong to the realm of the spirit.
The crux of the matter lies not in the external nature of the
ceremony of initiation as it appears to us because that is bound to be
unintelligible to us being an affair of the other world, but in the
conviction of the necessity and the successful choice of a really good
preceptor. We can attain to the conviction of the necessity of the help
of a good preceptor by the exercise of our unbiased reason in the light
of our ordinary experience. When once this conviction has been
truly formed Sri Krishna Himself helps us in finding the really good
preceptor in two ways. In the first place he instructs us as regards
the character and functions of a good preceptor through the revealed shastras. In the second place He Himself sends to us the good preceptor
himself at the moment when we are at all likely to benefit by his
instructions. The good preceptor also comes to us when we reject him.
In such cases also it is certainly Krishna Who sends him to us for no
reason what-so-ever.
Krishna has revealed from eternity the tidings of the spiritual realm
in the form of transcendental sounds that have been handed down in the
records of the spiritual scriptures all over the world. The spiritual
scriptures help all those who are prepared to exercise this reason for
the purpose of finding not the relative but the Absolute Truth to find
out the proper instructor in accordance with their directions. The only
good preceptor is he who can make us really understand the spiritual
scriptures and they enable us realise the necessity and the nature of
submission to the processes laid down in them. But there is still every
chance of foul play. A very clever man or a magician may pass himself
off as a person who can properly explain the scriptures by means of his
greater knowledge or deceptive arts. It is very important, therefore,
that we should be on our guard against such tricks. The Scholar as well
as the magician pretend to explain the scriptures only in terms of the
object or happenings of this world. But the scriptures themselves
declare that they do not tell us at all of the thing of this world.
Those who are liable to be deluded by the arts of pervert yogis
who persuade themselves into believing that the spiritual is identical with
the perversion, distortion or defiance of the laws of physical nature.
The laws of physical nature are not unreal. They govern the relation of
all relative existences. In our present state it is therefore, always
possible for another who possesses the power or the knowledge to
demonstrate the merely tentative character of what we choose to regard
as our deepest convictions by exposing their insufficiency or
inapplicability. But such surprises as they belong to the realm of the
phenomenal, have nothing to do with the Absolute. Those who have an
unspiritual partiality for scholarship or for magic fall into the
clutches of the pseudo-religionists. The serious plight of these
victims of their own perversity will be realised from the fact that no
one can be delivered from the state of ignorance by the method of
compulsion. It is not possible to save the man who refuses on principle
to listen to the voice of reason. The empiric pedants are no exception
to this rule.
The plain meaning of the shastras should, therefore, be our
only guide in the search of the good preceptor when we actually feel the need of
his guidance. The zcriptures have defined the good preceptor as one who
himself leads the spiritual life. It is not any worldly qualifications
that make the good preceptor. It is by unreserved submission to such a
preceptor that we can be helped to reenter into the realm that is our
real home but which unfortunately is veritable terra incognita
to almost all of us at present and also impossible of access to one body
and mind alike which is the result of the disease of abuse of our
faculty of free reason and the consequent accumulation of a killing
load of worldly experiences which we have learnt to regard as the very
stuff of our existence.