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*  ** THE BRAHMA SUTRAS* *by Swami Sivananda*
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*  *CHAPTER 1: SAMANVAYA ADHYAYA* * SECTION 1: Antaradhikaranam: Topic 7
(Sutras 20-21)
*** * The being or person in the Sun and the eye is Brahman.**  *

*
Antastaddharmopadesat I.1.20 (20)*

* The being within (the Sun and the eye) is Brahman, because His attributes
are taught therein.*

*Antah: (Antaratma, the being within the sun and the eye); Tat Dharma: His
essential attribute; Upadesat: because of the teaching, as Sruti teaches.*

* The wonderful Purusha of Chhandogya Upanishad described in chapters 1, 6
and 7 is Brahman.*

*From the description in the Chhandogya Upanishad of the essential qualities
belonging to the Indwelling Spirit residing in the Sun and in the human eye,
it is to be understood that he is Brahman and not the individual soul. You
will find in Chhandogya Upanishad I-6-6, "Now that person bright as gold who
is seen within the sun, with beard bright as gold and hair bright as gold
altogether to the very tips of his nails, whose eyes are like blue lotus.
His name is 'Ut' because he has risen (Udita) above all evil. He transcends
all limitations. He also who knows this rises above all evil. So much with
reference to the Devas."*

*With reference to the body, "Now the person who is seen in the eye is Rik.
He is Sama. He is Uktha. He is Yajus. He is Brahman. His form is the same as
that of the former i.e. of the Being in the Sun. The joints of the one are
the joints of the other, the name of the one is the name of the other" Chh.
Up. I-7-5.*

*Do these texts refer to some special individual soul who by means of
knowledge and pious deeds has raised himself to an exalted state; or do they
refer to the eternally perfect supreme Brahman? The Purvapakshin says that
the reference is to an individual soul only, as the scripture speaks of a
definite shape, particular abode. Special features are attributed to the
person in the Sun, such as the possession of beard as bright as gold and so
on. The same characteristics belong to the being in the eye also.*

*On the contrary no shape can be attributed to the Supreme Lord, "That which
is without sound, without touch, without form, without decay" Kau. Up.
I-3-15.*

*Further a definite abode is stated, "He who is in the Sun. He who is in the
eye". This shows that an individual soul is meant. As regards the Supreme
Lord, he has no special abode, "Where does he rest? In his own glory" Chh.
Up. VII-24-1. "Like the ether he is Omnipresent, Eternal".*

*The power of the being in question is said to be limited. "He is the Lord
of the worlds beyond that and of the wishes of the Devas," shows that the
power of the being in the Sun is limited. "He is the Lord of the worlds
beneath that and of the wishes of men," shows that the power of the person
in the eye is limited. Whereas the power of the Supreme Lord is unlimited.
"He is the Lord of all, the King of all things, the Protector of all
things." This indicates that the Lord is free from all limitations.
Therefore the being in the Sun and in the eye cannot be the Supreme Lord.*

*This Sutra refutes the above objection of the Purvapakshin. The being
within the Sun and within the eye is not the individual soul, but the
Supreme Lord only. Why? Because His essential attributes are declared.*

*At first the name of the being within the Sun is stated, "His name is
'Ut'." Then it is declared, "He has risen above all evil". The same name is
then transferred to the being in the eye, "the name of the one is the name
of the other". Perfect freedom from sins is ascribed to the Supreme Self
only, the Self which is free from sin etc., **Apahatapapma** Chh. Up.
VIII-7. There is the passage, "He is Rik. He is Saman, Uktha, Yajus,
Brahman," which declares the being in the eye to be the Self, Saman and so
on. This is possible only if the being is the Lord, who as being the cause
of all, is to be regarded as the Self of all.*

*Further it is declared, "Rik and Saman are his joints" with reference to
the Devas, and "the joints of the one are the joints of the other with
reference to the body". This statement can be made only with reference to
that which is the Self of all.*

*The mention of a particular abode, viz., the Sun and the eye, of form with
a beard bright as gold and of a limitation of powers is only for the purpose
of meditation or Upasana. The Supreme Lord may assume through Maya any form
He likes in order to please thereby his devout worshippers to save and bless
them. Smriti also says, "That thou seest me O Narada, is the Maya emitted by
me. Do not then look on me endowed with the qualities of all beings." The
limitation of Brahman's powers which is due to the distinction of what
belongs to the Devas and what to the body, has reference to devout
meditation only. It is for the convenience of meditation that these
limitations are imagined in Brahman. In His essential or true nature He is
beyond them. It follows, therefore, that the Being which scripture states to
be within the eye and the Sun is the Supreme Lord.*

*
Bhedavyapadesachchanyah I.1.21 (21)*

* And there is another one (i.e. the Lord who is different from the
individual souls animating the Sun etc.) on account of the declaration of
distinction.*

*Bheda: difference; Vyapadesat:** because of declaration; Cha: and,
also; Anyah: is different, another, other than the Jiva or the individual
soul.*

* An argument in support of Sutra 20 is adduced.*

*Anyah: (Sarirat anyah:** other than the embodied individual soul). Moreover
there is one who is distinct from the individual souls which animate the Sun
and other bodies, viz., the Lord who rules within. The distinction between
the Lord and the individual souls is declared in the following passage of
the *

*
*

*Srutis, "He who dwells in the Sun and is within the Sun, whom the Sun does
not know, whose body the Sun is and who rules the Sun from within, is thy
Self, the ruler within, the immortal (Bri. Up. III-7-9). Here the expression
"He within the Sun whom the Sun does not know" clearly shows that the Ruler
within is distinct from that cognising individual soul whose body is the
sun. The text clearly indicates that the Supreme Lord is within the Sun and
yet different from the individual soul identifying itself with the Sun. This
confirms the view expressed in the previous Sutra. It is an established
conclusion that the passage under discussion gives a description of the
Supreme Lord only but not of any exalted Jiva.*
*--

நல்லதுசெய் நல்லதே நடக்கும்
जन सेवा इश्वर  सेवा
cnu.pne*

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