Makara Sankranti (1)
In Sanskrit, Makara
Sankranti means the time when the sun crosses the tropic of Capricorn. The
day is of special significance to all those leading the spiritual life and
mention has been made of this commencement of this new period in such
scriptures as the Upanishads and the Bhagavad Gita. The sun comes to the
North, energising and invigorating all life wherever it is, and on whatever he
sheds his light. In esoteric parlance, in mystic terminology, the sun is
regarded as the presiding deity over the self of man, while the moon is the
presiding deity over the mind of man. The self or the soul is different from
the mind; the Atman and the Manas are differentiated by their
metaphysical and psychological characteristics, respectively.
The self of man is presided over by the Sun or Surya. The Sun is designated as Atma-Karaka. "Surya Atma Jagatas
Tasthushascha" says the Veda.
The Rig-Veda proclaims the spiritual
presiding principle in the Sun as the invigorator, energiser of the selves of
all created beings. That is the meaning of the Vedic prayer mentioned above. Of all the things that move and do
not move, of all that is organic or inorganic, of everything in creation, the
solar principle is the self, as it were, the pivot round which all individual
energies revolve. We live by the Sun and die if the Sun is not to be.
Spiritually envisaged, esoterically conceived, the Sun is not merely a huge orb
of atomic energy as the physicists would tell us, but a radiant mass of
life-giving vitality to everyone. The sun is not merely a heating principle,
like an electric heater or a fire-like burning mass, or a huge conflagration of
fire, because these cannot give you that energy which the Sun supplies to you.
I shall give you a small analogy to give you an idea as to what the Sun can
contain and does contain.
Do you know what the earth contains? Can you
imagine what energy, what vitality, what abundance, what resources are
contained in the earth! You have got gold, you have got diamonds, you have got
mineral resources under different parts and bowels of the earth, you have got
gas and petrol and what not; and where do you get this energy from, for the
sake of the living beings on earth? The trees vigorously rise from the earth,
sucking energy from the bottom of the earth, and they seek energy from above
from the rays of the Sun. When we geologically and physically look into the
structure of this earth, and chemically examine its contents, biologically
investigate into its resources, as a pure scientific mind, we will realise that
the earth is not a dead matter. It is energy-embodiment, on whose bounties we
are alive here. The food that we eat is not a dead stuff; otherwise it cannot
give us energy.
From where do we get energy? From the food that we
eat. From where do we get the food? From the earth. If energy is to come from
food, naturally the source of it must be full of energy. The earth cannot be
inanimate, as we generally dub it to be. It is not inorganic; there is
something organic and living, meaningful and significant in it and the earth
has been declared to be a part of the solar constitution, even many millions of
years ago. As our wise men tell us, once upon a time a mighty gigantic star
happened to rush by the side of the electro-magnetic field of the Sun, some
light years away from the Sun, of course, not merely a few miles. The impact of
this upon the orb of the Sun was such that it broke off a little piece of it.
That little piece, being a flaming, diverging,
powerful energy-block, rushing from the Sun boiling with the flame of what the
Sun is, is supposed to have come down after thousands of years, cooling down
gradually from the flaming condition in which it was to a cooler condition and
from the cooler condition to a still cooler condition, from that condition into
the gaseous condition, from the gaseous to the liquid condition and from the
liquid condition to the solid condition that we see today. So, all this
wonderful earth is nothing but a part of the Sun and our greatness can be
traced back to the greatness of the Sun which cannot be, by a logical
deduction, a mere physical or inorganic form as uninformed science may tell us.
Something wonderful and mysterious is there in the
Sun and there is some great significance in connecting the principle of the Sun
with the self of man, as there is also equal significance in the connection of
the moon with the mind of man. You know, during, the full-moon and the new-moon
days the mind gets affected. Those who are weaklings and who are not mentally
strong will feel this impact more than normal persons. Normal persons do not
feel it, but those who are not normal in their minds will feel much.
The moon, the stars, the sun and all the stellar
system exert a mutual influence amongst themselves. You know during the
full-moon the ocean rises up, wells up as if to greet the rising moon and,
naturally, the pull must be felt everywhere on earth, but you cannot see it.
Such is the invisible impact of the higher forces of nature, whose father is
the Sun, and when its influence is felt more and more, the self is supposed to
also exert influence in its activity, operation. So, this particular day, we
call Makara Sankranti, is holy.
The Upanishads
and the Bhagavadgita tell us that
those who die during these six months of the northern course of the Sun, rise
from the earthly entanglements to the higher regions presided over by noble
deities, finally piercing through the orb of the Sun, attain Salvation.
Crossing the barrier of the Sun does the soul cross the still higher regions of
resplendence and spiritual magnificence. The Upanishads and such scriptures describe that while the passage of
the moon is the passage of return to the earth, the passage through the Sun is
the passage to salvation, liberation of the spirit.
Those who cross the barrier of the Sun come not to
this mortal world again. They go to higher regions until the soul reaches
universal salvation, until the soul becomes everything, enters into everything
everywhere, as the Mundaka Upanishad
tells us. Seekers of Truth, aspirants on the path of Yoga, devotees of God, lovers of mankind, all these have to pay
tribute to the supreme father of energy, vital, not dead, which is Surya. "Suryah pratyaksha devata"
(The Sun is the visible God). If you have any visible God, it is the Sun before
you.
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