Vedas and Upanishads: Gayatri Mantra
Vedas and Upanishads: Gayatri Mantra
Gayatri Mantra
Om bhur bhuvah svaha tat savitur varenyam
bargo devasya dhimahi dhiyo yonah prachodayat
OM let us mediate on the blessed Divine Light, worthy of honor, that pervades our hearts.
May it illuminate all our possibilities, guide our intellect and enlighten our understanding.
The Vedas
The Vedas are the oldest spiritual scriptures of the world. Veda literally means “knowledge”, specifically the highest knowledge about God and
man. Vedas are the spiritual truth, said to have been a direct revelation from God through Dev Vani - the voice of God to Rishis (self-realised
saints) during their meditations. This truth was then passed on orally through an unbroken chain of a Master-Disciple relationship. Hence the
Vedas are also called Shruti, which means “das Gehörte” – “the things heard”. There are 4 Vedas: Rig, Sama, Yajur and Atharva Veda. The
Rishis who received them, and then passed them on were:
The Vedas were transmitted orally all the way up to Maharishi Ved Vyasa who then wrote them down. Vedas are as old as the Universe, and
are said to have been on Earth for at least 20,000 years. Rig-Veda and Sama-Veda were written in verse, Yajur-Veda in prose, and the Atharva-
Veda mainly in prose and partly in verse. The Vedas contain a total of more than 24,000 mantras. Rig-Veda, the oldest and most extensive,
contains 10,000 mantras. The hymns of the Rig-, Yajur- and Sama-Veda are dedicated to various expressions of the Divine (deities and gods of
nature) like gods of earth, fire, rain, etc., for receiving blessings of peace, happiness and prosperity. One part of the Vedas also consists of rules for
interpreting Vedic ceremonies and philosophical discussions about God, the soul and the afterlife. Each of the four Vedas consists of four parts,
which are called Veda-Samhita. Each Veda is characterized by a Mahavakya (maha – big, vakya – word) which transmits the essence of the
teaching about the union of Jiva – the Self and Brahman – the Absolute, the Highest Self.
The Upanishads
The Upanishads teach that in the whole Universe there is only one reality, and that is God. Everything that ever existed, exists and will exist in the
Universe originates from Him, and disappears back into Him, in the eternal cycle of creation, maintenance and destruction. He is the sun, the
moon and the stars, the planets, every living being, all living and non-living matter and every virtue, every vice, all the good and the bad, every
thought, every feeling and every act. He is time and space and all that exists in the Universe. . He is eternal within the Universe and
simultaneously He transcends it. He is unformed, eternal, boundless and omnipotent. He is saguna (manifest) and nirguna (unmanifest). He is
manifest in His creation and is unmanifest when all that is created disappears in Him. The highest and purest principle of God is His unmanifest
existence, when the whole Universe disappears in Him, when the sun, the moon, the stars, the planets, all animate and inanimate ceases to exist,
and time and space disappear. This unmanifest essence is the only existing reality. The Upanishads contain one of the highest ideas about God
and His relationship with human beings and the Universe. Rightly they are given the highest place among
the great religious philosophies of the world. The great philosopher Schopenhauer said: "In the whole
world, there is no study so beneficial and so elevating as that of the Upanishads. They were my comfort in
life and will be my consolation in death."
There are 108 most widely known Upanishads. Some of the most
famous are Brihadaranyaka Upanishad, Chandogya
Upanishad, Taittiriya Upanishad, Kena Upanishad, Iso
Upanishad, Mundaka Upanishad, Svetasvatara Upanishad and
Mandukya Upanishad. Each of these major Upanishads is
connected to one of the four Veda Samhitas. The idea ofthe one, unformed and infinite God, as the true
reality of the Universe, inseparable, and at the same time beyond everything, is based on the
philosophical discussions from the Upanishads. The teachings about the immortal soul, the law of karma,
the consequences of actions and the law of evolution of living beings through the process of rebirth
according to their own karma or actions, are based on the Upanishads.