The Intertwined Nature of the Secular and the Spiritual (Swami Krishnananda)
The Spiritual Seek - Un podcast de The Spiritual Seek
Catégories:
https://spiritualseek.online/------------FAQ on the Unity of the Secular and SpiritualWhat is the traditional understanding of the "secular" and the "spiritual" and how has it manifested historically?Historically, particularly in European contexts, the secular and spiritual have been viewed as distinct and often opposing domains. The state, representing secular power, dealt with worldly affairs, while the church, representing spiritual authority, was concerned with matters of faith and the divine. This led to conflicts and divisions, as seen in the relationship between monarchs and the papacy. This division led to a feeling that engagement with the secular world was somehow separate from pursuing a spiritual life, and even detrimental to itDoes a true division between the secular and spiritual exist within a person?No, the idea of a strict separation between the secular and the spiritual is considered an illusion. A person is not composed of two distinct departments, one secular and the other spiritual, but rather an integrated whole. Our connection to society and the world is inherent, not external. Similarly, our aspirations for the divine are not separate from our lived experience but are intertwined with it. Trying to compartmentalize life into secular and spiritual aspects is an artificial distinction that doesn’t reflect reality.If there is no inherent separation, how does the idea of a "secular" realm arise?The idea of the secular emerges from a flawed perception rooted in a "baby mind" mentality. This mentality imagines God as being "above" and the world as being "below," leading to a sense of separation between the divine and the worldly. This is a limited view that does not acknowledge the omnipresence of the divine. Thinking of God as separate leads to a finite understanding of God, society and nature; creating a state of 'spiritual bankruptcy'.How does our involvement in society and nature relate to our spiritual life?Our engagement with society and nature is not separate from our spiritual journey but an integral part of it. We are not isolated individuals but a part of the vast web of human society and the natural world. Just as we cannot separate ourselves from our own bodies, we cannot separate ourselves from the world around us. True spirituality acknowledges our interconnectedness and involvement in this total operation, seeing society and nature as part of the same divine manifestation.If secular activities are not inherently separate, how should we understand actions and work in a spiritual context?Work, in a spiritual sense, is not just about ordinary actions (karma) which bind one through cause and effect, but rather about divine action (karma yoga). This means actions done with the awareness that our being is connected to the divine and the totality of existence. Like the sun’s activity being an expression of its being, our actions should be expressions of our connection to the divine. In this state, actions are not binding, but liberating, as they are emanations of pure existence.What is the nature of "true spirituality," and how does it affect our perception of the world?True spirituality is not about seeking an external God "above" or some distant realm. It is a vision of God and a recognition that everything, including oneself, is a manifestation of the divine. It involves seeing the world from God's perspective, as a self-contemplation of the whole, where nothing is separate. This vision of totality dissolves the illusion of separation between subject and object, the perceiver and the perceived, revealing their unity.What is Samadhi, and how does it relate to the unity of the secular and spiritual?Samadhi, often described as communion, is the state of experiencing...