Page:Essays On The Gita - Ghose - 1922.djvu/151

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WORKS AND SACRIFICE.
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tism was inclined to regard them as powers of the mental and material world opposed to our salvation (men, says the Upanishad, are the cattle of the gods, who do not desire him to know and be free) ; it saw the Divine as the immutable Brahman who has to be attained not by works of sacrifice and worship but by knowledge. Works only lead to material results and to an inferior Paradise; therefore thfay have to be re- nounced.

The Gita resolves this opposition by insisting that the Devas are only forms of the one Deva, the Ishwara, the Lord of all Yoga and worship and sacrificegand austerity, and if it is true that sacrifice offered t&he Devas leads only to material results and to Paradise, it is also true that sacrifice offered to the Ishwara leads beyond them to the great liberation. For the Lord and the immutable Brahman are not two different beings, but one and the same Being, and- whoever strives to- wards either, is striving towards that one divine Existence. All works in their totality find their culmina- tion and completeness in the knowledge of the Divine, sarvam karmdkhilam pdrtha jnine. pavisamdipyate. They are not an obstacle, but the way to the supreme know- ledge. Thus this opposition too is reconciled with the help of a large elucidation of the meaning of sacrifice. In fact its conflict is only a restricted form of the larger opposition between Yoga and Sankhya. Vedism is a specialised and narrow form of Yoga ; the principle of the Vedantists is identical with that of the Sankhyas, for to both the movement of salvation is the recoil of the intelligence, the buddhi, from the differentiating powers of Nature, from ego, mind, senses, from the subjective