The Vedanta Center of St. Petersburg,
Florida bases its teachings on the system of Vedanta, especially as
explained by Sri Ramakrishna (1836-1886) and his disciple Swami
Vivekananda (1863-1902) and demonstrated in their lives. Vedanta is the
philosophy that has evolved from the teachings of the Vedas,
which are a collection of ancient Indian scriptures -- the world's oldest
religious writings.
According to the Vedas, ultimate
reality is all-pervading, uncreated, self-luminous eternal spirit, the
final cause of the universe, the power behind all tangible forces, the
consciousness that animates all conscious beings. This is the central
philosophy of the Vedantist, and his religion consists of meditation on
this spirit and prayer for the guidance of his intellect along the path of
virtue and righteousness.
From the philosophical standpoint, Vedanta
is non-dualistic, and from the religious standpoint, monotheistic. The
Vedanta philosophy asserts the essential non-duality of God, soul and
universe, the apparent distinctions being created by names and forms
which, from the standpoint of ultimate reality, do not exist. Vedanta
accepts all religions as true and regards the various deities of the
different faiths as diverse manifestations of the one God.
According to Vedanta, religion is
experience and not mere acceptance of certain time-honored dogmas or
creeds. To know God is to become like God. We may quote scripture, engage
in rituals, perform social service, or pray with regularity, but unless we
realize the Divine spirit in our hearts, we are still phenomenal beings,
victims of the separative existence. One can experience God as tangibly
'as a fruit lying on the palm of one's hand,' which means that in this
very life we can suppress our lower nature, manifest our higher nature,
and become perfect. Through the experience of God, one's doubts disappear
and the 'knots of the heart are cut asunder.' By ridding himself of the
desires clinging to his heart, a mortal becomes immortal in this very
body. That the attainment of immortality is not the prerogative of a
chosen few but the birthright of all is the conviction of every follower
of Vedanta.
Vedanta asserts that Truth is
universal and all humankind and all existence are one. It teaches the
unity of Godhead, or ultimate Reality, and accepts every faith as a valid
means for its own followers to realize the Truth. The four cardinal
principles of Vedanta may be summed up as follows: the non-duality of the
Godhead, the divinity of the soul, the unity of existence and the harmony
of religions. On these four principles the faith of the Vedantist is
based.
The essential teachings of
Vedanta, as stated by Swami Vivekananda is: "Each soul is potentially
divine, the goal is to manifest this divinity within by controlling
nature: external and internal. Do this either by work, or worship, or
psychic control, or philosophy -- by one, or more, or all these -- and be
free. This is the whole of religion. Doctrines, or dogmas, or rituals, or
books, or temples, or forms, are but secondary details."