Brahman
Brahman est l'Être éternel et absolu, la conscience absolue et la félicité absolue. Brahman est le Soi de tous les êtres vivants. Brahman est le créateur, le conservateur, le destructeur ou le transformateur de toutes les choses. Dans la Bhagavad Gita, Krishna dit : "Brahman est ce qui est immuable et indépendant de toute cause autre que lui-même. Lorsque nous considérons Brahman comme logé dans l'être individuel, nous l'appelons l'Atman."[1]
The Kaivalyopanishad tells us: “That which is Supreme Brahman, the Self, the great support of the Universe, subtler than ... subtle, eternal, that alone Thou art. Thou art that Alone.” This affirmation, “That thou art,” “Tat-Tvam-Asi,” sums up the inner path of Hinduism—you are Brahman.
Chanting the OM draws the soul into union with Brahman and with the original Word who was with Brahman in the Beginning. Chanting the OM sends the soul back to her point of origin in the Great Central Sun. By the sounding of the Word, OM, the soul is repolarized to Brahman and recharged with the positive spin of the Atman primed for the Homeward journey as she reaps the karmas she has sown while filled with the gladness of her Lord.
Sources
Mark L. Prophet and Elizabeth Clare Prophet, The Masters and the Spiritual Path.
Elizabeth Clare Prophet, June 29, 1992.
- ↑ Bhagavad Gita 8:3, dans Swami Prabhavananda et Christopher Isherwood, traduction, The Song of God : Bhagavad-Gita (New York : New American Library, 1972), p. 74.