In continuation of three of my earlier articles,
God as both nirguna brahman and saguna brahman,
Experiencing God as he really is and
God as purna – the one infinite whole, the following is the fourth extract from the second chapter, ‘God’, of
The Truth of Otherness:
Thus, these three verses of
Guru Vachaka Kovai are an emphatic refutation of our separation from God, the one infinite
purna, the unlimited and absolute reality, who alone truly exists, and who is perfectly non-dual and therefore completely devoid of parts. In verse 888, Sri Ramana emphasises that the infinite
purna alone exists by quoting this Vedic
mantra, which says that even “when
purna is taken out of
purna,
purna whole alone remains”, and by adding that
purna alone remains not only then but also when
purna has united
purna. That is, whether anything appears to separate from it or unite with it, the infinite
purna in truth always exists alone, because whatever appears to separate from it or unite with it is in truth nothing but that
purna itself.
Then in verse 889 he explains that, since nothing other than that real
purna exists, there is nothing that could ever either separate from it or unite with it, and that therefore everything that appears to exist as other than it is in truth one with it. However, he does not conclude his explanation of this Vedic
mantra by saying merely that everything is one with the infinite reality, but goes one step further by stating clearly in verse 890 that everything except the infinite reality is a mere imagination and is therefore completely unreal.