Date: July_05_2002
Title: Non-stealing or Non-coveting Part 3
Category: Yamas and Niyamas
Duration: 10 min., 12 seconds
Date Given: June 11, 2002
Given by: Bodhinatha
As we have said, the tendency to acquire and hoard possessions for
ourselves, as well as, the willingness to steal to accomplish this in
subtle or gross ways, is part of our instinctive nature. We want to gather
up everything we can and keep it for ourselves to feel secure. Then we
have enough to eat and so forth. It is just part of the instinctive
nature we see in animals. Animals don't go around sharing their food
with one another. You put out the food and watch the animals fight over
it, right? It is just part of the instinctive nature. Harnessing it,
of course, is the challenge.
As we talked about, harnessing desire or the tendency to covet is a
good step toward restraining this tendency. If we don't want things
so much in the first place, we won't abuse credit. We won't get into
envy or jealousy regarding them. But, that is not enough. We can go
even further and fully conquer this instinctive aspect of our nature
through practicing charity, giving, Dana. Why is that? Because it is the
opposite. If we are giving things away, that is the opposite tendency of
hoarding everything for ourselves. Obviously, we can't be in both states
of mind at the same time. If we are generous, giving and thoughtful
of others, that is taking this tendency to be selfish, hoard things,
even steal them and really minimizing it in a very nice way.
The Kural has a whole chapter on charity as well. One verse, "Is it
because they are unaware of the joys of giving that hard-hearted men waste
their wealth by hoarding it?" That hits the point quite accurately. The
one extreme is, there we are gathering all this in and what are we doing
with it? We are hoarding it. Does it make us feel happy, joyful? Not
really. We can go the other direction and also be generous toward others,
give, think about others beyond selfish. It brings a lot more happiness
than just keeping it all for ourselves. The Tirukural calls it the
"joys of giving versus the emptiness of hoarding."
Gurudeva has a nice commentary on this principle. "To restrain one's
instinctive tendencies successfully, each must be replaced by a positive
observance. For each of the yamas, there is a positive replacement for
doing something else."
In this case, the tendency is to hoard everything for ourselves, be
selfish, steal, want what other people have, take it. The opposite
quality is to be generous, give away part of what we have, keep enough
for our family but be generous, give, think about the needs of others.
The first yama of course was non-injury. The tendency was hurting others
and a simple replacement for that one of course is helping others,
being helpful toward other people. Try to help them do well and succeed,
help meet their needs.
We can find an opposite quality for each of these tendencies we are
talking about.
We can even take the principle of charity one step further. Charity is
excellent but we can take it further by following certain practices
to spiritualize our household finances, to bring religion into the
financial world. In other words, it is one of the important qualities
of Hinduism. We don't separate the religious from the secular. There
is not one part of our life called secular life and another part of our
life called religious life. This part happens this part of the day and
that part happens during the other part of the day. No, it does not
work like that. The religion permeates life twenty-four hours a day,
even in our dreams. We are practicing our religion by what we do and
what we don't do.
So, we can bring in spiritual influences into our finances, household
finances and move us even further away from the tendency to covet. How
can we do that? Well, this is the description that we sometimes send
out on e-mail when devotees write in asking for advise in this area. So
I will just read what the e-mail says. It starts out in a very general
way. "Many Hindus go to the temple the first day of the year, attend
puja, archana and write the first check of the year to the temple as
a donation." Sometimes, we have Hindus coming here. We have two New
Years, so sometimes that happens January 1st and sometimes that happens
April 14th. But, usually each year, we have a few devotees coming here
and writing their first check on one of those two days. "The idea
behind this custom is that one's financial life for the coming year
is receiving the Gods blessings of siddhi and buddhi, meaning success
and wisdom. When applied to our livelihood, the blessing of siddhi
can increase prosperity, ensuring our income will be more abundant and
buddhi can give us the knowledge and discrimination to prudently handle
all the income received. We can apply this same principle effectively
to spiritualize our family's monthly income, by ceremoniously setting
aside the first portion for God. Each time you receive a paycheck, take
it into your shrine room, perform a Ganesha arati invoking His blessing
of siddhi and buddhi and write a check for a religious donation, a tithe
or lesser amount. Then thank Lord Ganesha for His blessings of abundance
and tell Him that you will spend the income according to your monthly
household budget."
That is a way of getting into a habit, shall we say, a simple way of
forming a habit, so that we don't get our paycheck, run out and spend it
wildly on our wish list without thought. But we first dedicate it to God,
make a religious contribution and then take a look at our budget. Say,
"Okay, how does this fit into my budget? How can I wisely spend this
money, not covetously spend it?"
One last thought, Gurudeva brings up one last area in asteya. It is an
interesting area, it is applying it in a broader sense. We can apply the
concept of stealing to community, national and global issues. The example
that Gurudeva chose was, "Major pollution of the environment is also a
form of stealing." Why is that? Who is stealing from whom here? Well, the
current generation is stealing from future generations. We are taking away
something and giving a big problem. We are taking away a clean earth and
we are passing on the obligation to fix this to a future generation. We
are not giving them any money to fix it or any solutions. We are just
doing it, polluting the environment and passing on this problem to
the future. So, it is like we are stealing from the children and the
children's children in a serious way, giving them a big problem.
That same concept applies to community, as well as, national issues. In
a community, a current generation can be causing problems for future
generations and not properly thinking about it, not taking on the
obligation to not cause these kinds of problems and pass them on with
no solutions and no funds to solve them.
So again, we don't have any shoplifters or bank robbers here this
morning. But we can see that there is a lot of subtlety in this concept
of non-stealing that we might not have thought about, without Gurudeva's
wonderful insights into it. Certainly, it is worth reflecting upon to see
if we can harness even further, this instinctive tendency to acquire,
hoard, stow away just for ourselves, even if it requires stealing and
replace it with generosity and a religious sense of giving.