Listen

Description

Recorded at the Vedanta Society of Western Washington on September 30, 2012.

In this second talk on spiritual evolution, Swami Manishananda continues the Vedantic view that spirit itself does not evolve; rather, the mind—as subtle matter—changes through experience, often in ways not immediately visible. He compares spiritual growth to “punctuated equilibrium,” where long periods of apparent stillness are followed by sudden spurts of progress, emphasizing that steady effort works beneath the surface. He then places spiritual evolution in a larger framework by describing the parallel between the macrocosm and microcosm: the cosmos moves through cycles of manifestation, preservation, and dissolution, and the individual moves through birth, death, and rebirth until liberation. Drawing from Sri Ramakrishna, he explains that dissolution is not annihilation, but a return to a potential “seed” state from which the next cycle unfolds.

Swami Manishananda then presents two practical descriptions of spiritual evolution. First, through the three gunas—tamas (inertia), rajas (activity), and sattva (equilibrium)—the mind gradually matures from heaviness and restlessness toward clarity, compassion, self-control, and contentment. Second, he explains Sri Ramakrishna’s teaching on transforming the ego: rather than trying to eliminate it prematurely, one ripens the ego from worldly self-importance into the humble sense of being a servant or child of God, until it naturally falls away in transcendental consciousness. The talk concludes by affirming that everyone advances toward freedom in their own way and time, and that spiritual practice does not create divinity but removes the obstacles to its full manifestation.