The Ego and the Avatar
Bhagavan Sri Sathya Sai Baba speaks here about the significance of Onam—a festival celebrated in Kerala—and its relevance to us all.
Bhagavatha represents the essence of all the Shastras (spiritual sciences), the truth proclaimed by all the Vedas (ancient revealed scriptures), and the goal. Bhagah means the omnipotence of Divinity. It also means that which is worthy of worship and meditation. Bha means effulgence. Ga means making it shine. Va means all-pervasive. Another meaning of Bhagah is Sambhartha and Bhartha. Sambhartha is one who creates the cosmos out of prakriti (nature). Bhartha is the protector of the created universe. Creation and protection are both covered by the term “Bhagavath.” Not only all material things in creation, but also all qualities like fame, knowledge, honor, health, charity, and sacrifice are properties of the Aishwarya (Divine).
Emperor Bali, the grandson of Prahlada, was the repository of all great qualities. He was a righteous ruler. There was no want in his realm. On the advice of his guru (preceptor), Shukracharya, he performed the Viswajit Yagna and became the ruler of the world. When Bali wanted to conquer Indraloka (Indra’s kingdom), Indra got frightened and sought Vishnu’s help to save him. Vishnu came to Bali as a Brahmana lad, Vamana, and sought from him the gift of three feet of land. Bali readily agreed to make the gift despite warnings from his guru that the person to whom he was making the offer was Lord Vishnu Himself. Bali felt that if the Lord of the universe came to him for a gift, there was no greater honor for him than to give it.
Immediately the dwarfish Vamana grew to cosmic proportions. By his first foot, he covered the earth. By his second foot he covered the heavens. He then asked Bali wherefrom he should get the third foot of ground. Bali begged the Lord to place His foot on his head.
The divine principle in man
While Emperor Bali felt supremely happy that the Lord’s sacred foot had been placed on his head, Shukracharya was burning with anger. He was the kind of guru who did not practice what he preached. Hence he had only one eye. Bali was greater than his guru because he practiced what he believed in. He was a true devotee of the Lord. He had only one defect—pride in his greatness. The Lord blessed him by destroying his ego.
This ego exists in every human being. As long as it remains, man cannot achieve anything good, or secure God’s grace. Bali shed his ego when he told the Lord that he had no more land to give after the Lord had measured earth and heaven by His two steps and that he was offering himself for the third step. “My ego had warped my mind. Lord, destroy that ego by placing Your redeeming foot on my head,” he said. The Lord by placing His foot on Bali and pressing him down to the nether world destroyed also his ego and thereby sanctified him.
The place where the Lord assumed the Cosmic form (Trivikrama) is known as Siddhashrama. This Siddhashrama is in every human being. The intelligence in man is his spiritual essence. The Vamana Avatar is the divine principle in man. The ego arising out of man’s consciousness represents Bali. The navel in which divinity resides is the Siddhashrama. It is called Siddhashrama because it is the place where all aspirations are realized.
Three worlds penetrate each other
The three feet of ground Vamana sought from Bali are: Bhuloka, Bhuvarloka, and Suvarloka. Bhuloka means the entire world constituted by the five senses and the five vital airs.
Bhuvarloka represents the subtle life force that is present in the atmosphere enveloping the world. It is the world of prana (life-force). Suvarloka is the atma (divine soul), the consciousness that permeates everything from the atom to the vastest thing in the cosmos. These three worlds are not one upon the other. They inter-penetrate each other the Suvarloka permeates the Bhuvarloka and the latter penetrates the Bhuloka. The three worlds represent symbolically the three bodies of man the gross body, the mental body, and the causal body.
Man must move forward from the gross body to the mental path and from the mental to the atmic state (self-realization). The inner meaning of the Onam [festival] celebration is that man must destroy the ego and achieve self-realization.
Source: Sathya Sai Speaks, Vol. 16