Everything can be sacrificed for truth, but truth cannot be sacrificed for anything.
Renunciation is the background of all religious thought wherever it be, and you will always find that as this idea of renunciation lessens, the more will the senses creep into the field of religion, and spirituality will decrease in the same ratio.
Interpretation
What this quote means
Renunciation is essential to religious thought, and its decline leads to a focus on sensory experiences that diminish spirituality.
This quote by Swami Vivekananda highlights the importance of renunciation in the context of religious and spiritual life. He argues that as the commitment to renunciation weakens, people may become more consumed by worldly pleasures and sensory experiences, which, in turn, detracts from their spiritual growth and understanding. Essentially, Vivekananda suggests that true spirituality requires a degree of detachment from material desires.
Themes
In practice
Example use cases
During a speech on the importance of spirituality in daily life, one might reference this quote to emphasize the need for spiritual commitment.
More from Swami Vivekananda
All quotes →Rama, the ancient idol of the heroic ages, the embodiment of truth, of morality, the ideal son, the ideal husband, and above all, the ideal king, this Rama has been presented before us by the great sage Valmiki. No language can be purer, none chaster, none more beautiful, and at the same time simpler, than the language in which the great poet has depicted the life of Rama.
Hinduism threw away Buddhism after taking its sap. The attempt of all the Southern Acharyas was to effect a reconciliation between the two. Shankaracharya's teaching shows the influence of Buddhism. His disciples perverted his teaching and carried it to such an extreme point that some of the later reformers were right in calling the Acharya's followers "crypto-buddhists".
According to the law of nature, wherever there is an awakening of a new and stronger life, there it tries to conquer and take the place of the old and the decaying. Nature favours the dying out of the unfit and the survival of the fittest. The final result of such conflict between the priestly and the other classes has been mentioned already.
I have come to deal with principles. I have only to preach that God comes again and again, and that He came in India as Krishna, Rama, and Buddha, and that He will come again. It can almost be demonstrated that after each 500 years the world sinks, and a tremendous spiritual wave comes, and on the top of the wave is a Christ.
Salvation means knowing the truth. We do not become anything; we are what we are. Salvation [comes] by faith and not by work. It is a question of knowledge! You must know what you are, and it is done. The dream vanishes. This you [and others] are dreaming here. When they die, they go to [the] heaven [of their dream]. They live in that dream, and [when it ends], they take a nice body [here], and they are good people.
Similar quotes
I want an ending that's satisfying. I'm more of a classical writer than a modernist one in that I want the ending to be coherent and feel like an ending. I don't like when it just seems to putter out. I mean, life is chaotic enough.
We all have private ails. The troublemakers are they who need public cures for their private ails.
There are four things that we ought to do with the Word of God - admit it as the Word of God, commit it to our hearts and minds, submit to it, and transmit it to the world.
My thoughts are stars I cannot fathom into constellations.
It was that white cloak that soiled me, not the other way around.
Spiritual people don't float around all day on clouds of glory; they live in the real world and deal with real issues in real ways.