History The earliest mention of
Tapas is in the Vedic texts. Atharva Veda verse 11.5.3 compares the process of spiritual rebirth of a student in care of his or her teacher, with the gestation process during the biological birth of a baby in a mother's womb.
Tapas is also found in the
Upanishads. The
Chāndogya Upaniṣad, for example, suggests that those who engage in ritualistic offerings to gods and priests will fail in their spiritual practice while those who engage in tapas and self-examination will succeed. The
Mundaka Upaniṣad also emphasizes the importance of
Tapas as a means to attain spiritual knowledge and realization: {{quote|By Truth can this Self be grasped, by Tapas, by Right Knowledge, and by a perpetually chaste life. Meditation and achievement of lucid knowledge is declared essential to self-realization in ancient scriptures. Texts by
Adi Sankara suggests
Tapas is important, but not sufficient for spiritual practice. Later Hindu scholars introduce a discussion of ‘false ascetic’, as one who go through the mechanics of tapas, without meditating on the nature of
Brahman. and the Upanishads. . Agni is considered a great
tapasvin, and symbolizes the heat and patience necessary to recreate and incubate life. According to Walter Kaelber, in certain translations of ancient Sanskrit documents
Tapas is interpreted as austerities and asceticism; however, this is frequently inadequate because it fails to reflect the context implied, which is of sexual heat or warmth that incubates the birth of life. The idea of linking austerity, exertion, fatigue and self-renunciation to the ancient idea of heat, brooding and inner devotion, comes from the observed labor every mother puts in caring for its embryo and delivering her baby, regardless of the life form. The concept and reference to 'egg hatching' is replaced in Sanskrit texts written in later centuries, with simply 'brooding' or 'incubation'. In ancient literature of Hinduism dedicated to love, desire, lust, seduction and sex, the root of the word
Tapas is commonly used. For example, in Atharva Veda, a
mantra recommended for a woman who wishes to win or compel a man's love is, 'Love's consuming longing, this passion this yearning, which the gods have poured, into the waters of life, I kindle for thee (
tam te tapāmi), by the law of Varuna.' Desire (
kāma) is homologized with the concept of
Tapas, to explain the feelings and inner energy that leads to sexual intercourse. Agnicayana, Satapatha Brahmana and other ancient texts similarly use the root of the word
Tapas to symbolize emotions, biological stages and a mother's effort from conception to the birth of a baby. Both meanings of
Tapas are found in various Hindu texts. In some ancient texts,
Tapas has the sense of ascetic mortification in a sense similar to other Indian religions, while in the
Bhagavad Gita and the
Yoga school of Hinduism, the term means self-training and virtuous living in a sense similar to Buddhism. In the
Puranas and the texts of the goddess tradition of Hinduism, the term is equivalent to a devotion with intense self-discipline, believed to yield special inner powers. In contemporary usage, any practice that includes hardship and requires perseverance – such as fasting during
Vrata – is called
Tapas.
Yoga and brahmacharya Patañjali, in his
Yoga Sūtra, lists
Tāpas as one of the
Niyamas (virtuous practices), and describes it in several sections such as 2.32, 2.43 and 4.1.
Tapas in the
Patanjali text and other Hindu texts on Yoga, states Benjamin Smith, is that which is "a means for perfection of the body and the organs through the lessening of impurities" and a foundation for a
yogi's pursuit of perfection.
Yama, niyama, asana and
pranayama from
Ashtanga yoga comes under tapas.
Tapas in the Hindu traditions is part of a stage of life, called
brahmacharya. The Vedic literature suggests
diksa (incubation of a student in a field of knowledge) requires
tapas, and
tapas is enabled by the state of brahmacharya. This state sometimes includes
tapas such as
vrata (fasting, sacrifice of food),
sram (philanthropic social work, sacrifice of income), silence (sacrifice of speech), and
asceticism (bare minimum living, sacrifice of comfort). Thus, during this process of spiritual rebirth and
diksa, the
tapas observed by a Brahmachari may include silence, fasting, seclusion, chastity, as well other activities. The goal of
tapas is to help focus the Brahmachari on meditation, observation of reality, reflection and spiritual rebirth. ==Jainism==