Adi Shankaracharya's Contribution to Vedic Scriptures
Published by Vedic Tithi Team
Adi Shankaracharya lived in 8th-century India and left behind a body of work that shaped how Hinduism is understood to this day. He did not write new scriptures. Instead, he explained the ones that already existed — clearly, logically, and in a way that connected them to each other.
His three main contributions were: writing commentaries on the core Vedic texts, building the philosophy of Advaita Vedanta into a complete system, and establishing four monastic centers (mathas) across India to keep the tradition alive.
Who Was Adi Shankaracharya?
Adi Shankaracharya was born around 788 CE in Kalady, a village in present-day Kerala. He is considered one of the most important figures in the history of Indian philosophy. He died young — around the age of 32 — but in that short life, he traveled the length of India, debated scholars from every tradition, and wrote texts that are still studied in Sanskrit universities today.
He is the principal teacher of Advaita Vedanta — the philosophy that says the individual self (Atman) and the universal reality (Brahman) are not two separate things. They are one.
Historical dates from standard Indological scholarship. See also: Encyclopaedia Britannica — Shankara
What Was the State of Vedic Knowledge Before Him?
By the 8th century CE, Vedic traditions had splintered. Different schools interpreted the Upanishads in different ways. Some focused only on ritual. Others were drifting toward Buddhist or Jain frameworks. There was no single, coherent voice explaining what the Vedic texts actually said — as a whole.
Shankaracharya's project was to show that the Upanishads, the Bhagavad Gita, and the Brahma Sutras — together called the Prasthanatrayi — all pointed to the same truth. His commentaries (Bhashyas) on these three texts became the standard reference for Vedanta philosophy.
His Commentaries on the Prasthanatrayi
Upanishad Bhashyas
Shankaracharya wrote detailed commentaries on the ten principal Upanishads, including the Brihadaranyaka, Chandogya, Taittiriya, Aitareya, Kena, and Mandukya. These are the oldest philosophical texts in the world and contain abstract ideas about consciousness, reality, and liberation.
His commentaries made these ideas accessible. He explained what each verse meant, how it connected to others, and why it pointed toward the non-dual view of reality.
Bhagavad Gita Bhashya
His commentary on the Bhagavad Gita emphasizes Jnana Yoga — the path of knowledge — as the direct route to liberation. He acknowledged Karma Yoga (right action) and Bhakti Yoga (devotion) as valid paths, but placed Jnana at the top as the final step.
Brahma Sutra Bhashya
The Brahma Sutras are terse aphorisms that summarize Upanishadic teaching. Without a good commentary, they are nearly impossible to understand. Shankaracharya's Brahma Sutra Bhashya is his most comprehensive philosophical work — a full systematic exposition of the Advaita Vedanta view.
What is Advaita Vedanta?
The word Advaita means "not two." The philosophy states:
- The individual soul (Atman) is identical with the ultimate reality (Brahman).
- The world of separate objects and people appears real but is ultimately a superimposition on this one reality — this is called maya.
- Liberation (Moksha) is not gained by doing something. It is the direct recognition of what you already are.
This was not a new idea — it was present in the Upanishads. What Shankaracharya did was build it into a logical, defensible system that could withstand philosophical challenge.
His Other Works
Beyond the major commentaries, he wrote several independent texts that are widely read today:
- Vivekachudamani (Crest Jewel of Discrimination) — a practical guide to Advaita Vedanta, written in verse
- Atmabodha (Self-Knowledge) — a short text on self-inquiry
- Upadeshasahasri (A Thousand Teachings) — his most systematic independent treatise
- Saundarya Lahari — a devotional hymn to the Goddess, showing that he saw Bhakti and Jnana as compatible
The Four Mathas
To ensure his tradition would survive him, Shankaracharya established four monastic centers (mathas) at the four corners of India:
| Matha | Location | Direction |
|---|---|---|
| Sringeri Sharada Peetham | Karnataka | South |
| Jyotirmatha | Uttarakhand | North |
| Govardhana Matha | Puri, Odisha | East |
| Dwaraka Sharada Peetham | Gujarat | West |
Each matha has a living head (Shankaracharya) who continues the tradition. All four are still active today.
His Relevance Today
Shankaracharya's Advaita Vedanta is the most widely studied school of Indian philosophy globally — in universities, meditation centers, and Vedanta societies from Chennai to California.
For a practitioner, his teachings offer something concrete:
- The source of suffering is mistaking the temporary for permanent — the body, relationships, status — for who you really are.
- When that mistake is corrected through inquiry and understanding, suffering loses its grip.
- This is not escapism. Shankaracharya was clear that ethical conduct and dharma are the foundation — without them, the mind is not fit for this inquiry.
Common Questions
Q: Did Shankaracharya reject devotion (Bhakti)?
A: No. He composed devotional hymns like the Saundarya Lahari and the Bhaja Govindam. He saw devotion as an important practice that prepares the mind for knowledge. His point was that knowledge (Jnana) is the final step — not that Bhakti is worthless.
Q: Is Advaita the same as Buddhism?
A: No. Shankaracharya explicitly debated Buddhist philosophers and argued against their positions. Advaita accepts the eternal reality of Brahman/Atman. Buddhism denies any permanent self. These are fundamentally different positions.
Q: What is the difference between Shankaracharya's Advaita and Ramanuja's Vishishtadvaita?
A: Ramanuja (11th–12th century CE) argued that the individual soul and God are real and distinct, though related. Shankaracharya's Advaita says they are ultimately identical. This was one of the major debates in classical Indian philosophy.
Q: Are the four mathas he established still active?
A: Yes. All four mathas — Sringeri, Jyotirmath, Puri, and Dwarka — are active today with a lineage of Shankaracharyas continuing his tradition.
Shankaracharya did not found a religion. He clarified one. His commentaries on the Prasthanatrayi gave the Vedic tradition a clear philosophical foundation. His mathas gave it institutional roots. His independent works gave it practical application.
He lived for about 32 years and produced a body of work that scholars and practitioners are still debating and applying 1,200 years later. That is the measure of his contribution.
