Chapter 2. Contents of the Gita
Summarized
TEXT 12
na tv evaham jatu nasam
na tvam neme janadhipah
na caiva na bhavisyamah
sarve vayam atah param
na tvam neme janadhipah
na caiva na bhavisyamah
sarve vayam atah param
SYNONYMS
TRANSLATION
PURPORT
nityo nityanam cetanas cetananam
eko bahunam yo vidadhati kaman
tam atma-stham ye 'nupasyanti dhiras
tesam santih sasvati netaresam
(Katha 2.2.13)
eko bahunam yo vidadhati kaman
tam atma-stham ye 'nupasyanti dhiras
tesam santih sasvati netaresam
(Katha 2.2.13)
The
same Vedic truth given to Arjuna is given to all persons in the world who pose
themselves as very learned but factually have but a poor fund of knowledge. The
Lord says clearly that He Himself, Arjuna, and all the kings who are assembled
on the battlefield, are eternally individual beings and that the Lord is
eternally the maintainer of the individual living entities both in their
conditioned as well as in their liberated situations. The Supreme Personality
of Godhead is the supreme individual person, and Arjuna, the Lord's eternal
associate, and all the kings assembled there are individual, eternal persons.
It is not that they did not exist as individuals in the past, and it is not
that they will not remain eternal persons. Their individuality existed in the
past, and their individuality will continue in the future without interruption.
Therefore, there is no cause for lamentation for anyone.
The
Mayavadi theory that after liberation the individual soul, separated by the
covering of maya or illusion, will merge into
the impersonal Brahman and lose its individual existence is not supported
herein by Lord Krsna, the supreme authority. Nor is the theory that we only
think of individuality in the conditioned state supported herein. Krsna clearly
says herein that in the future also the individuality of the Lord and others,
as it is confirmed in the Upanisads, will continue eternally. This
statement of Krsna is authoritative because Krsna cannot be subject to
illusion. If individuality is not a fact, then Krsna would not have stressed it
so much--even for the future. The Mayavadi may argue that the individuality
spoken of by Krsna is not spiritual, but material. Even accepting the argument
that the individuality is material, then how can one distinguish Krsna's
individuality? Krsna affirms His individuality in the past and confirms His
individuality in the future also. He has confirmed His individuality in many
ways, and impersonal Brahman has been declared to be subordinate to Him. Krsna
has maintained spiritual individuality all along; if He is accepted as an
ordinary conditioned soul in individual consciousness, then HisBhagavad-gita has no value as authoritative
scripture. A common man with all the four defects of human frailty is unable to
teach that which is worth hearing. The Gita is above such literature. No mundane book
compares with the Bhagavad-gita. When one accepts Krsna as an
ordinary man, the Gita loses all importance. The
Mayavadi argues that the plurality mentioned in this verse is conventional and
that it refers to the body. But previous to this verse such a bodily conception
is already condemned. After condemning the bodily conception of the living
entities, how was it possible for Krsna to place a conventional proposition on
the body again? Therefore, individuality is maintained on spiritual grounds and
is thus confirmed by great acaryas like Sri Ramanuja and others.
It is clearly mentioned in many places in the Gita that this spiritual
individuality is understood by those who are devotees of the Lord. Those who
are envious of Krsna as the Supreme Personality of Godhead have no bona fide
access to the great literature. The nondevotee's approach to the teachings of
the Gita is something like bees licking
on a bottle of honey. One cannot have a taste of honey unless one opens the
bottle. Similarly, the mysticism of the Bhagavad-gita can be understood only by devotees,
and no one else can taste it, as it is stated in the Fourth Chapter of the
book. Nor can the Gita be touched by persons who envy
the very existence of the Lord. Therefore, the Mayavadi explanation of the Gita is a most misleading
presentation of the whole truth. Lord Caitanya has forbidden us to read
commentations made by the Mayavadis and warns that one who takes to such an
understanding of the Mayavadi philosophy loses all power to understand the real
mystery of the Gita. If individuality refers to the
empirical universe, then there is no need of teaching by the Lord. The
plurality of the individual soul and of the Lord is an eternal fact, and it is
confirmed by the Vedas as above mentioned.
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