BHAGAVAD GITA - As It Is Original by His Divine Grace A.C.
Bhaktivedanta Swami (who later became known as Srila Prabhupada)
Day 4.
10.8.2012 Introduction
(Cont’d)
In the Bhagavad-gita, worship of different demigods
or rendering service to them is not approved. It is stated in the Seventh
Chapter, twentieth verse:
kamais tais tair hrta-jnanah prapadyante 'nya-devatah
tam tam niyamam asthaya prakrtya niyatah svaya
"Those
whose minds are distorted by material desires surrender unto demigods and
follow the particular rules and regulations of worship according to their own
natures." (Bg. 7.20) Here it is plainly said that those who are directed
by lust worship the demigods and not the Supreme Lord Krsna. When we mention
the name Krsna, we do not refer to any sectarian name. Krsna means
the highest pleasure, and it is confirmed that the Supreme Lord is the
reservoir or storehouse of all pleasure. We are all hankering after
pleasure. Ananda-mayo 'bhyasat (Vs. 1.1.12). The
living entities, like the Lord, are full of consciousness, and they are after
happiness. The Lord is perpetually happy, and if the living entities associate
with the Lord, cooperate with Him and take part in His association, then they
also become happy.
The
Lord descends to this mortal world to show His pastimes in Vrndavana, which are
full of happiness. When Lord Sri Krsna was in Vrndavana, His activities with
His cowherd boyfriends, with His damsel friends, with the inhabitants of
Vrndavana and with the cows were all full of happiness. The total population of
Vrndavana knew nothing but Krsna. But Lord Krsna even discouraged His father
Nanda Maharaja from worshiping the demigod Indra because He wanted to establish
the fact that people need not worship any demigod. They need only worship the
Supreme Lord because their ultimate goal is to return to His abode.
The
abode of Lord Sri Krsna is described in the Bhagavad-gita, Fifteenth
Chapter, sixth verse:
na tad bhasayate suryo na sasanko na pavakah
yad gatva na nivartante tad dhama paramam mama
"That
abode of Mine is not illumined by the sun or moon, nor by electricity and
anyone who reaches it never comes back to this material world." (Bg.
15.6)
This
verse gives a description of that eternal sky. Of course we have a material
conception of the sky, and we think of it in relationship to the sun, moon,
stars and so on, but in this verse the Lord states that in the eternal sky
there is no need for the sun nor for the moon nor fire of any kind because the
spiritual sky is already illuminated by the brahmajyoti, the
rays emanating from the Supreme Lord. We are trying with difficulty to reach
other planets, but it is not difficult to understand the abode of the Supreme
Lord. This abode is referred to as Goloka. In theBrahma-samhita it
is beautifully described: goloka eva nivasaty akhilatma-bhutah. The
Lord resides eternally in His abode Goloka, yet He can be approached from this
world, and to this end the Lord comes to manifest His real form, sac-cid-ananda-vigraha. When
He manifests this form, there is no need for our imagining what He looks like.
To discourage such imaginative speculation, He descends and exhibits Himself as
He is, as Syamasundara. Unfortunately, the less intelligent deride Him because
He comes as one of us and plays with us as a human being. But because of this
we should not consider that the Lord is one of us. It is by His potency that He
presents Himself in His real form before us and displays His pastimes, which
are prototypes of those pastimes found in His abode.
In
the effulgent rays of the spiritual sky there are innumerable planets floating.
The brahmajyoti emanates from the supreme abode, Krsnaloka,
and theanandamaya-cinmaya planets, which are not material, float in
those rays. The Lord says, na tad bhasayate suryo na sasanko na
pavakah. yad gatva na nivartante tad dhama paramam mama. One who can
approach that spiritual sky is not required to descend again to the material
sky. In the material sky, even if we approach the highest planet (Brahmaloka),
what to speak of the moon, we will find the same conditions of life, namely
birth, death, disease and old age. No planet in the material universe is free
from these four principles of material existence. Therefore the Lord says in Bhagavad-gita,
abrahma-bhuvanal lokah punar avartino 'rjuna. The living entities are
traveling from one planet to another, not by a mechanical arrangement but by a
spiritual process. This is also mentioned: yanti deva-vrata devan pitrn
yanti pitr-vratah. No mechanical arrangement is necessary if we want
interplanetary travel. The Gita instructs:yanti deva-vrata
devan. The moon, the sun and higher planets are called Svargaloka.
There are three different statuses of planets: higher, middle and lower
planetary systems. The earth belongs to the middle planetary system. Bhagavad-gita informs
us how to travel to the higher planetary systems (Devaloka) with a very simple
formula: yanti deva-vrata devan. One need only worship the
particular demigod of that particular planet and in that way go to the moon,
the sun or any of the higher planetary systems.
Yet Bhagavad-gita does
not advise us to go to any of the planets in this material world because even
if we go to Brahmaloka, the highest planet, through some sort of mechanical
contrivance by maybe traveling for forty thousand years (and who would live
that long?), we will still find the material inconveniences of birth, death,
disease and old age. But one who wants to approach the supreme planet,
Krsnaloka, or any of the other planets within the spiritual sky, will not meet
with these material inconveniences. Amongst all of the planets in the spiritual
sky there is one supreme planet called Goloka Vrndavana, which is the original
planet in the abode of the original Personality of Godhead Sri Krsna. All of
this information is given in Bhagavad-gita, and we are given
through its instruction information how to leave the material world and begin a
truly blissful life in the spiritual sky.
In
the Fifteenth Chapter of the Bhagavad-gita, the real picture
of the material world is given. It is said there:
urdhva-mulam adhah-sakham asvattham prahur avyayam
chandamsi yasya parnani yas tam veda sa veda-vit
"The
Supreme Lord said: There is a banyan tree which has its roots upward and its
branches down, and the Vedic hymns are its leaves. One who knows this tree is
the knower of the Vedas." (Bg 15.1) Here the material world is
described as a tree whose roots are upwards and branches are below. We have
experience of a tree whose roots are upward: if one stands on the bank of a
river or any reservoir of water, he can see that the trees reflected in the
water are upside down. The branches go downward and the roots upward.
Similarly, this material world is a reflection of the spiritual world. The
material world is but a shadow of reality. In the shadow there is no reality or
substantiality, but from the shadow we can understand that there is substance
and reality. In the desert there is no water, but the mirage suggests that
there is such a thing as water. In the material world there is no water, there
is no happiness, but the real water of actual happiness is there in the
spiritual world.
The
Lord suggests that we attain the spiritual world in the following manner:
nirmana-moha
jita-sanga-dosa
adhyatma-nitya vinivrtta-kamah
dvandvair vimuktah sukha-duhkha-samjnair
gacchanty amudhah padam avyayam tat
That padam avyayam or eternal kingdom can
be reached by one who isnirmana-moha. What does this mean? We are
after designations. Someone wants to become a son, someone wants to become
"lord," someone wants to become the president or a rich man or a king
or something else. As long as we are attached to these designations, we are
attached to the body because designations belong to the body. But we are not
these bodies, and realizing this is the first stage in spiritual realization.
We are associated with the three modes of material nature, but we must become
detached through devotional service to the Lord. If we are not attached to devotional
service to the Lord, then we cannot become detached from the modes of material
nature. Designations and attachments are due to our lust and desire, our
wanting to lord it over the material nature. As long as we do not give up this
propensity of lording it over material nature, there is no possibility of
returning to the kingdom of the Supreme, the sanatana-dhama. That
eternal kingdom, which is never destroyed, can be approached by one who is not
bewildered by the attractions of false material enjoyments, who is situated in
the service of the Supreme Lord. One so situated can easily approach that
supreme abode.
Elsewhere
in the Gita it is stated:
avyakto 'ksara ity uktas tam ahuh paramam gatim
yam prapya na nivartante tad dhama paramam mama
Avyakta means
unmanifested. Not even all of the material world is manifested before us. Our
senses are so imperfect that we cannot even see all of the stars within this
material universe. In Vedic literature we can receive much information about
all the planets, and we can believe it or not believe it. All of the important
planets are described in Vedic literatures, especially Srimad-Bhagavatam, and
the spiritual world, which is beyond this material sky, is described as avyakta,unmanifested.
One should desire and hanker after that supreme kingdom, for when one attains
that kingdom, he does not have to return to this material world.
Next,
one may raise the question of how one goes about approaching that abode of the
Supreme Lord. Information of this is given in the Eighth Chapter. It is said
there:
anta-kale ca mam eva smaran muktva kalevaram
yah prayati sa mad-bhavam yati nasty atra samsayah
"Anyone
who quits his body, at the end of life, remembering Me, attains immediately to
My nature; and there is no doubt of this." (Bg. 8.5) One who thinks of
Krsna at the time of his death goes to Krsna. One must remember the form of
Krsna; if he quits his body thinking of this form, he approaches the spiritual
kingdom. Mad-bhavam refers to the supreme nature of the Supreme
Being. The Supreme Being is sac-cid-ananda-vigraha--eternal, full
of knowledge and bliss. Our present body is not sac-cid-ananda. It
is asat, not sat.It is not eternal; it is
perishable. It is not cit, full of knowledge, but it is full
of ignorance. We have no knowledge of the spiritual kingdom, nor do we even
have perfect knowledge of this material world where there are so many things
unknown to us. The body is also nirananda; instead of being
full of bliss it is full of misery. All of the miseries we experience in the
material world arise from the body, but one who leaves this body thinking of
the Supreme Personality of Godhead at once attains a sac-cid-ananda body,
as is promised in the fifth verse of the Eight Chapter where Lord
Krsna says, "He attains My nature."
The
process of quitting this body and getting another body in the material world is
also organized. A man dies after it has been decided what form of body he will
have in the next life. Higher authorities, not the living entity himself, make
this decision. According to our activities in this life, we either rise or
sink. This life is a preparation for the next life. If we can prepare,
therefore, in this life to get promotion to the kingdom of God, then surely,
after quitting this material body, we will attain a spiritual body just like
the Lord.
As
explained before, there are different kinds of transcendentalists, thebrahmavadi,
paramatmavadi, and the devotee, and, as mentioned, in thebrahmajyoti (spiritual
sky) there are innumerable spiritual planets. The number of these planets is
far, far greater than all of the planets of this material world. This material
world has been approximated as only one quarter of the creation. In this
material segment there are millions and billions of universes with trillions of
planets and suns, stars and moons. But this whole material creation is only a
fragment of the total creation. Most of the creation is in the spiritual sky.
One who desires to merge into the existence of the Supreme Brahman is at once
transferred to thebrahmajyoti of the Supreme Lord and thus attains
the spiritual sky. The devotee, who wants to enjoy the association of the Lord,
enters into the Vaikuntha planets, which are innumerable, and the Supreme Lord
by His plenary expansions as Narayana with four hands and with different names
like Pradyumna, Aniruddha, Govinda, etc., associates with him there. Therefore
at the end of life the transcendentalists either think of the brahmajyoti, the
Paramatma or the Supreme Personality of Godhead Sri Krsna. In all cases they
enter into the spiritual sky, but only the devotee, or he who is in personal
touch with the Supreme Lord, enters into the Vaikuntha planets. The Lord
further adds that of this "there is no doubt." This must be believed
firmly. We should not reject that which does not tally with our imagination;
our attitude should be that of Arjuna: "I believe everything that You have
said." Therefore when the Lord says that at the time of death whoever
thinks of Him as Brahman or Paramatma or as the Personality of Godhead
certainly enters into the spiritual sky, there is no doubt about it. There is
no question of disbelieving it.
The
information on how to think of the Supreme Being at the time of death is also
given in the Gita:
yam yam vapi smaran bhavam tyajaty ante kalevaram
tam tam evaiti kaunteya sada tad-bhava-bhavitah
"In
whatever condition one quits his present body, in his next life he will attain
to that state of being without fail." (Bg. 8.6) Material nature is a
display of one of the energies of the Supreme Lord. In the Visnu Purana the
total energies of the Supreme Lord as Visnu-saktih para prokta, etc.,
are delineated. The Supreme Lord has diverse and innumerable energies which are
beyond our conception; however, great learned sages or liberated souls have
studied these energies and have analyzed them into three parts. All of the
energies are of visnu-sakti, that is to say they are different
potencies of Lord Visnu. That energy is para,transcendental. Living
entities also belong to the superior energy, as has already been explained. The
other energies, or material energies, are in the mode of ignorance. At the time
of death we can either remain in the inferior energy of this material world, or
we can transfer to the energy of the spiritual world.
In
life we are accustomed to thinking either of the material or the spiritual
energy. There are so many literatures which fill our thoughts with the material
energy--newspapers, novels, etc. Our thinking, which is now absorbed in these literatures,
must be transferred to the Vedic literatures. The great sages, therefore, have
written so many Vedic literatures such as the Puranas, etc.
The Puranasare not imaginative; they are historical records. In
the Caitanya-caritamrta there is the following verse:
maya-mugdha jivera nahi svatah krsna-jnana
jivere krpaya kaila krsna veda-purana
(Cc. Madhya 20.122)
The
forgetful living entities or conditioned souls have forgotten their
relationship with the Supreme Lord, and they are engrossed in thinking of
material activities. Just to transfer their thinking power to the spiritual
sky, Krsna has given a great number of Vedic literatures. First he divided
the Vedas into four, then he explained them in the Puranas, and
for less capable people he wrote theMahabharata. In the Mahabharata there
is given the Bhagavad-gita. Then all Vedic literature is
summarized in the Vedanta-sutra, and for future guidance he
gave a natural commentation on the Vedanta-sutra, called Srimad-Bhagavatam.We
must always engage our minds in reading these Vedic literatures. Just as
materialists engage their minds in reading newspapers, magazines and so many
materialistic literatures, we must transfer our reading to these literatures
which are given to us by Vyasadeva; in that way it will be possible for us to
remember the Supreme Lord at the time of death. That is the only way suggested
by the Lord, and He guarantees the result: "There is no doubt." (Bg.
8.7)
tasmat sarvesu kalesu mam anusmara yudhya ca
mayy arpita-mano-buddhir mam evaisyasy asamsayah
"Therefore,
Arjuna, you should always think of Me, and at the same time you should continue
your prescribed duty and fight. With your mind and activities always fixed on
Me, and everything engaged in Me, you will attain to Me without any
doubt."
He
does not advise Arjuna to simply remember Him and give up his occupation. No,
the Lord never suggests anything impractical. In this material world, in order
to maintain the body one has to work. Human society is divided, according to work,
into four divisions of social order--brahmana, ksatriya, vaisya, sudra. The brahmana class
or intelligent class is working in one way, theksatriya or
administrative class is working in another way, and the mercantile class and
the laborers are all tending to their specific duties. In the human society,
whether one is a laborer, merchant, warrior, administrator, or farmer, or even
if one belongs to the highest class and is a literary man, a scientist or a
theologian, he has to work in order to maintain his existence. The Lord
therefore tells Arjuna that he need not give up his occupation, but while he is
engaged in his occupation he should remember Krsna. If he doesn't practice
remembering Krsna while he is struggling for existence, then it will not be
possible for him to remember Krsna at the time of death. Lord Caitanya also
advises this. He says that one should practice remembering the Lord by chanting
the names of the Lord always. The names of the Lord and the Lord are
nondifferent. So Lord Krsna's instructions to Arjuna to "remember Me"
and Lord Caitanya's injunction to always "chant the names of Lord
Krsna" are the same instruction. There is no difference, because Krsna and
Krsna's name are nondifferent. In the absolute status there is no difference
between reference and referent. Therefore we have to practice remembering the
Lord always, twenty-four hours a day, by chanting His names and molding our
life's activities in such a way that we can remember Him always.
How
is this possible? The acaryas give the following example. If a
married woman is attached to another man, or if a man has an attachment for a
woman other than his wife, then the attachment is to be considered very strong.
One with such an attachment is always thinking of the loved one. The wife who
is thinking of her lover is always thinking of meeting him, even while she is
carrying out her household chores. In fact, she carries out her household work
even more carefully so her husband will not suspect her attachment. Similarly,
we should always remember the supreme lover, Sri Krsna, and at the same time
perform our material duties very nicely. A strong sense of love is required
here. If we have a strong sense of love for the Supreme Lord, then we can
discharge our duty and at the same time remember Him. But we have to develop
that sense of love. Arjuna, for instance, was always thinking of Krsna; he was
the constant companion of Krsna, and at the same time he was a warrior. Krsna
did not advise him to give up fighting and go to the forest to meditate. When
Lord Krsna delineates the yogasystem to Arjuna, Arjuna says that
the practice of this system is not possible for him.
arjuna uvaca
yo 'yam yogas tvaya proktah samyena madhusudana
etasyaham na pasyami cancalatvat sthitim sthiram
"Arjuna
said, O Madhusudana, the system of yoga which You have
summarized appears impractical and unendurable to me, for the mind is restless
and unsteady." (Bg. 6.33)
But
the Lord says:
yoginam api sarvesam mad-gatenantaratmana
sraddhavan bhajate yo mam sa me yuktatamo matah
"Of
all yogis, he who always abides in Me with great faith,
worshiping Me in transcendental loving service, is most intimately united with
Me in yoga, and is the highest of all." (Bg. 6.47) So one
who thinks of the Supreme Lord always is the greatest yogi, the
supermost jnani, and the greatest devotee at the same time.
The Lord further tells Arjuna that as a ksatriya he cannot
give up his fighting, but if Arjuna fights remembering Krsna, then he will be
able to remember Him at the time of death. But one must be completely
surrendered in the transcendental loving service of the Lord.
(To be continued)
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