Table of Contents
Introduction
Man prides himself on being a creature of reason, above the lowly
beasts. Yet it seems that when he applies his reason to unlocking the secrets
of nature for his benefit, he sinks deeper and deeper into a quagmire of
intractable problems. The internal combustion engine gets us where we're going
faster, but also results in choking air pollution, the greenhouse effect, and a
dangerous dependence on oil. Harnessing the atom gives us cheap energy, but
also leads to weapons of mass destruction, Chernobyl, and a rising tide of
dangerous radioactive waste. Modern agribusiness produces a dizzying variety
and abundance of food at the supermarket, but also results in the death of the
family farm, the pollution of ground water, the loss of precious topsoil, and
many other problems.
It's clear we're missing something in our attempts to harness the laws
of nature for our own purposes. What is that "something"? We find out
in the very first mantra of the Isopanisad, the foremost of ancient India's
books of wisdom known as the Upanisads: "Everything in this creation is
owned and controlled by the Lord. One should therefore accept only those things
necessary for himself, which are set aside as his quota, and one should not
accept other things, knowing well to whom they belong."
In nature we see this principle at work. Nature's arrangement, set up by
the Lord, maintains the birds and beasts: the elephant eats his fifty kilos per
day, the ant his few grains. If man doesn't interfere, the natural balance
sustains all creatures.
Any agriculturalist will tell you the earth can produce enough food to
feed ten times the present human population. Yet political intrigues and wars,
unfair distribution of land, the production of cash crops like tobacco, tea,
and coffee instead of food, and erosion due to misuse ensure that millions go
hungry, even in wealthy countries like the United States.
We must understand the laws of nature from the viewpoint of the Supreme
Lord, who has created these laws. In His eyes all the earth's
inhabitants--whether creatures of the land, water, or air--are His sons and daughters.
Yet we, the human inhabitants, the "most advanced" of His creatures,
treat these sons and daughters with great cruelty, from the practice of animal
slaughter to destruction of the rain forests. Is it any wonder that we suffer
an unending series of natural disasters, wars, epidemics, famines, and the
like?
The source of our problem is the desire for sense gratification beyond
the consideration of anyone else's rights. These rights are the rights of the
child in relation to the father. Every child has the right to share the wealth
of his father. So creating a brotherhood of all creatures on earth depends on
understanding the universal fatherhood of God.
As we have seen, the Vedic literature declares that the Supreme Lord
owns and controls the entire creation. Not a blade of grass moves without His
sanction. He is the complete whole. Then what is our position? Just as a king
is no king without subjects, God is no God without His servants. He is the
supreme enjoyer, and we are meant to take part in His enjoyment through service
to Him, not by trying to enjoy separately. He is omnipotent and thus completely
independent. Our minute independence is a tiny reflection of His total
independence. It is our misuse of that minute independence and our attempt to
enjoy separate from Him that have resulted in our current predicament.
Why do we misuse our independence? Because we are ignorant of our real
nature. The first lesson of the Vedic wisdom is that we are not bodies but
rather spirit souls--minute particles of consciousness dwelling within the body
and animating it. Just as a car is a machine that allows a driver to travel
from point A to point B, the body is a machine that allows the spirit soul to
act and to experience sensations and thoughts within the Lord's material
nature. When we understand our true identity as spiritual beings, part and
parcel of the Supreme Spirit, God, we understand that we are meant to serve Him
just as the hand or foot serves the whole body.
Our problem, however, is that we forget our identity separate from the
body and instead misidentify ourselves with it. If a person happens to be born
in America he considers himself an American, if he is born in France he
considers himself a Frenchman, and so on. We also identify ourselves according
to our sex, race, creed, social status, etc. But all these qualities apply only
to the body, not the soul. Therefore embracing them as our true identity causes
us to forget the Lord and our relationship with Him, and to see ourselves as
independent enjoyers of His material nature.
The Vedic literature explains that human activity, when devoid of
service to the Lord, is governed by a subtle law known as the law of karma.
This is the familiar law of action and reaction as it pertains to what we do in
this world and the enjoyment or suffering we experience as a result. If I cause
pain to another living being, then as surely as the wheel of life turns, I will
be forced to suffer similar pain. And if I bring happiness to another, a like
pleasure awaits me. At every second, with every breath, our activities in this
material world cause enjoyment and suffering. To facilitate these endless
actions and reactions, there has to be more than just one life. There has to be
reincarnation.
Until recently the idea of reincarnation, while universally accepted in
India and other Eastern countries, had found few adherents in the West. The
Church banned the philosophy of reincarnation centuries ago. This is a long
story dating as far back as the history of the early Christian Church between 300
A.D. and 600 A.D. Recounting this controversy is not within the scope of this
book, but the denial of this important concept has left a void in the world
view of the Western peoples.
However, in the last decade or so many thinkers in the West have begun
to take the idea of reincarnation seriously. For example, Dr. Michael Sabom of
Emory University Medical School has written a book entitled Recollections of
Death: A Medical Investigation (1982), which details his studies confirming the
out-of-body experiences reported by cardiac arrest patients. Sabom writes,
"Could the mind which splits apart from the physical brain be, in essence,
the soul, which continues to exist after the final bodily death, according to
some religious doctrines?"
And Dr. Ian Stevenson, a psychiatrist at the University of Virginia, in
his book Twenty Cases Suggestive of Reincarnation (1966), has documented and
verified past-life memories in young children. Other studies using such methods
as hypnotic regression indicate that the idea of reincarnation may soon gain
acceptance among mainstream scientists in the West.
The Vedic literature makes reincarnation of the soul a central feature
in its explanation of human destiny. And the logic is obvious when we consider
a simple question like the following: Why is one child born to wealthy parents
in the United States, while another is born to starving peasants in Ethiopia?
Only the doctrine of karma and reincarnation--reward and punishment carried
over many lifetimes--answers this question easily.The Laws of Nature: An
Infallible Justice has been compiled primarily from two sources. The first is a
series of talks given on the Sri Isopanisad by His Divine Grace A. C.
Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada (see "The Author," p. 84). Delivered
in Los Angeles in the spring of 1970, these talks provide an illuminating
account of how the universe really operates. The second source is Srila
Prabhupada's commentated translation of the Srimad-Bhagavatam. From the Third
Canto of this monumental work we here reproduce Chapter Thirty, titled
"Description by Lord Kapila of Adverse Fruitive Activities." In this
section we learn the fate of the sinful soul who transgresses the laws of God's
nature and incurs punishment according to the law of karma.
In one of his Isopanisad talks, Srila Prabhupada says, "If you do
good work, you will have so-called enjoyment in your next life--but you will
remain bound up in the cycle of birth and death. And if you do bad work, then
you will have to suffer the sinful reactions and also remain bound up in birth
and death. But if you work for Krsna, there are no such reactions, good or bad,
and at the time of death you will return to Krsna. This is the only way to
break the bonds of karma."
And this is the only way for society as a whole to mitigate the
sufferings mentioned earlier. While we are in this world there is no getting
rid of suffering al-together, for, as the Vedic teachings recognize, this
material world is by nature a place of suffering. Ultimately we are powerless
in the midst of a vast array of natural forces. The hope, therefore, is to know
and follow the will of the Supreme Lord, the master of nature. Only in this way
can we transcend the laws of nature, end the cycle of reincarnation, and attain
the perfection of life--love of God and a place in His kingdom.
Chapter 1
God and The Law of Karma
Among the vast ancient Sanskrit writings known as the Vedas, the 108
Upanisads contain the philosophical essence. And among all the Upanisads, the
Isopanisad is considered the foremost. In the following essay, based on talks
Srila Prabhupada gave on the Isopanisad in 1968, we learn the truth about the
Supreme Lord, the laws governing His material and spiritual energies, and how
to break free of the bondage of karma.
The Isopanisad states that the Supreme Personality of Godhead is
"perfect and complete." Part of the Lord's complete arrangement for
this material world is his process of creation, maintenance, and destruction.
Every living being in this material world has a fixed schedule of six changes:
birth, growth, maintenance, the production of by-products, diminution, and
destruction. This is the law of material nature. A flower is born as a bud. It
grows, remains fresh for two or three days, produces a seed, gradually withers,
and then is finished. You cannot stop this by your so-called material science.
To try to do so is avidya, ignorance.
Sometimes people foolishly think that by scientific advancement man will
become immortal. This is nonsense. You cannot stop the material laws. Therefore
in the Bhagavad-gita (7.14) Lord Krsna says that the material energy is
duratyaya, impossible to overcome by material means.
Material nature consists of three modes, or gunas: sattva-guna,
rajo-guna, and tamo-guna, or the modes of goodness, passion, and ignorance.
Another meaning of guna is "rope." Rope is made by twisting fiber in
a threefold process. First the fiber is twisted in three small strands, then three
of them are twisted together, then again three of those are twisted together.
In this way the rope becomes very strong. Similarly, the three modes of
nature--goodness, passion, and ignorance--are mixed, after which they produce
some by-product. Then they are mixed again, and then again. Thus they are
"twisted together" innumerable times.
In this way the material energy binds you more and more. By your own
efforts you cannot get out of this bondage, which is known as pavarga. Pa-varga
is the fifth set of letters in the Sanskrit Devanagari alphabet. It contains
the letters pa, pha, ba, bha, and ma. Pa stands for parisrama, "hard
labor." Every living entity in this world is struggling very hard to
maintain himself and survive. This is called the hard struggle for existence.
Pha stands for phena, "foam." When a horse works very hard, foam
comes out of its mouth. Similarly, when we are tired from working very hard,
our tongue may become dry and some foam forms in our mouth. Everyone is working
very hard for sense gratification--so much so that foam is coming from their
mouth. Ba represents bandha, "bondage." In spite of all our efforts,
we remain bound up by the ropes of the material modes of nature. Bha stands for
bhaya, "fear." In material life, one is always in a blazing fire of
fear, since no one knows what will happen next. And ma represents mrtyu,
"death." All our hopes and plans for happiness and security in this
world are ended by death.
So, Krsna consciousness nullifies this pavarga process. In other words,
by taking to Krsna consciousness one attains apavarga, where there is no hard
struggle for existence and no material bondage, fear, or death. Pavarga
symptomizes this material world, but when you add the prefix "a" to
pavarga, that means it is nullified. Our Krsna consciousness movement is the
path of apavarga.
Unfortunately, people do not know of these things, and therefore they
are wasting their lives. This modern civilization is a soul-killing
civilization; people are killing themselves because they do not know what real
life is. They are simply living like animals. The animal does not know what
life is, so he simply works under the laws of nature, undergoing gradual
evolution. But when you get this human form of life, you have a responsibility
to live in a different way. Here is a chance for you to become Krsna conscious
and solve all problems. But if you don't--if you continue to act like
animals--you will again have to enter the cycle of birth and death and
transmigrate through 8,400,000 species of life. It will take many, many
millions of years to come back to the human form of life. For example, the
sunshine you are seeing now you will not see again until after twenty-four
hours. Everything in nature moves in a cycle. So if you lose this opportunity of
elevating yourself, then again you must enter the cycle of transmigration.
Nature's law is very strong. Therefore we are opening so many centers so that
people may take advantage of this International Society for Krishna
Consciousness and elevate themselves.
It is important to take to Krsna consciousness immediately, because we
do not know how much time is left before death. When your time in this body
expires, no one can stop your death. The arrangement of material nature is so
strong. You cannot say, "Let me remain." Actually, people sometimes
request like that. When I was in Allahabad, an old friend who was very rich was
dying. At that time he begged the doctor, "Can't you give me at least four
more years to live? I have some plans which I could not finish." You see.
This is foolishness. Everyone thinks, "Oh, I have to do this. I have to do
that." No. Neither the doctors nor the scientists can check death:
"Oh, no, sir. Not four years, not even four minutes. You have to go immediately."
This is the law. So before that moment comes, one should be very careful to
become realized in Krsna consciousness. You should realize Krsna consciousness
very quickly. Before your next death comes, you must finish your business. That
is intelligence. Otherwise you will suffer defeat.
The Isopanisad states that whatever emanates from the complete
whole--the Supreme Lord--is also complete in itself. Therefore if you want to
take advantage of your life and become Krsna conscious, there is complete
facility. But you have to come to the point of taking up the practice. Krsna
consciousness is not theoretical; it is practical. All experiments have already
been performed. So, as indicated in the Isopanisad, there is a complete
facility for the small complete units--ourselves--to realize the supreme
complete, Krsna. We are complete units, but we are small. For example, in a big
machine there is a small screw, and the perfection of that small screw is to be
fitted in its proper place. Then it has value. But if it becomes unscrewed from
the machine and falls down on the floor, it has no value. Similarly, we are
perfect as long as we are attached to Krsna; otherwise we are useless.
To realize the complete means to realize what our relationship with the
complete is. And all forms of incompleteness are experienced only on account of
incomplete knowledge of the complete. We are thinking, "I am equal to God.
I am God." This is incomplete knowledge. But if you know, "I am part
and parcel of God, and therefore I am equal to God in quality," that is
complete knowledge. The human form of life is a chance to revive the complete
manifestation of the consciousness of the living being. You can revive this
complete consciousness by the process of Krsna consciousness. But if you don't
take advantage of this complete facility, you are killing yourself, committing
suicide. As it is said in the Isopanisad, "The killer of the soul, whoever
he may be, must enter into the planets known as the worlds of the faithless,
full of darkness and ignorance. " So don't be the killer of your soul.
Utilize the complete facility of your human life to become Krsna conscious.
That is your only business.
Breaking the Bonds of Karma
In conditioned life we are committing sins at every step, even without
knowing it. The reason we are sinning unknowingly is that we have been in
ignorance from our very birth. This ignorance is prominent despite so many
educational institutions. Why? Because despite so many big, big universities,
none of them is teaching atma-tattva, the science of the soul. Therefore people
remain in ignorance, and they continue to sin and suffer the reactions. That is
stated in the Srimad-Bhagavatam (5.5.3): parabhavas tavad abodha-jato yavan na
jijnasata atma-tattvam. This foolishness will continue until one comes to the
platform of understanding self-realization. Otherwise, all these universities
and institutions for imparting knowledge are a continuation of that same
ignorance and foolishness. Unless one comes to the point of asking "What
am I? What is God? What is this world? What is my relationship with God and
this world?" and finds proper answers, one continues to be foolish like an
animal and is subjected to transmigration from one body to another in different
species of life. This is the result of ignorance.
So, the modern civilization is very risky. One may feel comfortable as a
successful businessman or politician, or one may think oneself comfortable
because of being born in a rich nation like America, but these statuses of life
are temporary. They will have to change, and we do not know what kind of
miseries we will have to suffer in our next life because of our sinful
activities. So if one does not begin cultivating transcendental knowledge, then
one's life is very risky. Suppose a healthy man is living in a contaminated
place. Is his life not at risk? He may become infected by disease at any
moment. Therefore we should work to dissipate our ignorance through cultivation
of transcendental knowledge.
A good example of how we commit sins unknowingly is cooking. In the
Bhagavad-gita (3.13) Krsna says that His devotees are freed from sin because
they eat only the remnants of food that has been offered to Him. But, He says,
those who cook for themselves eat only sin. The difference between cooking here
in this temple and cooking in some ordinary house is that our cooking and
eating are relieving us from sin, while the cooking and eating of a nondevotee
are simply entangling him more and more in sin. The cooking appears to be the
same, but this cooking and that cooking are different. Here there is no sin
because the food is being cooked for Krsna.
Anything you do outside the field of Krsna conscious activities
entangles you in the modes of nature. Generally, you are being implicated in
sinful activities. Those who are a little more cautious avoid sinful activities
and perform pious activities. But one who performs pious activities is also
entangled. If a man is pious, he may take birth in a family that is very rich
or aristocratic, or he may be very beautiful or get the opportunity to become
very learned. These are the results of pious activities. But whether you are
pious or impious, you have to enter into the womb of some mother. And that
tribulation is very severe. That we have forgotten. Whether you take birth in a
very rich and aristocratic family or from an animal womb, the pangs of birth,
old age, disease, and death continue.
The Krsna consciousness movement is meant to give you an opportunity to
solve these four problems--birth, old age, disease, and death. But if you
continue to act sinfully and eat sinfully, then these miseries will continue.
Otherwise, you can nullify your sinful reactions by surrendering to Krsna, as
He states in the Bhagavad-gita (18.66): "Just give up all your so-called
religious practices and surrender unto Me. I shall protect you from all your
sinful reactions." Part of surrendering to Krsna is being careful not to
eat anything that has not been offered to Him. That should be our determination.
Even if we have committed some sin, by eating prasadam, food offered to Krsna,
we will counteract it. If we surrender to Krsna in this way, He will protect us
from sinful reactions. That is His promise.
And where does a surrendered devotee go at the time of death? Is he
finished, as the voidists say? No. Krsna says, mam eti: "He comes to
Me." And what is the benefit of going there? Mam upetya punar janma
duhkhalayam asasvatam napnuvanti: "One who comes back to Me does not have
to return to this miserable material world." That is the highest
perfection.
The Isopanisad states, "The killer of the soul, whoever he may be,
must enter into the planets known as the worlds of the faithless, full of
darkness and ignorance." Krsna is a lion to the demons and a lamb to the
devotees. The atheists say, "We have not seen Krsna." Yes, you will
see Krsna--you will see Him as the lion of death when He ultimately comes to
capture you: "Ow!" The atheist sees Krsna as death. And the theist,
or devotee, sees Krsna as his lover, as gentle as a lamb.
Actually, everyone is engaged in Krsna's service, either out of love or
by force. One who is entangled in material life is engaged in Krsna's service
because he is forced to serve Krsna's external, material energy. It is just
like what we see with the citizens of the state: whether one is a law-abiding
citizen or a criminal, one is subservient to the state. The criminal may say he
doesn't care for the state, but then the police will force him to accept the
authority of the state by putting him in prison.
Therefore, whether one accepts or rejects Caitanya Mahaprabhu's
philosophy that every living entity is eternally the servant of Krsna, one
remains His servant. The only difference is that the atheist is being forced to
accept Krsna as his master, and the devotee is voluntarily offering Him
service. This Krsna consciousness movement is teaching people that they are
eternal servants of God and should voluntarily offer Him service: "Don't
falsely claim that you are God. Oh, you don't care for God? You have to
care." The great demon Hiranya-kasipu also didn't care for God, and so God
came and killed him. God is seen by the atheist as death, but by the theist as
a lover. That is the difference.
If you are a devotee and understand this philosophy of spiritual life,
you can live for a moment or you can live for a hundred years--it doesn't
matter. Otherwise, what is the use of living? Some trees live for five hundred
or five thousand years, but what is the use of such a life, devoid of higher
consciousness?
If you know that you are Krsna's servant and that everything belongs to
Krsna, you can live for hundreds of years doing your duties and there will be
no karmic reaction. This is confirmed in the Bhagavad-gita (3.9): yajnarthat
karmano 'nyatra loko 'yam karma-bandhanah. "Except work for Krsna, any
work, whether good or bad, will bind you to this material world." If you
do good work, you will have so-called enjoyment in your next life--but you will
still remain bound up in the cycle of birth and death. And if you do bad work,
then you will have to suffer the sinful reactions and also remain bound up in
birth and death. But if you work for Krsna, there are no such reactions, good
or bad, and at the time of death you will return to Krsna. This is the only way
to break the bonds of karma.
Krsna, the Controller and Owner of All
In the Isopanisad, the word isa is used to describe the Supreme
Personality of Godhead. Isa means "controller." Do you think you are
controlled or not? Is there any person anywhere within this universe who is not
controlled? Can anyone say, "I am not controlled"? Nobody can say
that. So if you are controlled, then why do you declare, "I am not
controlled, I am independent, I am God"? Why this nonsense? Mayavadi
impersonalists claim, "I am God, you are God, everyone is God." But
if they are controlled, how can they be God? Does this make any sense? God is
never controlled; He is the supreme controller. So if somebody is controlled,
immediately we should know that he is not God.
Of course, some rascals claim that they are not controlled. I know one
such rascal who has a society and is preaching, "I am God." But one
day I saw him with a toothache; he was moaning, "Ohhh!" So I asked
him, "You claim that you are God, the supreme controller, but now you are
under the control of a toothache. What kind of God are you?" So if you see
someone who claims that he is God or that everyone is God, you should
immediately know such a person is a number-one rascal.
Now, this is not to say that the living entities are not controllers to
some extent. In the Bhagavad-gita Lord Krsna says that the living entities are
His superior energy. Why are the living entities superior energy? Because they
are conscious, whereas the material energy is not. Therefore the living
entities can control the material energy to some extent. For example, all the
paraphernalia in this temple has been made from matter: earth, water, fire, and
air. But it was a living entity who molded the material energy into this
paraphernalia for the purpose of worshiping Krsna. Another example: before
people came from Europe, this land of America was mostly vacant. The people who
lived here before that did not fully exploit it. But the Europeans came and
developed it into a country with great industries and roads.
So the superior energy, the living entities, can have some control over
the material energy. That Krsna explains in the Bhagavad-gita (7.5): yayedam
dharyate jagat. The importance of this material world is due to the living
entities. A big city like Los Angeles, New York, or London is valuable as long
as the living entities are there. Similarly, the body is valuable as long as
the living entity--the soul--is there. Therefore the soul is superior to
matter. But that superiority is being misused to exploit matter for sense
gratification. That is conditioned life. We have forgotten that, although we
are superior to matter, we are still subordinate to God.
The people of the modern civilization do not care for God because they
are intoxicated with their superiority over matter. They are simply trying to
exploit matter in different ways. But they are forgetting that all
people--American, Russian, Chinese, Indian--are subordinate to God. They have
forgotten Krsna and want to enjoy this material world. That is their disease.
So, the duty of the devotee of the Lord is to invoke the people's Krsna
consciousness. The devotee explains to them: "You are superior to matter,
but you are subordinate to Krsna. Therefore you should not try to enjoy matter
but rather use it for His enjoyment." For example, we have decorated this
temple not for our sense gratification but for Krsna's pleasure. What is the
difference between us and ordinary people? They are decorating their apartment
very nicely, and we are decorating our place very nicely--but the purpose is
different. We are doing it for Krsna, and they are doing it for themselves.
Whether you decorate your personal apartment or Krsna's temple, your superiority
over matter remains, since you are utilizing matter for your purposes. But when
you apply your intelligence toward utilizing matter for Krsna's pleasure, your
life is successful, whereas when you apply the same intelligence for your sense
gratification, you become entangled in material nature and feel anxiety. Then
you have to change bodies, one after another.
Krsna is the supreme controller of both the inferior energy, matter, and
the superior energy, the jivatma--ourselves. We are Krsna's superior energy
because we can control the material world, but that control is also
conditional. We have only limited control over this material world. But Krsna
has control over us; therefore, whatever control we have, He has sanctioned.
For example, a human being has manufactured this nice microphone using his
intelligence. That means he has been able to control matter to a certain degree
to fulfill his desires. But where has his intelligence come from? Krsna has
given man his superior intelligence. In the Bhagavad-gita (15.15) Krsna says,
sarvasya caham hrdi sannivisto mattah smrtir jnanam apohanam ca: "I am
seated in everyone's heart, and from Me come remembrance, knowledge, and
forgetfulness." Therefore the supreme controller is giving intelligence to
the superior energy in the human form of body: "Do this. Now do
that..." This direction is not whimsical. The person wanted to do
something in his past life, but in his present life he forgets, and so Krsna
reminds him: "You wanted to do this. Here is an opportunity." So
although you have superior intelligence, that is also controlled by Krsna. If
Krsna gives you the intelligence, you can manufacture this nice microphone.
Otherwise, you cannot. Therefore in every sphere of life we are controlled by
Krsna.
We can also see Krsna's control on the universal level. For example,
there are so many huge planets; this earth planet is only a small one. Still,
on this planet there are big oceans like the Atlantic and Pacific, as well as
big mountains and skyscraper buildings. Yet despite all this load, the earth is
floating in the air just like a swab of cotton. Who is floating it? Can you
float even a grain of sand in the air? You may talk about the law of gravity
and so many other things, but you cannot control it. Your airplane is flying in
the air, but as soon as the petrol is finished, it will immediately fall. So if
it takes so many scientists to build an airplane that can float only
temporarily in the air, is it possible that this huge earth is floating of its
own accord? No. Lord Krsna declares in the Bhagavad-gita (15.13), "I enter
into the material planets and keep them aloft." Just as to keep an
airplane aloft a pilot has to enter it, so to keep this earth aloft Krsna has
entered it. This is the simple truth.
We have to take knowledge from Krsna. We shouldn't accept any process of
gaining knowledge except hearing from Krsna or His representative. Then we will
have first-class knowledge. If you find an authority who is representing Krsna
and who can speak on the subject matter, and if you accept the knowledge he
gives, then your knowledge is perfect. Of all the processes for receiving
knowledge, the least reliable is direct sense perception. Suppose someone asks,
"Can you show me God?" That means he wants to experience everything
directly. But this is a second-class process for gaining knowledge, because our
senses are imperfect and we are prone to make mistakes. Suppose you need some
gold but you don't know where to purchase it. So you go to a proprietor of a
hardware store and ask, "Do you have any gold in stock?" He will
immediately understand that you are a first-class fool because you have come to
purchase gold in a hardware store. Therefore he will try to cheat you. He will
give you a piece of iron and say, "Here is gold." Then what will you
say? Will you accept that iron as gold? Because you do not know what gold is
and have gone to a hardware store to purchase it, you will get a piece of iron
and be cheated. Similarly, rascals who demand that they be shown God do not
know what God is, and therefore they are being cheated by so many bogus
spiritual leaders who claim that they are God. That is happening.
If you want to purchase gold, you must have at least some preliminary
knowledge of what gold is. Similarly, if you want to see God, the first
requirement is that you must know some of the basic characteristics of God.
Otherwise, if you go to some rascal and he claims to be God and you accept him
as God, you will be cheated.
Another question we should ask when someone says "I want to see
God" is, "What qualification do you have to see God?" God is not
so cheap that He can be seen by anybody and everybody. No, the Krsna
consciousness movement does not present any nonsense or cheap thing. If you
want to see God face to face, then you must follow the rules and regulations.
You must chant Hare Krsna and purify yourself. Then gradually the time will
come when you are purified and you will see God.
Still, even though in your present contaminated condition you are not
qualified to see God, He is so kind that He allows you to see Him in His Deity
form in the temple. In that form He agrees to be seen by everyone, whether or
not one knows He is God. The Deity is not an idol; it is not imagination. The
knowledge of how to construct the Deity and install Him on the altar is
received from the scripture and the superior acaryas, or spiritual masters.
Therefore the authorized Deity in the temple is Krsna Himself and can fully
reciprocate your love and service.
With your present blunt material senses, however, you cannot immediately
perceive God's spiritual form, name, qualities, pastimes, and paraphernalia.
And because people in the present civilization have no power to understand God,
nor are they guided by some person who can help them understand God, they have
become godless. But if you read Vedic scriptures like the Isopanisad and
Bhagavad-gita under superior guidance and follow the rules and regulations,
eventually God will be revealed to you. You cannot see God or understand God by
your own endeavor. You have to surrender to the process by which God can be
known. Then He will reveal Himself. He is the supreme controller; you are being
controlled. So how can you control God? "O God, come here. I want to see
You." God is not so cheap that by your order He will come and be seen by
you. No, that is not possible. You must always remember, "God is the
supreme controller and I am controlled. So if I can please God by my service,
then He will reveal Himself to me." That is the process of knowing God.
Ultimately, this process leads to love of God. That is real religion. It
doesn't matter whether you follow the Hindu, Muslim, or Christian religion: if
you are developing love of God, then you are perfect in your religion. And what
kind of love should we develop for God? It must be without any selfish
motivation--"O Lord, I love you because You supply me so many nice things.
You are my order supplier." No, we should not have this sort of love for
God. It should not depend on any exchange.
Lord Caitanya Mahaprabhu taught, "O Lord! Whether You trample me
under Your feet or embrace me or leave me brokenhearted by not being present
before me, that does not matter. You are completely free to do anything, for
You are my worshipable Lord unconditionally." That is love. We should
think, "God may do whatever He likes, yet I will still love Him. I don't
want anything in exchange." That is the sort of love Krsna wants. That is
why He is so fond of the gopis. In the gopis' love there is no question of
business ex-changes--"Give me this, then I will love You." Their love
was pure, unalloyed, without any impediment. If you try to love God in this
way, nothing in the whole world can check you. You only have to develop your
eagerness--"Krsna! I want You." That's all. Then there is no question
of being stopped. In any condition your love will increase. If you attain that
state, you will feel fully satisfied. It is not that God wants you to love Him
for His benefit. It is for your benefit. If you do otherwise, you will never be
happy.
God and His energies
The Isopanisad explains that whatever we see, whether animate or
inanimate, is controlled by the Supreme Lord. Lord Krsna says the same thing in
the Bhagavad-gita (9.10)--that His energies are managing everything. And the
Visnu Purana confirms, eka-desa-sthitasyagner jyotsna vistarini yatha: "As
heat and light are distributed all around by a fire situated in one place, so
the whole creation is a manifestation of energies expanded from the Supreme
Lord." For example, the sun is in one place, but it is distributing its
heat and light all over the universe. Similarly, the Supreme Lord is
distributing His material and spiritual energies all over the creation.
The spiritual energy is present in this temporary material world, but it
is covered by the material energy. For example, the sun is always shining in
the sky--no one can stop the sun from shining--but it is sometimes covered by a
cloud. When this happens, the sunshine on the ground is dim. The more the sun
is covered, the dimmer the sunlight. But this covering of the sun is partial.
All the sunshine cannot be covered; that is not possible. An insignificant
portion of the sunshine may be covered by a cloud. Similarly, this material
world is an insignificant portion of the spiritual world that is covered by the
material energy.
And what is the material energy? The material energy is just another
form of the spiritual energy. It manifests when there is an absence of spiritual
activity. Again the analogy of the sun and the cloud: What is a cloud? It is an
effect of the sunshine. The sunshine evaporates water from the sea, and a cloud
is formed. So the sun is the cause of the cloud. Similarly, the Supreme Lord is
the cause of this material energy, which covers our vision of Him.
In this way, two energies are working in this material world: the
spiritual energy and the material energy. The material energy consists of eight
material elements: earth, water, fire, air, ether, mind, intelligence, and
false ego. These are arranged from the grosser to the finer. Water is finer
than earth, fire is finer than water, etc.
So, the finer the element, the more powerful it is. For example, at the
speed of the mind you can go many thousands of miles within a second. But even
more powerful than the mind is the intelligence, and even more powerful than
the intelligence is spiritual energy. What is spiritual energy? That is stated
by Krsna in the Bhagavad-gita (7.5): apareyam itas tv anyam prakrtim viddhi me
param jiva-bhutam. "Beyond My inferior, material energy is another energy,
which is spiritual. It comprises the living entities."
We living entities are also energy, but superior energy. How are we
superior? Because we can control the inferior energy, matter. Matter has no
power to act on its own. The big airplane can fly so nicely in the sky, but
unless the spiritual energy--the pilot--is there, it is useless. The jet plane
will sit in the airport for thousands of years; it will not fly unless the
small particle of spiritual energy, the pilot, comes and touches it. So what is
the difficulty in understanding God? If there are so many huge machines that
cannot move without the touch of the spiritual energy, a living being, then how
can you argue that this whole material energy works automatically, without any
control? Who would put forward such a foolish argument? Therefore, those who
cannot understand how this material energy is being controlled by the Supreme
Lord are less intelligent. The godless men who believe that this material
energy is working automatically are fools.
The statement of the Isopanisad is that "Everything animate or
inanimate is controlled and owned by the Supreme Personality of Godhead."
Because He is the supreme controller, He is also the supreme proprietor. In our
practical experience we see that the man who controls a business establishment
is the proprietor. Similarly, since God is the controller of this material
world, He is also its proprietor. This means that as far as possible we should
engage everything in the Lord's service.
Then what about our own needs? That is explained in the Isopanisad:
"One should accept only those things necessary for himself, which are set
aside as his quota, and one should not accept other things, knowing well to
whom they belong." Krsna consciousness means to understand things as they
are. So if we simply understand these principles, we will be well situated in
Krsna consciousness.
The Position of Krsna
The Isopanisad states, "Although fixed in His abode, the
Personality of Godhead is swifter than the mind and can overcome all others
running. The powerful demigods cannot approach Him. Although in one place, He
controls those who supply the air and rain. He surpasses all in
excellence." The Brahma-samhita says something similar: goloka eva
nivasaty akhilatma-bhutah. Although Krsna is always in Goloka Vrndavana, He is
simultaneously in the hearts of all living beings.
Krsna has no duties to perform in Goloka. He is simply enjoying in the
company of His associates--the gopis, the cowherd boys, His mother and father,
His cows and calves, etc. He is completely free. And His associates are even
freer than He is, because when they seem to be in danger, Krsna feels some
anxiety about how to save them. But His associates feel no anxiety. They simply
think, "Oh, Krsna is here. He will protect us." When Krsna enacted
His pastimes five thousand years ago in Vrndavana, India, He would go every day
with His cowherd boyfriends and their calves and cows to play in the forest on
the bank of the Yamuna River. And often Kamsa would send some demon to try to
kill Krsna and His friends. Yet the cowherd boys would continue enjoying their
pastimes without anxiety because they were so confident of Krsna's protection.
That is spiritual life, which begins with surrendering to Krsna.
Surrendering to Krsna means having the strong faith that Krsna will save
us in any dangerous condition. The first step in surrendering is that we should
accept whatever is favorable for devotional service. Then we should reject
anything that is unfavorable for devotional service. The next stage is the
confidence that in any situation Krsna will protect us and maintain us.
Actually, He is already giving protection and maintenance to everyone. That is
a fact. But in maya (illusion) we think that we are protecting ourselves, or
that we are feeding ourselves.
For the devotees, Krsna personally takes charge of their protection and
maintenance. And for the ordinary living entities, Maya-devi--Krsna's external
energy--takes charge. Maya-devi is Krsna's agent for punishing the conditioned
souls. The situation is like what we see in the state: good citizens are taken
care of by the government directly, while criminals are taken care of by the
government through the prison department. In the prison house the government
takes care that the prisoners get sufficient food, and that they get hospital
treatment if they become diseased. The government cares for them--but under
punishment.
Similarly, in this material world Krsna has certainly arranged for our
care, but also for our punishment. If you commit this sin, then slap. If you
commit that sin, then kick. This is going on under the heading of the threefold
miseries--those caused by our own body and mind, those caused by other living
entities, and those caused by natural calamities under the supervision of the
demigods. Unfortunately, instead of understanding that we are being punished
for sinful activities, under the spell of maya we are thinking that this
kicking, slapping, and thrashing are accidental. This is illusion.
As soon as you take up Krsna consciousness, Krsna begins personally
taking care of you. As He promises in the Bhagavad-gita (18.66), "I will
take care of you. I will save you from all sinful reactions. Do not
worry." Because we have had so many lives in this material world, we are
suffering under heaps of sinful reactions. But as soon as you surrender to
Krsna, He immediately takes care of you and nullifies all your sinful
reactions. Krsna says, "Don't hesitate." Don't think, "Oh, I
have committed so many sins. How can Krsna save me?" No. Krsna is
all-powerful. He can save you. Your duty is to surrender to Him and without any
reservation dedicate your life to His service. Then Krsna will save you without
a doubt.
Krsna: A Seeming Paradox
The Isopanisad states, "The Supreme Lord walks and does not walk.
He is far away, but He is very near as well. He is within everything, and yet
He is outside of everything." How can Krsna walk and also not walk? As a
crude example, consider how the sun at noontime shines on your head. Now, if
you begin walking, you will see that the sun is accompanying you. About forty
years ago, when I was a householder, I was once walking with my second son in
the evening. He was four years old. All of a sudden he said, "O father,
why is the moon following us?" You see? The moon and the sun are fixed in
the sky, yet they seem to be moving with us. Similarly, if you are going on an
airplane or a train, you will see that the moon or the sun is going with you.
So if this is possible for the sun and the moon, why can't Krsna also walk with
you? "Although He is situated far away, He is very near as well." In
other words, although Krsna is in Goloka Vrndavana enjoying pastimes with His
associates, He is simultaneously everywhere in this material world. In this way
the Supreme Lord "walks and does not walk."
If Krsna were not present here as well as in Goloka, how could He accept
the food the devotees offer Him? Don't think that Krsna does not accept the
devotees' offerings. He can stretch His hand immediately if one offers Him
something with devotion. In the Bhagavad-gita (9.26) Krsna says, tad aham bhakty-upahrtam
asnami: "Whenever someone offers Me something with faith and love, I
accept it." People may ask, "Oh, Krsna is far away in Goloka
Vrndavana. How can He eat your offering?" Yes, He accepts it. Yes, He eats
it--provided it is offered with love.
So, Krsna is present everywhere, and He can manifest Himself anywhere
immediately, but you must have the qualification to call Him. If you are
actually a devotee, Krsna will immediately come to protect you. The demon
Hiranyakasipu challenged his son, the devotee Prahlada: "Where is your
God? You say He is everywhere. Then is He in this column of my palace? You
think your God is there? All right. Then I will kill Him." Hiranyakasipu
immediately broke the column. Then Krsna came out of the column in His form as
Nrsimhadeva--half man and half lion--and killed the demon. That is Krsna.
So Krsna can manifest Himself anywhere because He is present everywhere.
That is explained in the Isopanisad: tad antarasya sarvasya tad u sarvasyasya
bahyatah. "The Supreme Lord is within everything, and yet He is outside of
everything as well." This Vedic mantra is proof that the Lord is
everywhere. Whatever is said in the Vedas is a fact. Unless you accept the
Vedas as axiomatic truth, you cannot make progress in Krsna consciousness. In
mathematics there are also many axiomatic truths--a point has no length or
breadth, things equal to the same thing are equal to one another, etc. These
are axiomatic truths, and we have to accept them if we want to learn
mathematics. Similarly, the Vedas contain axiomatic truths, and we have to
accept the Vedas as axiomatic if we want to make spiritual progress.
Sometimes the Vedas seem to contradict themselves, but still we have to
accept all the Vedic injunctions. For example, according to Vedic injunction,
if you touch the bone of an animal you immediately become impure and must take
a bath. Now, a conchshell is the bone of an animal, but the conchshell is used
in the Deity room, where everything must be spotlessly pure. You cannot argue,
"Oh, you said that a bone is impure, and that as soon as you touch it you
become impure. Still you are putting a conchshell in the Deity room?" No.
There is no room for such an argument. You have to accept that while bones are
impure, the conchshell is so pure that it can be used in the Deity room.
Similarly, you have to accept the spiritual master's order as axiomatic.
There can be no argument. In this way you can make progress. You cannot argue
about things that are inconceivable to you. You will only fail. You have to
accept the Vedic injunctions and the orders of the spiritual master as
axiomatic truth. This is not dogmatic, because our predecessor spiritual
masters accepted this principle. If you argue with your spiritual master, you
will never reach a conclusion. The argument will go on perpetually: you put
some argument, I put some argument... That is not the process.
As the Mahabharata says, tarko 'pratisthah srutayo vibhinna: Mere logic
and argument can never come to a firm conclusion, and due to different
countries and different circumstances, one scripture is different from another.
Then nasav rsir yasya matam na bhinnam: As far as philosophical speculation is
concerned, one philosopher puts forward some theory, then another philosopher puts
forward another theory, and the theories always contradict each other. Unless
you defeat another philosopher, you cannot be a famous philosopher. That is the
way of philosophy. Then how can one learn the conclusive philosophical truth?
That is stated: dharmasya tattvam nihitam guhayam. The secret of the religious
process is lying within the hearts of the self-realized souls. Then how do you
realize it? Mahajano yena gatah sa panthah: You have to follow in the footsteps
of great spiritual personalities. Therefore we are trying to follow Lord Krsna
and Lord Caitanya. That is perfection. You have to accept the injunctions of
the Vedas, and you have to follow the instructions of the bona fide spiritual
master. Then success is sure.
The Lord and His Energy--One and Different
The Isopanisad states, "One who always sees all living entities as
spiritual sparks, in quality one with the Lord, becomes a true knower of
things. What, then, can cause him illusion or anxiety?" This realization
is Krsna consciousness. There are different kinds of realization, but the
devotee of Krsna realizes the truth--that we are qualitatively one with the
Lord but quantitatively different from Him. The impersonalists think that we
are a hundred percent one with the Lord, or the Supreme Absolute Truth. But
that is not a fact. If we were a hundred percent one with the Supreme Lord,
then how have we come under the control of maya (illusion)? The impersonalists
cannot answer this question.
The real nature of our identity with the Supreme is described in the
Vedic literature with the analogy of the sparks and the fire. The sparks of a
fire have the same quality as the fire, yet they are different in quantity. But
when the small spark leaves the fire and falls down in water, its fiery quality
is lost. Similarly, when the infinitesimal soul leaves the association of the
Lord and contacts the mode of ignorance, his spiritual quality becomes almost
extinct. When a spark falls on the land instead of in the water, then the spark
retains some heat. Similarly, when the living entity is in the quality of
passion, there is some hope that he can revive his Krsna consciousness. And if
the spark drops onto dry grass, it can ignite another fire and regain all its
fiery qualities. Similarly, a person who is in the mode of goodness can take
full advantage of spiritual association and easily revive his Krsna
consciousness. Therefore one has to come to the platform of goodness in this
material world.
Again, the analogy of the fire can help us understand the simultaneous
oneness and difference of the Lord and His diverse energies. Fire has two main
energies, heat and light. Wherever there is fire, there is heat and light. Now,
the heat is not different from the fire, nor is the light--but still, heat and
light are not fire. Similarly, the whole universe can be understood in this
way. The universe is simply made up of Krsna's energies, and therefore nothing
is different from Krsna. But still, Krsna is separate from everything in the
material universe.
So, whatever we see within the material or spiritual worlds is but an
expansion of Krsna's multifarious energies. This material world is an expansion
of Krsna's external energy (bahiranga sakti), the spiritual world is an
expansion of His internal energy (antaranga sakti), and we living entities are
an expansion of His marginal energy (tatastha sakti). We are sakti, energy. We
are not the energetic.
The Mayavadi philosophers say that because the energies are not outside
of Brahman, the energetic, they are all identical with Brahman. This is monism.
Our Vaisnava philosophy is that the energy is simultaneously one with and
different from the energetic. Again the analogy of the heat and fire: When you
perceive heat, you understand that there is fire nearby. But this does not mean
that because you feel some heat, you are in the fire. So the heat and the fire,
the energy and the energetic, are one yet different.
So the Mayavada philosophy of oneness and our Vaisnava philosophy of
oneness are different. The Maya-vadis say Brahman is real but that the energy
emanating from Brahman is false. We say that because Brahman is real, His
energy must also be real. That is the difference between Mayavada philosophy
and Vaisnava philosophy. One cannot claim that this material energy is false,
although it is certainly temporary. Suppose we have some trouble. There are so
many kinds of trouble pertaining to the body and mind and external affairs.
That trouble comes and goes, but when we are undergoing it, it is certainly
real. We feel the consequence. We cannot say it is false. The Mayavadi
philosophers say that it is false. But then why do they become so disturbed
when they have some trouble? No, none of Krsna's energies is false.
The Isopanisad uses the word vijanatah--"one who knows"--to
describe a person who understands the oneness and difference of the Lord and
His energies. If one is not vijanatah, one will remain in illusion and suffer.
But for one who knows, there is no illusion, no lamentation. When you are
perfectly convinced that there is nothing except Krsna and Krsna's energies,
then there is no illusion or lamentation for you. This is known as the
brahma-bhuta stage, as explained in the Bhagavad-gita (18.54): brahma-bhutah
prasannatma na socati na kanksati. "One who is transcendentally situated
in Brahman realization becomes fully joyful, and he never laments or desires to
have anything."
For our sense gratification we are very eager to get things we do not
have. That is hankering. And when we lose something, we lament. But if we know
that Krsna is the source and proprietor of the entire material energy, we
understand that everything belongs to Him and that anything gained is given by
Him for His service. Thus we do not hanker for the things of this world.
Furthermore, if something is taken away by Krsna, then what is the need for
lamentation? We should think, "Krsna wanted to take it away from me.
Therefore, why should I lament? The Supreme Lord is the cause of all causes. He
takes away, He also gives." When one is thus in full knowledge, there is
no more lamentation and no more hankering. That is the spiritual platform. Then
you can see everyone as a spiritual spark, as part and parcel of Krsna, and as
His eternal servant.
Krsna, the Supreme Pure
The Isopanisad states that the Lord is "the greatest of all,
unembodied, omniscient, beyond reproach, without veins, pure and
uncontaminated." No sin can pollute Krsna. Sometimes less intelligent
persons criticize Krsna: "Why did Krsna engage in the rasa dance, enjoying
with other men's wives in the middle of the night?" Krsna is God. He can
do whatever He likes. Your laws cannot restrict Krsna. For you there are so
many restrictive laws, but for Krsna there is no restrictive law. He can
surpass all regulations.
Pariksit Maharaja asked this same question of Sukadeva Gosvami:
"Krsna came to establish the principles of morality and religion. Then why
did He enjoy the company of so many young girls who were the wives of others?
This seems to be very sinful." Sukadeva Gosvami answered that Krsna cannot
be contaminated by sin; rather, whoever comes in contact with Krsna, even with
a contaminated mind, becomes purified. The sun is a good analogy: the sun
cannot be contaminated; rather, if something contaminated is placed in the
sunshine, it becomes purified. Similarly, you may approach Krsna with any
material desire and you will become purified. Of course, the gopis' feelings
toward Krsna are not at all material. Still, as young girls they were
captivated by His beauty. They approached Krsna with the desire to have Him as
their paramour. But actually, they became purified. Even demons can become
purified by coming in contact with Krsna. The demon Kamsa, for example, thought
of Krsna as his enemy. But he was also Krsna conscious, always thinking,
"Oh, how will I find Krsna? I will kill Him." That was his demoniac
mentality. But he also became purified. He got salvation.
The conclusion is that if we can somehow or other develop our Krsna
consciousness, we will immediately become purified of all sinful desires. Krsna
gives this chance to everyone.
Beyond the Limits of the Body
When the Isopanisad describes the Supreme Lord as "He who is the
greatest of all, who is unembodied and omniscient," this shows the
distinction between God and ourselves. We are embodied. Therefore my body is
different from me. When I leave this body, it becomes dust. As the Bible says,
"Dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return." But I am not dust;
I am a spirit soul. Therefore thou means "the body."
Krsna, however, is not embodied. This means there is no difference
between His body and His soul. In other words, His body is pure spirit.
Therefore He does not change His body. And because He does not change His body,
He is omniscient--He remembers everything. Because we do change our material
bodies, however, we forget what happened in our last birth. We have forgotten
who we were, just as when we sleep we forget our body and our surroundings. The
body becomes tired and rests; it becomes inactive. In contrast, in a dreamland
I work, I go somewhere, I fly, I create another body, another environment. This
we experience every night. It is not difficult to understand.
Similarly, in every life we create a different environment. In this life
I may think I am an Indian. In my next life, however, I may not be an Indian--I
may be an American. But even if I become an American, I may not be a man. I may
be a cow or a bull. Then I would be sent to the slaughterhouse. Do you see the
difficulty?
The problem is that we are always changing bodies, life after life. It
is a serious problem. We have no fixed position; we do not know where we will
be placed within the 8,400,000 species of life. But there is a solution: If
somehow or other a person develops pure Krsna consciousness, he will go to
Krsna at the time of death, and then he does not have to accept a material body
again. He gets a spiritual body similar to Krsna's, full of eternity,
knowledge, and bliss.
Therefore we should take up the practice of Krsna consciousness and
execute it very seriously, without any deviation. We should not think that
Krsna consciousness is some kind of fashion. No, it is the most important
function of every human being. Human life is simply meant for developing Krsna
consciousness. One has no other business.
Unfortunately, the people of the modern civilization have created so
many other engagements that they are forgetting Krsna consciousness. This is
called maya, or illusion. They are forgetting their real business. And the
rascal, blind leaders are leading everyone to hell. They are simply misleaders.
People do not like to accept any authority. Still, they have accepted these
rascals as leaders and are being misled. In this way both the rascal leaders
and their unfortunate followers remain bound up by the stringent laws of
material nature.
So, if somehow or other one comes in contact with Krsna, one should
seriously take up the process of Krsna consciousness and catch hold of His
lotus feet very tightly. If you hold on to Krsna's lotus feet very tightly,
maya will not be able to harm you.
Spiritual and Material Education
The Isopanisad states, "Those who are engaged in the culture of
nescience shall enter into the darkest region of ignorance. " There are
two kinds of education, material and spiritual. Material education is called
jada-vidya. Jada means "that which cannot move," or matter. Spirit
can move. Our body is a combination of spirit and matter. As long as the spirit
is there, the body is moving. For example, a man's coat and pants move as long
as the man wears them. It appears that the coat and pants are moving on their
own, but actually it is the body that is moving them. Similarly, this body is
moving because the spirit soul is moving it. Another example is the motorcar.
The motorcar is moving because the driver is moving it. Only a fool thinks the
motorcar is moving on its own. In spite of a wonderful mechanical arrangement,
the motorcar cannot move on its own.
Since they are given only jada-vidya, a materialistic education, people
think that this material nature is working, moving, and manifesting so many
wonderful things automatically. When we are at the seaside, we see the waves
moving. But the waves are not moving automatically. The air is moving them. And
something else is moving the air. In this way, if you go all the way back to
the ultimate cause, you will find Krsna, the cause of all causes. That is real
education, to search out the ultimate cause.
So the Isopanisad says that those who are captivated by the external
movements of the material energy are worshiping nescience. In the modern
civilization there are big, big institutions for understanding technology, how
a motorcar or an airplane moves. They are studying how to manufacture so much
machinery. But there is no educational institution for investigating how the
spirit soul is moving. The actual mover is not being studied. Instead they are
studying the external movements of matter.
When I lectured at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, I asked
the students, "Where is the technology to study the soul, the mover of the
body?" They had no such technology. They could not answer satisfactorily
because their education was simply jada-vidya. The Isopanisad says that those
who engage in the advancement of such materialistic education will go to the
darkest region of existence. Therefore the present civilization is in a very
dangerous position because there is no arrangement anywhere in the world for
genuine spiritual education. In this way human society is being pushed to the
darkest region of existence.
In a song, Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakura has declared that materialistic
education is simply an expansion of maya. The more we advance in this
materialistic education, the more our ability to understand God will be
hampered. And at last we will declare, "God is dead." This is all
ignorance and darkness.
So, the materialists are certainly being pushed into darkness. But there
is another class--the so-called philosophers, mental speculators, religionists,
and yogis--who are going into still greater darkness because they are defying
Krsna. They are pretending to cultivate spiritual knowledge, but because they
have no information of Krsna, or God, their teachings are even more dangerous
than those of the outright materialists. Why? Because they are misleading
people into thinking they are giving real spiritual knowledge. The so-called
yoga system they are teaching is misleading people: "Simply meditate, and
you will understand that you are God." Krsna never meditated to become
God. He was God from His very birth. When He was a three-month-old baby, the
Putana demon attacked Him--and Krsna sucked out her life air along with her
breast milk. So Krsna was God from the very beginning. That is God.
The nonsense so-called yogis teach, "You become still and silent,
and you will become God." How can I become silent? Is there any
possibility of becoming silent? No, there is no such possibility. "Become
desireless and you will become God." How can I become desireless? These
are all bluffs. We cannot be desireless. We cannot be silent. But our desires
and our activities can be purified. That is real knowledge. We should desire
only to serve Krsna. That is purification of desire. Instead of trying to be
still and silent, we should dovetail our activities in Krsna's service. As
living entities, we have activities, desires, and a loving propensity, but they
are being misdirected. If we direct them into Krsna's service, that is the
perfection of education.
We don't say that you should not become advanced in material education.
You may, but at the same time you should become Krsna conscious. That is our
message. We don't say that you shouldn't manufacture motorcars. No. We say,
"All right, you have manufactured these motorcars. Now employ them in
Krsna's service." That is our proposal.
So education is required, but if it is simply materialistic--if it is
devoid of Krsna consciousness--it is very, very dangerous. That is the teaching
of the Isopanisad.
Knowledge vs. Nescience
The Isopanisad says, "The wise have explained that one result is
derived from the culture of knowledge and that a different result is obtained
from the culture of nescience." As explained above, the real culture of
knowledge is the advancement of spiritual knowledge. And advancement of
knowledge in the matter of bodily comforts or to protect the body is the
culture of nescience, because however you may try to protect this body, it will
follow its natural course. What is that? Repeated birth and death, and while
the body is manifested, disease and old age. People are very busy cultivating
knowledge of this body, although they see that at every moment the body is
decaying. The death of the body was fixed when it was born. That is a fact. So
you cannot stop the natural course of this body--namely birth, old age,
disease, and death.
The Srimad-Bhagavatam (10.84.13) says that this body is nothing but a
bag containing three primary elements--mucus, bile, and air--and that one who
accepts this combination of mucus, bile, and air as himself is an ass. Even
great philosophers and scientists take themselves to be this combination of
mucus, bile, and air. This is their mistake. Actually, the philosophers and
scientists are spirit souls, and according to their karma they are exhibiting
their talent. They do not understand the law of karma.
Why do we find so many different personalities? If human beings are
nothing but combinations of mucus, bile, and air, why are they not identical?
One man is born a millionaire; another is unable to have two full meals a day,
despite struggling very hard. Why this difference? Because of the law of karma,
action and reaction. One who understands this mystery is in knowledge.
Human life is meant for understanding the mystery of life. And one who
fails to utilize this human form for this purpose is a krpana, a miser. This is
stated in the Garga Upanisad. If you get one million dollars and do not use it,
thinking, "Oh, I will simply keep this bank balance of one million
dollars," you are a krpana. You do not know how to use your money. On the
other hand, one who uses his million dollars to make another million dollars is
intelligent. Similarly, this human body is invaluable. One who uses it for
cultivating spiritual knowledge is a brahmana, a wise man, and one who
cultivates materialistic knowledge is a krpana, a miser. That is the difference
between brahmana and krpana.
One who uses this body the way cats and dogs do--for sense
gratification--is a miser. He does not know how to use his "million
dollars." Therefore it is the duty of the father, the mother, the state,
and the teachers to provide spiritual education for their dependents from the
very beginning of their lives. Indeed, the Srimad-Bhagavatam says that one
should not become a father, a mother, a teacher, or a governmental head unless
one is able to elevate one's dependents to the platform of spiritual knowledge,
which can save them from repeated birth and death.
The Way of Knowing God
In the Vedic disciplic succession, the spiritual masters always base
their statements on what they have heard from authoritative sources, never on
personal experience. Trying to understand things by one's own direct experience
is the material process of gaining knowledge, technically called pratyaksa. The
Vedic method is different. It is called sruti, which means "to hear from
authoritative sources." That is the secret of Vedic understanding.
With your imperfect senses you should not try to understand things that
are beyond your experimental powers. That is not possible. Suppose you want to
know who your father is. Can you find out by experimenting? Is it possible? No.
Then how can you know who your father is? By hearing from the proper authority,
your mother. This is common sense. And if you cannot know your material father
by the experimental process, how can you know the Supreme Father by the experimental
process? Krsna is the original father. He is the father of the father of the
father, all the way down to you. So if you cannot understand your immediate
father, the previous generation, by the experimental process, how can you know
God, or Krsna, in this way?
People search for God by the experimental process, but after much
searching they fail. Then they say, "Oh, there is no God. I am God."
But the Isopanisad says that one should try to learn about God not by the
experimental process but by hearing. From whom should one hear? From a
shopkeeper? From fanatics? No. One should hear from those who are dhira. Dhira
means "one whose senses are not agitated by material influence."
There are different kinds of agitation--agitations of the mind, the
power of speech, and anger, and agitations of the tongue, belly, and genitals.
When we become angry, we forget everything and can do any nonsense and speak so
much nonsense. For the agitation of the tongue there are so many
advertisements: "Here is liquor, here is chicken, here is beef." Will
we die without liquor, chicken, or beef? No. For the human beings Krsna has
given so many nice things to eat--grains, fruits, milk, and so on.
The cow produces milk abundantly, not for herself but for human beings.
That is proper human food. God says, "Mrs. Cow, although you are producing
milk, you cannot drink it. It is for the human beings, who are more advanced
than animals." Of course, in the infant stage animals live off their
mother's milk, so the calves drink some of the cow's milk. But the cow gives
excess milk, and that excess is specifically meant for us.
We should accept whatever God has ordained as our proper food. But no,
because of the agitation of the tongue, we think, "Why should I be
satisfied eating grains, milk products, vegetables, and fruits? Let me maintain
a slaughterhouse and kill these cows. After drinking their milk, just as I
drank my mother's milk, let me kill them to satisfy my tongue." You
shouldn't think such nonsense but should hear from the dhiras, or svamis, who
have controlled their senses. A svami, or gosvami, is one who has control over
the six agitations: the speech, the mind, anger, the tongue, the belly, and the
genitals.
There is a nice poem by Kalidasa called Kumara-sambhava describing how
Lord Siva is dhira. When Lord Siva's wife, Sati, heard Siva being blasphemed at
a sacrifice performed by her father, she committed suicide. Upon hearing about
his wife's suicide, Lord Siva became very angry and left this planet to meditate
elsewhere. During that time there was a war between the demons and the
demigods. The demigods needed a good general. They concluded that if Lord Siva
were to beget a son, the son would be able to lead them in the fight against
the demons. Lord Siva was completely naked while meditating. So Parvati, the
reincarnation of Sati, was sent to agitate his genitals for sex. But he was not
agitated. He remained silent. At this point Kalidasa remarks, "Here is a
dhira. He is naked, and a young girl is touching his genitals, but still he is
not agitated."Dhira means that even if there is some cause for agitation,
one will not be agitated. If there is some very nice food, my tongue should not
be agitated to taste it. If there is a very nice girl or boy, still I should
not be agitated sexually. In this way one who is dhira is able to control the
six agitating forces mentioned above. It is not that Lord Siva was impotent: he
was dhira. Similarly, Krsna danced with so many girls, but there was no sex
appetite.
So, you have to hear from a person who is dhira. If you hear from the
adhira, from those who are not self-controlled, then whatever knowledge you
learn will be useless. In the Isopanisad, a student has approached his
spiritual master to inquire from him, and the spiritual master is saying,
"This is what I have heard from authoritative sources." The spiritual
master is not inventing something from his own experience. He is presenting
exactly what he has heard.
So we have nothing to research. Everything is there. We simply have to
hear from a person who is dhira, who is not agitated by the six urges. That is
the Vedic process of gaining knowledge. And if we try to use some other
process, we will remain covered by nescience.
The Isopanisad states, "Only one who can learn the process of
nescience and that of transcendental knowledge side by side can transcend the
influence of repeated birth and death and enjoy the full blessings of
immortality." People do not understand what immortality is. They think it
is a mythological idea. They are proud of their advancement of knowledge, but
there are many things they do not know, nor can they ever know them by their
modern system of experimentation.
So if you want real knowledge, you should take knowledge from the literature
known as the Vedas. (The word veda means "knowledge.") Part of the
Vedas are the 108 Upanisads, out of which eleven are very important. Of those
eleven, the Isopanisad stands first. In the word upanisad, upa means
"near." So the knowledge in the Isopanisad will take you nearer to
Krsna.
In learned society the Vedas are accepted as sruti, or primary evidence.
The Vedas are not knowledge established by the research work of contaminated,
conditioned souls. Such people have imperfect senses, and so they cannot see
things as they are. They simply theorize, "It may be like this. It may be
like that." That is not knowledge. Knowledge is definite, without any
doubt or mistake. Conditioned souls commit mistakes, become illusioned, and
cheat. How do they cheat? When one who does not understand the Bhagavad-gita
writes a commentary on it, he is cheating the innocent public. Someone has a
title as a scholar, so he takes advantage of the popularity of the
Bhagavad-gita and writes a commentary. Such so-called scholars claim that
anyone can give his own opinion. But in the Bhagavad-gita Krsna says that only
His devotee can understand the Gita. So these so-called scholars are cheating.
The conclusion is that if you want genuine spiritual knowledge you have
to approach a bona fide spiritual master who has realized the Absolute Truth.
Otherwise you will remain in darkness. You cannot think, "Oh, I may or may
not accept a spiritual master. In any case, there are books that I can learn
from." No, the Vedic injunction is tad-vijnanartham sa gurum
evabhigacchet. The word gacchet means "one must go," not that one may
or may not go. To understand transcendental knowledge, one must go to a
spiritual master. That is the Vedic injunction.
You must know two things: what is maya (illusion) and what is Krsna.
Then your knowledge is perfect. Of course, Krsna is so nice that if you somehow
or other fully surrender to Him, all your searching for knowledge will be
finished: not only will you know what Krsna is, but you will automatically
learn what maya is. Krsna will give you intelligence from within.
So, by the mercy of both the spiritual master and Krsna, one takes up
devotional service. How is that? Their mercy runs on parallel lines. If you
have not yet found a spiritual master but are sincere, Krsna will direct you to
a bona fide spiritual master. And if you get a bona fide spiritual master, he
will take you to Krsna. Krsna is always sitting in your heart as the
caitya-guru, the spiritual master within. It is that caitya-guru who manifests
Himself externally as the spiritual master. Therefore the spiritual master is
the direct representative of Krsna.
The Isopanisad says we should learn what vidya and avidya are. Avidya is
ignorance under the guise of materialistic knowledge. Srila Bhaktivinoda
Thakura writes in one of his songs that "advancement of material knowledge
is simply the advancement of maya's jurisdiction." The more you become
implicated in material knowledge, the less you can understand Krsna consciousness.
Those who are advanced in material knowledge think, "What use is this
Krsna consciousness movement?" They have no attraction for spiritual
knowledge; they are too absorbed in avidya.
Some Indian boys reject the spiritual culture of India and come to the
West to learn technology. When they see that I have introduced in the West the
things they rejected in India, they are surprised. One reason I came to the
West is that modern India has rejected spiritual knowledge. Today Indians think
that if they can imitate Western technology, they will be happy. This is maya.
They do not see that those who are three hundred times more technologically
advanced than the Indians are not happy. India will not be able to equal
American or European technology for at least three hundred years because the
Western countries have been developing technology for a very long time. But
since the time of creation Indian culture has been a spiritual culture.Vidya,
or genuine spiritual knowledge, does not depend on technology. Srila Vyasadeva
is the original guru of Vedic knowledge. How was he living? In a cottage in
Badarikasrama. But just see his knowledge! He wrote so many Puranas, including
the Srimad-Bhagavatam. He also wrote the Vedanta-sutra and the Mahabharata. If
you studied every single verse written by Vyasadeva, it would take your whole
life. The Srimad-Bhagavatam alone has no less than eighteen thousand verses.
And each verse is so full of meaning that it would take a whole lifetime to
fully understand it. This is Vedic culture.
There is no knowledge comparable
to that contained in the Vedic literature--not only spiritual knowledge, but
material knowledge also. The Vedas discuss astronomy, mathematics, and many
other subjects. It is not that in ancient times there were no airplanes. They
are mentioned in the Puranas. These airplanes were so strong and swift that
they could easily reach other planets. It is not that there was no advancement
of material knowledge in the Vedic age. It was there. But the people then did
not consider it so important. They were interested in spiritual knowledge.
So, one should know what knowledge is, and what nescience is. If we
advance in nescience, or material knowledge, we will have to undergo repeated
birth and death. Moreover, there is no guarantee what your next birth will be.
That is not in your hands. Now you are happy being an American, but after
quitting this body you cannot dictate, "Please give me an American body
again." Yes, you may get an American body, but it may be an American cow's
body. Then you are destined for the slaughterhouse.
So, cultivating material knowledge--nationalism, socialism, this
"ism," that "ism"--is simply a dangerous waste of time.
Better to cultivate real knowledge, Vedic knowledge, which leads one to
surrender to Krsna. As Krsna says in the Bhagavad-gita (7.19), bahunam janmanam
ante jnanavan mam prapadyate. After many, many births, one who is in genuine
knowledge comes to Krsna and surrenders to Him, realizing, "O Krsna, You
are everything." This is the culmination of all cultivation of knowledge.
Beyond the White Light of Brahman
The Isopanisad states, "One should know perfectly the Personality
of Godhead and His transcendental name, as well as the temporary material
creation with its temporary demigods, men, and animals. When one knows these,
he surpasses death and the ephemeral cosmic manifestation with it, and in the
eternal kingdom of God he enjoys his eternal life of bliss and knowledge. O my
Lord, sustainer of all that lives, Your real face is covered by Your dazzling
effulgence. Kindly remove that covering and exhibit Yourself to Your pure
devotee."
Here the Isopanisad mentions the kingdom of God. Every planet, both
spiritual and material, has a predominating deity. In the sun, for example, the
predominating deity is Vivasvan. We get this information from the
Bhagavad-gita. So, there are millions and trillions of universes within the
material sky, and within each universe are millions and trillions of planets,
and in every planet there is a predominating deity.
Beyond the material sky is the brahmajyoti, or spiritual sky, where
there are innumerable Vaikuntha planets. Each Vaikuntha planet is predominated
by the Supreme Lord in His Narayana form, and each Narayana has a different
name--Pradyumna, Ani-ruddha, Sankarsana, etc. One cannot see these planets
because they are covered by the spiritual brahmajyoti effulgence, just as one
cannot see the sun globe on account of the dazzling sunshine. The effulgence in
the spiritual sky is coming out of Krsna's planet, Goloka Vrndavana, which is
above even Vaikuntha and where Krsna alone is the predominator.
The planet of the Absolute Truth, Krsna, is covered by the Brahman
effulgence. One has to penetrate that effulgence in order to see the Lord.
Therefore in the Isopanisad the devotee prays, "Kindly remove Your
effulgence so I can see You." The Mayavadi philosophers do not know that
there is something beyond the brahmajyoti. But here in the Isopanisad is the
Vedic evidence that the brahmajyoti is simply a golden effulgence covering the
real face of the Supreme Lord.
The idea is that Krsna's planet and the Vaikuntha planets are beyond the
Brahman effulgence and that only devotees can enter those spiritual planets.
The jnanis, the mental speculators, practice severe austerities to enter the
Brahman effulgence. But the demons who are killed by Krsna are immediately
transferred to that Brahman effulgence. So just consider: Is the place that is
given to the enemies of Krsna very covetable? If my enemy comes to my house, I
may give him some place to stay, but if my intimate friend comes, I give him a
much nicer place to stay. So this Brahman effulgence is not at all covetable.
Srila Prabodhananda Sarasvati has composed a nice verse in which he says
that for the devotee, for one who has attained the mercy of the Lord, the
Brahman effulgence is just like hell. Then what about heaven? The karmis, or
fruitive workers, are very eager to go to the heavenly planets, where the
demigods reside. But for the devotees heaven is just a will-o'-the-wisp. They
are not at all attracted to go there. And then there are the mystic yogis, who
try very strenuously to control the senses in order to attain special powers.
The senses are like venomous serpents because as soon as you indulge in sense
gratification--as soon as the senses "bite" you--you become degraded.
But the devotee says, "I do not fear the poisonous serpents of the
senses." Why? "Because I have extracted their fangs." In other
words, by engaging his senses in Krsna's service, the devotee is no longer
tempted to indulge in sense gratification, and thus his senses cannot drag him
down to a hellish condition of life.
In this way, the devotees are above the karmis, jnanis, and yogis. The
devotees' place is the highest because only by devotion can one understand God.
Krsna does not say you can understand Him by fruitive work. He does not say you
can understand Him by speculation. He does not say you can understand Him by
mystic yoga. He clearly says (Bg. 18.55), bhaktya mam abhi-janati yavan yas
casmi tattvatah: "Only by devotional service can one truly understand Me
as I am."
Except for devotional service, there is no possibility of understanding
the Absolute Truth. Any other process is imperfect because it is based on
speculation. For example, the scientists may speculate on what the sun planet
is, but because they have no access there, they cannot actually know what the
sun planet is. They can only speculate. That's all. Once three blind men came upon
an elephant. They began feeling the elephant and speculating on what it was.
One felt its big legs and concluded, "Oh, the elephant is just like a
pillar." The second man felt the trunk and concluded, "Oh, this
elephant is just like a snake." And the third man felt the belly of the
elephant and concluded, "This elephant is like a big boat." But
actually, the blind men did not know what the elephant really was.
If you have no ability to see something, you can only speculate about
it. Therefore the Isopanisad says, "Please remove this brilliant
effulgence covering Your face so I can see You." That seeing power is
bestowed upon the devotee by Krsna when He sees the devotee's love for Him. As
the Brahma-samhita says, premanjana-cchurita-bhakti-vilocanena: The devotees
anoint their eyes with the salve of love of God, and therefore they can see the
Lord's beautiful form within their hearts. In India there is a special eye
ointment. If you apply it you can immediately see clearly. Similarly, if you
smear your eyes with the ointment of love of Godhead, you will see God always.
This is the way of understanding God--by service and by enhancing your love for
Him. This love can be developed only by devotional service; otherwise there is
no possibility of achieving it. So the more you increase your spirit of service
to God, the more you increase your dormant love for God. And as soon as you are
in the perfectional stage of love of God, you will see God always, at every
moment.
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