Introduction
Table of Contents
Introduction
As the sinful Ajamila lay on his deathbed, he was terrified to see three
fierce humanlike creatures coming to drag him out of his dying body and take
him away to the abode of Yamaraja, the lord of death, for punishment.
Surprisingly, Ajamila escaped this terrible fate. How? You'll find out
in the pages of A Second Chance: The Story of a Near-Death Experience.
You'll also learn many vital truths about the fundamental nature of the
self and reality, so you can better prepare yourself for your own inevitable
encounters with death and dying.
Even today, people momentarily on the verge of death report encounters
like Ajamila's, lending credibility to the idea that there is life after death.
In 1982, George Gallup, Jr., published a book called Adventures in
Immortality, which contained results of a survey on American beliefs about the
afterlife, including near-death and out-of-body experiences.
Sixty-seven percent of the people surveyed said they believe in life
after death, and fifteen percent said they themselves had had some kind of
near-death experience.
The people who reported a near-death experience were then asked to
describe it. Nine percent reported an out-of-body sensation, and eight percent
felt that "a special being or beings were present during the near-death
experience."
The Gallup survey is intriguing, but it leaves unanswered this basic
question: Is there any scientific evidence for near-death experiences,
particularly of the out-of-body type?
Apparently there is--from studies of people on the verge of death who,
while supposedly unconscious, accurately report events relating to their
physical body from a perspective outside it. Heart attack patients, accident
victims, and soldiers wounded in battle have all reported such experiences.
Dr. Michael Sabom, a cardiologist at the Emory University Medical
School, undertook a scientific study of such reports. He interviewed thirty-two
cardiac-arrest patients who reported out-of-body experiences. During a cardiac
arrest the heart stops pumping blood to the brain, and so a patient should be
totally unconscious. Yet twenty-six of the thirty-two patients reporting
out-of-body experiences during cardiac arrest were able to give fairly accurate
visual accounts of their resuscitation. And the remaining six gave extremely
accurate accounts of the specific resuscitation techniques, matching
confidential hospital records of their operations.
The results of Sabom's study, detailed in his book Recollections of
Death: A Medical Investigation (1982), convinced him of the reality of
out-of-body experiences. He concluded that the mind was an entity distinct from
the brain and that the near-death crisis caused the mind and brain to split
apart for a brief time. Sabom wrote, "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? As I see
it, this is the ultimate question that has been raised by reports of the NDE
[near-death experience]."
The true dimensions of that ultimate question are thoroughly explored in
A Second Chance, by His Divine Grace A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, the
founding spiritual master (acarya) of the International Society for Krishna
Consciousness.
Thousands of years ago in India, the history concerning Ajamila and his
near-death experience was related by the great spiritual master Sukadeva
Gosvami to his disciple King Pariksit. Their conversation is recorded in the
Sixth Canto of the Sanskrit classic Srimad-Bhagavatam, renowned as the ripened
fruit of the tree of India's timeless Vedic literature.
In 1975-76, in the course of translating the Srimad-Bhagavatam into
English, Srila Prabhupada translated the story of Ajamila. And as with the rest
of the work, in addition to the text he provided an illuminating commentary on
each verse.
But this wasn't the first time Srila Prabhupada had explained the story
of Ajamila. During the winter of 1970-71 Srila Prabhupada was traveling with
some of his Western disciples in India. They had heard him speak about Ajamila
several times, and at their request he now gave a systematic series of lectures
on the Ajamila story.
Thus A Second Chance consists of texts from the Sixth Canto of
Srimad-Bhagavatam (reproduced here in boldface type), selections from Srila
Prabhupada's commentary, and excerpts from transcriptions of his lectures
during the '70-71 India tour.
The history of Ajamila is dramatic, powerful, and engaging. And the
sharp philosophical and metaphysical debates that punctuate the action as
Ajamila confronts the messengers of death and finds deliverance are bound to
excite the interest of those concerned with life's deepest questions.
The
Publishers
Chapter 1
Separating
the Men From the Animals
Sukadeva Gosvami said to King Pariksit: In the city known as Kanyakubja
[Kanauj in present-day India] there lived a brahmana named Ajamila who married
a prostitute maidservant and lost all his brahminical qualities because of the
association of that low-class woman. Ajamila gave trouble to others by
arresting them, by cheating them in gambling, or by directly plundering them.
This was the way he earned his livelihood and maintained his wife and children.
(Srimad-Bhagavatam 6.1.21-22)
The Law of Consequences
Although Ajamila was born of a brahmana father and strictly followed the
regulative principles--no meat-eating, no illicit sex, no intoxication, and no
gambling--he fell in love with a prostitute, and therefore all his good
qualities were lost. As soon as a person abandons the regulative principles, he
engages in various kinds of sinful activities. The regulative principles serve
to keep us on the standard of human life. But if we abandon them, we fall down
into illusory life, or maya.
If we want to advance in spiritual life, we must follow the regulative
principles and rectify the mistakes of our past lives and this present life.
Only those who have become free from all kinds of sinful reactions and are now
engaged in pious activities can fully understand God. Persons who commit sinful
activities and who are overly attached to bodily comforts and mundane
friendship, society, and family affection cannot be spiritually self-realized.
The fault of illicit connection with women is that it destroys all one's
brahminical qualities. Ajamila abandoned all the regulative principles due to
his association with a prostitute. He became a cheater and a thief. One who
acts dishonestly will be punished. He may escape the king's or government's
law, but he can never escape God's law. The materialists think, "I am
cheating God, and I can continue to gratify my senses by all nefarious
activities." But the sastras (scriptures) state that such persons are
cheating their own happiness in the end, because they will have to accept a
material body again and suffer accordingly.
A man who is born in a brahmana family is expected to be truthful and
self-controlled, to be fully cognizant of spiritual life and its practical
application, and to have complete faith in the statements of the sastras.
If a person does not follow the sastras, he becomes degraded. The great
sages and rsis throughout the world have given guidance, and their words are
recorded in the sastras. But rascals and fools misinterpret the scriptures and
misguide the people. At present, the Bhagavad-gita is interpreted in so many
different ways, and these so-called explanations are accepted by the innocent
public as authoritative knowledge. One interpreter explains that the
battlefield of Kuruksetra refers to the material body and that the five Pandava
brothers are really the five senses of the material body. But this is not the
proper understanding. How can anyone explain the Bhagavad-gita when he does not
understand it? Such an attempt is nonsense.
To understand the bona fide science of God, one must approach a bona
fide spiritual master and hear the Bhagavad-gita from him. We have to follow
the great personalities, the previous acaryas (spiritual masters). That will be
to our profit. We should not speculate and make up our own statements. We
should simply accept the injunctions given by the great acaryas, because that
is the process of the Vedic system. One must approach a bona fide spiritual
master and inquire from him submissively. The Absolute Truth is explained in
the scriptures, and the scriptures are explained by the spiritual master or a
saintly person. Whatever the bona fide, self-realized spiritual master says
must be accepted.
There is no room for interpretation of the sastras. In the
Srimad-Bhagavatam it is said that Krsna lifted Govardhana Hill just as a child
lifts a mushroom. He did it so easily, but people do not believe it. Those who
do not believe in the Bhagavatam interpret an indirect meaning. The meaning is
clear, and there is nothing to be misunderstood, but these rascals draw their
own conclusions nonetheless.
When the language is clear, why should we interpret? By interpretation,
so-called scholars and theologians have played havoc with the Vedic literature.
No bona fide acarya has ever interpreted the sastras according to his own
whims, but many so-called modern scholars and leaders have done so, and
therefore people are gliding down into the most abominable conditions of
material existence. In the interest of the people, these rascals should be
exposed. Therefore we are presenting the Bhagavad-gita As It Is.
The Degradation of Modern Society
Here the Srimad-Bhagavatam says that the brahmana Ajamila became
attached to a prostitute and thus lost his brahminical qualifications. He was a
young man of about twenty when this happened. Because of his illicit
association with the prostitute, Ajamila was forced to live by begging,
borrowing, stealing, and gambling.
These verses indicate how degraded one becomes simply by indulging in
illicit sex with a prostitute. Illicit sex is not possible with chaste women,
but only with unchaste women. The more society allows prostitution and illicit
sex, the more impetus it gives to cheaters, thieves, plunderers, drunkards, and
gamblers. Therefore we first advise all the disciples in our Krsna
consciousness movement to avoid illicit sex, which is the beginning of all
abominable life and which is followed by meat-eating, gambling, and
intoxication, one after another. Of course, restraint is difficult, but it is
quite possible if one fully surrenders to Krsna, since all abominable habits
gradually become distasteful for a Krsna conscious person.
While in his time Ajamila was an exception, in the present age there are
millions of Ajamilas. But if illicit sex is allowed to increase, the entire
society will be condemned, for it will be full of rogues, thieves, cheaters,
and so forth.
Therefore, if we actually want to improve the world situation, we have
to take to Krsna consciousness, as that gives the best service to human
society, both materially and spiritually. Whatever abominable characteristics
we have developed, we have only to take to the process of bhakti-yoga, or
devotional service, in order to completely eradicate them. We have developed so
many anarthas, or unwanted habits, the chief of which are meat-eating,
intoxication, illicit sex, and gambling. But we can curb them by accepting the
principles of bhakti-yoga as they are presented in the Bhagavad-gita and the
Srimad-Bhagavatam. Scarcely anyone knows these Vedic scriptures, and therefore
no one heeds their instructions. People would rather read all kinds of books by
all kinds of rascals, but the result of such books is to kill Krsna
consciousness.
In illusion a person may think he can get rid of unwanted habits and be
saved by some artificial, mystic meditation. And in fact at one time it was
possible to attain liberation by practicing astanga-yoga, or eightfold yogic
meditation. But at present almost no one can follow this process, and
artificial attempts at yoga will not help us.
Therefore to help the fallen people of this Age of Kali, the Supreme
Lord appeared five hundred years ago as Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu. He knew that
the people of this age would not even be able to follow the regulative
principles, what to speak of practicing astanga-yoga. Therefore He gave the
maha-mantra--Hare Krsna, Hare Krsna, Krsna Krsna, Hare Hare. Hare Rama, Hare
Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare--so that we can gradually be elevated to the highest
position of spiritual life. Other processes of purification or sacrifice cannot
be followed in this age, because for the most part people are too degraded. But
anyone may take to this process of chanting Hare Krsna. As it is said in the
Brhan-naradiya Purana (3.8.126),
harer nama harer nama
harer namaiva kevalam
kalau nasty eva nasty eva
nasty eva gatir anyatha
"In this age of quarrel and hypocrisy, the only means of
deliverance is chanting the holy name of the Lord. There is no other way. There
is no other way. There is no other way." Chanting the holy name of the
Lord is always superbly effective, but it is especially effective in this Age
of Kali. Its practical effectiveness will now be explained by Sukadeva Gosvami
through the history of Ajamila, who was freed from the hands of Yamaraja, the
universal judge, simply because of chanting the holy name of Narayana.
The Dangers of Illicit Sex
To benefit fully from chanting the holy name of the Lord, one needs to
chant offenselessly. And to guarantee offenseless chanting, some austerity is
required. First of all, one should not indulge in illicit sex. Sex is one of
the bodily needs, so it is sanctioned in the sastras to some degree: one is
allowed to live peacefully with one's wife and have sex for begetting children.
Other than to beget children, however, there is no need of indulging in sex.
One who does not take the responsibility of family life but remains a bachelor
and engages in illicit sex is considered irresponsible, and he will have to
suffer the consequences.
Of course, one who thinks that family life is too big a responsibility
can forgo it and thus avoid a lot of trouble. Family responsibility is very
great; therefore if a man feels he cannot accept the responsibility, he should
remain a brahmacari, a celibate student. A person who practices the science of
brahmacarya under the care of a spiritual master automatically becomes
seventy-five percent free from material entanglement.
Today, however, no one wants to undergo the austerities of brahmacarya.
Everyone wants to remain unmarried but also engage in sex. In this way people
are losing all good character. To maintain a woman who is nothing more than a
prostitute and engage in illicit sex with her for producing children is sinful.
Such children are unwanted (varna-sankara), and in this way society becomes
degraded.
Ajamila became attracted to a prostitute, and with her he begot ten
children. He became so degraded that he could not execute honest business to
support his large family, and he was forced to beg, borrow, and steal to
maintain them. If a person indulges in illicit sex, intoxication and gambling
automatically follow. His expenses will be unlimited, and to meet all his
expenses he will have to adopt methods of cheating and stealing. The basis for
Ajamila's degradation was his illicit connection with the prostitute.
Therefore, in the practice of Krsna consciousness we do not allow any
illicit sex. Devotees must either get married or remain celibate; this
regulation is very effective for maintaining a high standard of purity.
Chapter 2
In Imitation Of the Original
Sukadeva Gosvami continued: My dear king, eighty-eight years of his life
passed by while Ajamila thus spent his time in abominable, sinful activities to
maintain his family of ten sons and the prostitute. The youngest child was a
baby named Narayana, who was naturally very dear to his father and mother.
(Srimad-Bhagavatam 6.1.23-24)
Parental Affection
Ajamila's sinfulness is shown by the fact that although he was
eighty-eight years old, he had a very young child. According to Vedic culture,
one should leave home as soon as he has reached fifty years of age; one should
not live at home and go on producing children. Sex is allowed for twenty-five
years, between the ages of twenty-five and fifty. After that one should give up
the habit of sex and leave home as a vanaprastha and then properly take
sannyasa. Ajamila, however, because of his association with a prostitute, lost
all brahminical culture and became most sinful, even in his so-called household
life.
Ajamila was a young man of twenty when he met the prostitute, and he
begot ten children in her. When he was almost ninety years old, the time came
when he was to die. At that time most of his children were grown up, so
naturally the youngest child, Narayana, became his parents' favorite, and
Ajamila was very much attached to him.
A baby's smile immediately attracts the father, mother, and relatives.
When the child begins to talk, making sounds in broken language, it is very
joyful for the parents. Unless this attraction is there, it is not possible to
raise the child with affection. Parental affection is natural even among the
animal species. In Kanpura, a monkey once came with her baby near the room
where we were staying. The baby monkey entered the window through the bars, and
the mother became very upset. She became mad with anxiety. Somehow or other we
pushed the baby monkey out of the bars, and immediately the mother embraced the
baby and took it away with her.
In human society, the affection between a mother and her child is very
much eulogized, but as we see, this relationship is visible even among the
animals. Therefore it is not an outstanding qualification; it is material
nature's law. Unless the mother and child are affectionately connected, it is
not possible for the child to grow up. Parental affection is natural and
necessary, but it does not raise one to the spiritual platform.
The character of the debauchee Ajamila was abominable, but he was still
very affectionate toward his youngest child. Although Ajamila was nearly
ninety, he was still enjoying the child's playful pastimes, just as Maharaja
Nanda and mother Yasoda enjoyed the childhood pastimes of Lord Krsna.
Spiritual
Affection and Variety
Parental affection in this material world is a perverted reflection of
parental affection in the spiritual world, where it is found in its pure,
original form. Everything originates with the transcendental reality. As stated
in the Vedanta-sutra (1.1.2), janmady asya yatah: "The Supreme Absolute
Truth is that from which everything emanates." If the affection between a
child and his parents did not exist in the Absolute Truth, it could not exist
in the material world.
Since the Absolute Truth is the source of
everything, whatever varieties we see here in this material world are simply
reflections of the varieties in the spiritual world. If the Absolute Truth were
without variety, then where have all these varieties come from? No, the
Absolute Truth is not impersonal (nirakara) or without variety (nirvisesa).
Still, some persons, called Mayavadis, are so disappointed and
frustrated with the imperfect varieties of this material world that they
imagine the spiritual world to be impersonal and without variety. These
impersonalists realize that they are Brahman, or spirit, but they do not know
that there are innumerable planets in the brahmajyoti, or spiritual atmosphere.
They think that the brahmajyoti itself is all-in-all. The impersonalists have
no information of the Vaikuntha planets, and due to their imperfect knowledge
they again come down to these material planets. As said in the
Srimad-Bhagavatam (10.2.32):
ye 'nye 'ravindaksa vimukta-maninas
tvayy asta-bhavad
avisuddha-buddhayah
aruhya-krchhrena param padam tatah
patanty adho 'nadrta yusmad anghrayah
"Although impersonalists are almost liberated, still, on account of
their negligence of the lotus feet of Krsna, their intelligence is not yet
purified. Thus despite performing severe austerities to rise up to the platform
of Brahman, they must fall down again to this material world."
Spiritual Form and Spiritual Pastimes
The impersonalist philosophers cannot differentiate between activities
in the material world and similar activities in the spiritual world. Nor do
they differentiate between the material form and God's form. They are convinced
that the impersonal brahmajyoti, the spiritual effulgence emanating from the
Lord's body, is the Supreme Absolute Truth. The Mayavadis mistakenly assume
that when God appears He accepts a material body, just as we have taken this
material form in the material world. That kind of thinking is impersonalism, or
Mayavada philosophy.
God has a form, but not a material form like ours. His form is
sac-cid-ananda-vigraha, a spiritual form full of eternity, bliss, and
knowledge. Anyone who understands the transcendental nature of Krsna's form achieves
perfection. This Krsna confirms in the Bhagavad-gita (4.9):
janma karma ca me divyam
evam yo vetti tattvatah
tyaktva deham punar janma
naiti mam eti so 'rjuna
"When I come, I do not accept a material body; My birth and
activities are completely spiritual. And anyone who perfectly understands this
is liberated." When Krsna displayed Himself as the perfect child before
mother Yasoda, He would break everything when she did not supply Him with
butter--as if He were in need of butter! So God can display Himself exactly
like an ordinary human being, yet He remains the Supreme Personality of
Godhead.
Impersonalists cannot know God because they see Him as an ordinary man.
This is rascaldom, as Krsna declares in the Bhagavad-gita (9.11): avajananti
mam mudhah. "Only rascals accept Me as an ordinary human being." The
Maya-vadis say, "Oh, here is a child. How can He be God?" Even Brahma
and Indra became bewildered. They thought, "How can this boy be the
Supreme Lord? Let me test Him."
Sometimes a so-called incarnation of God declares, "I am God."
He should be tested to determine whether or not he is actually God. The
Mayavadis are claiming, "I am God, I am Krsna, I am Rama." Everyone
becomes "Krsna," everyone becomes "Rama," yet people do not
challenge their claims: "If you are Rama, exhibit your supreme potency!
Rama constructed a bridge over the Indian Ocean. What have you done? At the age
of seven, Krsna lifted Govardhana Hill. What have you done?" When they are
challenged by Krsna's pastimes, these rascals say, "It is all fiction; it
is all legend." Therefore people accept an ordinary person as Rama or
Krsna. This nonsense is going on, and both those who declare themselves to be
God and those who accept them as God will have to suffer for it. Anyone can
claim to be God, and any foolish person can accept, but no one will benefit by
serving a false God.
Once Lord Brahma thought that Krsna might also be such a false God. He
observed that a mere boy in Vrndavana, India, was accepted as the Supreme Lord
and that He was performing extraordinary activities. So Brahma decided to make
a test. He took away all of Krsna's calves and playmates and hid them. When
Brahma returned to Vrndavana after one year and saw the same calves and
playmates still there, he could understand that Krsna had expanded Himself by
His unlimited potency into so many calves and boys. The boys' own mothers could
not detect that their sons were Krsna's expansions, though the mothers could
not explain why every evening when their boys returned home from the fields,
their affection for them increased more and more. Finally, Brahma surrendered
to Krsna, composing very nice prayers in glorification of the Lord.
Similarly, Indra became bewildered when Krsna told His father, Nanda
Maharaja, "There is no need of performing sacrifices to Indra, because he
is under the order of the Supreme Lord." Krsna did not say to Nanda
Maharaja, "I am the Supreme Lord," but He said, "Indra is under
the order of the Supreme Lord; therefore he has to supply you with water. So
there is no need of performing this yajna [sacrifice] to him."
When the sacrifice to Indra was stopped, he became furious and tried to
punish the inhabitants of Vrndavana by sending incessant torrents of rain for
seven days. Vrndavana was nearly drowned in water--so great was the downpour.
But Krsna, a child of about seven years, immediately lifted Govardhana Hill and
invited all the residents of Vrndavana, together with their animals, to take
shelter underneath the hill. Krsna held up the hill for seven days and nights
without taking any food or rest, just to protect the residents of Vrndavana.
Thus Indra understood that Krsna was the Supreme Personality of Godhead.
In this way the Srimad-Bhagavatam warns that if even great personalities
like Brahma and Indra can sometimes become bewildered by maya, the external
manifestation of Krsna's energy, then what to speak of us.
So, God sometimes displays Himself as God and sometimes as a human
being, but the rascal impersonalists dismiss His pastimes as legend or
mythology. Either they do not believe in the sastras or they interpret them in
their own way, using ardha-kukkuti-nyaya, "the logic of half a hen."
Once a man kept a hen that delivered a golden egg every day. The foolish man
thought, "It is very profitable, but it is expensive to feed this hen.
Better that I cut off her head and save the expense of feeding her. Then I will
get the egg without any charge." The impersonalists accept the sastras in
this way. They think, "Oh, this is not good; it is inconvenient. We shall
cut this portion out." When Krsna says, "One should see Me
everywhere," the rascal Mayavadis think it is very palatable, but when He
says, "Give up everything and surrender to Me," they disagree. They
accept what is convenient and reject what is not. But the acaryas do not
distort the sastras in this way. When Krsna spoke the Bhagavad-gita, Arjuna
said, "I accept whatever You have said."
The Absolute Truth Full of Knowledge
The Vedanta-sutra is accepted as the supreme authority of all Vedic
literature. And the Vedanta-sutra (1.1.2) says, janmady asya yatah: "The
Absolute Truth is the original source of everything." Janma means
"birth." There is no question of interpretation; the meaning is
clear. Everything in this material world comes out of the Absolute Truth, just
as this body comes out of the womb of our mother. Janmady asya yatah:
"Beginning from birth up to the annihilation, everything is an emanation
from the Absolute Truth." The Absolute Truth is that which is the source
of everything, the reservoir of everything, and the maintainer of everything.
What are the characteristics of the original source? The Srimad-Bhagavatam
(1.1.1) says, janmady asya yato 'nvayad itaratas carthesv abhijnah svarat: The
original source of everything must be supremely cognizant of everything, both
directly and indirectly. He is the supreme spirit, and He knows everything
because He is perfect. We are also spirit--spiritual sparks--and as soon as a
spiritual spark takes shelter in the womb of a mother, it develops a body. That
means that the spiritual spark is the source of the body and all its
mechanisms. Although it is by our energy that this body is produced, we do not
know how our veins are created or how our bones are created. And because we do
not know, we are not God. But Krsna knows. This is the characteristic of the
Absolute Truth: He knows everything. Krsna confirms this in the Bhagavad-gita
(7.26): "I know everything that has happened in the past, everything that
is happening now, and everything that will happen in the future."
We become cognizant of the Absolute Truth by accepting knowledge from a
spiritual master, but how has Krsna become perfectly cognizant? How is Krsna's
knowledge so perfect? Because He is fully independent (svarat). He does not
have to learn anything from anyone. Some rascal may try to realize himself as
God by taking knowledge from a Mayavadi, but Krsna is God without taking
knowledge from anyone. That is God.
Chapter 3
At the Final Hour
Sukadeva Gosvami continued: Because of the child's broken language and
awkward movements, old Ajamila was very much attached to him. He always took
care of the child and enjoyed his activities. When Ajamila chewed food and ate
it, he called the child to chew and eat, and when he drank he called the child
to drink also. Always engaged in taking care of the child and calling his name,
Narayana, Ajamila could not understand that his own time was now exhausted and
that death was upon him.
When the time of death arrived for the foolish Ajamila, he began
thinking exclusively of his son Narayana. (Srimad-Bhagavatam 6.1.25-27)
A Child's Name
Here it is clearly mentioned that the child Narayana was so young that
he could not even speak or walk properly. Since the old man was very attached
to the child, he enjoyed the child's activities, and because the child's name
was Narayana, the old man always chanted the holy name of Narayana. Although
Ajamila was referring to the small child and not to the original Narayana, the
name of Narayana is so powerful that even by chanting his son's name he was
becoming purified. Srila Rupa Gosvami has therefore declared that if one's mind
is somehow or other attracted by the holy name of Krsna (tasmat kenapy upayena
manah krsne nivesayet), one is on the path of liberation. In India even today
parents often give their children names of God, such as Krsna, Govinda, or
Narayana. Thus the parents chant the names Krsna, Govinda, or Narayana and get
the chance to be purified.
At the time of death, Ajamila was chanting the name of Narayana in
connection with his youngest child. Since Ajamila was the son of a brahmana, he
had been accustomed to worshiping Narayana in his youth, because in every
brahmana's house there is worship of Narayana. Therefore, although the
contaminated Ajamila was calling for his son, by concentrating his mind on the
holy name of Narayana he remembered the Narayana he had very faithfully
worshiped in his youth.
The value of remembering Narayana at the time of death is explained in
the Second Canto of the Srimad-Bhagavatam (2.1.6):
etavan sankhya-yogabhyam
svadharma-parinisthaya
janma-labhah parah pumsam
ante narayana-smrtih
"The highest perfection of human life, achieved either by complete
knowledge of matter and spirit, by acquirement of mystic powers, or by perfect
discharge of one's occupational duty, is to remember Narayana, the Personality
of Godhead, at the end of life."
Somehow or other, therefore, Ajamila consciously or unconsciously
chanted the name of Narayana at the time of death and became all-perfect.
Death, a Critical Time of Life
As mentioned above, one's mentality at the time of death is
all-important. But if we become complacent and think, "Oh, death takes
place--what of it?" then we cannot advance on the spiritual path. Just as
the air carries fragrances, so a person's mentality at the time of death will
carry him to his next life. If he has cultivated the mentality of a Vaisnava, a
pure devotee of Krsna, then he will immediately be transferred to Vaikuntha.
But if he has cultivated the mentality of an ordinary karmi, a fruitive worker,
then he will have to stay in this material world to suffer the consequences of
the kind of mentality he has thus created.
Suppose I am a businessman. If I simply do business up till the point of
death, naturally my mentality will be business. One Calcutta businessman at the
time of death asked about the management of his mill. He might have taken his
next birth as a rat in his mill. This is possible. At the time of death,
whatever you are thinking will carry you to your next body. Krsna is very kind,
and whatever mentality one is absorbed in at the time of death, Krsna will
provide an appropriate body: "All right, you are thinking like a rat?
Become a rat." "You are thinking like a tiger? Become a tiger."
"You are thinking like My devotee? Come to Me."
By chanting Hare Krsna, we can mold our thoughts so that we are always
thinking of Krsna. As Krsna recommends in the Bhagavad-gita (6.47), yoginam api
sarvesam mad-gatenantaratmana: "The first-class yogi is he who always
thinks of Me within his heart." The Krsna consciousness movement is
especially meant for helping the members of human society come to this state of
full Krsna consciousness. Then at the end of life one will simply remember
Krsna. Whatever you practice throughout your life will determine your
consciousness at death. That is natural.
One who properly prepares for the time of death is really intelligent,
while one who thinks he can remain at home forever and enjoy the association of
his wife and children is a fool. In illusion a man thinks, "My bank
balance, my nice house, and my family will protect me." But these cannot
protect anyone. The Srimad-Bhagavatam (2.1.4) declares,
dehapatya-kalatradisv
atma-sainyesv asatsv api
tesam pramatto nidhanam
pasyann api na pasyati
"One who is mad thinks, 'My strong body, my grown-up children, my
good wife, and my bank balance will save me.' " We are simply struggling
in this material world like soldiers fighting on a battlefield. Our soldiers
are our children, our wife, our bank balance, our countrymen, etc. The Srimad-Bhagavatam
warns us not to take shelter of such fallible soldiers. Even though a man has
seen that his father and grandfather, who were once living, are existing no
more, he does not see that likewise everyone, including himself, will be
destroyed. How can he protect his son? How can his son protect him? These
questions do not arise for the materialist who is simply engrossed in the
animal propensities of eating, sleeping, defending, and mating.
Chapter 4
Neither Birth Nor Death
Sukadeva Gosvami continued: Ajamila then saw three awkward persons with
deformed bodily features, fierce, twisted faces, and hair standing erect on
their bodies. With ropes in their hands, they had come to take him away to the
abode of Yamaraja. When he saw them he was extremely bewildered, and because of
attachment to his child, who was playing nearby, Ajamila began to call him
loudly by his name. Thus with tears in his eyes he somehow or other chanted the
holy name of Narayana. (Srimad-Bhagavatam 6.1.28-29)
Anxious to Save Themselves from Death
At the time of death people become very anxious to save themselves,
especially those who have been sinful. Of course, the soul itself is not
subject to death (na hanyate hanyamane sarire), but leaving the present body
and entering into another body is very painful. At death the living entity can
no longer bear to remain in his present body--the pain is so acute. Sometimes
when a person's life becomes too painful he commits suicide. But suicide is a
sin punishable by the laws of karma.
When Ajamila was dying, he saw three ferocious and very frightening
persons with ropes in their hands, unruly hair on their heads, and bodily hair
like bristles. These assistants of Yamaraja, the Yamadutas, had come to drag
Ajamila out of his body and take him to the court of Yamaraja. Sometimes a
dying man cries out in fear when he sees the Yamadutas. Ajamila, too, became
very fearful.
Fortunately, even though Ajamila was referring to his son, he chanted
the holy name of Narayana, and therefore the order-carriers of Narayana, the
Visnudutas, also immediately arrived there. Because Ajamila was extremely
afraid of the ropes of Yamaraja, he chanted the Lord's name with tearful eyes.
Actually, however, he never meant to chant the holy name of Narayana; he meant
to call his son.
The Appearance and Disappearance Of Krsna and His Devotees
One may ask, "The devotees die, and the nondevotees also die. What
is the difference?" It is like this: The mother cat may catch a rat and
carry it in her mouth, and she also carries her kittens in her mouth. It is the
same mouth, but the kittens are comfortable and safe, whereas the rat is
feeling the jaws of death. Similarly, at the time of death the devotees are
transferred to the spiritual realm, Vaikuntha, whereas the ordinary sinful man
is dragged down to the hellish regions by the Yamadutas, the constables of
Yama-raja. This was apparently to be Ajamila's fate.
In the Bhagavad-gita (4.9) Krsna says, janma karma ca me divyam:
"My appearance and disappearance are spiritual, transcendental; they are
not ordinary." Why does Krsna appear in this world? That He explains in
the previous verse (Bg. 4.8):
paritranaya sadhunam
vinasaya ca duskrtam
dharma-samsthapanarthaya
sambhavami yuge yuge
"To deliver the pious and annihilate the miscreants, as well as to
reestablish the principles of religion, I appear millennium after
millennium." God's only business is to protect the faithful devotees and
to kill the demoniac. Therefore we find Lord Visnu pictured with His weapons,
the club and cakra (disc), for protecting the devotees, and the lotus flower
and conch for their benediction.
Similarly transcendental are the appearance and disappearance of Krsna's
devotees who are sent to this material world to preach the glories of the Lord.
According to the principles of Vaisnavism, both the appearance and the
disappearance of such Vaisnavas, or devotees of Visnu (Krsna), are
all-auspicious. Therefore we hold festivals in their honor on the anniversaries
of both days.
Actually, even ordinary living entities never take birth or die, what to
speak of Krsna and His devotees. Sometimes atheistic men say God is dead. They
do not know that even the smallest living entity does not die. So how can God
be dead? Atheists are described in the Bhagavad-gita as mudhas, or foolish
rascals. They have no knowledge but pose themselves as learned men and mutter
something that is good neither for them nor the public.
Liberation via Thinking of Krsna
Because somehow or other Ajamila became absorbed in thinking of
Narayana, or Krsna, at the time of death, he immediately became eligible for
liberation, even though he had acted sinfully throughout his entire life. One
can think of Krsna in any capacity. The gopis, Krsna's cowherd girlfriends,
were absorbed in thinking of Krsna out of what appeared to be lusty desire,
Sisupala became absorbed in thinking of Krsna out of anger, and Kamsa
incessantly thought of Krsna out of fear. Kamsa and Sisupala were demons, but
because they thought of the Supreme Personality of Godhead throughout their
lives and at the time of death, they were granted liberation by Krsna Himself.
Of course, it is best if one thinks of Krsna favorably. Bhakti, or
devotional service, means thinking favorably of Krsna. Sisupala and Kamsa were
not devotees, because the word devotee implies someone who is favorably
disposed toward Krsna. Thinking of Krsna in the opposite way, however, is also
accepted by Krsna. Krsna is so kind that anyone who thinks of Him always, even
as an enemy, becomes the greatest yogi and attains liberation. Thus the results
of yogic performances and austerities were achieved even by such inimical
personalities as Kamsa and Sisupala. In the impersonal Brahman effulgence
(brahmajyoti) we find not only the highest learned scholars (jnanis), who have
struggled to attain Brahman, but also those persons who constantly think of
Krsna in enmity. They also enter into that spiritual effulgence. Thus the
destination achieved by the jnanis is also achieved by the enemies of Krsna.
This, however, is not very desirable.
A living entity can remain for some time in the Brahman effulgence
(brahmajyoti) as a tiny shining spiritual particle. As there are many molecular
particles of sunshine, similarly the living entities can live as small
particles of spiritual effulgence in the brahmajyoti. But they are subject to
fall down into this material creation again. By nature the living entities want
varieties of sense enjoyment, but in that impersonal existence there are no
varieties of enjoyment. So when they desire to enjoy, they have to come again
to this material world. Therefore, if one merges into the Brahman effulgence,
there is every chance of falling down.
Krsna's devotees do not desire liberation, because their only interest
is to be engaged in devotional service to Krsna, whether in the material world
or in the spiritual world. Still, by the mercy of Krsna, they attain liberation
by being elevated to the planet of Goloka Vrndavana, the residence of Krsna,
where the material miseries of birth, death, old age, and disease are conspicuous
by their absence. Thus a devotee's position is different from that of the
impersonalists and jnanis. The devotee's position is very exalted. He also
passes through the Brahman effulgence, but he is not attracted to it. He is
attracted to the Vaikuntha planets, especially Goloka Vrndavana, where the
Supreme Personality of Godhead lives eternally with His associates.
Chapter 5
The Visnudutas To the Rescue
Sukadeva Gosvami continued: My dear king, the order-carriers of Visnu,
the Visnudutas, immediately arrived when they heard the holy name of their
master from the mouth of the dying Ajamila, who had certainly chanted without
offense because he had chanted in complete anxiety. The order-carriers of Yamaraja
were snatching the soul from the core of Ajamila's heart, but with resounding
voices the Visnudutas forbade them to do so. (Srimad-Bhagavatam 6.1.30-31)
The Messengers Dispatched by the Lord
The Yamadutas, who are the assistants of Yamaraja, the superintendent of
death, had come to drag Ajamila away. Ajamila appealed to his youngest son,
Narayana: "Narayana, please come here! I'm dying!" Krsna is so kind
that as soon as He heard Ajamila chant "Narayana!" at the time of his
death, He immediately dispatched His assistants, the Visnudutas, to give
Ajamila shelter.
Srila Visvanatha Cakravarti Thakura remarks that the Visnudutas came
because they heard Ajamila chant the holy name of their master, Narayana,
without considering why he was chanting. While chanting the name of Narayana,
Ajamila was actually thinking of his son, but simply because they heard Ajamila
chant the Lord's name, the Visnudutas immediately came for Ajamila's
protection. Chanting of the Lord's holy name is actually meant for His
glorification. Ajamila, however, did not glorify the Lord: he simply chanted
the holy name of Narayana because of his excessive attachment to his son.
Nevertheless, because of his past good fortune in having rendered devotional
service to Narayana in his youth, he apparently chanted the holy name in full
devotional service and without offense. Thus that chanting was sufficient to
cleanse him of all sinful reactions and assure him the protection of the
Visnudutas.
The name Narayana has the full potency of the Supreme Personality of
Godhead--Narayana, or Krsna. That is the secret of nama-sankirtana, chanting
the names of God. By chanting the holy name of Krsna, we make immediate contact
with Krsna Himself. The reason for this is that the Lord's name is not
material: it is spiritual and absolute. Thus there is no difference between
Krsna and His name.
Snatching the Soul
When the Visnudutas arrived, they spoke to the Yamadutas with extreme
gravity: "What are you doing? Stop! You cannot take this man to
Yamaraja!"
A Vaisnava, one who has surrendered to the lotus feet of Lord Visnu, is
always protected by Lord Visnu's order-carriers. Because Ajamila had chanted
the holy name of Narayana, the Visnudutas not only immediately arrived on the
spot but also at once ordered the Yamadutas not to touch him. By speaking with
resounding voices, the Visnudutas threatened to punish the Yamadutas if they
continued trying to snatch Ajamila's soul from his heart. The order-carriers of
Yamaraja have jurisdiction over all sinful living entities, but the messengers
of Lord Visnu are capable of punishing anyone, including Yamaraja, if he wrongs
a Vaisnava.
Modern scientists do not know where to find the soul within the body
with their material instruments, but here the Srimad-Bhagavatam clearly
explains that the soul is within the core of the heart (hrdaya); it is from the
heart that the Yamadutas were trying to extract the soul of Ajamila. The heart
is part of the mechanical arrangement of the body. As the Lord says in the
Bhagavad-gita (18.61):
isvarah sarva-bhutanam
hrd-dese 'rjuna tisthati
bhramayan sarva-bhutani
yantrarudhani mayaya
"The Supreme Lord is situated in everyone's heart, O Arjuna, and is
directing the wanderings of all living entities, who are seated as on a machine
made of the material energy." Yantra means "machine," such as an
automobile. The driver of the machine of the body is the individual soul, who
is also its director or proprietor, but the supreme director and proprietor is
the Personality of Godhead in His form as the Supersoul.
One's body is created through the agency of maya according to one's
activities in one's past life; and according to one's activities in this life,
maya creates another body for the next life. At the appropriate time, one's
next body is immediately chosen, and both the individual soul and the Supersoul
transfer to that particular bodily machine. This is the process of
transmigration of the soul.
During transmigration from one body to the next, the sinful soul is
taken away by the order-carriers of Yamaraja and put into a particular type of
hellish life in order to become accustomed to the condition in which he will
live in his next body.
Chapter 6
The Residents Of the Spiritual Sky
Sukadeva Gosvami continued: When the order-carriers of Yamaraja, the son
of the sun-god, were thus forbidden, they replied, "Who are you, sirs,
that have the audacity to challenge the jurisdiction of Yamaraja? Whose
servants are you, where have you come from, and why are you forbidding us to
touch the body of Ajamila? Are you demigods from the heavenly planets, are you
sub-demigods, or are you the best of devotees? Your eyes are just like the
petals of lotus flowers. Dressed in yellow silken garments, decorated with
garlands of lotuses, and wearing very attractive helmets on your heads and
earrings on your ears, you all appear fresh and youthful. Your four long arms
are decorated with bows and quivers of arrows and with swords, clubs,
conchshells, discs, and lotus flowers. Your effulgence has dissipated the
darkness here with extraordinary illumination. Now, sirs, why are you
obstructing us?" (Srimad-Bhagavatam 6.1.32-36)
Divine Interference
The sins Ajamila had committed placed him within the jurisdiction of
Yamaraja, the supreme judge appointed to consider the sins of the living
entities. When forbidden to touch Ajamila, the order-carriers of Yamaraja were
surprised, because within all the three worlds no one had ever before hindered
them in the execution of their duty.
The Visnudutas were coming from Vaikuntha, and they appeared
extraordinary, each with four arms. The servants of Yamaraja immediately
received them with respect. They had no idea which planet the Visnudutas had
come from, so they simply suggested, "You must have come from a very
exalted planet, but why are you interfering with our business? We are
Yamadutas. It is our duty to arrest every sinful man, and Ajamila has committed
misdeeds throughout his life. Now, at the end of his life, we are authorized to
take him to Yamaraja, the son of Vivasvan, the sun-god, so why are you
preventing us?"
The most significant word used in verse 32 is siddha-sattamah, which
means "the best of the perfect." In the Bhagavad-gita (7.3) it is
said, manusyanam sahasresu kascid yatati siddhaye: out of millions of persons,
one may try to become siddha, perfect--or, in other words, self-realized. A
self-realized person knows that he is not the body but a spiritual soul (aham
brahmasmi). At present almost no one is aware of this fact, but one who
understands this has attained perfection and is therefore called siddha. When
one understands that the soul is part and parcel of the Supreme Soul and one
thus engages in the devotional service of the Supreme Soul, one becomes
siddha-sattama. One is then eligible to live in Vaikuntha or Krsnaloka. The
word siddha-sattama, therefore, refers to a pure devotee of the Lord.
Since the Yamadutas are servants of Yamaraja, who is also one of the
siddha-sattamas, they knew that a siddha-sattama is above the demigods and
sub-demigods and, indeed, above all the living entities within this material
world. The Yamadutas therefore inquired why the Visnudutas were preventing them
from carrying out the orders of such an exalted soul as Yamaraja.
It should also be noted that Ajamila was not yet dead, for the Yamadutas
had been stopped before they could snatch the soul from his heart. Ajamila was
simply on the verge of death as the argument progressed between the Yamadutas
and the Visnudutas. The conclusion of that argument was to be a decision
regarding who would claim the soul of Ajamila.
Spiritual Beauty
The Visnudutas exactly resembled Lord Visnu. The Yamadutas had never
seen them before, because the Yamadutas stay in an atmosphere where only sinful
activities are executed. Therefore they were astonished at the presence of
these beautiful personalities and said, "By your bodily features you
appear to be very exalted gentlemen, and you have such celestial power that you
have dissipated the darkness of this material world with your effulgence. Why
then should you endeavor to stop us from executing our duty?" It will be
explained that the Yamadutas, the order-carriers of Yamaraja, mistakenly
considered Ajamila sinful. They did not know that although he was sinful
throughout his entire life, he was purified by constantly chanting the holy
name of Narayana.
The Visnudutas were so effulgent because they were residents of the
spiritual world, where everyone and everything is self-effulgent. As Lord Krsna
says in the Bhagavad-gita (15.6), na tad bhasayate suryo na sasanko na pavakah:
"My abode is not illuminated by the sun, the moon, fire, or
electricity." The Yamadutas did not know where the Visnudutas had come
from, but they could see that the Visnudutas were not ordinary, since they were
so effulgent, they had four arms, and they were extremely beautiful.
The dress and bodily features of the residents of Vaikuntha are
accurately described in these verses. The residents of Vaikuntha, who are
decorated with garlands and yellow silken garments, have four arms holding a
disc, flower, club, and conchshell. Thus they exactly resemble Lord
Visnu--except for one very prominent feature: the Kaustubha jewel, which the
Lord wears on His chest. The residents of Vaikuntha have the same bodily
features as Narayana because they have attained the liberation of sarupya, but
they nevertheless act as servants. All the residents of Vaikunthaloka know
perfectly well that their master is Narayana, or Krsna, and that they are all
His servants. They are all self-realized souls who are nitya-mukta,
everlastingly liberated. Although they could conceivably declare themselves
Narayana, they never do so; they always remain Krsna conscious and serve the
Lord faithfully. Such is the atmosphere of Vaikunthaloka. Similarly, one who
learns the faithful service of Lord Krsna through the Krsna consciousness
movement will always remain in Vaikunthaloka and have nothing to do with the
material world.
Beyond the Material World
In our conditioned state, we cannot know about the spiritual world. But
the spiritual world exists. As Lord Krsna states in the Bhagavad-gita (8.20),
paras tasmat tu bhavo 'nyo: "Besides this inferior, material nature there
is another, superior nature." This material nature is one nature,
comprised of millions and trillions of universes clustered together in one
corner of the spiritual sky. We cannot even measure the sky covered by this one
universe, within which there are innumerable planets; yet there are millions
and trillions of universes in the entire material creation. And the entire
material creation is only one fourth of existence. In other words, this whole
material world is existing in one fourth of Krsna's energy. The other three
fourths comprise the spiritual sky. Unfortunate persons think that this planet
is all in all, but this is frog philosophy. A frog in a well cannot understand
anything beyond the well, and he measures everything in terms of his well. When
he is told about the ocean, he cannot imagine it. Similarly, persons with such
a frog's mentality imagine, "God is like this," or "God's
kingdom is like that," or "I am God," or "There is no
God." But this is all foolishness.
Chapter 7
Authorized Discrimination
Sukadeva Gosvami continued: Being thus addressed by the messengers of
Yamaraja, the servants of Vasudeva smiled and spoke the following words in
voices as deep as the sound of rumbling clouds: "If you are actually
servants of Yamaraja, you must explain to us the meaning of religious
principles and the symptoms of irreligion. What is the process of punishing
others? Who are the actual candidates for punishment? Are all persons engaged
in fruitive activities punishable, or only some of them?" (Srimad-Bhagavatam
6.1.37-39)
What the Representatives of Dharma Should Know
The Yamadutas protested to the Visnudutas, "You are so exalted that
it is not very good for you to interfere with our business." The Yamadutas
were surprised to see that the Visnudutas, although exalted souls, were
hindering the rule of Yamaraja. Similarly, the Visnudutas were also surprised
that the Yamadutas, although claiming to be servants of Yamaraja, the supreme
judge of religious principles, were unaware of the principles of religion. Thus
the Visnudutas smiled, thinking, "What is this nonsense they are speaking?
If they are actually servants of Yamaraja, they should know that Ajamila is not
a suitable candidate for them to carry off."
The Visnudutas began to speak in grave voices: "You claim to be the
representatives of Dharmaraja [Yamaraja], the superintendent of death and the
maintainer of religion, and you accuse us of interfering in your business,
which he has entrusted to you. Therefore would you kindly explain what is
dharma, or religion, and what is adharma, or irreligion? If you are actually
representatives of Yamaraja, then you can answer this question."
This inquiry put by the Visnudutas to the Yamadutas is most important. A
servant must know the instructions of his master. The servants of Yamaraja
claimed to be carrying out his orders, and therefore the Visnudutas very
intelligently asked them to explain religious and irreligious principles. A
Vaisnava knows these principles perfectly well because he is well acquainted
with the instructions of the Supreme Personality of Godhead. The Supreme Lord
says, sarva-dharman parityajya mam ekam saranam vraja: "Give up all
varieties of religion and just surrender unto Me." Therefore surrender
unto the Supreme Personality of Godhead is the actual principle of religion.
Those who have surrendered to the demands of material nature instead of to
Krsna are all impious, regardless of their material position. Unaware of the
principles of religion, they do not surrender to Krsna, and therefore they are
considered sinful rascals, the lowest of men, and fools bereft of all
knowledge. As Krsna says in the Bhagavad-gita (7.15):
na mam duskrtino mudhah
prapadyante naradhamah
mayayapahrta-jnana
asuram bhavam asritah
"Those miscreants who are grossly foolish, who are the lowest among
mankind, whose knowledge is stolen by illusion, and who partake of the
atheistic nature of demons do not surrender unto Me."
The question posed by the Visnudutas was very suitable. One who
represents someone else must fully know that person's mission. The devotees in
the Krsna consciousness movement must therefore be fully aware of the mission
of Krsna and Lord Caitanya and the philosophy of Krsna consciousness; otherwise
they will be considered foolish.
Lord Caitanya Mahaprabhu has said, yei krsna-tattva-vetta, sei 'guru'
haya: "One must know Krsna--then he can become a guru." Not just
anyone can become a guru. Thus the Visnudutas challenged the Yamadutas:
"If you are truly representatives of Dharmaraja, then you must explain
what is religion and what is irreligion." That should be the criterion for
determining who is actually representative of religion. It is not that everyone
should be accepted as religious or as a guru. Widespread ignorance has given
rise to many persons calling themselves God, representing so much nonsense in
the name of dharma. When someone says, "I am God," or "I have
become God by mystic yoga," one should challenge him. In America a man
claimed, "I am God, everyone is God," and thus gathered disciples.
One day he was suffering from a toothache, and I asked him, "What kind of
God are you that you are suffering so much from a toothache?" Only a
lunatic or a cheater claims, "I am God."
Officers of Law Enforcement
One who has the power to punish others should not punish everyone. There
are innumerable living entities, most of whom are in the spiritual world and
are nitya-mukta, everlastingly liberated. There is no question of judging these
liberated living beings. Only a small fraction of the living entities, perhaps
one fourth, are in the material world. And the major portion of the living
entities in the material world--8,000,000 of the 8,400,000 forms of life--are
lower than human beings. They are not punishable, for under the laws of
material nature they are automatically evolving. Human beings, who are advanced
in consciousness, are responsible for their actions, but not all humans are
punishable. Those engaged in advanced pious activities are beyond punishment.
Only those who engage in sinful activities are punishable. Therefore the
Visnudutas particularly inquired about the criteria Yamaraja uses to determine
who is punishable and who is not. How is one to be judged? What is the basic
principle of authority? These are the questions raised by the Visnudutas.
The Yamadutas felt that they were faultless because they were following
the orders of Yamaraja, who himself is faultless. Just because a magistrate has
to direct the punishment of those who transgress the law does not mean the
magistrate is a criminal. He is a representative of the government. Similarly,
although Yamaraja has jurisdiction over the regions of hell and deals with all
sinful persons, he is a pure representative of Krsna and simply executes the
order of his master.
A police constable is supposed to know the law and whom to arrest for
breaking the law. If he arrests anyone and everyone, then he himself is a
criminal. He may not arrest the law-abiding citizens. Similarly, the Yamadutas
cannot take away just anyone and everyone to the court of Yamaraja. They can
take only the nondevotees to be punished for their sinful acts. Yamaraja has
especially cautioned the Yamadutas not to approach Vaisnavas.
However, because Ajamila had been very sinful, the Yamadutas could not
understand why he should not be considered a criminal and be brought to
Yamaraja for punishment.
Devotees and Demons
There are two classes of people in this material world: those who are
servants of God, called devas or suras, and those who are servants of maya
(illusion), called asuras.
In the spiritual world, however, there is only one class, because the
inhabitants are all servants of God. Therefore the spiritual world is called
absolute. There is no disagreement in the spiritual world, as the center is
Krsna, or God, and everyone there is engaged in His service out of love, not as
a paid servant. A paid servant will serve in proportion to the money he
receives, but in Vaikuntha there is no question of being a paid servant.
Everyone is liberated, and everyone is as opulent as the Supreme Personality of
Godhead, but everyone is still a servant. In the material world people serve
out of need, but in the spiritual world everyone serves out of love. There is
no need for anything, because everything there is complete. The Brahma-samhita
says that in the spiritual world there are kalpa-vrksa, or desire trees, from
which one can get anything he desires.
In the material world, service is forced upon everyone. If someone does
not render service, he will starve. Even a king has to work, what to speak of
the poor man. Under the direction of the Supreme Lord, the material energy
makes everyone into a dancing dog. The master says, "Please dance,"
and the dog dances, because he knows that unless he performs, he will starve.
Whether in the material world or the spiritual world, everyone is a
servant, but here people are under the impression that they are masters. The
head of the family thinks, "I am the master of my wife and children."
But in fact he is serving each and every member of his family. The state
executive officer thinks, "I am the king" or "I am the
president," but actually he is the servant of the citizens. Servitude is
his position, and unless he serves the citizens according to their
expectations, he will be deposed or fail to win reelection.
In the material world everyone is trying to become master of all he
surveys, and thus there is competition on every level--between self-acclaimed
"Gods," between heads of state, even between friends and family
members. In this illusory competition to be master, everyone fails. Mahatma
Gandhi was respected as the father of India, but after all he was just a
servant, and when one man didn't like his service, Gandhi was killed.
Similarly, President Kennedy was a very popular president, but somebody saw
some discrepancy in his service, and he was also killed. No one is really the
master here. Everyone is either a servant of maya (illusion) or a servant of
God.
Everyone has to obey the government laws. Under the spell of illusion,
however, the criminal thinks, "I do not accept the government laws." Yet
when he is caught he is forced to obey the government laws in the prison house.
He has no choice. Similarly, we are all servants of God, but the demoniac class
of men (asuras) do not care about God and God's laws. These rascals think that
there is no God, or that everyone is God, or that they themselves are God. But
such "Gods" must also follow the laws of God in the form of birth,
death, disease, and old age.
Only persons who are totally illusioned refuse to serve God. Instead of
voluntarily rendering service to God, they are the slaves of maya, the illusory
energy of God. A person who is haunted by ghosts speaks all kinds of nonsense.
Similarly, when a living entity is haunted by maya, or engrossed by the
illusory effects of the material nature, he also talks foolish nonsense, and
the most foolish talk is to claim that he is God.
Among the two classes of men--the divine (devas) and the demoniac
(asuras)--there is an ongoing struggle. The asuras are always rebelling against
God, and the devas are always surrendering to God. In the story of Prahlada
Maharaja, we see that even among family members there are devas and asuras.
Prahlada Maharaja's father, Hiranyakasipu, was an asura, whereas Prahlada
Maharaja was a deva. Naturally a father is affectionate toward his child, but
because Hiranyakasipu was a demon, he became the enemy of his son. That is the
nature of demons.
Of course, even a tiger has affection for her cubs, and so at first
Hiranyakasipu showed affection for Prahlada Maharaja, who was a very well
mannered and attractive child at five years old. One day Hiranyakasipu asked
his son, "My dear boy, what is the best thing you have learned in school?
Tell me."
Prahlada Maharaja replied, "One should sacrifice everything to
realize God. This human form of life is the best opportunity we have for making
spiritual progress, and it must be utilized for realizing God."
Hiranyakasipu angrily inquired from his son's teachers, "Why have
you taught all this nonsense to my boy?"
They fearfully answered, "Sir, we did not teach these things to
this boy. He is naturally inclined toward God, so what can we do? As soon as he
gets the opportunity, he begins to teach God consciousness to the other boys in
the class." In the absence of his teachers, Prahlada Maharaja would
immediately stand up on the bench and address his friends, "My dear boys,
this life is not for enjoying sense gratification. It is for realizing God. Do
not forget this."
Similarly, we have taken up this preaching mission because people in
general are interested only in immediate sense gratification, which is not good
for them. In the Srimad-Bhagavatam (5.5.4) Lord Rsabhadeva says, nunam
pramattah kurute vikarma yad indriya-pritaya aprnoti: "Simply for sense
gratification people are committing so many sinful activities. They are just
like madmen." A madman does not know what he is doing. Materialistic
persons are so much engrossed in their pursuit of sense gratification that they
have become maddened and commit all kinds of sins.
Lord Rsabhadeva says that the materialistic way of life is very risky.
For those who indulge in sense gratification, Krsna gives the facility, forcing
them to take birth again in the material atmosphere. A monkey has very good
facility for enjoying sex. In some ways a monkey is renounced: he lives naked
in the forest, he eats only fruit. But his nature is that he must have at least
three dozen wives for sex enjoyment. So-called renunciants who wear the cloth
of a sadhu but secretly enjoy illicit sex with women are just like monkeys.
This is demoniac.
Demons, or asuras, do not believe in God and act according to their own
whims. In the Bhagavad-gita (7.15), Krsna describes them as follows:
na mam duskrtino mudhah
prapadyante naradhamah
mayayapahrta-jnana
asuram bhavam asritah
"Those miscreants who are grossly foolish, who are lowest among
mankind, whose knowledge is stolen by illusion, and who partake of the atheistic
nature of demons do not surrender unto Me." Here Krsna clearly states,
asuram bhavam asritah: because the demons have taken shelter of atheistic
philosophy, they are the lowest of mankind despite their advancement of
education, science, and politics. Someone might object, "How can you call
an atheistic gentleman with a university degree a demon? He is so educated and
highly qualified." The verdict of the sastra is that although he appears
to be very learned, his actual knowledge has been stolen away by maya on
account of his being atheistic.
Scriptural injunctions may not be very palatable; nonetheless, they are
authoritative, and we have to preach the truth. We cannot play hide and seek
with the problems of life. We must know our real position, and we must know
what is religion and what is irreligion. Religion means action according to the
orders of God, and irreligion means action that goes against the orders of God.
Chapter 8
Religion
The Yamadutas replied, "That which is prescribed in the Vedas
constitutes dharma, and the opposite of that is irreligion. The Vedas are
directly the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Narayana, and are self-born. This
we have heard from Yamaraja."(Srimad-Bhagavatam 6.1.40)
Hearing from Authority
Vedic principles are accepted as authoritative because they originate
with Krsna. Thus the Vedas carry the authority of the Supreme Personality of
Godhead in the same way that lawbooks carry the authority of the government.
When it comes to determining what is religion and what is irreligion,
there is no such thing as "This is my opinion" or "I think it
means this." Opinion is nonsense. We have to understand God by the process
of susruma, hearing from the authorized representative of God. In the
Bhagavad-gita (4.1) Krsna says,
imam vivasvate yogam
proktavan aham avyayam
vivasvan manave praha
manur iksvakave bravit
"I instructed this imperishable science of yoga to the sun-god,
Vivasvan, and Vivasvan instructed it to Manu, the father of mankind, and Manu
in turn instructed it to Iksvaku." This is the way to understand the
Vedas: by hearing from the proper authority, the spiritual master.
So the Yamadutas were claiming that the Visnudutas should not hinder
them in the performance of their duty since they were acting under the order of
a bona fide authority, Yamaraja. Yamaraja is one of the twelve mahajanas, great
personalities who are authorities in both spiritual and material affairs. He is
a Vaisnava, but his thankless task is to punish all the souls who perform
sinful activities. Just as the superintendent of police is a responsible,
faithful servant of the government, so Yamaraja is a faithful servant of Lord
Narayana, or Krsna. His task is to chastise sinful persons. If a high-court
judge is required in ordinary government, why not in God's government?
There are twelve mahajanas mentioned in the Srimad-Bhagavatam: Lord
Brahma; Narada Muni; Lord Siva; the four Kumaras; Lord Kapila, the son of
Devahuti; Svayambhuva Manu; Prahlada Maharaja; Bhismadeva; Janaka Maharaja;
Sukadeva Gosvami; Bali Maharaja; and Yamaraja. These authorities know exactly
who God is, and they can direct us to Him. Therefore the sastras advise us to
follow them.
Without following the mahajanas, it is impossible to know God, because
we cannot understand the path of religion by our mental speculation. Religious
principles are enunciated by the Supreme Personality of Godhead (dharmam tu
saksad bhagavat-pranitam). Therefore real religion means to abide by the words
of the Supreme Lord and His representatives. In the Bhagavad-gita (18.66) Krsna
says, mam ekam saranam vraja: "Simply surrender unto Me." That is
true religion. Anything else is irreligion. Manmade religion is not religion;
it is cheating. Nowadays it has become fashionable for everyone to manufacture
his own religion without reference to the authorities. One should know that
dharma, or religion, means the laws given to man by God. The path of dharma is
strictly followed by the mahajanas, and so we have to follow them. Otherwise
there is no possibility of understanding what religion is or who God is.
Everyone in the material world is puzzled about what religion is.
Therefore, the Mundaka Upanisad (1.2.12) says, one should approach a guru: tad
vijnanartham sa gurum evabhigacchet. "If someone wants to learn the
transcendental science, he has to approach a guru." There are no
exceptions. One cannot say, "I shall learn the transcendental science
without going to a spiritual master." No. That is not possible. The
Vaisnava principles enjoin, adau gurv-asrayam: the first step in understanding
spiritual knowledge is to take shelter of a bona fide guru. And there are three
principles to observe in taking shelter of a guru: tad viddhi pranipatena
pariprasnena sevaya. We must surrender to the spiritual master, we must inquire
from him, and we must render service to him. Then we will be able to understand
real spiritual knowledge.
When Sanatana Gosvami approached Lord Caitanya to become His disciple,
Sanatana surrendered himself and said, "My dear Lord, when I was a
minister, people used to address me as a learned man, and so I accepted that I
was learned and intelligent. But actually I am neither learned nor intelligent,
because I do not know what I am. This is the result of my learning: I know
everything except what I am and how to get out of this miserable material
condition of life."
We see that modern education fails here also. The professor talks about
so many things, but if we ask him what he is, he has no answer. Universities
award degrees to the graduates, who think, "I am a Ph.D., a very learned
man," but if we ask that Ph.D. to explain what he is and what the purpose
of life is, he will refer only to his bodily designations: "I am American,
I am male, etc." He can only state his identification with the body, which
he is not, and therefore he is fool number one.
At first Arjuna was also thinking in terms of bodily connections:
"Krsna, how can I fight? On the other side there are my cousins, my
brothers, my uncles, my nephews, and my brothers-in-law. If I kill them, their
wives will become widows and be polluted, and there will be unwanted
children." Arjuna was a very learned man, but he was perplexed. He said,
"My dear Krsna, now I am puzzled. I am a ksatriya, and it is my duty to
fight, but I am deviating from this duty because I am bewildered and cannot
reason clearly. I know You can explain to me what I should do; therefore I
surrender unto You as Your disciple. Please instruct me." (Bhagavad-gita
2.7)
The Vedic literature advises us first of all that the guru is not a
plaything. One should not think, "I must have a guru because it is
fashionable, but there is no need to obey his order." That kind of guru is
useless, and that kind of disciple is useless also. Accepting a guru is very
serious. You must seriously find out who is a bona fide spiritual master, one
who can solve the problems of your life. Only when one is serious about getting
out of the blazing fire of material existence should one approach a spiritual
master.
The Srimad-Bhagavatam (11.3.21) says,
tasmad gurum prapadyeta
jijnasuh sreya uttamam
sabde pare ca nisnatam
brahmany upasamasrayam
One who wants the ultimate benefit in his life must surrender to a guru.
The guru must be well versed in the Vedic literature and know its conclusions.
And not only must he be well versed in the scripture, but in his life he must
have adopted the path of Vedic principles, without deviating in any way. He
must be finished with all hankerings for wealth, women, and prestige, and he
must be fully situated in spiritual life, completely surrendered to the Supreme
Personality of Godhead, Krsna. One should try to find such a personality and
accept him as one's spiritual master.
So the servants of Yamaraja replied quite properly. They did not
manufacture principles of religion or irreligion. Instead, they explained what
they had heard from their spiritual master, Yamaraja. Mahajano yena gatah sa
panthah: one should follow the mahajana, the authorized person. Yamaraja is one
of twelve authorities. Therefore the servants of Yamaraja, the Yamadutas,
replied with perfect justification when they said susruma: "We have heard
from our master, Yamaraja."
Chapter 9
Punishment
The Yamadutas continued, "The supreme cause of all causes,
Narayana, is situated in His abode in the spiritual world, but still He
controls the entire cosmic manifestation according to the modes of material nature--goodness,
passion, and ignorance. In this way all living entities are awarded different
qualities, different names (such as brahmana, ksatriya, and vaisya), different
duties according to the varnasrama institution, and different forms. Thus
Narayana is the cause of the entire cosmic manifestation.
"The sun, fire, sky, air, demigods, moon, evening, day, night,
directions, water, land, and the Supersoul Himself all witness the activities
of the living entity. The candidates for punishment are those who are confirmed
by these many witnesses to have deviated from their prescribed duties. Everyone
engaged in fruitive activities is suitable to be subjected to punishment
according to his sinful acts.
"O inhabitants of Vaikuntha, you are sinless, but those within this
material world are all fruitive workers, whether acting piously or impiously.
Both kinds of action are possible for them because they are contaminated by the
three modes of nature and must act accordingly. One who has accepted a material
body cannot be inactive, and sinful action is inevitable for one acting under
the modes of material nature. Therefore all the living entities within this
material world are punishable. Thus in proportion to the extent of one's
religious or irreligious actions in this life, one must enjoy or suffer the
corresponding reactions of his karma in the next." (Srimad-Bhagavatam
6.1.41-45)
The Cause Behind All Activities
The Svetasvatara Upanisad (6.8) informs us,
na tasya karyam karanam ca vidyate
na tat-samas
cabhyadhikas ca drsyate
parasya saktir vividhaiva sruyate
svabhaviki jnana-bala-kriya ca
Narayana, the Supreme Personality of Godhead, is almighty, omnipotent.
He has multifarious energies, and therefore He is able to remain in His own
abode and without endeavor supervise and manipulate the entire cosmic
manifestation through the interaction of the three modes of material
nature--goodness, passion, and ignorance. These interactions create different
forms, bodies, activities, and changes, which all occur perfectly. Because the
Lord is perfect, everything works as if He were directly supervising and taking
part in it.
Atheistic men, however, being covered by the three modes of material nature,
cannot see that Narayana is the supreme cause behind all activities. Lord Krsna
confirms this in the Bhagavad-gita (7.13),
tribhir guna-mayair bhavair
ebhih sarvam idam jagat
mohitam nabhijanati
mam ebhyah param avyayam
"Deluded by the three modes, the whole world does not know Me, who
am above the modes and inexhaustible."
Compelled to Work
There are three energies of the Supreme Lord: the internal energy
(para-sakti), the marginal energy, and the external energy. The living entities
belong to the marginal energy because they can come under the influence of
either the internal or external energy of the Lord. By nature they also belong
to the para-sakti, but when they come under the control of the material energy
they are known as ksetra-jna-sakti, "knowers of the material field."
In other words, the direct, internal energy of God is spiritual (para), and the
living entities have this same nature (para), but in contact with the material
energy (ksetra), the living entity accepts a material body as his self and is
thus forced to act, manipulating the five senses.
The Yamadutas say that everyone with a material body must work. An ant
and an elephant both have to work. The ant requires only a grain of sugar for
his sustenance, whereas the elephant requires three hundred kilograms of food
daily, but both must work for it. Foolish people say that the Vaisnavas do not
work, but the Vaisnavas work for Krsna twenty-four hours a day. They are not
idle do-nothings. While we are in this material world, we have to work, but we
work for Krsna. That is not really work, or karma: it is dharma, practical
religion. Unless one works for Krsna, all his labor is adharma, irreligious
sense gratification.
On the Basis of a Man's Nature
The real aim of life is to satisfy Krsna, and varnasrama-dharma is the
institution of that ideal in human society. The varnasrama system divides
society into four spiritual orders (asramas) and four social classes (varnas).
The spiritual orders are the brahmacaris (celibate students), the grhasthas
(householders living under spiritual regulation), the vanaprasthas (retirees),
and the sannyasis (renunciants). The four social orders are the brahmanas
(intellectuals), the ksatriyas (warriors and administrators), the vaisyas
(farmers and businessmen), and the sudras (manual laborers). Without the
principles of varnasrama-dharma, human society is almost animal society.
Indeed, human civilization begins when human beings accept the four social and
spiritual divisions of society, according to quality and work. As Krsna says in
the Bhagavad-gita (4.13), catur-varnyam maya srstam guna-karma-vibhagasah: "I
have created the four social divisions according to quality and work."
In this material world we associate with a particular combination of the
modes of nature, and accordingly we mold our character and behavior, and by
this criterion we fit into a particular social category. Today people say that
there should be no more caste system, but how can they ignore the natural
designation of classes in human society? There must be a class of intelligent
men, the brahmanas, who are qualified to disseminate Vedic knowledge to the
people in general. There must be a class of ksatriyas to offer administrative
rule and protection. There must be a class of merchants and farmers, the
vaisyas, who trade and perform agricultural duties such as cow protection. And
there must be a class of sudras, who render service to the other classes. All
men fit into these four classes, each according to his guna, or nature.
Prescribed Duty vs. Unlawful Action
Whatever our varna or asrama, however, the perfection of our work is to
satisfy Visnu, or Krsna. The Lord states this in the Bhagavad-gita (3.9):
yajnarthat karmano 'nyatra
loko 'yam karma-bandhanah
tad-artham karma kaunteya
mukta-sangah samacara
"Work done as a sacrifice for Visnu has to be performed; otherwise
work causes bondage in this material world. Therefore, O Arjuna, perform your
prescribed duties for His satisfaction, and in that way you will always remain
free from bondage." This is the sum and substance of human life. Since we
have to work, we should work for Krsna. Then we are saved from all sinful
reactions.
But if we work for our personal sense gratification, we will become
entangled in the reactions, lifetime after lifetime. It is not possible for a
person to get out of the clutches of repeated birth and death as long as he
continues to pursue sense gratification.
Caitanya Mahaprabhu says, jivera 'svarupa' haya--krsnera 'nitya-dasa'
(Caitanya-caritamrta, Madhya-lila 20.108): "The constitutional position of
the living entity is that he is eternally a servant of Krsna." If one
takes that position, he is saved; otherwise not.
And how does one who accepts his position as a servant of Krsna work?
Prahlada Maharaja explains in the Srimad-Bhagavatam (7.5.23):
sravanam kirtanam visnoh
smaranam pada-sevanam
arcanam vandanam dasyam
sakhyam atma-nivedanam
"Hearing and chanting about the transcendental holy name, form,
qualities, paraphernalia, and pastimes of Lord Visnu, remembering these,
serving the lotus feet of the Lord, offering the Lord respectful worship,
offering prayers to the Lord, becoming His servant, considering the Lord one's
best friend, and surrendering everything to Him--these are the nine processes
of pure devotional service."
In order to take up these processes seriously, one must accept the
regulative principles for spiritual life: no meat-eating, no illicit sex, no
intoxication, and no gambling. Then one will be able to accept the injunction
to chant the Hare Krsna maha-mantra and always be engaged in the service of the
Lord in one of the above nine ways. If we accept this authority, our life will
be successful, both spiritually and materially. Otherwise, we will have to be
satisfied with indulging in sense gratification, performing sinful activities,
suffering like dogs and hogs, and enduring repeated birth, old age, disease,
and death.
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