Have you ever been to one of those huge malls in the USA? If you have, did you ever manage to get yourself lost? I have this habit of not being able to navigate around these mega malls to skillfully (unlike my better half). it seems I always manage to get myself "misplaced'. The good thing about these malls is that the management always places detailed maps about the place to help out people like me.
On these maps you find a listing of all the sections of the mall and a detailed listing of all the stores and many other nifty features. However, for me, I find the most useful feature to be the red arrow that says.........YOU ARE HERE! No matter how much detail the map may contain unless you can find what your position is in relation to the entire thing you may still find great difficulty to successfully navigate these mazes.
The Bhagavad Gita proposes a similar solution to the situation in which we find ourselves. In the first chapter of the Gita Arjuna presents many arguments to Krsna why he should not perform his duty and ultimately he says to Krsna:
"Now I am confused about my duty and have lost all composure because of miserly weakness. In this condition I am asking You to tell me for certain what is best for me. Now I am Your disciple, and a soul surrendered unto You. Please instruct me." Bg 2.7.
In other words Arjuna is saying: "Krsna............I am LOST. Please help me!" The first point I find fascinating about this is that Arjuna, despite his very elevated position, has no reservation is admitting his precarious position. Most times when we are faced with similar situations we try to weasel our way around it so that some other person may get the blame or to minimize our own short coming. This is very exemplary on the part of Arjuna!
Krsna is also very expert in setting Arjuna right. He at once gets to the heart of the matter, He begins to give Arjuna directions to relieve him of his lost condition. He immediately advises Arjuna:
"While speaking learned words, you are mourning for what is not worthy of grief. Those who are wise lament neither for the living nor for the dead." Bg 2.11.
In this verse and over the course of the verses that follow up to verse 30, Krsna gives very clear indication that Arjuna, and by extension, every living entity in existence is not the material body, rather everyone is the spirit soul who is situated with the shell of the body. Simply put, Krsna is telling Arjuna, YOU ARE HERE!
When we know where(who) we are, only then can we begin to move in the right direction to our real destination, to go back home back to Godhead. Suffice to say, as long as our term of reference is improperly placed, it will make our moving progressively in the right direction very difficult or even impossible.
Srila Prabhupada writes: "......All of this is clearly described, and if we properly utilize the instructions of Bhagavad-gita, then our whole life will become purified, and ultimately we will be able to reach the destination which is beyond this material sky (yad gatva na nivartante tad dhama paramam mama). [Bg. 15.6]
That destination is called the sanatana sky, the eternal, spiritual sky. In this material world we find that everything is temporary. It comes into being, stays for some time, produces some by-products, dwindles and then vanishes. That is the law of the material world, whether we use as an example this body, or a piece of fruit or anything. But beyond this temporary world there is another world of which we have information. That world consists of another nature, which is sanatana, eternal. Jiva is also described as sanatana, eternal, and the Lord is also described as sanatana in the Eleventh Chapter. We have an intimate relationship with the Lord, and because we are all qualitatively one -- the sanatana-dhama, or sky, the sanatana Supreme Personality and the sanatana living entities -- the whole purpose of Bhagavad-gita is to revive our sanatana occupation, or sanatana-dharma, which is the eternal occupation of the living entity. We are temporarily engaged in different activities, but all of these activities can be purified when we give up all these temporary activities and take up the activities which are prescribed by the Supreme Lord. That is called our pure life." Bg Introduction.
Showing posts with label Gitopanisad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gitopanisad. Show all posts
January 07, 2014
You are Here.....
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Srila Prabhupada
January 30, 2013
This Ancient Science...
The Personality of Godhead, Lord Sri Krsna, said: 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. (BG 4.1)
PURPORT
Herein we find the history of the Bhagavad-gita traced from a remote time when it was delivered to the royal order of all planets, beginning from the sun planet. The kings of all planets are especially meant for the protection of the inhabitants, and therefore the royal order should understand the science of Bhagavad-gita in order to be able to rule the citizens and protect them from material bondage to lust. Human life is meant for cultivation of spiritual knowledge, in eternal relationship with the Supreme Personality of Godhead, and the executive heads of all states and all planets are obliged to impart this lesson to the citizens by education, culture and devotion. In other words, the executive heads of all states are intended to spread the science of Krsna consciousness so that the people may take advantage of this great science and pursue a successful path, utilizing the opportunity of the human form of life.
In this millennium, the sun-god is known as Vivasvan, the king of the sun, which is the origin of all planets within the solar system. In the Brahma-samhita (5.52) it is stated:
yac-caksur esa savita sakala-grahanam
raja samasta-sura-murtir asesa-tejah
yasyajnaya bhramati sambhrta-kala-cakro
govindam adi-purusam tam aham bhajami
"Let me worship," Lord Brahma said, "the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Govinda [Krsna], who is the original person and under whose order the sun, which is the king of all planets, is assuming immense power and heat. The sun represents the eye of the Lord and traverses its orbit in obedience to His order."
The sun is the king of the planets, and the sun-god (at present of the name Vivasvan) rules the sun planet, which is controlling all other planets by supplying heat and light. He is rotating under the order of Krsna, and Lord Krsna originally made Vivasvan His first disciple to understand the science of Bhagavad-gita. The Gita is not, therefore, a speculative treatise for the insignificant mundane scholar but is a standard book of knowledge coming down from time immemorial.
In the Mahabharata (Santi-parva 348.51-52) we can trace out the history of the Gita as follows:
treta-yugadau ca tato
vivasvan manave dadau
manus ca loka-bhrty-artham
sutayeksvakave dadau
iksvakuna ca kathito
vyapya lokan avasthitah
"In the beginning of the millennium known as Treta-yuga this science of the relationship with the Supreme was delivered by Vivasvan to Manu. Manu, being the father of mankind, gave it to his son Maharaja Iksvaku, the king of this earth planet and forefather of the Raghu dynasty, in which Lord Ramacandra appeared. Therefore, Bhagavad-gita existed in human society from the time of Maharaja Iksvaku."
At the present moment we have just passed through five thousand years of the Kali-yuga, which lasts 432,000 years. Before this there was Dvapara-yuga (800,000 years), and before that there was Treta-yuga (1,200,000 years). Thus, some 2,005,000 years ago, Manu spoke the Bhagavad-gita to his disciple and son Maharaja Iksvaku, the king of this planet earth. The age of the current Manu is calculated to last some 305,300,000 years, of which 120,400,000 have passed. Accepting that before the birth of Manu the Gita was spoken by the Lord to His disciple the sun-god Vivasvan, a rough estimate is that the Gita was spoken at least 120,400,000 years ago; and in human society it has been extant for two million years. It was respoken by the Lord again to Arjuna about five thousand years ago. That is the rough estimate of the history of the Gita, according to the Gita itself and according to the version of the speaker, Lord Sri Krsna. It was spoken to the sun-god Vivasvan because he is also a ksatriya and is the father of all ksatriyas who are descendants of the sun-god, or the surya-vamsa ksatriyas. Because Bhagavad-gita is as good as the Vedas, being spoken by the Supreme Personality of Godhead, this knowledge is apauruseya, superhuman. Since the Vedic instructions are accepted as they are, without human interpretation, the Gita must therefore be accepted without mundane interpretation. The mundane wranglers may speculate on the Gita in their own ways, but that is not Bhagavad-gita as it is. Therefore, Bhagavad-gita has to be accepted as it is, from the disciplic succession, and it is described herein that the Lord spoke to the sun-god, the sun-god spoke to his son Manu and Manu spoke to his son Iksvaku.
January 14, 2013
The Key that Unlocks the Mystery
Of all the books of knowledge originating in India, none is more popular or widely read or commented on than the Bhagavad-gita. Suffice to say that as many commentaries there are, as many opinions on its meaning exists.
The Gita is known as Gitopanisad because is summarizes the entire range of the Vedic knowledge and presents the conclusion of the Vedas throughout its body.
In many places Krsna describes the qualification necessary to understand the the subject matter of the Gita. For example, in chapter 4 verse 3 He says that Arjuna is fit to understand the Gita because Arjuna is His friend and devotee. Srila Prabhupada writes that to understand the Gita one has to have a similar disposition as Arjuna.
Srila Prabhupada writes: "The nondevotee's approach to the teachings of the Gita is something like that of a bee licking on a bottle of honey. One cannot have a taste of honey unless one opens the bottle. Similarly, the mysticism of the Bhagavad-gita can be understood only by devotees, and no one else can taste it..." (BG 2.12 purport)
A very practical example is that a person reveals the most intimate details of himself and his personality to those who have the most intimate relationship with them. Persons who are averse to them, envious, friends in an official capacity and so on are limited in how much they can understand about a person. However, that persons's very close friends or family members have the opportunity to understand the most about that person. Everyone who knows the president of prime minister of a country knows them in an official capacity and address them as such, but their family members and close friends may call them by their first name and know their bad habits and deep secrets.
It is the same with understand the Gita. Those to endeavour to develop a close relationship with Krsna will find the meaning of Bhagavad-gita being revealed on every page, but those who prefer to hold on to their own opinions and seek to use the text to achieve their own means will find the essential meaning the Gtia securely locked away from their efforts.
The Gita is known as Gitopanisad because is summarizes the entire range of the Vedic knowledge and presents the conclusion of the Vedas throughout its body.
In many places Krsna describes the qualification necessary to understand the the subject matter of the Gita. For example, in chapter 4 verse 3 He says that Arjuna is fit to understand the Gita because Arjuna is His friend and devotee. Srila Prabhupada writes that to understand the Gita one has to have a similar disposition as Arjuna.
Srila Prabhupada writes: "The nondevotee's approach to the teachings of the Gita is something like that of a bee licking on a bottle of honey. One cannot have a taste of honey unless one opens the bottle. Similarly, the mysticism of the Bhagavad-gita can be understood only by devotees, and no one else can taste it..." (BG 2.12 purport)
A very practical example is that a person reveals the most intimate details of himself and his personality to those who have the most intimate relationship with them. Persons who are averse to them, envious, friends in an official capacity and so on are limited in how much they can understand about a person. However, that persons's very close friends or family members have the opportunity to understand the most about that person. Everyone who knows the president of prime minister of a country knows them in an official capacity and address them as such, but their family members and close friends may call them by their first name and know their bad habits and deep secrets.
It is the same with understand the Gita. Those to endeavour to develop a close relationship with Krsna will find the meaning of Bhagavad-gita being revealed on every page, but those who prefer to hold on to their own opinions and seek to use the text to achieve their own means will find the essential meaning the Gtia securely locked away from their efforts.
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