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THE ETERNAL SPIRIT
Arjuna said: O Krishna, who is the Eternal Being or the Spirit?
What is the nature of the Eternal Being? What is Karma? Who are the mortal
beings? And who are Divine Beings? Who is the Supreme Being and how does He dwell
in the body? How can You, the Supreme Being, be remembered at the time of death by those who have control over
their minds, O Krishna? (8.01-02)
DEFINITION
OF SUPREME SPIRIT, SPIRIT, INDIVIDUAL SOUL, AND KARMA
Lord Krishna said: The eternal and
immutable Spirit of the Supreme Being is called Eternal Being or the Spirit.
The inherent power of cognition and desire of Eternal Being is called the
nature of Eternal Being. The creative power of Eternal Being that causes
manifestation of the living entity is called Karma. (8.03)
Spirit is
also called Eternal Spirit, Spiritual Being, Eternal Being, and God in English;
and Brahm, or Eternal Brahm (Note: Brahm is also spelled as Brahma and Brahman)
in Sanskrit. Spirit is the cause of all causes. The word ‘God’ is generally
used for both Spirit, and the Supreme Spirit (or the Supreme Being), the basis
of Spirit. We have used the word ‘Eternal Being’ for Spirit; and ‘Supreme
Being’, ‘Absolute’, and ‘Krishna’ for the Supreme Spirit in this rendering.
The subtle
body consists of six sensory faculties, intellect, ego, and five vital forces
called bioimpulses (Life forces, Prana). The individual soul is defined as the
subtle body sustained by Spirit. The individual soul is enshrined in the
physical body. The subtle body keeps the physical body active and alive by
operating the organs of perception and action.
Various expansions of the Supreme Being are also called Divine
Beings. The Supreme Being also resides inside the physical bodies as the Divine
Controller (Ishvara). (8.04)
THEORY OF
REINCARNATION AND KARMA
One who remembers the Supreme Being exclusively, even while
leaving the body at the time of death, attains the Supreme Abode; there is no
doubt about it. (8.05)
Whatever object one remembers as
one leaves the body at the end of life, one attains that object. Thought of
whatever object prevails during one's lifetime, one remembers only that object
at the end of life and achieves it. (8.06)
One’s
destiny is determined by the predominant thought at the time of death. Even if
one has practiced devotion and God-consciousness during one’s lifetime, the
thought of God may or may not come at the hour of death. Therefore,
God-consciousness should be continued till death (BS 1.1.12). Sages continue
their efforts in their successive lives, yet at the moment of death they may
fail to remember God. One cannot expect to have good thoughts at the time of
death if one has kept bad company. Keeping the association of perfect devotees
and avoiding the company of worldly-minded people is the criterion for success
in spiritual life. Whatever thought one nurtures during life, the same thought
comes at the time of death and determines the future destiny. Therefore, life
should be molded in such a way that one should be able to remember God at the
time of death. People should practice God-consciousness in everyday life from
very childhood by forming a habit of remembering God before taking any food,
before going to bed, and before starting any work or study.
A SIMPLE
METHOD OF GOD-REALIZATION
Therefore, always remember Me and
do your duty. You shall certainly attain Me if your mind and intellect are ever
focused on Me. (8.07)
The
supreme purpose of life is to remember all the time a personal God one believes
in so that one can remember God at the time of death. To remember the absolute
and impersonal God may not be possible for most human beings. A pure devotee is
able to experience the ecstasy of Lord's personal presence within and reach His
Supreme Abode by always remembering Him. Live in a state of constant spiritual
awareness.
By contemplating Me with an unwavering mind that is disciplined
by the practice of meditation, one attains the Supreme Being, O Arjuna. (8.08)
One gets
spiritual awakening and the vision of God by constantly thinking of God in
meditation, silent repetition of the holy names of God, and contemplation. The
endeavor of our whole life shapes our destiny. Spiritual practices are meant to
keep the mind absorbed in His thoughts and fixed at His lotus feet. Ramakrishna
said that when you desire anything, pray to the Mother aspect of God in a
lonely place, with tears of sincerity in your eyes, and your wishes shall be
fulfilled. He also said that it might be possible to attain Self-realization
within three days. The more intensely one practices spiritual disciplines, the
more quickly one attains perfection. The intensity of conviction and belief,
combined with deep yearning, restlessness, intense longing, and persistence,
determine the speed of spiritual progress. The real practice of HathaYoga is
not only the yogic exercises taught in modern yoga centers, but also the
consistence, persistence, and insistence in one’s search for the Supreme Truth.
Self-realization
is not a simple act but a process of gradual spiritual growth, starting with
resolve, proceeding gradually to vow, divine grace, faith, and finally
realization of Truth (YV 19.30). The Supreme Being is not realized through
discourses, intellect, or learning. It is realized only when one sincerely longs
for it with vigorous effort. Sincere craving brings divine grace that unveils
the Supreme Being (MuU 3.02.03).
One who meditates at the time of death with steadfast mind and
devotion on the Supreme Being as the omniscient, the oldest, the controller, smaller
than the smallest and bigger than the biggest, the sustainer of everything, the
inconceivable, self-luminous like the sun, and transcendental (or beyond the
material reality) by making the flow of bioimpulses (life forces, Prana) rise
up to the middle of the eye brows by the power of yogic practices and holding
there, attains Me, the Supreme Being. (See also verses 4.29, 5.27, 6.13)
(8.09-10)
Now I shall briefly explain the process to attain the Supreme
Abode that the knowers of the Veda call immutable; into which the ascetics,
freed from attachment, enter; and desiring which people lead a life of
celibacy. (8.11)
ATTAIN
SALVATION BY MEDITATING ON GOD AT THE TIME OF DEATH
When one leaves the physical body
by controlling all the senses, focusing the mind on God and the bioimpulses
(Life forces, Prana) in the cerebrum, engaged in yogic practice, meditating on
Me, and uttering AUM ¾ the sacred monosyllable sound power of the Spirit ¾ one attains the Supreme
Abode. (8.12-13)
Scriptural
knowledge has its place, but it is through direct realization that the inner
core can be reached and the outer shell discarded. Meditation is the way to
inner realization and should be learnt, personally, from a competent teacher.
Realization of the true nature of mind leads to meditation.
A simple
technique of meditation is described here: (1) Wash your face, eyes, hands, and
feet and sit in a clean, quiet, dark place, using any comfortable posture, with
head, neck, and spine straight and vertical. No music or incense during
meditation is recommended. The time and place of meditation should be fixed.
Follow the good principles of living by thoughts, words, and deeds. Some yogic
exercises are necessary. Midnight, morning, and evening are the best times to
meditate for 15 to 25 minutes every day, (2) Remember any name or form of the
personal god you believe in and ask His or Her blessings, (3) Close your eyes,
tilt head slightly upward, and take 5 to 10 very slow and deep breaths, (4) Fix
your gaze, mind, and feelings inside the chest center, the seat of the causal
heart, and breathe slowly. Mentally chant "So" as you breathe in and
"Hum" as you breathe out. Think as if breath itself is making these
sounds “So” and “Hum” (I am That Spirit). Mentally visualize and follow the route
of breath going in through the nostrils, up towards the mid-brows, and down to
the chest center, or lungs. Be alert, and feel the sensation created by the
breath in the body as you follow the breath. Do not try to control or lead your
breathing; just follow the natural breathing, (5) Direct the will towards the
thought of merging yourself into the infinite space of the air you are
breathing. If your mind wanders away from following the breaths, start from
step (4). Be regular, and persist without procrastination.
The sound
of “OM” or “AUM” is a combination of three primary sounds: A, U, and M. It is
the source of all sounds one can utter. Therefore, it is the fittest sound
symbol of Spirit. It is also the primeval impulse that moves our five nerve centers
that control bodily functions. The sound produced due to the fast-moving
earth, planets and galaxies is AUM. Yogananda calls “OM” the sound of the
vibration of the cosmic motor. The Bible says: In the beginning was the word
(OM, Amen, Allah) and the word was with God, and the word was God (John 1.01).
This cosmic sound vibration is heard by yogis as a sound, or a mixture of
sounds, of various frequencies.
The Omnic
meditation, mentioned here by Lord Krishna, is a very powerful, sacred
technique used by saints and sages of all religions. Briefly, the Omnic method
entails getting the mind permeated by a continuous, reverberating sound of AUM.
When the mind gets absorbed in repeating this divine sound, the individual
consciousness merges into the Cosmic Consciousness.
A simpler
method of contemplation is given below by Lord Krishna for those who cannot
follow the conventional path of meditation discussed above.
I am easily attainable, O Arjuna,
by that ever steadfast devotee who always thinks of Me and whose mind does not
go elsewhere. (8.14)
It is not
an easy task to always remember God. One must have a basis to remember God all
the time. This basis could be an intense love of God or a passion to serve Him
through the service of humanity.
After attaining Me, the great souls do not incur rebirth in
this miserable transitory world because they have attained the highest perfection.
(8.15)
Human
birth is full of suffering. Even the saints, sages, and God in human form
cannot escape the sufferings of the human body and mind. One has to learn to
endure and work towards salvation.
The dwellers of all the worlds ¾ up to and including the
world of the creator ¾ are subject to the miseries of repeated birth and
death. But after attaining Me, O Arjuna, one does not take birth again. (See
also 9.25) (8.16)
EVERYTHING
IN THE CREATION IS CYCLIC
Those who know that the duration of creation lasts 4.32 billion
years and that the duration of destruction also lasts 4.32 billion years, they
are the knowers of the cycles of creation and destruction. (8.17)
Thus, one
complete creative cycle lasts 8.64 billion solar years. The duration of partial
dissolution, during which all heavenly planets, the earth, and the lower
planets are annihilated and rest within the abdomen of Brahmaa, is 4.32 billion
years. Complete dissolution takes place at the end of Brahmaa's (or creative
cycle's) full life-span of 100 solar years, or 8.64 billion years x 30 x 12
x 100 = just over 311 trillion solar
years called Kalpa (See verse 9.07), according to Vedic astrology. At this
time, the complete material creation, including the modes of material Nature,
enters into one of the three main, partial manifestations of the Absolute ¾
called MahaaVishnu (or the source and sink of the total material energy) ¾ and
is annihilated. During the complete dissolution, everything is said to take
rest in the abdomen of Lord (MahaaVishnu) until the beginning of the next cycle
of creation. In the second manifestation, Lord’s energies enter into all the
universes to create and support diversities. And in the third manifestation,
the Absolute is diffused as the all-pervading supersoul in the universes and
remains present within the atoms and every cell of everything ¾
visible or invisible.
All manifestations come out of the primary material Nature
during the creative cycle, and they merge into the primary material Nature
during the destructive cycle. (8.18)
The same multitude of beings comes
into existence again and again at the arrival of the creative cycle and are
annihilated, inevitably, at the arrival of the destructive cycle. (8.19)
According
to the Vedas, creation is a beginningless and endless cycle, and there is no
such thing as the first creation.
There is another eternal transcendental existence ¾
higher than the changeable material Nature ¾ called Eternal Being or
Spirit that does not perish when all created beings perish. This is also called
the Supreme Abode. Those who attain the Supreme Abode do not take birth again.
(8.20-21)
TWO BASIC PATHS OF DEPARTURE
FROM THE WORLD
This Supreme Abode, O Arjuna, is attainable by unswerving
devotion to Me within which all beings exist, and by which the entire universe
is pervaded. (See also 9.04 and 11.55) (8.22)
O Arjun, now I shall describe different paths departing by which, after death, the yogis do or do not come back. (8.23)
Verses 8.23-26 are considered to be the most mysterious and misunderstood verses in the Gita. What appears to refer to the auspicious times of departure of the living entity during death in verse 8.23, actually refers to the presiding deities of various astral planes during gradual passage of the soul after death. This is made clear in verse 8.26. It should be noted that one's final destination and the corresponding path leading to the destination has to be earned and may have nothing to do with the time of death. Eligibility to tread the path, and not the time of departure, as sometimes commonly misunderstood, determines the path of departure.
Lord explains in verses 8.24-25 that there are two goals in life which people seek. These two goals are achieved by two different paths guiding the two types of seekers to their destinations. One is called path of no return (verse 8.24), and the other is path of return (verse 8.25). These two paths are renamed in verse 8.26 as the path of light and the path of darkness, the path of Moksh and path of coming and going, the path of the seekers of spirituality and seekers of materialism, path of the light of knowledge and of darkness of ignorance.
Passing gradually, after death, through celestial controllers of fire, light, daytime, the bright lunar fortnight, and the six months of the northern solstice of the sun, yogis who know the Self attain supreme abode (and do not come back to earth). (8.24)
There are thousands of gross and subtle nerves
(Nadis) in the human body. Only one of them ¾ the Sushumna Nadi ¾ goes
towards the cerebral opening in the seventh energy center (Chakra). If the
vital life force (Prana) passes out of the body through Sushumna Nadi during
death by virtue of meditation on the energy centers (Chakras), the living
entity reaches the Supreme and attains salvation. (ChU 8.6.06, KaU 6.16, BS
4.2.17).
Anyone who
knows how to meditate on the energy centers (Chakras) becomes virtuous and pure
and does not become besmeared with sin like a lotus leaf does not get wet by
water (ChU 5.10.10). This is known as gradual emancipation of the soul from the
lower centers in the body via the path leading to celestial controllers. What
appears to refer to the auspicious times of departure of the living entity in
this verse refers only to the presiding deities of various energy centers in
the astral plane of the body. The kingdom of heaven is within all of us. All
spheres of the macrocosm are represented in our body in microcosmic form as
the seven Chakras or astral energy centers. Celestial controllers ¾
different aspects of the cosmic intellect ¾ that govern the forces of
nature also reside in these astral centers of the body and control the forces
that work upon the body.
The
Upanishad (ChU 5.10.01) also refers to a superhuman person or celestial
ruler. According to the gurus of KriyaYoga, this superbeing is the Kundalini
power. This interpretation is thus supported by the Upanishad. Ramakrishna also
said that spiritual consciousness is not possible without the awakening of
Kundalini. When the mind force rises upward by the power of Kundalini and
reaches the seventh Chakra (Energy center), it merges with the Universal Spirit
in the eighth astral cosmic plane. Yogic scriptures say: As long as the
Kundalini power remains dormant in the lower center, one cannot get success
through spiritual practices, such as meditation and worship.
The path of no return, described above, is also called the path of gods (Devayaan), the path of light, northern path, and the path of gradual liberation (Kram-mukti), the ascending path of evolution. This path is blocked for the ignorant and persons devoid of the necessary qualities such as austerity, abstinence, faith and knowledge. Those who have above mentioned qualities will walk this path.
Fire, light, day-time, the bright fortnight and the six months of the northern solstice of the sun indicate deities presided over by the Sun. It is said in the Upanishads (ChU 4.15.05, BrU 6.2.15) that those who qualify for the northern path after death reach the deity of flame, from there to the deity of the day, from there to the deity of the bright fortnight, from there to the deity of the six months during which the sun travels northwards, from there to Sun, and from there to lightening. Then a Superbeing, created from the mind of Brahmaa, comes and leads them to the world of Brahmaa. Becoming perfect at each stage, they stay in the world of Brahmaa till the end of the cycle of creation; at the completion of which they merge in Brahman together with Brahmaa. Having reached Brahman, they do not return back to worldly life again. This is also called Brahm-Nirvan.
Passing gradually, after death, through celestial controllers of smoke, night, the dark lunar fortnight, and the six months of southern solstice of the sun, the righteous person attains heaven and comes back to earth again. (8.25)
The destination of righteous
persons who work to enjoy the fruits of their labor, is described in the above
verse. Those who attain heaven reincarnate when the fruits of their virtuous
deeds are exhausted (MuU 1.02.09). If the soul goes out by any path other than
Sushumna Nadi, one does not attain emancipation and undergoes repeated births
and deaths.
Those who leave the world after spending their lifetime in doing good and performing rituals and worship to enjoy the results so accrued, travel by the southern path. This path is also called the path of darkness, the path of return, the path of ignorance, the path of ancestors, and the path of materialism. This path is presided over by the Moon god, representing the world of matter and sense enjoyment. Those who qualify for this path, after death, reach the deity of smoke, from there to the deity of the night, from there to the deity of the dark fortnight, from there to the deity of the six months during which the sun travels southwards, and from there to the heaven. Such people return to the mortal world, after enjoying heavenly pleasures for a period of time, when the fruits of their virtuous deeds are exhausted.
The path of light of spiritual
practice and Self-knowledge and the path of darkness of materialism and
ignorance are thought to be the world’s two eternal paths. The former leads to
salvation and the latter leads to rebirth as human beings. (8.26)
The path
of transmigration may be included in the path of reincarnation, or it may be
called the third path. The Upanishads describe this third path as the path of
lower creatures, such as animals and insects. Unrighteous ones, who do not
qualify for either path, transmigrate into lower wombs, such as animals, birds,
and insects (BrU 6.02.15-16). The immortal soul wanders endlessly through the
ocean of transmigration made up of 8.4 million different species of life on
this planet. The good Lord, out of His sweet will or mercy and without any
reason, bestows the precious gift of the human body that is like a raft to
carry one across the ocean of transmigration (TR 7.43.02-04). Consider what we
are is God’s gift to us, and what we become is our gift to God. It is also said
that human birth, faith in God, and the help of a real guru come only by His
grace. Our present life provides the opportunity for preparation for the next
life. According to the activities in this life, one can either get a promotion
or salvation, a demotion or transmigration, or another chance for salvation by
reincarnating as a human being.
TRANSCENDENTAL KNOWLEDGE
LEADS TO SALVATION
Knowing these two paths, O Arjuna, a yogi is not bewildered at
all. Therefore, one should be resolute in attaining salvation — the goal of
human birth — at all times. (8.27)
One who knows all this goes beyond getting the benefits of the
study of the Vedas, performance of sacrifices, austerities, and charities; and
attains salvation. (8.28)
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