GEMS
FROM THE OCEAN OF
HINDU THOUGHT, VISION AND
PRACTICE.
BEACH
2: First Steps on the Ascent to the Divine
Wave 7: A
Quick Overview of the Gita
In a matter of
probably an hour and a half Lord Krishna swung the extreme negative position
that Arjuna took impulsively at the very start of the war, to an extremely
concordant position, whereby he agreed to carry on the war. This historical
dialogue between God and Man is what constitutes the Gita. The dialogue had two
purposes; one obvious, and the other, hidden. The obvious purpose was to
convince Arjuna on the need to fight and not to retreat on the plea of
(misplaced) compassion. For this purpose Krishna
uses five arguments as if he is arguing for a
defense. The other purpose was to leave for the entire humanity the legacy of a
divine sermon on how to live so that one is not born again to live. The
teaching that came out thus from the divine mouth may be classified into five guidelines for spiritual living. Though the five
arguments and the five teachings are symbiotically combined by the Lord and are
spread throughout the dialogue the careful reader-seeker can isolate them as
distinct threads that run through the Gita.
The very first
argument that Krishna puts forward is the philosophical argument. What Arjuna is grieving
about is only the personalities that are arrayed in the battle. But they are
after all, ephemeral. They are not
permanent, in the absolute sense. What is permanent is only the Atman, the
essential spiritual entity of the individual soul. The Atman is ever-existing.
You cannot harm it in any way. What dies is only the physical body. The soul
within goes from body to body and undergoes different life-experiences. The
Atman, which is the spiritual substance of the soul, does not go through any of
these experiences, because it is an impersonal Absolute. This argument which is difficult to be
comprehended in its entirety is the undercurrent of everything in the Gita. It
is in fact the springboard from which every other argument or concept gets its
substance.
The second argument
that Krishna uses is the ‘duty’ argument, Arjuna is a born warrior and it is his duty (‘swadharma’) as a kshatriya, the
warrior-class, not to retreat from a just war, but fight to the finish. The third argument combines this with the
attitude of performance of this duty. Duty has to be performed for duty’s sake,
not for the purpose of getting a reward or result. An attachment to the reward
or the result accruing from the performance of the duty will sow the seeds of further
action and duty and this never-ending chain will move into the next life also.
Therefore duty has to be performed in a detached way. So Krishna
tells Arjuna that fight he must, but without attachment, malice, envy or
hatred. This is the well-known karma-yoga
argument of the Gita.
At this point Krishna takes the discussion to a different plane and
says that not only one should do one’s duty without attachment to the fruits
thereof, but one should do it without claiming the agency of action. The thought that ‘I am the doer of this
action’ is the thin end of the wedge that brings into play one’s ego and all
its subsidiary members of the great gang of man’s internal enemies. Nothing in
the world takes place without the Will of the Lord, and so if we think that we
are the ones who are doing the action, we are only going down the spiritual
ladder. This concept of the Lord being the Agent-Provocateur of every action
brings with it the standard path of Devotion
(Bhakti) to the Lord as the most popular path towards God. But in the
Hindu metaphysics and philosophy the concept - ‘It is
all God’s Will’ - of the Lord being the power behind for everything
raises a question that is very peculiarly Hindu in origin.
Hinduism spares no
pains to declare from its loftiest summits, the vedas and upanishads, that God,
in addition to being transcendent, is also immanent. That The Lord transcends
every conception of space and time and causation is an acceptable theory to
every religion. But not every religion goes to the extent of declaring that
each animate and inanimate entity is also spiritual in essence. In other words,
stripped of our external coverings like the body, mind and intellect, we are,
each one of us, sparks of the divine, with that divine element residing, as it
were, in our core of cores, our soul of souls. The Lord resides as our
Consciousness in our heart of hearts. What we see, hear, smell, touch or taste
is all what this Consciousness does. At
this point arises the natural dilemma. If God is immanent in us and is the
basic motivator and proprietor of all our thoughts and actions, then should He
not be held responsible for all the ignoble thoughts and actions for which I am
being held responsible as if I am the one who did them? To answer this dilemma Krishna puts forth his fifth
argument to Arjuna. And by this argument He brings in the villain of the
piece. It is prakriti, He says, that is responsible. What is Prakriti? The word prakRta,
in Sanskrit, means, that which is currently ongoing, that which is the natural
thing. Each individual brings along with him tendencies that have been
accumulated from his past lives. Every thought and action that anybody does
leaves an imprint of a memory (in the mind of the doer) and through that a
familiarity, which in due time becomes a habit or tendency to think and do in
the same way. These are the so-called vAsanAs that we bring from our
previous lives. These vAsanAs shape our inborn character. This character
is our prakRti. This is what makes us act and react in a particular way
that becomes our own habitual style of action and response to events. So prakRti is the doer, says the Lord, and
not the Lord Himself.
So Krishna
says, elaborating His fifth argument, ‘Arjuna, don’t
think that you can run away to the forest as a renouncer and forget this war.
Your prakRti will not allow you to do it. You better go with your prakRti and
act accordingly’.
These are the
arguments which Krishna uses to convince
Arjuna to go back to his normal role in the war. But in the process of all this
dialogue the Lord covers a large ground of Hindu philosophy and thus leaves a
legacy of a great teaching for the
entire humanity. This becomes relevant in a modern context. And this is what
makes the Gita a scripture even for our daily living. Krishna’s
teaching may be classified under five headings.
The first is
on yoga-sAdhanA, that is, the discipline of the senses. Krishna
gives it the very first priority in the spiritual ascent for any person. In
fact it is not a project which can be finished in a certain time schedule. It
has to be a life-long effort. The very effort matters. The senses always crave
for sense-objects. That is their nature. But man, using his discretionary
intellect, has to harness his will-power to control and monitor them into the
right channels. And, in this, Krishna says one
may seek the help of the indwelling Lord. The Lord will not only help Man but
shower His grace on him for him to have the strength for the spiritual climb.
To propitiate the Lord one does not have to do fanciful worship or ostentatious
rituals. These will only fan the fire of one’s ego further. To remember the
Lord at all times and be continuously aware of His omnipresence is what
constitutes the deepest devotion to God. This path of devotion
to the One Supreme Almighty who is also indwelling in every being is the
second major teaching of the gita to humanity. The concept of the one supreme,
even though there are many manifestations of Him, in the form of avatars and
forms, is fundamental to the path of devotion.
But being devoted to
God is not everything. One has to do one’s duties, professional or personal,
domestic or social, filial or moral, religious or secular, --- all duties that
devolve on one, in such a way that no residual attachment or vAsanA
sticks in the mind. For these residual vAsanAs
are the obstacles in the upward spiritual path by which one reaches God. So the
discharge of one’s duties without any attachment is the obligation of every
one. This is the great karma yoga of the gita. It is the contribution of the
gita to world knowledge and culture. Krishna
elaborately details how it could be practised. He says : Dedicate all your
actions to Me. By thus dedicating all our actions to God we can experience an
internal alchemy that takes place in ours own mind. For dedication to God
means, doing only those actions that are acceptable to God and never doing
those actions which are unacceptable to Him. Dedication is voluntary acceptance
of ‘suffering’ for the sake of the God of dedication. The methodology of
dedication is technically called yajna,
by Krishna. Any action done selflessly without
expectation of reward and with a sense of detachment, is called yajna. Do every
one of your actions, as a yajna, says the Lord.
Thus the three teachings
are: yoga sAdhanA, bhakti and karma yoga. Now come two deeper things. One is Surrender. Surrender even your will to God in the
sense that thereafter you are nothing but an instrument in the hands of God. It
is self-effacement, no doubt, but that is exactly what is meant by a total
devotion to the Absolute.
The other teaching is
in fact the final goal of Man.
It may be called the Equanimous View of everything.
The One Supreme, being the grandest in
conception, being all-pervading, is called brahman by the scriptures.
Our perception has to widen in its subtlety to perceive this Absolute brahman
in every being, indeed in every creation of God, animate or inanimate. This
impartial perception comes to One who has transcended all the dualities of the world like good and
bad, happiness and misery, friend and foe,
like and dislike, and heat and cold.. By yoga sAdhanA, bhakti and
karma yoga one reaches the stage where one is ready for the other two:
namely, to surrender even one’s will to God and to be
able to treat every experience the same equanimous way.
Copyright© V. Krishnamurthy 23 May
2008
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