ISKCON Desire Tree's Posts (20171)

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“Satisfaction of the self-realized spiritual master is the secret of advancement in spiritual life. Inquiries and submission constitute the proper combination for spiritual understanding. Unless there is submission and service, inquiries from the learned spiritual master will not be effective. One must be able to pass the test of the spiritual master, and when he sees the genuine desire of the disciple, he automatically blesses the disciple with genuine spiritual understanding.” (Bhagavad-gita As It Is 4.34, Purport)

“First there must be the devotee’s mercy; then Krishna’s mercy will descend. Yasya prasadad bhagavat-prasado/ yasyaprasadan na gatih kuto ’pi. Our first duty, therefore, is to satisfy the spiritual master, who can arrange for the Lord’s mercy. A common man must first begin to serve the spiritual master, or the devotee. Then, through the mercy of the devotee, the Lord will be satisfied. Unless one receives the dust of a devotee’s lotus feet on one’s head, there is no possibility of advancement.” (Caitanya-caritamrta, Madhya 11.58, Purport)

“For advancement of material knowledge there is a need for personal ability and researching aptitude, but in the case of spiritual knowledge, all progress depends more or less on the mercy of the spiritual master. The spiritual master must be satisfied with the disciple; only then is knowledge automatically manifest before the student of spiritual science.” (Srimad-Bhagavatam 2.1.10, Purport)

“A common man cannot rise to the topmost stage of spiritual perfection simply by following the rituals and religious principles. He has to take shelter of a bona fide spiritual master and work under his direction faithfully and sincerely; then he becomes perfect, without a doubt.” (Srimad-Bhagavatam 3.22.6, Purport)

“Visvanatha Cakravarti Thakura’s eight stanzas of prayer to the spiritual master, it is clearly stated that simply by satisfying the spiritual master one can achieve the supreme success in life, and in spite of executing all ritualistic performances, if one cannot satisfy the spiritual master, one has no access to spiritual perfection.” (Srimad-Bhagavatam 3.22.6, Purport)

“Your next question is, should we love Krishna or love the spiritual master: You cannot go to Krishna directly, loving Him. It is common sense that if Krishna is the object of your love, His pet dog is also the object of your love. Friends meet friends and if the friend is with his dog the gentleman pats his dog first, is it not? So the man becomes automatically pleased, his dog being patted. I have seen it in your country. The conclusion is this: Without pleasing the spiritual master he cannot please Krishna. If anyone tries to please Krishna directly, he’s fool number one.” (Srila Prabhupada Letter, December 14, 1972)

“So far your questions are concerned. Nityananda is the principle of the Guru. So, the Gurudeva is the incarnation of Nityananda. Anyone strictly following the instruction of the Guru is following Nityananda. The price one has to pay if he wants to become Krsna conscious is that he must dedicate himself to following the order of the spiritual master, mahat seva. If the Spiritual Master is pleased with disciple then the blessings of Guru will be there. That is the best way to become Krsna conscious, and Krsna is non-different from Nityananda. You may pray to Lord Nityananda to help you become dedicated in the service of your Guru. Krsna consciousness cannot be achieved artificially. You should approach Nityananda Prabhu through your Spiritual Master.” (Srila Prabhupada Letter, October 2, 1976)

Lord Krishna (to Sudama Brahmana): “With great compassion our gurudeva said, ‘My dear boys, it is very wonderful that you have suffered so much trouble for me. Everyone likes to take care of his body as the first consideration, but you are so good and faithful to your guru that without caring for bodily comforts you have taken so much trouble for me. I am glad to see that bona fide students like you will undergo any kind of trouble for the satisfaction of the spiritual master. That is the way for a bona fide disciple to become free from his debt to the spiritual master. It is the duty of the disciple to dedicate his life to the service of the spiritual master. My dear best of the twice-born, I am greatly pleased by your acts, and I bless you: May all your desires and ambitions be fulfilled. May the understanding of the Vedas which you have learned from me always continue to remain within your memory, so that at every moment you can remember the teachings of the Vedas and quote their instructions without difficulty. Thus you will never be disappointed in this life or the next.’

Krishna continued: ‘My dear friend, you may remember that many such incidents occurred while we were in the asrama of our spiritual master. Both of us can realize that without the blessings of the spiritual master no one can be happy. By the mercy of the spiritual master and by his blessings, one can achieve peace and prosperity and be able to fulfill the mission of human life.'” (Krishna Book, Chapter 80)

“The candidate must be prepared to satisfy the spiritual master in every way. A bona fide spiritual master who is fully cognizant of the methods of spiritual science, learned in the spiritual scriptures such as the Bhagavad-gita, Vedanta, Srimad-Bhagavatam and Upanisads, and who is also a realized soul who has made a tangible connection with the Supreme Lord, is the transparent medium by which the willing candidate is led to the path of the Vaikunthas. The spiritual master must be satisfied in all respects, because simply by his good wishes a candidate can make wonderful progress along the path.”(Easy Journey to Other Planets, Chapter 1)

Devotee: “Sometimes this question comes up, with the devotees especially, that it says the devotee makes advancement when the spiritual master is pleased. Right? So sometimes the spiritual master is far, far away. He may be in Los Angeles. Somebody is coming to Hamburg temple. He thinks, ‘How will the spiritual master be pleased?'”

Prabhupada: “Just follow his order. Spiritual master is along with you by his words. Just like my spiritual master is not physically present, but I am associating with him by his words.”

Devotee: “And Krishna knows that; therefore we make advancement. He is sitting in our heart. He knows what we’re doing. So He sees, ‘He’s serving My pure devotee,’ immediately there is advancement.”

Prabhupada: “Yes. Spiritual master… Krishna is not limited. It is not material. You can associate with Krishna and the spiritual master in any circumstance, provided you want two things. Just like we can associate with Krishna immediately if we take Bhagavad-gita as it is. He is not different from Bhagavad-gita. Nama-rupe kali-kale krsna-avatara (CC Adi 17.22). Krishna is incarnated in His name in this age. You associate with Krishna’s name, immediately associate with Krishna.”

Devotee: “And his devotees.”

Prabhupada: “Yes.”

(Srila Prabhupada Lecture, London, July 7, 1972)

“Your strong desire to serve me is very beautiful; your serving me means serving Krishna. I am also your servant so I cannot accept your service from you, or from any of my disciples. I accept service from my disciples on behalf of Krishna. Just like a tax collector must collect for the treasury, not for himself. If he himself touches so much as a farthing it would be unlawful. So I have no right to accept service from any disciple, but on behalf of Krishna I can accept. Sincere service to the Spiritual Master is service to the Supreme Lord. As stated in the prayer, Yasya Prasadad Bhagavat Prasadad. That means because Krishna accepts service through the via media of Spiritual Master, therefore pleasing the Spiritual Master is equal to pleasing the Supreme Lord.” (Srila Prabhupada Letter, February 13, 1968)

“Bhakti-lata-bija means ‘the seed of devotional service.’ Everything has an original cause, or seed. For any idea, program, plan or device, there is first of all the contemplation of the plan, and that is called the bija, or seed. The methods, rules and regulations by which one is perfectly trained in devotional service constitute the bhakti-lata-bija, or seed of devotional service. This bhakti-lata-bija is received from the spiritual master by the grace of Krishna. Other seeds, called anyabhilasa-bija, include karma-bija and jnana-bija. If one is not fortunate enough to receive the bhakti-lata-bija from the spiritual master, he instead cultivates such seeds as karma-bija, jnana-bija, or political, social or philanthropic bijas. However, the bhakti-lata-bija is different from these other bijas. The bhakti-lata-bija can be received only through the mercy of the spiritual master. Therefore one has to satisfy the spiritual master to get the bhakti-lata-bija (yasya prasadad bhagavat-prasadah). The bhakti-lata-bija is the origin of devotional service. Unless one satisfies the spiritual master, he gets the bija, or root cause, of karma, jnana and yoga without the benefit of devotional service. But one who is faithful to his spiritual master gets the bhakti-lata-bija.” (Caitanya-caritamrta, Madhya 19.152, Purport)

“If you see that the spiritual master is satisfied, then you should know that Krishna is satisfied. That is confirmed by Visvanatha Cakravarti: yasya prasadad bhagavat-prasadah. And yasyaprasadan na gatih kuto ‘pi: If the spiritual master is not satisfied, then you are gone to hell. Yasya aprasadan na gatih kuto ‘pi. Because who will recommend to Krishna the promotion and so many things?” (Srila Prabhupada Lecture, Rome, May 24, 1974)

“When one serves a Vaisnava unknowingly, one still gets the good result, and if one unknowingly insults a Vaisnava, one suffers the bad result. A Vaisnava is especially favored by the Supreme Personality of Godhead. Pleasing him or displeasing him directly affects the pleasure and displeasure of the Supreme Lord. Srila Visvanatha Cakravarti Thakura, in his eight stanzas of prayer to the spiritual master, has sung, yasya prasadad bhagavat-prasadah: by pleasing the spiritual master, who is a pure Vaisnava, one pleases the Personality of Godhead, but if one displeases the spiritual master one does not know where he is going.” (Srimad-Bhagavatam 4.9.23, Purport)

“The spiritual master is certainly very merciful to his disciples, and consequently by satisfying him a devotee gets strength from the Supreme Personality of Godhead. Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu therefore says, guru-krsna-prasade paya bhakti-lata-bija: (CC Madhya 19.151) one must first please the spiritual master, and then one automatically pleases Krishna and gets the strength with which to cross the ocean of nescience. If one seriously desires to return home, back to Godhead, one must therefore become strong enough by pleasing the spiritual master, for thus one gets the weapon with which to conquer the enemy, and one also gets the grace of Krishna. Simply getting the weapon of jnana is insufficient. One must sharpen the weapon by serving the spiritual master and adhering to his instructions. Then the candidate will get the mercy of the Supreme Personality of Godhead.”(Srimad-Bhagavatam, 7.15.45, Purport)

Source:https://theharekrishnamovement.org/2016/10/30/the-secret-of-success-in-spiritual-life-2/

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We may approach the Lord for something material and he may fulfill our desire, but in such a way that we don’t approach him again for that desire. So, it is better if we approach the Lord and great souls like Giri Govardhan with spiritual desires like the gopi’s—just to serve and please Krishna—without any desire for themselves. By serving and pleasing Krishna we become pramodah—we become exceedingly happy. That is how we become happy. Not by trying in our own independent way to enjoy but by serving and pleasing Krishna and His devotees. That was the benediction the gopis wanted from Govardhan Hill and he fulfilled their desires.”

Source:http://www.girirajswami.com/?p=11498

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His Final Instructions

Today we honor the disappearance day of His Dive Grace A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada with a half day fast and are celebrating your disappearance with remembrances and prayers.

The Disappearance of a Vaisnava was explained very nicely by Srila Prabhupada is a lecture given on the disappearance day lecture of Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Goswami Maharaja Prabhupada on Dec. 13, 1973 in Los Angeles:

“So spiritually, appearance and disappearance, there is no difference. Just like in material point of view, if a person takes birth… Suppose you get a son born, you become very happy. The same son, when passes away, you become very unhappy. This is material. But spiritually, there is no such difference, appearance or disappearance. So although this is the disappearance day of Oṁ Viṣṇupāda Śrī Śrīmad Bhaktisiddhānta Sarasvatī Ṭhākura, so there is nothing to be lamented. Although we feel separation, that feeling is there, but spiritually, there is no difference between appearance and disappearance.”

For today’s post we are going back in time…to the first issue of Back to Godhead Magazine after Srila Prabhu’s departure.

Srila Prabhupada Speaks Out
text excerpted from; Back to Godhead Magazine

His Final Instructions

During his last months, Srila Prabhupada was not very active physically, and he spoke relatively little. Yet when he did speak, his words were full of spiritual strength. These excerpts from Srila Prabhupada’s last statements reveal the mind of the pure devotee and universal teacher. And they show that Srila Prabhupada is indeed a transcendental personality, whose devotion to Lord Krsna and to the mission of spreading love of Krsna is undying.

“I cannot speak. I am feeling weak. I wanted to travel to Chandigarh and other places, but I changed my program because my health is deteriorating. I decided to come here to Vrndavana (the land of Lord Krsna). If death takes place, let it take place here.”

“There is nothing new to be said. Whatever I had to say, I have already said in my books. Now you must all try to understand it and continue with your endeavors. Whether I am present or not present doesn’t matter. Just as Krsna is living eternally, the living being also lives eternally. But especially… kirtir yasya sa jivati: ‘One who has done service to the Lord lives forever.’ You have been taught to serve Krsna, and with Krsna we’ll live eternally. Our life is eternal. Na hanyate hanyamane sarire: the disappearance of this temporary body doesn’t matter. The body is meant for disappearance. So, live forever by serving Krsna. Thank you very much.”

“There are two things—life and death. So if I die, where is the wrong in that? If I die, that is natural.”

“Our money is only spent for Krsna—Krsna’s palace, Krsna’s temple, Krsna’s worship, ‘Krsna’s glorification. It is not for our personal enjoyment. This is human life.”

“And I also want you to organize varnasrama society [the Vedic social structure]. Divide society: brahmana [intellectual class], ksatriya [administrators], and so on. There should be social division, just as there is a division of the different parts of our body. This will help people. Don’t waste the human form of life by sinful living. I have already given the ideas in my books, so you should all read them. You are intelligent, all of you. Caitanya Mahaprabhu said para-upakara—do good to others, do not exploit them. Any human being has the ability to chant Hare Krsna. Give them chanting. And also make the situation favorable. Is that clear?

“This is our mission: whatever we have, teach others. The whole world is filled with distress. Therefore our Gurukula school is meant for this purpose: to teach the students, and let them go all over the world to teach others. Durlabha manava janma sat-sange/ taraha e bhava-sindhu re [‘Human life, especially in the association of devotees, is very rarely obtained. So please take advantage of this opportunity to cross over the ocean of material existence’].”

“My Guru Maharaja [spiritual master] said, ‘Whatever money there is, use it to print books.’ He was so happy to print books. So, do it all very nicely. My Guru Maharaja used to say, ‘Go on printing, go on printing.’ I printed my books, now you do the same ‘

“Printing of spiritual books is our life-force. Print more books. This material body is only bones. But go on printing—this is life. We are not concerned with bones and stones. Our concern is the living force: apareyam itas tv anyam prakrtim viddhi me param. The living force is sustaining these bones. In the material world, people are all simply protecting bones and flesh; they have no [spiritual] idea.

“Take matter—you mix earth, water, put it into fire, and then make a building. But matter cannot act automatically. Matter cannot have mind or consciousness or impetus. It is nonsense to say that matter gives rise to life. Matter has no sense. Life is the superior energy; matter is useless. Bhumir apo ‘nalo vayuh [the material elements] are useless. But there is another, superior nature. Yayedam dharyate jagat And that nature is actually governing the whole, universe.

“You [disciples] are all intelligent and experienced men; you can go on managing this movement. If I depart, there is no cause for lamentation. I will always be with you through my books and my orders. I will always remain with you in that way.”

“I didn’t waste a single moment. I tried my best, and it has been successful ,to some, extent”

“Have sankirtana [congregational chanting of God’s holy names]. All Europeans, Americans, Africans-United Nations under Caitanya Mahaprabhu’s flag. Do everything just as I have shown you. It is possible. This is the real United Nations. You try, under the protection of Caitanya Mahaprabhu, and things will be successful. Others will simply waste their time and be disappointed. They will change from one body to another and suffer.”

“As soon as one forgets Krsna and wants to enjoy life independently, he falls down.”

“Material motives should be given up, and everything favorable should be engaged in Krsna’s service. Then there will be success.”

When asked who would succeed him as the leader of the Krsna consciousness movement, Srila Prabhupada replied: “All of my disciples will take the legacy. If you want, you can also take it. Sacrifice everything. I—one—may soon pass away. But they are hundreds, and this movement will increase. It’s not that I’ll give an order: ‘Here is the next leader.’ Anyone who follows the previous leadership is a leader. I don’t make any distinction between Indian and European. All my disciples are leaders… as much as they follow purely. If you want to follow, then you can also lead. But you dont want to follow. ‘Leader’ means (one who is a first-class disciple. Evam parampara-praptam. One who is perfectly following. Our instruction is, guru mukha-padma-vakya. Do you know this? Ara na kariha mane asa. [My only desire is to have my consciousness purified by the words emanating from the lotus mouth of my spiritual master’]. To become a leader is not very difficult, provided one is prepared to follow the instructions of the bonafide guru.

Text excerpted from: The Bhaktivedanta Book Trust International, Inc., Rights and Permissions, copyrights@bbti.orghttp://www.bbti.org

Source:https://theharekrishnamovement.org/2016/11/03/his-final-instructions/

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To Stay Awake

A friend returning from India and dealing with jetlag added a small line in an email to me –  my goal today: to stay awake.

That jumped out. What a goal, not just for the day, but for life.

In spiritual life when we think of being awake, we think of being conscious, being mindful of how we are relating with the world and with others. Being awake in bhakti means being awake to Krishna, to our particular relationship with Him, and our intentional effort to honor, respect, and grow that relationship.

Arjuna became super-awake by hearing the knowledge Krishna taught him in the Bhagavad-gita.

Each of us have our life circumstances that we interact with and that pull a response from us. As spiritual practitioners what do we want to be awake for? What do we want to be awake to?

We might want to be awake to unwanted emotions. Is that envy tugging at our heart? Is that the false ego–our false conception of who we are–stoking our anger? Are we happy at others success or secretly pleased at their failures? Do we think we are better than others? Do we listen with half an ear or judge with cheap certainty? These are some of the many hard things we may want to be awake to.

We should want to be awake to random acts of service. To jump at opportunities. To be awake enough to turn whatever we are doing into an act of devotion, an act of love.

We may want to be awake to death, to be conscious of the journey of leaving this body, and to be as intentional and focused as we can. Death is never easy so we want to be awake to understanding it now. To be awake to getting the spiritual support we need and to do it in the best way possible.

We may want to be awake to transcendence – to consciously rise above the swirling ocean of life and directly engage with our relationship with Krishna. We need to be awake to give and receive pure love.

We may want to be awake to the clouds blowing across the sky, to the blazing sunset, the full moon taking our breath away, to the early morning chants that fill our heart with longing to go home, to meet Krishna again. We may want to be awake to the fact that we turned our back on Krishna and went away.

And we may want to be awake, should want to be fully awake, when we turn and face Him again.

Source:http://iskconofdc.org/to-stay-awake/

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I ran across this interesting compilation of quotes this morning on the Prabhupada News website, by Vidura Prabhu. This is a nice reminder that Krsna is present today, through His spoken words on the battlefield of Kuruksetra, and by chanting his holy names. And that Srila Prabhupada is also present today, through his words and instructions. I have done some slight editing (highlighting), and have included the full text and purports to SB 1.15.27-31 at bottom of post. -Vyasasan das

Arjuna Teaches Us How to Serve the Spiritual Master in His Absence
by: Vidura dasa

Oct 23 2011, USA — “The Lord left behind Him the instructions of the Bhagavad-gita not for the benefit of Arjuna alone, but also for all time and in all lands(1). […]The problem which arose in the heart of Arjuna on the Battlefield of Kuruksetra was solved by the teachings of the Bhagavad-gita. […]The merciful Lord left behind Him the great teachings of the Bhagavad-gita so that one can take the instructions of the Lord even when He is not visible to material eyesight(2). […] Thus the Bhagavad-gita, or any authentic scriptural sound representation of the Lord, is also the incarnation of the Lord. There is no difference between the sound representation of the Lord and the Lord Himself. One can derive the same benefit from the Bhagavad-gita as Arjuna did in the personal presence of the Lord.” (SB 1.15.27)

“Arjuna began to think of the Lord’s instructions to him on the Battlefield of Kuruksetra. Only those instructions began to eliminate the tinges of material contamination(3) in the mind of Arjuna.” (SB 1.15.28)

“As soon as Arjuna turned his attention towards the instructions of the Lord, as they are inculcated in the Bhagavad-gita, his true color of eternal association with the Lord became manifest, and thus he felt freed from all material contaminations.” (SB 1.15.29)

“As soon as Arjuna took up the instructions of the Bhagavad-gita, expert as he was, he could at once eradicate the material conception of Lord Krishna, his eternal friend. He could realize that the Lord was still present before him by His instruction(4), by His form, by His pastimes, by His qualities and everything else related to Him. […] One is not able to feel the presence of the Lord in all circumstances until one is endowed with the required transcendental vision made possible by devotional service prescribed in the revealed scriptures. Arjuna had attained this stage long before on the Battlefield of Kuruksetra, and when he apparently felt the absence of the Lord, he at once took shelter of the instructions of the Bhagavad-gita(5), and thus again he was placed in his original position*.” (SB 1.15.31)

(1) Can everyone and anyone take shelter of Srila Prabhupada’s instructions?

(2) Does this depend on any physical presence?

(3) What is the result of following the instructions?*

(4) Is Srila Prabhupada really present before us by His instructions?

(5) So in Srila Prabhupada’s absence we only need to take shelter of His instructions?

(6) Is it fair to draw these conclusions i.e. can they be applied to Srila Prabhupada? See quotes below:

“As soon as we chant Hare Krishna or chant Bhagavad-gita or Bhagavata,so He is present immediately by His vibration. He’s absolute. Therefore try to remember His words of instruction; you’ll not feel separation. You’ll feel that He is with you. Soweshould associate by thevibration, and not by the physical presence. That is real association. Sabdad anavritti. By sound. Just like we are touching Krishna immediately by sound. Soundvibration. So we should give more stress on the sound vibration, either of Krishna or of the spiritual master. Then we‘ll feel happy and no separation. When Krishna departed from this world, at that time Arjuna was overwhelmed with sorrow and he began to remember the instruction of Bhagavad-gita. You’ll find in the Srimad-Bhagavatam. Then he was pacified. He immediately began to remember the teachings which was taught to him in the Battlefield of Kurukṣetra, and he was pacified. He was his constant friend, so when Krishna went to His abode he was feeling overwhelmed, but he began to remember His teaching. So whenever we shall feel separation, the best thing is to remember the teachings. Then it will be very nice. Is that clear?” (Lecture | Srimad-Bhagavatam 7.9.12 | Montreal, August 18, 1968)

“Krishna and his representative are the same. Similarly, the spiritual master can be present wherever the disciple wants. A spiritual master is the principle, not the body. Just like a television can be seen in thousands of place by the principle of relay monitoring.” (SP – 28/5/68)

“When one receives the seed of devotional service by the mercy of the guru and Krishna, the Supreme Personality of Godhead, one’s real life begins. If one abides by the orders of the spiritual master, by the grace of Krishna he is freed from service to the mind.” (SB 5.11.17 | Purport)

“One may argue that ‘Where is Krishna?’ No, you have got Krishna’s representative, guru. Yasya prasadad bhagavat-prasado. The representative is there. If you act according to his instruction, if you want to please him, then Krishna is pleased.” (Lectures | Srimad-Bhagavatam 6.1.15 | Denver, June 28, 1975)

“So if you want to be anxiety-less, without any anxiety, then you must take shelter of the guru, or the spiritual master, and the test is that by the instruction of guru, by following the instruction of guru, you will be anxiety-less. This is the test.” (Lecture | Stockholm, September 9, 1973)

“If there is no chance to serve the spiritual master directly, a devotee should serve him by remembering his instructions. There is no difference between the spiritual masters instructions and the spiritual master himself. In the absence therefore, his words of direction should be pride of the disciple.” (C.c. Adi 1.35, purport)

“The disciple and Spiritual Master are never separated because the Spiritual Master always keeps company with the disciple as long as the disciple follows strictly the instructions of the Spiritual Master. This is called the association of Vani. Physical presence is called Vapuh. As long as the Spiritual Master is physically present, the disciple should serve the physical body of the Spiritual Master, and when the Spiritual Master is no longer physically existing, the disciple should serve the instructions of the Spiritual Master.” (S.B. 4:28:47, purport)

“The Spiritual Master is present wherever his sincere disciple is trying to serve his instructions. This is possible by the Mercy of Krishna. In your attempts to serve me and in all your sincere devotional sentiments I am with you as My Guru Maharaja is with me. Remember this always.“ (Letter to Bhakta Don, Dec. 1, 1973)

Full Text and Purport

Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam
By His Divine Grace A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupāda
Canto One, Chapter 15, Text 25-31

TEXTS 25–26

jalaukasāṁ jale yadvan
mahānto ’danty aṇīyasaḥ
durbalān balino rājan
mahānto balino mithaḥ

evaṁ baliṣṭhair yadubhir
mahadbhir itarān vibhuḥ
yadūn yadubhir anyonyaṁ
bhū-bhārān sañjahāra ha

jalaukasām—of the aquatics; jale—in the water; yadvat—as it is; mahāntaḥ—the larger one; adanti—swallows; aṇīyasaḥ—smaller ones; durbalān—the weak; balinaḥ—the stronger; rājan—O King; mahāntaḥ—the strongest; balinaḥ—less strong; mithaḥ—in a duel; evam—thus; baliṣṭhaiḥ—by the strongest; yadubhiḥ—by the descendants of Yadu; mahadbhiḥ—one who has greater strength; itarān—the common ones; vibhuḥ—the Supreme Personality of Godhead; yadūn—all the Yadus; yadubhiḥ—by the Yadus; anyonyam—among one another; bhū-bhārān—the burden of the world; sañjahāra—has unloaded; ha—in the past.

TRANSLATION

O King, as in the ocean the bigger and stronger aquatics swallow up the smaller and weaker ones, so also the Supreme Personality of Godhead, to lighten the burden of the earth, has engaged the stronger Yadu to kill the weaker, and the bigger Yadu to kill the smaller.

PURPORT

In the material world the struggle for existence and survival of the fittest are laws because in the material world there is disparity between conditioned souls due to everyone’s desire to lord it over the material resources. This very mentality of lording it over the material nature is the root cause of conditioned life. And to give facility to such imitation lords, the illusory energy of the Lord has created a disparity between conditioned living beings by creating the stronger and the weaker in every species of life. The mentality of lording it over the material nature and the creation has naturally created a disparity and therefore the law of struggle for existence. In the spiritual world there is no such disparity, nor is there such a struggle for existence. In the spiritual world there is no struggle for existence because everyone there exists eternally. There is no disparity because everyone wants to render service to the Supreme Lord, and no one wants to imitate the Lord in becoming the beneficiary. The Lord, being creator of everything, including the living beings, factually is the proprietor and enjoyer of everything that be, but in the material world, by the spell of māyā, or illusion, this eternal relation with the Supreme Personality of Godhead is forgotten, and so the living being is conditioned under the law of struggle for existence and survival of the fittest.

TEXT 27

deśa-kālārtha-yuktāni
hṛt-tāpopaśamāni ca
haranti smarataś cittaṁ
govindābhihitāni me

deśa—space; kāla—time; artha—importance; yuktāni—impregnated with; hṛt—the heart; tāpa—burning; upaśamāni—extinguishing; ca—and; haranti—are attracting; smarataḥ—by remembering; cittam—mind; govinda—the Supreme Personality of pleasure; abhihitāni—narrated by; me—unto me.

TRANSLATION

Now I am attracted to those instructions imparted to me by the Personality of Godhead [Govinda] because they are impregnated with instructions for relieving the burning heart in all circumstances of time and space.

PURPORT

Herein Arjuna refers to the instruction of the Bhagavad-gītā, which was imparted to him by the Lord on the Battlefield of Kurukṣetra. The Lord left behind Him the instructions of the Bhagavad-gītā not for the benefit of Arjuna alone, but also for all time and in all lands. The Bhagavad-gītā, being spoken by the Supreme Personality of Godhead, is the essence of all Vedic wisdom. It is nicely presented by the Lord Himself for all who have very little time to go through the vast Vedic literatures like the Upaniṣads, Purāṇas and Vedānta-sūtras. It is put within the study of the great historical epic Mahābhārata, which was especially prepared for the less intelligent class, namely the women, the laborers and those who are worthless descendants of the brāhmaṇas, kṣatriyas and higher sections of the vaiśyas. The problem which arose in the heart of Arjuna on the Battlefield of Kurukṣetra was solved by the teachings of the Bhagavad-gītā. Again, after the departure of the Lord from the vision of earthly people, when Arjuna was face to face with being vanquished in his acquired power and prominence, he wanted again to remember the great teachings of the Bhagavad-gītā just to teach all concerned that the Bhagavad-gītā can be consulted in all critical times, not only for solace from all kinds of mental agonies, but also for the way out of great entanglements which may embarrass one in some critical hour.

The merciful Lord left behind Him the great teachings of the Bhagavad-gītā so that one can take the instructions of the Lord even when He is not visible to material eyesight. Material senses cannot have any estimation of the Supreme Lord, but by His inconceivable power the Lord can incarnate Himself to the sense perception of the conditioned souls in a suitable manner through the agency of matter, which is also another form of the Lord’s manifested energy. Thus the Bhagavad-gītā, or any authentic scriptural sound representation of the Lord, is also the incarnation of the Lord. There is no difference between the sound representation of the Lord and the Lord Himself. One can derive the same benefit from the Bhagavad-gītā as Arjuna did in the personal presence of the Lord.

The faithful human being who is desirous of being liberated from the clutches of material existence can very easily take advantage of the Bhagavad-gītā, and with this in view, the Lord instructed Arjuna as if Arjuna were in need of it. In the Bhagavad-gītā, five important factors of knowledge have been delineated pertaining to (1) the Supreme Lord, (2) the living being, (3) nature, (4) time and space and (5) the process of activity. Out of these, the Supreme Lord and the living being are qualitatively one. The difference between the two has been analyzed as the difference between the whole and the part and parcel. Nature is inert matter displaying the interaction of three different modes, and eternal time and unlimited space are considered to be beyond the existence of the material nature. Activities of the living being are different varieties of aptitudes which can entrap or liberate the living being within and without material nature. All these subject matters are concisely discussed in the Bhagavad-gītā, and later the subject matters are elaborated in the Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam for further enlightenment. Out of the five subjects, the Supreme Lord, the living entity, nature, and time and space are eternal, but the living entity, nature and time are under the direction of the Supreme Lord, who is absolute and completely independent of any other control. The Supreme Lord is the supreme controller. The material activity of the living being is beginningless, but it can be rectified by transferral into the spiritual quality. Thus it can cease its material qualitative reactions. Both the Lord and the living entity are cognizant, and both have the sense of identification, of being conscious as a living force. But the living being under the condition of material nature, called mahat-tattva, misidentifies himself as being different from the Lord. The whole scheme of Vedic wisdom is targeted to the aim of eradicating such a misconception and thus liberating the living being from the illusion of material identification. When such an illusion is eradicated by knowledge and renunciation, the living beings are responsible actors and enjoyers also. The sense of enjoyment in the Lord is real, but such a sense in the living being is a sort of wishful desire only. This difference in consciousness is the distinction of the two identities, namely the Lord and the living being. Otherwise there is no difference between the Lord and the living being. The living being is therefore eternally one and different simultaneously. The whole instruction of the Bhagavad-gītā stands on this principle.

In the Bhagavad-gītā the Lord and the living beings are both described as sanātana, or eternal, and the Lord’s abode, far beyond the material sky, is also described as sanātana. The living being is invited to live in the sanātana existence of the Lord, and the process which can help a living being to approach the Lord’s abode, where the liberated activity of the soul is exhibited, is called sanātana-dharma. One cannot, however, reach the eternal abode of the Lord without being free from the misconception of material identification, and the Bhagavad-gītā gives us the clue how to achieve this stage of perfection. The process of being liberated from the misconception of material identification is called, in different stages, fruitive activity, empiric philosophy and devotional service, up to transcendental realization. Such transcendental realization is made possible by dovetailing all the above items in relation with the Lord. Prescribed duties of the human being, as directed in the Vedas, can gradually purify the sinful mind of the conditioned soul and raise him to the stage of knowledge. The purified stage of acquiring knowledge becomes the basis of devotional service to the Lord. As long as one is engaged in researching the solution of the problems of life, his knowledge is called jñāna, or purified knowledge, but on realizing the actual solution of life, one becomes situated in the devotional service of the Lord. The Bhagavad-gītā begins with the problems of life by discriminating the soul from the elements of matter and proves by all reason and argument that the soul is indestructible in all circumstances and that the outer covering of matter, the body and the mind, change for another term of material existence which is full of miseries. The Bhagavad-gītā is therefore meant for terminating all different types of miseries, and Arjuna took shelter of this great knowledge, which had been imparted to him during the Kurukṣetra battle.

TEXT 28

sūta uvāca

evaṁ cintayato jiṣṇoḥ
kṛṣṇa-pāda-saroruham
sauhārdenātigāḍhena
śāntāsīd vimalā matiḥ

sūtaḥ uvāca—Sūta Gosvāmī said; evam—thus; cintayataḥ—while thinking of the instructions; jiṣṇoḥ—of the Supreme Personality of Godhead; kṛṣṇa-pāda—the feet of Kṛṣṇa; saroruham—resembling lotuses; sauhārdena—by deep friendship; ati-gāḍhena—in great intimacy; śāntā—pacified; āsīt—it so became; vimalā—without any tinge of material contamination; matiḥ—mind.

TRANSLATION

Sūta Gosvāmī said: Thus being deeply absorbed in thinking of the instructions of the Lord, which were imparted in the great intimacy of friendship, and in thinking of His lotus feet, Arjuna’s mind became pacified and free from all material contamination.

PURPORT

Since the Lord is absolute, deep meditation upon Him is as good as yogic trance. The Lord is nondifferent from His name, form, quality, pastimes, entourage and specific actions. Arjuna began to think of the Lord’s instructions to him on the Battlefield of Kurukṣetra. Only those instructions began to eliminate the tinges of material contamination in the mind of Arjuna. The Lord is like the sun; the sun’s appearance means immediate dissipation of darkness, or ignorance, and the Lord’s appearance within the mind of the devotee can at once drive away the miserable material effects. Lord Caitanya has therefore recommended constant chanting of the name of the Lord for protection from all contamination of the material world. The feeling of separation from the Lord is undoubtedly painful to the devotee, but because it is in connection with the Lord, it has a specific transcendental effect which pacifies the heart. Feelings of separation are also sources of transcendental bliss, and they are never comparable to contaminated material feelings of separation.

TEXT 29

vāsudevāṅghry-anudhyāna-
paribṛṁhita-raṁhasā
bhaktyā nirmathitāśeṣa-
kaṣāya-dhiṣaṇo ’rjunaḥ

vāsudeva-aṅghri—the lotus feet of the Lord; anudhyāna—by constant remembrance; paribṛṁhita—expanded; raṁhasā—with great velocity; bhaktyā—in devotion; nirmathita—subsided; aśeṣa—unlimited; kaṣāya—dint; dhiṣaṇaḥ—conception; arjunaḥ—Arjuna.

TRANSLATION

Arjuna’s constant remembrance of the lotus feet of Lord Śrī Kṛṣṇa rapidly increased his devotion, and as a result all the trash in his thoughts subsided.

PURPORT

Material desires in the mind are the trash of material contamination. By such contamination, the living being is faced with so many compatible and incompatible things that discourage the very existence of spiritual identity. Birth after birth the conditioned soul is entrapped with so many pleasing and displeasing elements, which are all false and temporary. They accumulate due to our reactions to material desires, but when we get in touch with the transcendental Lord in His variegated energies by devotional service, the naked forms of all material desires become manifest, and the intelligence of the living being is pacified in its true color. As soon as Arjuna turned his attention towards the instructions of the Lord, as they are inculcated in the Bhagavad-gītā, his true color of eternal association with the Lord became manifest, and thus he felt freed from all material contaminations.

TEXT 30

gītaṁ bhagavatā jñānaṁ
yat tat saṅgrāma-mūrdhani
kāla-karma-tamo-ruddhaṁ
punar adhyagamat prabhuḥ

gītam—instructed; bhagavatā—by the Personality of Godhead; jñānam—transcendental knowledge; yat—which; tat—that; saṅgrāma-mūrdhani—in the midst of battle; kāla-karma—time and actions; tamaḥ-ruddham—enwrapped by such darkness; punaḥ adhyagamat—revived them again; prabhuḥ—the lord of his senses.

TRANSLATION

Because of the Lord’s pastimes and activities and because of His absence, it appeared that Arjuna forgot the instructions left by the Personality of Godhead. But factually this was not the case, and again he became lord of his senses.

PURPORT

A conditioned soul is enwrapped in his fruitive activities by the force of eternal time. But the Supreme Lord, when He incarnates on the earth, is not influenced by kāla, or the material conception of past, present and future. The activities of the Lord are eternal, and they are manifestations of His ātma-māyā, or internal potency. All pastimes or activities of the Lord are spiritual in nature, but to the laymen they appear to be on the same level with material activities. It so appeared that Arjuna and the Lord were engaged in the Battle of Kurukṣetra as the other party was also engaged, but factually the Lord was executing His mission of incarnation and association with His eternal friend Arjuna. Therefore such apparently material activities of Arjuna did not drive him away from his transcendental position, but on the contrary revived his consciousness of the songs of the Lord, as He sang them personally. This revival of consciousness is assured by the Lord in the Bhagavad-gītā (18.65) as follows:

man-manā bhava mad-bhakto
mad-yājī māṁ namaskuru
mām evaiṣyasi satyaṁ te
pratijāne priyo ’si me

One should think of the Lord always; the mind should not forget Him. One should become a devotee of the Lord and offer obeisances unto Him. One who lives in that fashion becomes undoubtedly endowed with the blessing of the Lord by achieving the shelter of His lotus feet. There is nothing to doubt about this eternal truth. Because Arjuna was His confidential friend, the secret was disclosed to him.

Arjuna had no desire to fight with his relatives, but he fought for the mission of the Lord. He was always engaged in the execution of His mission only, and therefore after the Lord’s departure he remained in the same transcendental position, even though it appeared that he forgot all the instructions of the Bhagavad-gītā. One should, therefore, adjust the activities of life in pace with the mission of the Lord, and by doing this one is sure to return back home, back to Godhead. This is the highest perfection of life.

TEXT 31

viśoko brahma-sampattyā
sañchinna-dvaita-saṁśayaḥ
līna-prakṛti-nairguṇyād
aliṅgatvād asambhavaḥ

viśokaḥ—free from bereavement; brahma-sampattyā—by possession of spiritual assets; sañchinna—being completely cut off; dvaita-saṁśayaḥ—from the doubts of relativity; līna—merged in; prakṛti—material nature; nairguṇyāt—due to being in transcendence; aliṅgatvāt—because of being devoid of a material body; asambhavaḥ—free from birth and death.

TRANSLATION

Because of his possessing spiritual assets, the doubts of duality were completely cut off. Thus he was freed from the three modes of material nature and placed in transcendence. There was no longer any chance of his becoming entangled in birth and death, for he was freed from material form.

PURPORT

Doubts of duality begin from the misconception of the material body, which is accepted as the self by less intelligent persons. The most foolish part of our ignorance is our identifying this material body with the self. Everything in relation with the body is ignorantly accepted as our own. Doubts due to misconceptions of “myself” and “mine”—in other words, “my body,” “my relatives,” “my property,” “my wife,” “my children,” “my wealth,” “my country,” “my community,” and hundreds and thousands of similar illusory contemplations—cause bewilderment for the conditioned soul. By assimilating the instructions of the Bhagavad-gītā, one is sure to be released from such bewilderment because real knowledge is knowledge that the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Vāsudeva, Lord Kṛṣṇa, is everything, including one’s self. Everything is a manifestation of His potency as part and parcel. The potency and the potent are nondifferent, so the conception of duality is at once mitigated by attainment of perfect knowledge. As soon as Arjuna took up the instructions of the Bhagavad-gītā, expert as he was, he could at once eradicate the material conception of Lord Kṛṣṇa, his eternal friend. He could realize that the Lord was still present before him by His instruction, by His form, by His pastimes, by His qualities and everything else related to Him. He could realize that Lord Kṛṣṇa, his friend, was still present before him by His transcendental presence in different nondual energies, and there was no question of attainment of the association of the Lord by another change of body under the influence of time and space. By attainment of absolute knowledge, one can be in association with the Lord constantly, even in this present life, simply by hearing, chanting, thinking of and worshiping the Supreme Lord. One can see Him, one can feel His presence even in this present life simply by understanding the advaya-jñāna Lord, or the Absolute Lord, through the process of devotional service, which begins with hearing about Him. Lord Caitanya says that simply by chanting the holy name of the Lord one can at once wash off the dust on the mirror of pure consciousness, and as soon as the dust is removed, one is at once freed from all material conditions. To become free from material conditions means to liberate the soul. As soon as one is, therefore, situated in absolute knowledge, his material conception of life is removed, or he emerges from a false conception of life. Thus the function of the pure soul is revived in spiritual realization. This practical realization of the living being is made possible due to his becoming free from the reaction of the three modes of material nature, namely goodness, passion and ignorance. By the grace of the Lord, a pure devotee is at once raised to the place of the Absolute, and there is no chance of the devotee’s becoming materially entangled again in conditioned life. One is not able to feel the presence of the Lord in all circumstances until one is endowed with the required transcendental vision made possible by devotional service prescribed in the revealed scriptures. Arjuna had attained this stage long before on the Battlefield of Kurukṣetra, and when he apparently felt the absence of the Lord, he at once took shelter of the instructions of the Bhagavad-gītā, and thus again he was placed in his original position. This is the position of viśoka, or the stage of being freed from all grief and anxieties.

Source:https://theharekrishnamovement.org/2016/11/01/arjuna-teaches-us-how-to-serve-the-spiritual-master-in-his-absence/

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What is Hare Krishna All About?

This is an old post I saved many years ago in my files, which I found on The Bhaktivedantas website. After re-reading it, I realized why I saved it. It is good information.

Krishna Consciousness in a Nutshell
by Hansadutta das

Krishna consciousness is the original consciousness of every living being, and it is explained in different Vedic literatures. One of these literatures is the Chaitanya-charitamrita. Chaitanya-charitamrita means “characteristic of the eternal living force”. Every living being is eternal by nature, and because he is eternal, he cannot be happy in this material world, which is a temporary arrangement, however wonderful it may be.

…Every living creature is subjected to four basic miseries, beginning with birth, continuing into old age and disease, and ending in death. No one wants to be miserable–everyone wants to be happy–but material nature functions in such a way that no one can be happy.

What is the Hare Krishna Program for Self-Realization?

…This movement is primarily spreading the teachings of Bhagavad-gita and Srimad-Bhagavatam and the chanting of the holy names:

Hare Krishna, Hare Krishna, Krishna Krishna, Hare Hare/ Hare Rama, Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare

Self-realization the Aim of Life

It is the duty of every living entity to learn the science of Krishna, or the science of the self, and to make himself perfect. He will attain freedom from the temporary world of material creation by reviving his original love of Krishna. In this way, he will return home, back to Godhead, which is the aim of all human endeavors, be they scientific, economic, artistic or cultural.

No One Lives Forever

Every living creature is subjected to four basic miseries, beginning with birth, continuing into old age and disease, and ending in death. No one wants to be miserable–everyone wants to be happy–but material nature functions in such a way that no one can be happy.

Ignoring this basic truth, modern thinkers, politicians, scientists, educators and artists are all struggling against the stringent laws of nature. They think by material adjustments they will find the happiness they hanker for. In spite of all comforts and the advancement of science, economics and politics, no one is happy–if for no other reason than that life is temporary.

Time and Energy Dedicated to God

The Hare Krishna movement offers a program to get out of the material world altogether. We accept the statements of the scriptures that beyond this temporary manifestation of material creation there is another permanent creation. In this temporary life, a human being should do everything possible to promote himself to that permanent life, which is eternal, spiritual life. This is man’s only duty in life. Science, medicine, education, art, music and poetry should all be applied for achieving this end, rather than for improving an illusory life of material enjoyment, which may be immediately pleasing, but is only temporary.

Living by the Laws of God

The highest authority is God Himself. God speaks through shastras, or scriptures, such as the Bible, the Koran, Bhagavad-gita and Srimad-Bhagavatam. There are a number of authorized scriptures in the world in different communities, but the principles of all scriptural injunctions are the same. The Bible says, “Thou shalt not kill.” This is a basic law in human society. Bhagavad-gita teaches ahimsa, or non-violence. One should not disturb even an ant or a mosquito unnecessarily. Jesus says, “Whatever you do unto the least of my brethren, you do it unto me.” “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.” According to time, place and circumstance, there may be different scriptures, different languages and different customs, but the principles of religion are the same. The teacher may be different, the school may be different, the language may be different and the teaching technique may be different, but the conclusion is the same.

Hare Krishna Movement is Genuine and Authorized,
Not a Newly Invented Religion or Cult

Krishna consciousness is a science. Religion is not a sentiment meant for a section of the population to believe. Religion is based on the authority of shastras, or scriptures, and the conclusions of the shastras are perfect. The Hare Krishna movement is based on the teachings of Bhagavad-gita and Srimad- Bhagavatam, which are Vedic literatures written more than 5,000 years ago. This movement has come down through the line of disciplic succession, or the line of spiritual masters, beginning with Krishna and continuing down to the present day.

What is the Hare Krishna Program for Self-Realization?

Five hundred years ago, Krishna appeared again as Lord Chaitanya. The Srimad-Bhagavatam and other Vedic literatures predicted that Lord Chaitanya would be the Yuga Avatar, or the incarnation of Godhead for Kali-yuga, the age of darkness, quarrel, hypocrisy and dissension. Lord Chaitanya especially stressed the process of sankirtan, or congregational chanting of the holy names of the Lord. Although there are many paths of spiritual realization, and the body of Vedic literatures is vast, Lord Chaitanya taught that in this age the general mass of people would not be able to practice these various paths of spiritual discipline. Therefore He recommended that people in this age should practice chanting the holy names. This movement is primarily spreading the teachings of Bhagavad-gita and Srimad-Bhagavatam and the chanting of the holy names: Hare Krishna, Hare Krishna, Krishna Krishna, Hare Hare/ Hare Rama, Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare.

Source:https://theharekrishnamovement.org/2016/11/04/what-is-hare-krishna-all-about/

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Transcendental morality

Continued from, "Lessons in life," Bhismadev's list of challenges for society at large to improve their quality of life…

With regards to these moral principles given by Bhismadev here in the purport, the principle of, "Not to lie," may be exempt in exceptional circumstances. When devotees are hiding in the basement and a soldier comes looking for them then we can say, "Devotees, I don't know, I've never seen them!" One must not take these principles in a fundamentalist way, they must be applied with intelligence. Fundamentalism is a form of reductionism where we try to eliminate the complexities of life and try to get a few slogans which are applied at all times, all places, all circumstances and which cannot be possibly adjusted in any situation. This creates fanaticism and can create many problems.

Prabhupada also gave the example of the father who has to lie to a child to give the child medicine and tells them that it is sweet. For a higher purpose! Once there was a debate about book distribution because some book distributors were at times not so moral and not so honest in the way they were distributing books. There was another group who was into honesty and it became a big issue. This matter was taken to Prabhupada. Prabhupada said that not to lie and to be honest is very important. He wrote this in a letter to Bhurijana and said that he upheld the importance of moral behaviour and honesty and then Prabhupada asked, "What about those who are so moral, are they distributing books?" The answer was, "Not so many as the other group…" and Prabhupada asked what was the point of morality, books have to somehow or other go out! So sometimes, we have transcendental morality that for the sake of Krsna things may be different…

Also Yudhisthir Maharaj's example can be applied. At the end of his life, Yudhisthir went to hell, well not himself but he saw that all his brothers had gone to hell and Yudhisthir asked how was that possible – there was Arjuna who gave his life to Krsna's service, Bhima who had no evil in his heart, Nakul and Sahadev – how could they go to hell!? But this was the punishment that Yudhisthir had to go through for hesitating to lie when Krsna requested it. However, this does not justify that in the name of transcendence, to lie left and right. We cannot take these stories and say that for Krsna and for the sake of sankirtan it is perfectly alright to tell endless lies. 

Even though we have principles, we are not being relieved from using our brain. We have to, in a refined way, take these principles and say that this is dharma and dharma is to be followed and then, there is apad-dharma, religious principles which is followed in case of emergency and sometimes one may deviate from the principle i.e. not to lie, not to get angry…

Now what if we have to apply this to the four regulative principles. Let's say there was a plane crash and the only survivors were in a jungle and there were no vegetables that one could eat but there were these fat birds which moved very slow, so what are you going to do!? Fast for the first couple days and then what to do… apad-dharma?? I will leave that up to the individual, to their intelligence but personally, I will tell you that I would fast… and if I die that is okay, it is all still in Krsna hands wherever we go! That part does not warrant apad-dharma. As far as the four regulative principles go, I think it is very important to keep those very fixed.

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Lessons in life by Kadamba Kanana Swami

In this chapter, the passing away of Bhismadev, in the purport to this verse there is a list of challenges for society at large to improve their quality of life. The first challenge is, "Not to become angry!" We remember Upadesamrta, the Nectar of Instruction Verse 1, vaco vegam manasa krodha vegam, one must control the pushings of anger. So even when anger is pushing, one must somehow or other subdue it. Bhismadev also said that in order to conquer anger, one must learn to forgive because it is very difficult to judge with two types of measurements – measurement for others and different measurements for ourselves. For ourselves, there are so many explanations for our mistakes, "It wasn't really my fault. It was just circumstances. I didn't intend it that way…"whereas for others, "How could they do that! This is outrageous." We judge them different and the same extenuating circumstances are not being considered so Bhismadev points out that we must learn to forgive. We have to see that others make mistakes because then we can overcome anger.  

Forgiving is not necessarily the same as forgetting. If someone has committed an abominable activity, we may forgive but it does not mean that we forget. We will remember but we will also keep a special eye – if someone puts his fingers in the money box then after that we keep him at a distance from the money box obviously. So forgiving and forgetting is not necessarily the same. Also, there may be a point when we forget, it depends on the seriousness of the offence.

Sometimes though, anger is required. Sometimes, it is necessary to send out a signal that from now it is too much. This has to stop. BANG, fist on the table! Everyone needs that also. It is not that anger per se is bad. Those who are envious sometimes deserve anger. Those who are envious of devotees, we need to sometimes check it with anger. That is also there. But Bhismadev is referring to uncontrolled anger. Controlled anger has a place. Srila Prabhupada would also get angry at times but his anger was always related to Krsna and to whatever was favourable to Krsna. When there was neglect, Prabhupada was not tolerating that. He would point it out!

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ISKCON Youth Ministry’s annual Mexico Bus Tour is coming up December 9 – January 3, taking youth and young adults ages 16 and older on an amazing adventure of a lifetime. Young people will be flying in from all over the USA and Canada, the UK and more.
They will spend three weeks traveling across Mexico, presenting Krishna culture festivals in towns and villages, going on Harinama Sankirtana, and visiting Mayan pyramids, jungle waterfalls and beaches along the way.

Participants will get a real taste for the pioneering spirit of spreading Krishna consciousness to fortunate souls in remote places. Here the youth get to do everything. We’ll roll into a village with our bus, unload in the central square, set up a festival. A team of youth begin cooking a feast. Another team prepare the stage, sound system and lights, while dancers dress up, actors make up, and kirtaniyas rehearse.
Meanwhile, the village chief has mobilized a promotional campaign: a rickety old truck with loudspeakers drives up and down every street announcing “Festival cultural de la India! Musica! Danza! Teatro! Comida!” Soon, the square fills with people. The festival begins. Kirtan, dance, theater, film, more kirtan, and finally a prasadam feast for everyone, along with book tables.
We announce that “everything you’ve seen here tonight is from these books. Please don’t leave without getting a book as a souvenir.” At the end of the evening, we pack everything and everyone back into the bus, and there’s this exhilarating feeling of accomplishment among the youth, having just made their own contribution to help spread Lord Chaitanya’s Sankirtana Movement to another town, another village. In this way we continue across Mexico for three weeks of an incredible adventure. (There are options to meet us along the way for those who cannot come on the whole tour.)

We encourage youth to travel on this tour, get inspired, and then inspire others at your temple when they return. The per-person cost for youth varies (from $500 up to $900) depending on how many sign up, and how many donations we’re able to raise. We still need to raise $12,000 in the next few weeks before departure. Please help! Give a general donation or help sponsor a deserving youth who cannot otherwise afford to come. Contact us.

Your servants at ISKCON Youth Ministry,
Manorama dasa & Jaya Sri Radhe devi dasi

Phone: 352-283-4181
Email: youth@krishna.com
Website: youthbustour.com

Posters, photos and videos of previous tours:
https://youthbustour.com/photos-videos/

Source:http://alachuatemple.com/iskcon-youth-sankirtana-bus-tour-across-mexico/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss

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Fall In Love, Become the One in a Million

Very few souls take to the path of pure unmotivated loving devotional service to God. This is because the gross or subtle egoistic disposition of the typical soul of this world prevents him/her from whole heartedly serving someone whom he/she considers "someone else". The typical soul wants to serve himself or those closely related to him materially.

This false ego is the fundamental reason for souls being averse to God. Once one understands that God is actually his most intimate relation, the path of pure devotional service to Him opens up. This understanding is the defining characteristic of the true ego, or in other words, the soul's true identify and relationship.

Thus, it is not surprising that most people serve something other than God. They see things as related to themselves, rather than seeing themselves as related to God. So much so, that even other spiritual paths focus on one's own liberation from matter, than on reviving one's relationship with God. This is the extent to which the egoistic disposition denies the soul it's true glory of being a loving servant of God.

The heart yearns for love, and true love is not found in this world of limits. To escape this fact, other spiritualists seek to reach a state of oneness or nothingness wherein the yearning for love stops. This is akin to the desperate suicide attempt of a heart-broken lover, and is born out of ignorance of the complete nature of spiritual nature.

God is our eternal friend and the worthy object of the heart's yearning for eternal love. Break your internal ego barriers - grossest to the subtlest, and fall in love. Are you the one in a million?

---

http://www.vedabase.com/en/bg/7/3

Bg 7.3

manuṣyāṇāṁ sahasreṣu
kaścid yatati siddhaye
yatatām api siddhānāṁ
kaścin māṁ vetti tattvataḥ
Synonyms: 
manuṣyāṇām — of men; sahasreṣu — out of many thousands; kaścit — someone; yatati — endeavors; siddhaye — for perfection; yatatām — of those so endeavoring; api — indeed; siddhānām — of those who have achieved perfection; kaścit — someone; mām — Me; vetti — does know; tattvataḥ — in fact.
Translation: 
Out of many thousands among men, one may endeavor for perfection, and of those who have achieved perfection, hardly one knows Me in truth.

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Devotion is …

There is no easy translation into English of the Sanskrit word, bhakti. It’s a bit of an anomaly. Bhakti is love, specifically divine love, but even the word love itself is a poor attempt to describe this most cherished of all emotions.

One translation Srila Prabhupada gave for bhakti is ‘devotional service’. Love indeed means service – the things we do to make the beloved happy. When it comes to Krishna, bhakti is the expression of our love through activities for Him with our consciousness steeped in devotion.

So what is devotion? This was the question that was asked of us during a recent training seminar. We had to give our answer in five words–a sort of “sticky” statement that can refresh our consciousness when needed.

Here they are – brief bursts of bhakti energy. Take as needed and add some of your own:

Devotion (to Krishna) is …

… sincere steady dedication

… sincerity in action

… perseverance and surrender

… enthusiasm, cleanliness, caring

… serving with others

…. servant of the servant

… systematic flow of steps

… service with love

… understanding Krishna’s presence

… feeling some emotion

… a gift from above

… attention to details

… desiring to please

… thoughtful service effort

… offering of yourself

… love, happiness, joy

… brimming with love

… unconditional loving service

… pure unalloyed selflessness
Ananda Vrindavanesvari Devi Dasi

Source:http://www.dandavats.com/?p=33086

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Two Drunks and a Book Distributor

One evening a drunk came to our stall and picked up a Gita and told me that it is an incomplete Bhagavat-gita. He said that by reading the first page, he understood that it is not complete.
Instead of arguing, I was trying to avoid him & looking for an interested person. But the drunk stayed at our stall arguing with me.
Suddenly another drunkard showed up and told the first drunk, ”You cannot take the Bhagavad-gita, because you are not a Hindu.“
The first drunk said, “No, I am Hindu.”
The second drunk then challenged him: "If you’re a Hindu, then take a copy.”
So the first drunk took a copy. Then I showed him the Krishna book, and the second drunk said to the first, "If you are Hindu, take this book also.”
To my surprise, he immediately bought that book, too.
Then the first drunk told the second drunkard, "What about you? You also buy a copy.”
Then the second drunk also bought a Gita. They shook hands and put their arms over each other’s shoulders and proceeded to another destination.
Bhakta Chetan

Source:http://www.dandavats.com/?p=33091

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His Holiness Bhakti Charu Swami continued to engulf Headquarter corporations in London with the spiritual wisdom of Lord Rama in commemoration of Diwali. On 26th October, 2016, HSBC invited His Holiness Bhakti Charu Swami to join over 200 Bankers and Executives at its Headquarters in Canary Wharf, London to make relevant the teachings of Lord Rama for one of the largest corporations on the planet.

Even after 150 years, HSBC continues to provide multinational banking and financial services to over 60 million customers. With total assets of USD 2.67 trillion, HSBC has approximately 6,000 offices serviced by over 266,000 employees in 71 countries and territories across Africa, Asia, Oceania, Europe, North America and South America. As of 2014, HSBC was the world’s sixth-largest corporation according to a composite measure by Forbes magazine.

The central question explored at the event revolved around what wisdom from the Vedic philosophical tradition can be used to provoke thought in the workplace to positively impact the life of millions. In doing so, the event focused on the topic ‘Being At Our Best.’ While lamps are used in the festival to encourage one on a journey of darkness to light, ‘Being At Your Best’ is central to achieving this virtue. The story of Diwali illustrates the need to be inwardly and outwardly balanced to enable satisfaction of the self. While Diwali is an epic of trials and tribulations, the pastimes of Sita & Rama demonstrates how to remain peaceful amidst the volatility of life, and in doing so become healthy, wealthy and wise. Diwali prompts respect and responsibility towards both others and oneself in carrying out prescribed duties at work and in wider life.

Following a traditional Bharat Natyam performance by Aiswarya Iswari devi dasi, the event opened with an HSBC Executive, Nick Winsor who shared insights on the years he spent working in India. In striving to be ‘At Our Best’ for customers and colleagues, Mr Winsor explained how it can be easy to overlook our own needs, and especially spiritual needs. To help colleagues achieve their professional and personal ambitions, Mr Winsor introduced a well-being programme that focused on health, wellness, finances, lifestyle, progression, values and culture. Mr Winsor shared his realisation on the above so that employees can learn how to be at their best for themselves, their family and the wider community.

Ramesh Parmar, Chief Financial Officer for HBC Global FX & Commodities joined His Holiness Bhakti Charu Swami for a panel discussion. His Holiness detailed what bankers can learn from the story of Lord Rama in viewing challenges; how to remain ‘At Your Best’ in volatile environments; why its important to be healthy, wealthy and wise in order to achieve satisfaction and peace; what spiritual yogic principles can be used to be more meditative as we carry out our duties and how to remediate and establish a culture within to cultivate an attitude of holistic responsibility by including the Supreme Personality of Godhead in our lives.

His Holiness expressed how the message of Diwali is relevant to the religious, non-religious, culturally diverse and even financial markets through the example of avoiding immoral monetary exploitation. Despite the number of conflicts Rama faced before successfully returning home to initiate Diwali, he never focused on his triumphs and victories. But rather, Rama, the hero of Diwali, asks us to focus on the inherent goodness in all and through his pastimes illustrates the honour of words, ethics to family, loyalty to his partner, equality to friend and enemy, dispassion from greed and love to all walks of life regardless of man or animal. He never allowed anger and revenge to take control but rather through stability of mind and attachment to love gained affection from all. His wife Sita represented the beauty of the world, simplicity, chastity and strength despite being in the most awkward circumstances kidnapped far from her beloved. She also illustrated compassion, forgiveness and patience for liberation depicting the highest qualities of strength. Diwali clearly celebrates the equality of strengths in both man and woman. Sita never once developed hatred for Ravana but felt pity for his lust. She set an example on how to despise the sin and not the sinner.

The representation of irresponsible wealth management through the greed and unethical means of Ravana illustrates the unfortunate impacts on the world. While personifying anger, greed, lust, envy and violence, Ravana eventually succumbed to the overpowering virtues of Rama. After his defeat, Rama did not usurp the wealth of Ravana but let it remain with the people of Sri Lanka after coronating a local inhabitant as the successor. Rama returned home to only manage the ancestral state treasury for his subjects. He himself always lived simply and equally shared the suffering of his subjects. Any concerns from his people were his concern and their resolutions were always his prime duty. Many sites visited by Rama remain to this day as places of pilgrimage for aspirants.

His Holiness concluded the event by scientifically explaining how the soul encaged within the temporary body can develop a relationship with God residing in the core of our hearts. Through surrender to the Supreme Personality of Godhead, described also as the King of Kings, one can learn how to recognise their superior devotional nature and connect with the Lord of our hearts. Through the performance of devotional service, the living entity gradually awakens the dormant propensity to surrender whole heartedly to God and realise the spiritual reality far beyond the material condition of life. The very name Rama signifies ever-lasting bliss experienced by one who acknowledges and surrenders their independence to be an instrument in the hands of God, and thereby help to improve the world around us in whatever we do.

Event organiser and HSBC host Surinder Shandilya commented: “The story of Lord Rama’s journey is not just a ritualistic annual festival. The pastimes recorded in the Ramayana, one of the largest and oldest Sanskrit literatures, contain ancient principles of righteous conduct to raise one’s consciousness beyond the material. Lord Rama laid the path of righteousness for all people in all times and place by His lifelong example, and to this day through His dedicated followers. Amongst us here tonight, we have a resplendent custodian of those much needed teachings made relevant to one of the largest corporations in the world. His Holiness Bhakti Charu Swami has enlightened and paved the way for unlimited people to act in such a way so as to create prosperity and peace in all that we do now, and that too for a spiritual destination. It has been an absolute honour to host a guest speaker who lives by the teachings which we all aspire to follow.”

Source:http://www.dandavats.com/?p=33093

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Originally, the living being was with Krsna in the spiritual world and the living being, upon eternity, came to understand that he also had independence, that he did not have to serve Krsna and that rather he could be served too! At this point, he was not yet envious but when he made the choice to be served, then envy came. 

It is said that this state of consciousness where one is contemplating the possibility of not being engaged in the service of Krsna is a neutral state – one is neither absorbed in the service of Krsna nor is one absorbed in the material energy. Therefore, it is a neutral state or a marginal state of being in between, called taṭasthā. Therefore in this taṭasthā consciousness, the living being can choose to come down or to go back to Krsna. When he comes down, then envy in competition with Krsna begins immediately.

Like now, we are living in this world of competition where we are competing with each other and ultimately competing with God. Ultimately, we want to be God! We want to be worshiped… we want to be recognized…  we want to be famous… we want to be rich… we want to be powerful and the whole world is filled with people who are competing with each other and all these things.

Source:https://www.kksblog.com/2016/11/unfavourable-competition/

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April 4, 2010 Los Angeles

We have gathered on a most auspicious occasion, the celebration of the fortieth anniversary of the manifestation of ISKCON Los Angeles here on Watseka Avenue, which came to be known as New Dvaraka. Srila Prabhupada, our founder-acarya and spiritual master, had said, “You have New York, New England–so many ‘New’ duplicates in the USA–why not New Vrndavana?” And so we also have New Dvaraka.

At the time that Srila Prabhupada and his disciples acquired New Dvaraka, I was in Boston, and there we heard the news that Srila Prabhupada had gotten a wonderful property that had been a church. Srila Prabhupada made New Dvaraka his Western world headquarters and spent months on end here–at one stage he stayed for eight months–and established it as the model center. And he personally trained the devotees. A devotee named Silavati was the head pujari, and under Prabhupada’s guidance she and others devotees established an exemplary standard of Deity worship. Then if any temple wanted to learn the proper standard of Deity worship, they would write or send a devotee here to learn. The activities and standards in New Dvaraka became the model for the other temples in ISKCON.

The sankirtana, public chanting and dancing, was also exemplary. Visnujana was the lead singer, and all the devotees were eager to go out and chant with him. And Tamal Krishna was the main organizer. He made sure that all the brahmacaris had nicely colored matching cloth and that all the ladies had bright saris and that all the devotees danced in step. It was a wonderful performance, and people were attracted.

As we heard in Boston, the Deities were the center of the community and the center of the devotees’ lives. There was a sweet reciprocation between the Deities and the pujaris and the sankirtana devotees and the public. All the devotees were in the mood of sankirtana, of wanting to share with others the wonderful knowledge and happiness that they had found in Krsna consciousness. The pujaris considered themselves to be servants not only of the Deities but of the sankirtana devotees and public as well. In the temple their mood was, “We want to decorate the Deities so beautifully that the sankirtana devotees will feel inspired to go out and chant and tell people about Krsna.” And the sankirtana devotees felt, “We want to go out and bring people back to see the Deities, the merciful forms of Sri Sri Rukmini-Dvarakadisa; Sri Jagannatha, Baladeva, and Subhadra; and Sri Sri Gaura-Nitai. So there was a wonderful reciprocation between the Deities and the devotees and the public.

In Boston we heard about Visnujana. Not only was he the lead singer who sang and played the mrdanga and harmonium beautifully, but he was also the temple commander. He was in charge of delegating different services to different devotees and seeing that all the jobs were done. We heard stories of how the devotees, when they got an assignment from him, would rush to do it and as soon as they were finished rush back to him and say, “I did what you told me. What else can I do? What more can I do?” We were astonished to hear the stories of the wonderful mood of service of the devotees here and the great inspiration they got from their leaders.

We also heard about the Sunday programs, the Sunday festivals. They were truly festivals. All week long the devotees would invite people to the Sunday program, and when guests came they found a real festival. There would always be some special event–a swing festival, butter churning, a dramatic performance–all sorts of attractive activities to introduce people to Krsna consciousness and inspire them in its mood and culture. And then a wonderful feast.

After Srila Prabhupada had established the movement in America, he decided to return to India to establish the mission there, and he asked that one disciple (or couple) from each temple–the second person in each temple–proceed to India to assist him. I was asked to go from Boston, and even in India New Dvaraka was a great inspiration. Srila Prabhupada had devised the life-membership program, which he said was a way to distribute his books and to give people association with devotees. The idea was that someone would give one thousand one hundred eleven rupees and get all of Srila Prabhupada’s books, present and future, and a lifetime subscription to Back to Godhead magazine, and when they traveled they could stay at our centers in our guest facilities.

Soon after the devotees got New Dvaraka, there was an issue of Back to Godhead that featured the project, with a picture of the temple and many devotees on the cover. So we would show people this magazine. And there was another issue that featured the San Francisco Ratha-yatra, with a photo of the grand chariot and thousands of participants on the cover. We would also show that magazine. People were very impressed and inspired, and many became life members and began to systematically progress in spiritual life.

In October 1973, after serving in India for three years, I became quite ill with jaundice, and eventually Srila Prabhupada said that as long as I stayed in Bombay I wouldn’t be able to recover. So I came to New Dvaraka, where I was given a private room just off the Tulasi greenhouse. The devotees took very good care of me. A week or two later, Srila Prabhupada himself came, and as my health improved I was gradually able to come out of my room and hear him speak, in his room, in his garden, and on his morning walks.

One time I came into the garden when Srila Prabhupada was alone, and he asked me how many devotees there were in the community. I had been curious–it was a very large, thriving community–so I knew the figures. He asked me how many men and how many women, and I answered. Then I asked, “Do you want to know how many children there are?” He said, “Oh yes, the children count too.” So I told him the number of children.

So many wonderful exchanges took place here. Srila Prabhupada was eager to present the message of Krsna consciousness on many fronts. One area was the field of science, and at that time Svarupa Damodara, who was working toward his PhD in organic chemistry at the University of California at Irvine, was coming to meet Prabhupada, often with a professor, Dr. Wolf-Rottkay. And Srila Prabhupada would speak on the theme that life comes from life–that life, the spirit soul, comes from the Supreme Soul, Krsna, not from a combination of chemicals.

Srila Prabhupada also encouraged devotees who wanted to enter the field of politics. At the time there was agitation that the slogan “In God we trust” should be removed because it was unfair to the atheists, and Srila Prabhupada declared, “We must influence the society before they remove it.” So under Prabhupada’s guidance, some disciples formed the “In God We Trust” party. Srila Prabhupada was very enthusiastic.

Srila Prabhupada had deep personal realization of Krsna consciousness and thus was very enthusiastic to share Krsna consciousness with others. But the irony, or the paradox, is that although Krsna consciousness is the greatest treasure, people are often unwilling to accept it. Therefore he taxed his brain, as he would often tell us: “You must tax your brain to find new and better ways to present Krsna consciousness”–so that people could appreciate and accept it. He saw that at the time, people had faith in science, and so he encouraged his devotee scientists to present the same philosophy of Krsna consciousness in scientific language. And they did.

After the scientists, who are comparable to the intellectual class, come the politicians, who are comparable to the ruling class. And one disciple who wanted to infiltrate the political field was Balavanta, who ran for mayor of Atlanta. At the time, the rule was that the media had to give equal time, or equal coverage, to all the different candidates. And Prabhupada understood that as a political candidate, a devotee would have a special opportunity to tell people about Krsna consciousness. Although we didn’t really expect him to win, Balavanta ended up getting a huge number of votes, far beyond anyone’s expectation.

Once, Balavanta appeared on a television program with the other candidates. Srila Prabhupada had said that the theme of Balavanta’s campaign, the theme of the “In God We Trust” party, should be that the political leaders must be of good character: if the leaders are not of good character, how can you expect good government? Balavanta, on the television panel with the other candidates, began to speak on this theme. He said, “How can you trust someone who cannot control his senses to control the affairs of the government?” He continued, “Everyone knows that smoking is not good for you, but because people cannot control their senses, they smoke anyway.” And the other candidates, all of whom had been smoking, became so embarrassed they immediately hid their cigarettes [laughter], because they had been exposed.

Srila Prabhupada had a very clear vision of how Krsna consciousness could help society in every sphere of life and how devotees could present Krsna consciousness to appeal to people in every sphere of life. It was amazing how much Srila Prabhupada and his young disciples (he used to call us “boys and girls”) could do, how empowered we were by Srila Prabhupada’s mercy.

At the same time, Srila Prabhupada was very personal in his dealings. One might think that someone with such a grand vision, with such big plans, would have no time or energy for little people, but Srila Prabhupada had both: he envisioned a mission to help the entire human society and at the same time was very caring for each and every soul. As he said, “Every soul is important in Krsna consciousness.”

Srila Prabhupada was so expert that he could engage everyone. After I had served in India for three years and then gotten sick and come here to recover, my parents came to visit me. We all went on a morning walk with Srila Prabhupada, at Cheviot Hills Park. On the walk there were scientists, political aspirants, managers, book distributors–and my parents. And Srila Prabhupada satisfied everyone. He was genuinely charming. When he saw my mother, he said, “Oh, Mrs. Teton, you look so young.” [laughter] She was very happy. And at the end of the walk, when we came to the parking lot, there was a Rolls Royce that the devotees had organized for Srila Prabhupada, and as he was about to get in he noticed that my father was eyeing the car. In a very shy, humble, diffident way, Prabhupada said to him, “My disciples arranged this for me.” And my father immediately said, “Oh no, no, you deserve it. You deserve it.” [laughter] Then Prabhupada said, “You can ride with me, if you like.” And my father said, “No, we have rented a car. That’s all right.” Prabhupada was just so pleasing.

Later I heard that Prabhupada’s servant had said, “Srila Prabhupada, everyone likes you so much,” and Srila Prabhupada had replied, “Yes, because I like everyone.”

For my family, it was a big thing that after three years I had come back to America. My uncle also came from Chicago, and I arranged for him to meet Srila Prabhupada in his quarters. My uncle was a doctor with high ideals, and he confided in Srila Prabhupada how disillusioned he was with other doctors. He felt that they were too materialistic, more interested in money than in the welfare of their patients. (This was in 1973; I can hardly imagine what he would think about the doctors today.) He went on sharing his chagrin with Srila Prabhupada, who simply listened intently and with sympathy. For me, it was as if time stood still, but in that conversation, which probably lasted half an hour, Srila Prabhupada did not say more than a few sentences. He just listened with tremendous sympathy. And at the end, as we were walking out, my uncle turned to me and said, “My God! I’ve never met anyone like him. I must get a picture of him. I have never seen a face like his.”

Srila Prabhupada had a way . . . But it was Krsna. When Srila Prabhupada would return from his morning walks, the devotees would line up on either side of the way leading to the temple and offer him flowers, which he in turn would give back to them in a very personal exchange. I heard that during one such exchange Visnujana had said, “Srila Prabhupada, you are attracting all of us,” and Prabhupada had replied, “That is Krsna’s trick”–meaning that Krsna, who is all-attractive, was manifesting Himself through Srila Prabhupada, and we were thinking it was Prabhupada. But the fact is that a pure devotee who is fully surrendered to Krsna shares in the same qualities as Krsna. Srila Prabhupada certainly did, and so we were attracted.

Another time, in his garden, Srila Prabhupada was talking about (in his words) bogus svamis and yogis. There is a statement in scripture that one who is not a devotee of the Lord has no good qualities:

yasyasti bhaktir bhagavaty akincana sarvair gunais tatra samasate surah harav abhaktasya kuto mahad-guna manorathenasati dhavato bahih

“One who has unflinching devotional faith in Krsna consistently manifests all the good qualities of Krsna and the demigods. However, he who has no devotion to the Supreme Personality of Godhead has no good qualifications because he is engaged by mental concoction in material existence, which is the external feature of the Lord.” (SB 5.18.12)

And there is one to the effect that impersonal speculators may imagine that they are liberated but that because they neglect the service of the lotus feet of the Lord, they fall down.

ye ‘nye ‘ravindaksa vimukta-maninas tvayy asta-bhavad avisuddha-buddhayah aruhya krcchrena param padam tatah patanty adho ‘nadrta-yusmad-anghrayah

“O lotus-eyed Lord [Krsna], although nondevotees who accept severe austerities and penances to achieve the highest position may think themselves liberated, their intelligence is impure. They fall down from their position of imagined superiority because they have no regard for Your lotus feet.” (SB 10.2.32) They cannot maintain their impersonal position. Srila Prabhupada said that what he wrote in his purports was based not only on scriptural statements–of course, it was confirmed by scripture–but also on his personal experiences with svamis and yogis in India. He said that once, he went into the men’s room at an ashram as the svami was coming out, and inside Prabhupada smelled marijuana. The svami had gone in to have a smoke. He said he had many such personal experiences.

He also spoke about Dr. Ramamurti Mishra, who had a yoga studio in Manhattan and an ashram in upstate New York. When Prabhupada first arrived in New York, he stayed in Dr. Mishra’s apartment. And he said that although Dr. Mishra was a Mayavadi impersonalist, personally they were friends. He cooked for Dr. Mishra, who was quite sickly then, and Dr. Mishra felt that Prabhupada’s cooking was bringing him back to life. Prabhupada said, “When it came to philosophy we would differ–we would argue vehemently–but personally we were friends.” I took that as an important instruction. Of course, it is natural in the beginning stage that one should avoid impersonalists, because if one is weak one might get confused. But when one is more mature in devotional service and has firm, unshakable faith in Krsna and the process of bhakti-yoga, one can be friends with someone and still have philosophical differences. One need not totally abandon the relationship just because of philosophical differences.

Once, while I was facing Srila Prabhupada in his garden, he looked to the side. His face lit up, his eyes opened wide, and he became very, very happy. I thought, “Wow! Who has come? It looks like Prabhupada is meeting a long-lost friend.” And when I turned I saw that it was a devotee carrying a tulasi plant. Srila Prabhupada had become so ecstatic, so moved, by the arrival of Tulasi-devi. He said, “The whole atmosphere has become sanctified just by the presence of Tulasi-devi.”

One of Srila Prabhupada’s personal servants, Srutakirti dasa, noted how much Srila Prabhupada liked the activities of Krsna consciousness: “He was such a devotee; he just took pleasure in Krsna consciousness.” Srutakirti said that most devotees would see Prabhupada only in the temple room when he was speaking or in his quarters when he was giving directions on how to organize and manage and spread the mission. But Srutakirti said that one of the best parts of being Prabhupada’s servant was that he could be with him when he was not acting as the head of the world mission, the founder-acarya of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness. When Prabhupada was alone, sometimes he would just take out his harmonium and begin to sing. There was no one there; no one was recording him. But he just enjoyed being with Krsna, singing songs about Krsna written by Vaisnava acaryas.

Or sometimes he would read books about Krsna. Once, Srutakirti went into his room and he was reading Krsna book, his summary study of the Tenth Canto of Srimad-Bhagavatam. He was relishing, and he looked up at Srutakirti and said, “This book is so wonderful that if you just read this book, you will be Krsna conscious.” Then he said, “If you read just one chapter of this book, you will be Krsna conscious.” Then he said, “If you read just one page of this book, you will be Krsna conscious.” Then he said, “If you read just one line of this book, you will be Krsna conscious.” And then he said, “If you read just one word, you will be Krsna conscious.” [laughter, applause] Srila Prabhupada had such faith in Krsna, and he knew that his books were Krsna. The Krsna book is Krsna, Srimad-Bhagavatam is Krsna, the Bhagavad-gita is Krsna, and by associating with Krsna, your life becomes perfect.

My sister also came to visit me in Los Angeles, and she stayed with two devotees in the community here–Kanka and her husband–and she loved Krsna consciousness. By then I was feeling a little better and was able to move about, so I mentioned to Srila Prabhupada that she had come. Prabhupada met her, and after the meeting she came with me to the temple room, which was where the FATE (First America Theistic Exhibition) museum is now. I was showing her the pictures on the wall and telling her about them. There was one particularly sweet picture of Krsna and His friends herding the cows in the forest of Vrndavana, and I was explaining, “This is Krsna. He is the Supreme Personality of Godhead. And this is what the spiritual world is like.” She was just drinking it all in. Suddenly she had a flash of realization, and she turned to me and said, “Has Prabhupada seen Krsna?” And I said, “Yes.” And she said, “Oh my God!” [laughter] By Prabhupada’s association, people could be elevated immediately–just by being in his presence.

Eventually, as my health was getting better, Prabhupada encouraged me to return to Bombay. Once, he used the phrase, “back home, back to Bombay,” and the way he said it, I got the sense that he was telling me, “If you go back to Bombay and perform your service there you can go back to Godhead.”

So, the day I was departing for India, I went to take leave of Srila Prabhupada. He was getting his massage upstairs in the room with the skylight, just sitting in his gamsha in a very relaxed mood. I told him I was leaving and took the opportunity to ask some questions. I was very inspired by the presentation of Krsna consciousness to scientists and asked how we should speak to them. I said, “When you speak about the scientists, you use phrases like ‘fools,’ ‘rascals,’ and ‘kick them in the face with boots.’ [laughter] When we speak to them, should we use the same terms?” And he replied, “No, you should speak like a gentleman.”

That was the only time I was in Los Angeles with Srila Prabhupada. Much more happened than I have time to relate, but it was wonderful, and I got a sense of how important and dynamic Los Angeles was, how much time and energy Srila Prabhupada spent here, and how his presence permeates every aspect of the project.

Before my talk, I was in the mood of separation from Srila Prabhupada. So I went up to his quarters, and there my feelings of separation increased. After a while of just sitting there–nothing dramatic–I felt Prabhupada’s presence, as if he was saying, “I am still here. I am still present. You can feel my association even now.”

At the end of Srila Prabhupada’s eight-month stay here, when he was finally leaving, it was very hard on all the devotees. They were used to seeing him every day, and they thought he might just remain there, that he might never leave. And when he was about to leave, he spoke to them about the two ways of associating: by vani, transcendental sound, words, and by vapuh, physical presence. He said, “Although I am leaving physically, you can still have my association by vani, by following my instructions. Association by vani is more intimate than mere physical presence.” This is something we can all experience: if we really absorb ourselves in Srila Prabhupada’s teachings and endeavor to follow his instructions, we feel his presence, feel his reciprocation. As Svavasa Prabhu said in his introductory talk, it has been forty years–unless there is some feeling, why would we continue to serve after forty years? There is some feeling, love, and that love is based on personal reciprocation. Love means two–a reciprocation between two persons. So although Srila Prabhupada is no longer physically present, still the reciprocation of love–through service, surrender, and inquiry–continues.

If we are serious about our spiritual lives, we will have questions: “What does this mean?” “How do I apply this?” “How can I improve?” And although Srila Prabhupada is not here physically to answer our questions, we can get answers from his books and tapes and from his sincere followers. So all the exchanges that we can have with the spiritual master in his physical presence, we can have through vani, through his words. As he said, “If you read just one word, you can be Krsna conscious.” The problem, of course, is that we become Krsna conscious and then forget. We have to stay absorbed in chanting and hearing about Krsna. As long as we do, we are on the liberated platform, and if we maintain that effort, even if we are not always successful, but if we maintain that effort, we will be Krsna conscious and Srila Prabhupada will take us back home, back to Godhead.

And that is the purpose of this temple, this project, this community–to give such association. Srila Prabhupada told me, “Not everyone will be able to live in the temple, but the temple is necessary so that people can come and get the idea of how they can be Krsna conscious at home.” In principle, there is nothing we do at the temple that you can’t do in your own home. Of course, as Srila Prabhupada said, best is to live in the temple, next best is to live near the temple and come every day, and next, if due to circumstances you do not live close enough to the temple to come daily, you can make your home into a temple and you can do the same things at home that the devotees do in the temple. Even then, on Sundays and holidays–whenever possible–come to the temple and associate with more advanced devotees and get more inspiration in this most wonderful process that leads to a most glorious result.

Hare Krsna.

Devotee: Your thoughts on impersonal Brahman?

Giriraj Swami: I spit at the thought. [laughter] Impersonal Brahman is transcendental. Srimad-Bhagavatam (1.2.11) explains that the Absolute Truth is realized in three features– Brahman, Paramatma, and Bhagavan–and that they are nondual (advaya).

vadanti tat tattva-vidas tattvam yaj jnanam advayam brahmeti paramatmeti bhagavan iti sabdyate

“Learned transcendentalists who know the Absolute Truth call this nondual substance Brahman, Paramatma, or Bhagavan.” The three are all the same, but for a devotee, the idea of merging into impersonal Brahman is anathema, because in impersonal Brahman there is no loving reciprocation with Krsna, no chanting and hearing the glories of Krsna, no rendering of service to Krsna. Therefore one great devotee, Prabodhananda Sarasvati, said, kaivalyam narakayate: “For a devotee, the pleasure of merging into the existence of Brahman [kaivayla] is considered hellish [narakayate].” In fact, it is worse than hell, because in hell you can sing the glories of Krsna, but in impersonal Brahman, there is nothing.

If you follow the process of Krsna consciousness, you can actually play with Krsna, who is the source of the happiness of impersonal Brahman realization
(brahma-sukha).

ittham satam brahma-sukhanubhutya dasyam gatanam para-daivatena mayasritanam nara-darakena sardham vijahruh krta-punya-punjah

“The cowherd boys used to play with Krsna, who is the source of the Brahman effulgence for jnanis desiring to merge into that effulgence, who is the Supreme Personality of Godhead for devotees who have accepted eternal servitorship, and who for ordinary persons is but another ordinary child. The cowherd boys, having accumulated the results of pious activities for many lives, were able to associate in this way with the Supreme Personality of Godhead.” (SB 10.12.11)

Source:http://www.dandavats.com/?p=8380

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Of Saints and Critics By Madhavananda das

It is a qualification of a vaisnava that he is adosa-darsi: he never sees others’ faults. Of course, every human being has both good qualities and faults. Therefore it is said, saj-jana gunam icchanti dosam icchanti pamarah: everyone has a combination of faults and glories. But a vaisnava, a sober man, accepts only a man’s glories and not his faults, for flies seek sores whereas honeybees seek honey.

In his Sarartha-darsini commentary on Srimad Bhagavatam 4.4.12, Srila Viswanath Chakravarti Thakur has described four types of saintly persons according to how they see good qualities and faults:

1) Mahat (“great person”) — A mahat has the ability to see some good in everyone. They also perceive faults in others, but they consider that those faults can be eventually transformed by certain methods into good qualities. Thus, if they feel that a person may be benefited by discussing that person’s faults, they may, under appropriate circumstances, speak harsh words. Neem juice tastes very bitter, but it can cure diseases when administered appropriately. It should be noted that a mahat will never reject or condemn a faulty person, but thinks only how that person may be benefited.

2) Mahattara (“greater person”) — A mahattara also sees good and bad qualities in others, but focuses on and praises the good qualities. Seeing a materialistic merchant, a mahattara will think, “Although he is a sense-gratifier, he takes good care of guests and is worthy of deliverance.”

3) Mahattama (“especially great person”) — A mahattama sees whatever good qualities others have and magnifies them, not seeing even the smallest fault. Viswanath describes their attitude, “This person has stolen my cloth because he is cold, and though he has a weapon, he doesn’t attack me because he is merciful. He is virtuous.”

4) Ati-mahattama (“extremely great person”) — An ati-mahattama sees good qualities in others even where there are none. Their attitude is, “In this world there are no bad people. Everyone is good.”

In the same purport, Viswanath also delineates four types of asadhus, wicked or bad persons, who are characterized according to their propensity for fault-finding:

1) Asadhu (“wicked person”) — An asadhu sees some good qualities in others but presumes that eventually those good qualities will be overshadowed or spoiled by some fault. For example, upon seeing someone working for another person’s benefit, the asadhu will conclude that eventually he or she will want to exploit the person whom they are helping. Simply put, asadhus are not gentlemen.

2) Asadhutara (“very wicked person”) — An asadhutara is even more improper. He or she sees only faults in others and overlooks others’ good qualities. “This sannyasi eats ghee rice to fill his stomach. He is lusty and should be considered fallen.”

3) Asadhutama (“especially wicked person”) — An asadhutama takes small faults and magnifies them, seeing no good qualities at all. Viswanath gives an example: An asadhutama will criticize and condemn a renunciate as being a “bogus rascal”, for the fault of giving up the forest and living in the house of a married man. The asadhutama will conclude, “His obvious motivation is only to steal the money of that householder.”

4) Aty-asadhutama (“extremely wicked person”) — An aty-asadhutama sees faults in all others, even where there are no faults. “In this world, or in this society, no one is good. Everyone is evil.” They are the very worst.

Excerpted from issue number 238 of Sri Krishna Kathamrita Bindu the fortnightly email magazine from ISKCON Gopal Jiu Publications. For information about obtaining a free subscription to Sri Krishna Kathamrita Bindu, write to:

katha@gopaljiu.org

or visit our website:

http://www.gopaljiu.org/

Bibliography

— Krishnadas Kaviraj Goswami. Sri Caitanya-caritamrta. English translation and commentary by A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada. Bhaktivedanta Book Trust. Los Angeles. 1975.

— Srimad Bhagavatam with commentaries by Srila Viswanath Chakravarti Thakur and Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati Thakur. Gaudiya Math. Bagbazar. 1992. Bengali.

— Srimad Bhagavatam, Sarartha Darsini commentary of Srila Viswanath Chakravarti Thakur. English translation by Bhanu Swami. Sri Vaikuntha Enterprises. Chennai, India. 2009.

Source:http://www.dandavats.com/?p=9040

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Interrupt Anxiety with Gratitude

As we were driving through West Bengal, I spotted a newly built house, with two words painted in large black letters across the entry portico – God Gift (written as spelled :). I imagined how every day the family would get this message as they arrived home and could not help but smile.

It also reminded me of a quote posted at one of the seminars at the ISKCON Leadership Sanga last week – Interrupt anxiety with gratitude. Anxiety is a given in most of our lives. It seeps in all over the place, in small and big ways, and triggers various reactions.

First is our effort to quell it. To run, hide, or avoid what is making us anxious. Cover it up and bury it deep within. We may also try to soothe anxiety with distraction, in both healthy and unhealthy ways.

Anxiety is connected to not being in control and especially where there is personal difficulty or failure, or the anticipation of that. From the moment we wake up, our mind can begin it’s tap tap tapping on the anxiety button. If and when that happens here’s a few things we can do.

Interrupt the anxious thoughts with grateful ones. it really does work magic. No matter what, there is always something to be grateful for. And even if our situation is very desperate, expressing gratitude for something can help us through.

Another anxiety interrupter is having a place to take shelter. With Krishna, the feeling of shelter is almost immediate. When we say Krishna’s name, we can feel strength, relief, solace, hope, and a knowing that all will be well. That’s why getting some japa meditation done first thing in the morning is one of the best ways to control the mind.

Anxiety will never be far from us as we interact with the world. Too much of it can wear us down, zap our energy, and make us chronically ill. We may feel obliged to be anxious, that we are not a good person if we don’t. Interrupt that thought, and anxiety in general, as often as you can. The nature of the soul is happiness. Lord knows, life doesn’t often match that, but still we should remember it and let gratitude and Krishna’s name bring it out.
Ananda Vrindavana Devi Dasi

Source:http://www.dandavats.com/?p=33113

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After our taking a swim in the river along the gorge between Otaki and Napier in NZ, Ameyatma bathed me in the purifying waters of his door-to-door book distribution mission just before the sun went down. We knocked on about twenty doors and took turns doing the presentation of Srila Prabhupada’s books.
It is a bit inconceivable how sweet and gracious the people of Napier were. One lady, whose name is Storm, raced to beat us to the door and had it open before we got there. She was eager to chat with us and told us she already has all of the books we had in our hands. We then remembered Devamrita Swami’s new book, Hiding in Unnatural Happiness, and “returned fire” with “You don’t have this one! It was just published.”
She and her husband very happily gave a donation and took another book to add to her collection. They’re the couple in the attached picture. She even gave us a bag for “your ladies” that came from India, she said. Robert (in the photo with the copy of Beyond Birth and Death) was disconnected and unwilling to take a book, but Ameyatma and I just kept standing there trying to come up with new things to say.
We watched his heart completely soften while we stood there chatting with him, until he found a few coins and happily took the “Beyond Birth and Death”. Jeff, holding the Chant and Be Happy, at first said he wasn’t interested but we threw out our last chance: “You like music though?” and handed him a “Chant and Be Happy”. We told him about the Beatles and George Harrison. He immediately went through a soft-heart metamorphosis before our eyes and clutched the book, exclaiming, “I will read this.” Then he gave a generous donation.
A few Gitas also went out before I started to take photos, including one to a nice couple with a brand new baby crying the whole time we presented the Gita. –ys, Nitai-cand Dasa

Source:http://www.dandavats.com/?p=33116

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Many disciples of His Divine Grace attended and each one of them offered his homage and realizations for the glorification of Srila Prabhupada. Many concluded that although Srila Prabhupada was no longer physically present on the earth he is still very much present in this world in the form of his books and his instructions given to his followers.
Many programs were held at the Krishna Balaram temple in his honor like an Abhisek, performed to his deity, arati and pushpanjali at his Samadhi. 
A huge cake weighing 150 kg was cut on this occasion by Iskcon’s GBC member and senior Vaishnava HH Gopal Krishna Goswami.

Source:http://www.dandavats.com/?p=33120

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One of my closest friends, Dr Abhishek Ghosh, who is a faculty member at Grand Valley State University, Michigan, USA, invited me to speak to his students for a World Religions course. As most of the students were from a Christian background, he asked me to give an insider perspective on how I as a Hindu see Christianity in particular and other religions in general.

I spoke on how God is bigger than the religions we dedicate to him (Religion is meant for God; God is not meant for religion) and that we need to understand the purpose of exclusivist statements found in certain religions: they are meant to create focus, not proclaim an absolute truth.

After the class, when a student asked whether the God of different religions is one or different, I explained that the God of revelation is one, but the gods who are projections of people’s own desires are different: the God of terrorists is not the God of transcendentalists. Towards the end, Dr Ghosh played the devil’s advocate and asked a couple of tough questions but in a jovial tone. I answered and the session ended on a jolly note.

In India, I usually speak to engineering students, practically never to humanities students. While students from the humanities have been part of the audience during many of my talks in Western Universities, this was my first talk to an audience solely of humanities students, and that too as a part of their religious study course. My background in the sciences doesn’t equip me for addressing such an audience; so, I tried to tune my presentation based on what I had learnt from my discussions with devotee-scholars who teach religious studies in Western universities. Overall, I appreciated the thoughtfulness and sincerity of these students – their interest was more than academic.

A week after the class, Dr Ghosh called and told me that his students were still talking about my class, which he felt indicated that an interaction with a living practitioner of the subject they were studying had significantly impacted them.

The talk audio is here:

A Bhagavad-gita view of religious diversity

Source:http://www.thespiritualscientist.com/2016/11/bhagavad-gita-view-religious-diversity-talk-grand-valley-state-university-part-world-religions-course/

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