Re: Ekadashi
From the Bhakti List Archives
• March 7, 1996
> On Thu, 7 Mar 1996 21:32:58 +0000 (GMT) Anand said: > > > > > >Secondly, as our Acharyas always point out the concept of sin and > >deliverance is not there in our philosophy. > > > How would you interpret the Charama slOka? > We should clarify the difference between sin and paapa (Sanskrit) or vinai (Tamil). Sin in English connotes a moral offense against God that affects the very essence of being. This is a consequence of Christian conceptions of the polarity of good and evil. In Vedanta, there is no polarity of good and evil. In Vedanta, particularly in Visishtadvaita Vedanta, there is a continuous spectrum of jnAna, which is extremely contracted in those who have a lot of avidya in the form of karma, and which is infinite in those blessed released jivas enjoying the bliss of God in parama padam. Paapa is of the form of karma, and does include violations of Saastra, but is not purely so. There is definitely a distinction here. In the charama sloka, Arjuna is grieving because he is unsure as to whether he can ever undertake bhakti-yoga due to the immense karma that he has accumulated in the form of paapa, etc. It is *not* a feeling of guilt for violating ``God's law'', but a feeling that he has for so long acted under the impression that he is the agent, and in doing so, has accumulated so much karma that he sees no end in sight. At this point, Krishna says, ``Come to me for refuge, don't give up hope. Your single resolve of sincere SaraNaagati will unleash the floodgates of My grace and release all your paapas and clear the path for moksha. I myself will accomplish that moksha.'' Is God ``pleased'' in some simple way by our actions? Yes and no, but as per my understanding, mostly No. God cares about the jivas, how they feel, and the beauty of creation. However, He is also satyakAma, satyasankalpa, and He has no desires that need to be fulfilled. He has nothing to gain by anything, and nothing can increase the bliss inherent in His nature. I also say that He is one small sense ``pleased'', because He responds to our requests. It does not affect Him *personally* either way, but the request for protection causes His irresistible grace to flow, for example. Only in this sense is He pleased. This should not be thought of as a shop where God is the shopowner and where moksha can be bought by pleasing God. The jnAna that consists of prapatti and bhakti should be practiced because they are in line with our nature, and not out of seeking favors from God. As far as naraka/hell is concerned: I may have a revolutionary viewpoint here, and I know it is not supported by smritis and puranas, though it may be supported by the Upanishads. I do not believe in any kind of hell. Rebirth itself is hellish enough, and the karma is then experienced in a terrible way. Contracted jnAna is the worst kind of hell I can imagine, since it alienates one from the blissful essence of God. Mani
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