The Bhagavad Gita Revisited
The following excerpts are taken from the Bhagavad-Gita, the teachings of Krishna, which comprise the sixth book of the great Indian epic called the Mahabharata.
The Mahabharata
is set in that transitional time between the end of the Dwarpara Yuga and our
own Kali Yuga— according to most traditional calculations, somewhere around
5,000 years ago.
Dwapara was
a great age; a time when Divine Knowledge pervaded the fabric of everyday life
and the attributes of lucidity and purity found expression in all human
endeavors. Lucidity and purity are expressions of Sattva Guna. In the Vedic
teaching there are three gunas, Tama, Raja, and Sattva, that color the
expression of all gross, subtle, and mental energies—and the highest of these
three gunas among the trinity is Sattva Guna. Sattva Guna leads to the state of
Gunateeta, described by Upasani Maharaj, as “the state devoid and beyond the Gunas,” i.e. God- Realization.
In the
beginning of Dwarpara Yuga, life was guided by the manifestation of Divine Knowledge,
and the ascendancy of Sattva Guna over Tama Guna and Raja Guna. But by the end
of Dwarpara Yuga, life fell under the shadow of Tama Guna —the expression of
ignorance and dark cruelty—and the shadow of Raja Guna—the expression of the
unbridled pursuit of worldly pleasures and possessions. Consequently as the
next age of Kali Yuga dawned, the ability to think, speak, and act truthfully
was in decline and life became growingly selfish and deceitful.
Mahabharata means great family—the great family
of humanity, but as the shadow grew longer, and Dwarpara Yuga inevitably turned
to Kali Yuga, the great family had become divided by greed and distrust. It is
a long story, but eventually the two sides of the family, the Kauravas and the
Pandavas, were arrayed on the battlefield poised for war. Krishna, the Avatar,
had done all that He could to avoid the confrontation, but even He could not
stem the tide of destiny.
In the
great battle, Krishna stood with the Pandavas, who represented the embodiment
of Sattva Guna, against the Kauravas who embodied Raja and Tama Gunas. In fact,
it was Krishna himself who drove the chariot of Arjuna, the Pandava prince and
greatest of all warriors, into war.
It fell to
the exalted status of Arjuna to throw down the gauntlet that would begin the
war. Lord Krishna drove the chariot onto the battlefield between the two
opposing sides, but Arjuna balked. Seeing the faces of both sides— faces of his
brothers and kin, his teachers, and respected elders, and realizing that war
would only bring suffering and death to all, he froze with indecision. Seeing
his hesitancy, Krishna asked, “What are you doing? Why do you hesitate?
Throw down the gauntlet to begin the war.”
“I
cannot!” Arjuna replied,
“How can I start this war and bring death upon all of these people?” And
so it came to pass, that right there and then, between the two armies poised
for war, Krishna taught Arjuna the Great Teachings known as the Bhagavad-Gita.
“He who
shall say, ‘Lo! I have slain a man!’
He who
shall think, ‘Lo! I am slain!’ those both know naught!
“Life
cannot slay. Life is not slain!
“I say
to thee, weapons reach not that Life,
“Flames
burn it not, waters cannot overwhelm it, not dry winds wither it.
“Unentered,
all-arriving, stable, sure, invisible, ineffable,
By word and thought uncompassed, ever all itself — thus is the Soul declared!” – Krishna
By word and thought uncompassed, ever all itself — thus is the Soul declared!” – Krishna
Krishna is
speaking from His direct experience of illusion and reality. These bodies of
ours, these bodies we cherish so deeply, exist only in the illusion and
delusion of a great dream. It is the dream of us and others. Our joys and
sorrows, successes and failures, births and deaths all seem so real— until we
wake up.
But if it
is really a dream, yet our experience tells us that it is real, then how should
we act in the world—moment by moment, day by day? This was Arjuna’s
question—our question.
In the
conversation that follows, Krishna speaks to Arjuna about the life of action
and the contemplative life of meditation. He extols the virtues and
shortcomings of both, saying; “Live in
action! Labor! Make thine acts thy piety…” while also counselling; “Yet the right act is less, far less, than
the right-thinking mind. Seek refuge in thy soul, have there thy heaven.”
And so
Arjuna remains confused. He asks Krishna which of these two paths is the better
way to attain the Supreme Reality.
Seeing Arjuna’s mind impaled on the horns of this dilemma, Krishna slips between the horns saying that the two paths are, in fact, really one:
Seeing Arjuna’s mind impaled on the horns of this dilemma, Krishna slips between the horns saying that the two paths are, in fact, really one:
“Yet
these (two paths) are one! By shunning action; nay, and none shall come by mere
renouncements unto perfection.”
We have
probably all heard the saying, “…to be in the world, but not of the world.” This
is quite consistent with Christ’s words to His disciples;
“Give to
Caesar what is Caesar’s and save for God what is God’s.”
But
Arjuna’s questions persist—our questions persist—and in order to explain the
why and how of His proclamation, Krishna begins to talk about the three
qualities that inform action—namely our friends Sattva, Raja, and Tama Gunas.
In the
fourteenth chapter of the Bhagavad Gita Krishna says, “Sattva, Raja,
and Tama—so are named the qualities of Nature—Lucidity, Passion, and Ignorance.
The three bind down the changeless Spirit in the changeful flesh, though sweet
Sattva by purity living unsullied and enlightened, binds the sinless Soul to
happiness and truth; while Raja, being kin to appetite and breeding impulse and
propensity binds by tie of works the embodied Soul, Oh Kunti’s son! But Tama,
begot of Darkness, blinding mortal men, binds down their souls to stupor, sloth,
and drowsiness.”
There is a
saying, “Good is not God,” another by Meher Baba, “The saint is bound
by a golden chain, the sinner by a spiked one—but the goal is to be free of all
chains.” From this we can conclude that even too much Satva Guna is a
hindrance to attaining the Supreme Reality. This is why Krishna counsels Arjuna
that one should rise above all the Gunas.
“When,
watching life, the living man perceives that the only actors are the Qualities
(the Gunas), and knows what rules beyond the Qualities, then he comes to Me!
The soul passing forth from the Three Qualities— whereby arises all
bodies—overcomes Birth, Death, Sorrow, and Age; and drinketh deep the undying
wine of Amrit,” (the
Eternal Bliss of Union with God).
Of course
Arjuna is more than interested at this point, and asks Krishna;
“Oh my
Lord! Which be the signs to know him that hath gone past the Three Modes (Gunas)? How does he live? What is
the way that leads him safe beyond the Threefold Modes?”
Krishna responds;
“He who with equanimity surveys luster of goodness, strife of passion, sloth
of ignorance; without anger, nor wish to change them: who sits a sojourner and
stranger in their midst unruffled, standing off, saying serene when troubles
break, ‘These be the signs!’
“He unto
whom—while centered in the Self—grief and joy sound as one word; to whose
deep-seeing eyes the clod, the marble, and the gold are one; whose equal heart
holds the same gentleness for lovely and unlovely things, firm-set,
well-pleased when praised or blamed; satisfied with honor or dishonor; unto
friends and unto foes alike in tolerance, detached from undertakings—he is
named Surmounter of the Qualities.”
The
teachings of the Bhagavad-Gita were not new—even in the time of Krishna.
“This deathless Yoga (these teachings), this deep union, I taught to Vivaswata, the Lord of Light.”
“This deathless Yoga (these teachings), this deep union, I taught to Vivaswata, the Lord of Light.”
There is great significance in this statement by Krishna because Vivaswata
is a name associated with the Sun. So, Krishna is saying that indeed He has
been around for a long ling time!
“Vivaswata
gave it to Manu (his son) who passed it down the line to all My Royal Rishis.
Then with years the truth grew dim and perished, noble prince!
Now once again I will declare to you this ancient lore, this mystery supreme—seeing I find you my devotee and friend.”
Now once again I will declare to you this ancient lore, this mystery supreme—seeing I find you my devotee and friend.”
But Arjuna
is puzzled. How can this same being have been around since the beginning of
time? He asks;
“How shall I comprehend this thing You say, ‘From the beginning it was I who
taught…?’”
To this
Krishna responds revealing the nature of Divine Incarnation—the Avatar—the
Christ—the Messiah—the Ancient One who comes again and again, in different
guises and different forms ;
“Manifold
the renewals of My birth have been, Arjuna! And of your births, too! But Mine I
know, and yours you know not, oh Slayer of the Foes! Albeit I be unborn,
undying, indestructible, the Lord of all things living; not the less by Maya,
by My magic which I stamp on floating Nature-forms, the primal vast—I come, and
go, and come.
“When
righteousness declines O Bharata! When Wickedness is strong, I rise, from age
to age, and take visible shape, and move a man among men, succoring the good,
thrusting the evil back, and setting Virtue on her seat again.”
It is the
story of the Avatar, The Ancient One, The Highest of the High, The Christ, The
Buddha—His Names are many, His shapes are many—He dons them all like we put on
clothes appropriate to the situation and the time.
And Arjuna
believes in the divinity of Krishna and by His teachings his darkness is
dispelled, but Arjuna still sees Him as a man and so asks Krishna to reveal
Himself—reveal His Godhood.
“If this
can be, if I may bear the sight, make Yourself visible…show me your very Self, the Eternal God!”
And Krishna obliges His beloved devotee.
“Gaze
then Arjuna! I manifest for you those hundred thousand shapes that clothe My
Mystery: I show you all my semblances—infinite, rich, divine—My changeful hues,
My countless forms, see in this face of Mine…Behold! This is the universe!
Look! What is live and dead I gather all in One—in Me! Gaze, as thy lips have
said, on God Eternal, Very God! See Me! See what thou prayest!”
Krishna then
tells Arjuna that what he wishes to see cannot be seen with earthly eyes, “therefore
I give to you other eyes, new light! Now look! This is my glory, unveiled to
mortal sight.”
And right
there, on the battlefield, between the two armies poised for war, Krishna
reveals to Arjuna His Universal Form.
I find it
interesting that in the story, when Krishna reveals His Universal Form to
Arjuna, it is Sanjaya, who narrates the story. Sanjaya is Dhritarashtra’s advisor.
Dhritarashtra is the blind king who has fathered the Kauravas warriors.
Sanjaya
tells Dhritarashtra that Krishna is now displaying to Arjuna all of the
splendor, wonder, and dread of His Almighty-head.
“Out of
countless eyes beholding, out of countless mouths commanding countless mystic
forms enfolding; in one Form supremely standing, countless radiant glories
wearing, countless heavenly weapons bearing, crowned with garlands of
star-clusters, robed in garb of woven lusters, breathing from His perfect
Presence breaths of every subtle essence of all heavenly odors; shedding
blinding brilliance; overspreading—boundless, beautiful—all spaces with His
all-regarding faces—so He showed! And sore amazed, thrilled, overfilled,
dazzled, and dazed, Arjuna knelt, and bowed his head, and clasped his palms and
cried, and said…”
Try to
imagine, if you can, what Arjuna sees. He sees the earth, its moon and sun, the
solar system; all solar systems that make up our galaxy; all galaxies; the
entire creation coming into existence and then being absorbed through Krishna’s
Divine Form.
Try to
imagine that all of creation is less than even a speck when compared to the
Subtle World with all its powers and experiences, heaven and hell, angels and
gods, and all divine beings; and that the
Subtle World is less than even a speck when compared to the Mental World, the abode of Archangels and real
Saints—the world of Mind itself.
Try to
imagine all these three worlds being born and existing and then being
absorbed—crushed—between the teeth of Krishna’s Divine Form.
This is
what Arjuna saw while standing on the battlefield between the two armies of the
Pandavas and the Kauravas poised and ready for war.
Arjuna exclaims;
“You fashion men and then devour them all, one with another, great and small
alike! The creatures who you fashion you then take within your flaming jaws—lapping
them up!
“Lord
God! Your terrors strike from end to end of earth, filling life full, from
birth to death, with deadly, burning, lurid dead! Ah Vishnu! Make me know why
is it is that You appear so? Tell me, who You are who feasts upon the dead!?”
Seeing within Krishna Universal Form the aspect of Shiva—The
Destroyer—reignites Arjuna’s ambivalence regarding the war and his role in it.
Krishna responds thusly;
“Arise Arjuna! Destroy your foes! (It is) by me they fall—not you! The stroke of death is dealt them now, even as they show thus gallantly. Arjuna, you are My instrument and it is I who bid them perish! You will only be the slayer of the slain!”
Apparently,
Arjuna gets it—gets who Krishna really is—and after praising Him in every way
utters, what I think is a very interesting observation—how easy it is when
graced with the familiarity of a Divine Presence, to forget that He is not like
we; or as Meher Baba reminded us on more than one occasion, “I come down and
laugh and play with you—but never forget, I am God!”
Arjuna
says, “For you are All! And if in anger now, You should remember I did think
You my friend, speaking with easy speech, as men use each to each, and did call
You ‘Prince,’ yet never comprehending Your hidden majesty, Your might, and Your
majesty; and in my heedlessness, or in my love, on journey, or in jest, or when
we lay at rest, sitting at council, straying in the grove, alone, or in the
throng, did do You the most Holy, wrong, then forgive me for that witless sin!”
Arjuna then asks Krishna to show him once again His personal form—His
human form:
“Now I
know that you are Father of all below, of all above, and of all worlds within,
as so with all reverence I ask Your grace, as father to a son, as friend to
friend, as one who loves to his lover, turn your face in gentleness and mercy
upon me on and show me once more Your visage that I know and let me once again
behold the form I loved most of all, my Charioteer, in Krishna’s kind
disguise.”
To his request Krishna replies;
To his request Krishna replies;
“Let
trouble shake your heart no more because your eyes have seen My terror and My
glory. As before I have been so will I be again for thee; with lightened heart
behold!”
“Then back
again the semblance dear of the well-loved charioteer; peace and joy it did
restore, when Prince Arjuna beheld once more, Mighty God’s form and face
clothed in Krishna’s gentle grace.”—Sanjaya
With
Arjuna’s earthly sight and familiar state returned, his heart beats calm, his
mind can think, and Krishna tells him of the rarity of his experience.
“Yes, it
was wonderful and terrible to view Me as you did, dear Prince—to see me as the
gods see me! Yet not by study of the sacred texts, nor from sacrifice, nor
penance, nor gift-giving, nor with prayer shall any so behold Me as you have
seen Me!
“Only by
fullest service, perfect faith, and uttermost surrender am I known and seen and
entered into, Indian Prince! Who does their all for Me: who finds Me in all,
adores Me always—and loves all that I
have made, and loves Me as an end in itself, that person Arjuna, comes to Me!”
There are
numerous paths that lead to God-Realization; but here, in this passage, Krishna
reveals the highest path—the path of Love. It is so simple, one needs no
special talents or intellect; no diet, or dress, or mode of life, or sacrifice,
or practice is necessary—only love for God—only love for the God-Man—the
Christ—the Avatar.
Krishna
then goes on to make a distinction between worship of the personal and the
impersonal states of God;
“Whoever
serve Me as I show Myself, constantly true, in full devotion fixed, those hold
I very holy. But those who serve and worship Me as The One, Invisible, Unrevealed,
Unnamed, Unthinkable, Uttermost, All-Pervading, Highest; who adore Me thus,
mastering their senses, cultivating an impartial mind that looks upon all
without distinction, joyful in response to all acts of goodness, these blessed
souls come unto Me.
Yet this path (of service and devotion to the Impersonal State of God) is most difficult to tread. It is an invisible path that can scarce be trod by man.
Yet this path (of service and devotion to the Impersonal State of God) is most difficult to tread. It is an invisible path that can scarce be trod by man.
“But as
for those who live their lives renouncing self for Me, full of Me, fixed to
serve only the Highest, night and day musing on Me, who clasps Me with heart
and mind, whose soul clings fast to Me!—him will I swiftly lift up from life’s
ocean of distress and death, to dwell with Me on High!”
But Krishna
is also a pragmatist—the Avatar and all the Perfect Masters are always, as I
have learned, pragmatists. These Perfect Ones never stand on ceremony, are always
adaptable to every situation, and are always here for us only. The Avatar never
gives up on us, never gives up on anyone or anything.
“But if
your thought droops from such height; if you find that you are unable to
remember me constantly in your body and soul, do not despair!
“Instead
give me service! Seek to reach Me by worshiping Me with steadfast will.
“But if
you cannot do that, them do your work for Me, toil in works pleasing to me! For
he who labors right for Love of Me shall in the end attain!
“And if
even in this your heart fails, then bring Me your failure! Find refuge in Me!
Let go of failure or success — the fruits of labor— renouncing even hope itself
for Me, then come with humble heart, for, though knowledge is greater than
diligence, yet worship is better than knowing, and renouncing better still, for
near to renouncing — very near — dwells Eternal Peace.”
I find it interesting
that in this statement Krishna has made what appears to be the lowest path the
highest — the fruit of failure becoming the requisite for renunciation. Is this
not an expression of God’s mercy and compassion?
“Who does not hate any living thing, being himself kindly and harmless, compassionate, exempt from arrogance and self-love, unmoved by good or ill, patient, contented, firm in faith, mastering himself, true to his word, always seeking Me heart and soul, vowed unto Me, that man I love!
“Who
troubles not his kind, and is not troubled by them; free of wrath, living beyond
gladness, grief, or fear, that man I love!
“Who
does not chase after his desires, looking here and there with longing, free of
sin, serene, well-balanced, unperplexed, working with Me, yet from all works
detached, that man I love!
“Who
fixed in faith on Me, dotes upon none, scorns none, rejoices not and grieves
not, unperturbed when good or evil manifests or departs, that man I love!
“Who
keeps an equal heart for friend and foe alike, equally bearing shame and glory;
who remains at peace in heat and cold, pleasure and pain; abides without desire
and endures praise or calumny with passionless restraint, linked by no ties to
earth, steadfast in Me, that man I love!
“But
most of all I love those happy ones who without effort or awareness live life
in single-minded fervid faith and love unseeing, drinking the blessed nectar of
my Being!”
And in the
end, Krishna turns to Arjuna and once again counsels him to fight. This war was
inevitable and even the Avatar could not stop it. The forces of destiny had
been fixed; there was no way out.
Could not
God Himself stop a war? There is an old story about a candidate for the
priesthood who was being examined by a bishop, and a question regarding God’s
omnipotence was asked of the candidate who responded by saying that even God
cannot do everything. “And what is it that God cannot do?” asked the
Bishop. The candidate answered calmly, “Even God cannot beat the ace of
spades with a deuce of clubs.”
Stopping
the war would destroy the game—His game. And what is His game? It is the game
of awakening God to God’s own Reality—His own true Self—our own true Self—our
own Divine Reality.
And so it
was time for Arjuna to commence and fight the war; but the real question was
how he should fight; how he should act; how he should hold himself.
“Do all
you do for Me! Renounce for Me! Sacrifice heart and will and mind for Me! In
faith of Me all dangers you will vanquish by My grace. But, if instead you
trust to yourself, forgetting Me, then you will perish!
And then Krishna reveals to Arjuna that, in fact, Arjuna has no power
to stop the war either—that Arjuna has no power to not fight. Thinking that he
does, is just another delusion.
“If this
day, relying on yourself, you say, ‘I will not fight!’ vain will your
resolution prove, for the qualities of your nature spurred by fair illusions
will rise within you and prompt you to the very actions you have disavowed and
you will be lost.
“Arjuna,
I am the Master that lives in your heart; it is I who pulls the strings and you
who dance to My tune. Trust Me, your Master, and come to Me for your
nourishment and your relief. Oh prince of men, only then, by My grace, will you
gain the uttermost repose, the Eternal Place.”
Then
Krishna offers His last words to Arjuna, revealing the unique relationship of
God and man and the love that God, in the form of the Avatar, has for each and
every one of us—for all of His creation—for each and every state of Himself.
“Arjuna, you are precious to Me! Hear My last words; I tell this to you for your comfort. Give Me your heart! Adore Me! Serve Me! Cling to Me in faith and love and reverence; and I promise that you shall come to Me! For you are sweet to Me.
“Arjuna, you are precious to Me! Hear My last words; I tell this to you for your comfort. Give Me your heart! Adore Me! Serve Me! Cling to Me in faith and love and reverence; and I promise that you shall come to Me! For you are sweet to Me.
“So let
go of those archaic rites and writs of duty! Fly to Me alone! Make Me your
refuge, and I will free your soul of all of its sins. Be of good cheer!”
As Meher
Baba said; “Don’t worry, be happy!”
In the
Bhagavad Gita Krishna is saying that there are numerous ‘ways’ to reach the
Supreme Reality. There is meditation and contemplation; works done with an
attitude of renunciation and detachment; living life in the knowledge that “all
things shall pass.” But it is also pretty clear that Krishna is saying that of
all the ‘ways’, the best and the highest, is to hold on to Him—the Avatar—the
Ancient One—the Godman.
Meher Baba
wrote/dictated a book called God
Speaks. In it He answers many questions about how the process of God
Realization works through the dream of creation and the mechanics of evolution,
reincarnation, and involution of consciousness.
I have read God Speaks many times over
the past thirty-five or so years and have come to the conclusion that God Speaks is God’s story; it is
Meher Baba’s story—the story of the Avatar—the Ancient One—the Godman. In other
words He is telling us who He is.
But just
imagine the difficulty of the task. Let’s say that you were suddenly to awaken
on another world inhabited by beings that have never heard of or seen a human
being, or have even heard of the planet Earth. What would you tell them when
they begin to ask you who you are? “Well,
I’m named Michael; I’m a musician, and I live on this planet called Earth…”
But that
approach wouldn’t work because in all these answers there is an underlying
assumption that the beings you are talking to understand what it is to be
human. You would have to first explain what it is to be human. That would be a
little difficult, no doubt. Now, by extension, how can the Avatar begin to
explain to us who He is—that He is God in human form and what God in human form
means?
God Speaks
is His explanation—His story—and it takes Meher Baba 159 pages of the 201 pages
of principle text (2nd Edition), before He even mentions the word Avatar. He is
like an artist painting the under-painting, background, and all of the other
characters from stone to man to angels and saints, before painting himself into
the canvas.
“Hence, at the end of every cycle, when God manifests on earth in the form of man and reveals His divinity to mankind, He is recognized as the Avatar—the Messiah—the Prophet. The direct descent of God on earth as the Avatar is that independent status of God when God directly becomes man without undergoing or passing through the processes of evolution, reincarnation, and involution of consciousness. Consequently, God directly becomes God-Man, and lives the life of man amongst mankind, realizing His divine status of the Highest of the High, or Ancient One, through these (five) Qutubs or Sadgurus, or Perfect Masters of the time.”—God Speaks, page 159
Meher Baba
goes on to make the distinction between the Avatar and other God-Realized
individuals. Then returning to the unique status of the Avatar He says on page
162:
“In this
manner, infinite God, age after age, throughout all cycles, wills through His
infinite mercy to effect His presence amidst mankind by stooping down to human
levels in human form, but His physical presence amidst mankind not being apprehended,
He is looked upon as an ordinary man of the world. When, however, He asserts
His divinity on earth by proclaiming Himself the Avatar of the Age, He is
worshiped by some who accept Him as God; and glorified by a few who know Him as
God. But it invariably falls to the lot of the rest of humanity to condemn Him
while He is physically in their midst…
“The
Avatar is always One and the same because God is always One and the same, the
eternal, indivisible, infinite One who manifests Himself in the form of man as
the Avatar, as the Messiah, as the Prophet, as the Buddha, as the Ancient
One,—the Highest of the High. This eternally One and the same Avatar is made to
repeat His manifestation from time to time, in different cycles, adopting
different names and different human forms, in different places, to reveal Truth
in different garbs and different languages, in order to raise humanity from the
pit of ignorance and help free it from the bondage of delusions.”
Please
remember that the story of the Mahabharata is set in a period of time roughly
five-thousand years ago and was communicated for thousands of years through the
long tradition of oral transmission. This great epic was only later written
down in Sanskrit—approximately 1700 years ago— and English translations began
to emerge a mere hundred years ago or less.
The
question arises; are the words uttered by God immune to the ravages of time? Or
in the words of the legendary Sufi Saint Mullah Nasredin, is what we have here,
“the soup of the soup of the soup of the
chicken your friend brought?”
Allow me to digress:
A friend knocks on the Mullah’s door one day. “What do you want?” asked the Mullah. “I’ve brought a chicken for your wife to make into a soup.” So the Mullah invites him in, they sit around while the soup is cooked, and then they eat it.
The next day there is another knock on the door. “Who’s there?” asks the Mullah. “I am the friend of your friend who brought the chicken,” the man replies; “can I have some soup?” The Mullah invites him in and goes back to the kitchen. There is only a little soup left, so he adds some water and serves the soup.
Over the next several days, friends of the friends of the friends come to his door asking for soup and the Mullah continues to add more and more water to the soup.
A friend knocks on the Mullah’s door one day. “What do you want?” asked the Mullah. “I’ve brought a chicken for your wife to make into a soup.” So the Mullah invites him in, they sit around while the soup is cooked, and then they eat it.
The next day there is another knock on the door. “Who’s there?” asks the Mullah. “I am the friend of your friend who brought the chicken,” the man replies; “can I have some soup?” The Mullah invites him in and goes back to the kitchen. There is only a little soup left, so he adds some water and serves the soup.
Over the next several days, friends of the friends of the friends come to his door asking for soup and the Mullah continues to add more and more water to the soup.
“This
isn’t soup!” states the seventh guest, “this
is water!” to which the Mullah replies, “No, it is the soup of the soup of the soup of the soup, etc. etc. of
the chicken that your friend of the friend of the friend etc. brought!”
What was it
that Krishna told Arjuna?
“You see
Me as Time who kills, Time who brings all doom; the Slayer Time come hither to
consume.”
So
apparently, even the acts of eternal God are not exempt from the effects of
time once He has released them into the world. The point was brought home to me
one day while I was sitting in Mandali Hall at Meherazad, India with a number
of other pilgrims listening to the stories of Eruch Jessawala, one of Meher
Baba’s closest followers. Somehow the subject of the Bhagavad Gita came
up—perhaps it was something I said—and Eruch offered the following:
“There
are so many paintings of Krishna and Arjuna standing next to each other on a
golden jeweled chariot. It is really very beautiful, but brother, those
chariots of war were not at all like that.
“You
see, in those days, the war chariots were built in such a way that the driver
(Krishna) sat below the warrior (Arjuna) just above the wheels and had to
endure the choking dust, the stench of rotting corpses, unable to even see
where He was going. It was the warrior sitting above the driver who directed
the driver by kicking him on the shoulders and face.
“You
see, it was the Avatar, Beloved God Himself, who accepted the position of the
lowest of the low out of love for His lover. What a sacrifice it is that He
makes for us.”
And He does it again and again, sacrifices again and again for all time
and All Times by taking a human birth and living among us to help each of us in
our journeyless journey to God.
Why does He do this? Is that not another way?
There was once a king who asked his spiritual advisor why God comes
again and again. The advisor parried the king’s question by saying that it was
such a beautiful day, why not first have a special holiday on the kings royal
barge.
And so the king gathered a huge retinue of soldiers and family and they
departed on the barge. Far from shore, the waters became very turbulent and the
mighty barge began to rock and sway. In the middle of this tumult the advisor
picked up the king’s youngest son and through him overboard.
The king immediately jumped into the water to save his son.
As soon as they were safely onboard the waters became calm again and
the king turned angrily to his advisor. What was the meaning of his cruel act?
The advisor calmly replied, “You asked me why God has to come again and
again. You could have ordered your soldiers to save your son, but you jumped
into the waters first—because of love.”
©copyright, Michael Kovitz,7.27.2010
Labels: 3 Gunas, Avatar, Bhagavad Gita, Dwarpara Yuga, Kali Yuga, Mahabharata, Meher Baba God Speaks, Mullah Nasredin
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Thumbs up! :)
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