The Rg Veda mantra says:
om tad visno paramam padam
sada pasyanti suraya
diviva caksuratatam:
The divine feet of our holy Lord are like the sun above our heads.
His holy feet are like the vigilant eye of a grand guardian hanging over our heads like the sun,
and we are living beneath the glance of that vigilant eye.
We are interested not in objective, but in subjective reality. We shall always try to live not in objective but in subjective relativity. We should never think, “Under my feet I have firm ground to stand on; I am big. I shall stand erect.” Rather we should think, “Above my consciousness is super consciousness; the vigilant guardian’s eye is always watching me. I am living under the glance of that eye.” Our support comes not from below, but from above. He is our shelter. We are hanging from that substantial upper world wherein he resides; our support is found there. We must always be conscious of that.
This is a principle mantra in the Rg Veda. Before anyone approaches a new duty, he should think about his own position. We have been instructed by this verse from the Vedas to think in this way: “You are under the vigilant eye of your guardian, and that great eye is as living as the sun; its glance is just like that of the sun which is over your head. Like a light that can pierce through to see anything within you, his piercing glance is upon you.” With this understanding of identity we should approach our duty. We are never encouraged to think that we stand firmly here on solid earth and that on the basis of a strong position—independent of his grace—we can carry out our dharma.
Actually, in our subjective relationship with divinity, we are just like the rays of the sun. Where do the sun’s rays stand? They stand on the sun—that is their source. In the same way, we should think that our stand is in the realm of divinity; we are so many particles of consciousness, and our stand, our motherland, is that conscious area. God consciousness means Krishna consciousness. We are consciousness and we are meant for Krishna consciousness. That is our relationship. We should always be conscious of this fact. We are connected with Krishna consciousness. We are members of the Krishna conscious world. And we have come to wander in the foreign land of material consciousness, mayika, misconception, thinking that we are units of this material world, but it is not so. We are units of the conscious world—the Krishna conscious world—and somehow we have come within this material conception of existence, the world of matter. Matter is what we can exploit, the objective side of reality, and the subjective side is the element we should revere. Our relationship with the subjective is that of reverence and devotion to the higher entity, and not that of exploitation or enjoyment. Real enjoyment, divine enjoyment, comes from service, not from exploitation.
Srila B.R. Sridhara Maharaja, ‘Loving Search for the Lost Servant’
Tad Visnoh Paramam Padam
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MAR 28 2012 – KRISHNA TALK 139
(The following is a class by Srila B.G. Narasingha Maharaja given on 20th January 2000 at Karighatta in South India)
There are four Vedas, and it is taken that the Rg Veda is the principal one. Veda means knowledge and it has two major divisions – material and spiritual. There is the mundane knowledge of this phenomenal world and there is the spiritual or transcendental knowledge that is called in Sanskrit sabda-brahma, or knowledge of that which lies beyond the senses. In the modern world people are very busy with sensual knowledge – that which they can acquire through experimentation, what they acquire through touch, sight etc. Knowledge about transcendence is almost an imaginary thing in society. In other words, people doubt that it actually exists. When people want higher knowledge they look towards the heavens; they want to know something about life on other planets, life in another galaxy, but this is also within the mundane world. The desire to know something about life up there is also mundane because that is within the material sky. Transcendental knowledge lies beyond the material sky in the spiritual sky. The Vedas deals with all knowledge – mundane and transcendental.
To a certain extent we may discover mundane knowledge without the help of the Vedas. For example in the Vedas there are many references to flying machines and even inter-planetary travel and communication. Nowadays we have airplanes, rockets, space shuttles etc. All this is happening by man’s own endeavor. First the Wright brothers invented the first airplane, and in time man traveled into space. Man is doing all of this without any reference to the Vedas. However, long before man even dreamt of flying, flying was there in the Vedas. But man has learnt to fly without directly approaching the Vedas. Thus, to a certain extent, material knowledge can be gained by ones own endeavor. The Vedas also inform us that there is life on other planets, but at present we have not discovered that by our own efforts. Yet the proposal is there. You can save so much time if you accept Vedic knowledge.
Why should we accept Vedic knowledge? The Vedic knowledge says there is life on other planets. Why should you accept that? Because it is quite logical. The Vedas proposed flying machines and inter-planetary travel thousands of years ago and now you have to come to know that is possible. So why should you reject the other proposal made by the Vedas that life is there on other planets? First accept that there is life on other planets. Whether you can contact that life or not is another question. But you can answer that primary question, “Yes, there is life on other planets, there is life throughout the universe.” According to the Vedic knowledge of the universe, there is no place where life does not exist, and that life is in many variegated forms. Yet we struggle with the principle of accepting a higher authority and therefore we want to know everything through our own hard work, experiments and research.
We doubt the proposal that life exists throughout the universe, then for many years we presume that life can only exist in certain limited circumstances – that we can only find life here on this planet. If it is too hot, like on the sun, then how is it possible for life to exist there? If it is too cold, like the moon, then how is it possible for life to exist there? But then we discover that within our own world, deep within a volcano in the ocean, where the water is thousands of degrees – a place where we could never have imagined anything living before – some life-form can live within that extreme circumstance. So life exists in all places regardless of how extreme the environment may be. We may have experience of that – we may not. But through the Vedas we can know what is not knowable to us in this world. As I said, to a certain degree we may gain knowledge of this world by our own endeavor. But as regards transcendence, as regards that which is beyond the material field, that which is beyond the material sky, which is lying within the spiritual sky and is unknown and unknowable, the only means is the Vedic authorities, the Veda itself and the parampara. Parampara means the guru-disciple succession – a continuous line running for thousands of years that receives higher knowledge and cultivates the practices of sadhana, the practices to attain a higher realization. Only through this method can that which is beyond this world become known to us. This way of experience is actually far more substantial than how we experience the world today.
How do you experience the world today? You touch it. You see it. You hear it. You want to have some reciprocation with it. By doing these things you are sure that it exists. The spiritual world, the experience of transcendence, has more reality than that. In the morning we wake up and see the sun rising on the horizon. When knowledge of transcendence awakens in the heart, it is a more substantial experience than seeing the sun rise.
Those who are great sages, who are great mountains of realized knowledge so to speak, have a higher consciousness. They say that that transcendental world is the only reality and everything in this phenomenal world, eventually vanishes. So, the primary interest of a human being should be to journey towards transcendence and discover what is beyond this world.
Unfortunately we are all very, very busy with this world without even the slightest information that there exists another world beyond this one. When we say the “transcendental sky” we do not simply mean a sky filled with light where only a bird may be happy to fly and soar. The spiritual sky is filled with spiritual planets much greater than the planets of this mundane world. These are the Vaikuntha planets. There life exists without any material defect. The material defects are birth, death, old age and disease. These four things are the problems that everyone has to deal with. In Vaikuntha there is no such thing as birth, death, old age and disease. Once going there one never becomes old, one never becomes diseased, and one never dies. So the real purpose of human life is with this. That should be our direction – towards the transcendental world. How will we achieve that world? That should be the goal of life, and to achieve that goal one can look towards the Vedas. In the Rg Veda it says:
om tad visnoh paramam padam
sada pasyanti surayah
diviva caksur atatam
Visnu means the Supreme Person. The Absolute Truth is ultimately a person, a divine entity. His lotus feet are the most negligible part, the lowest part of His transcendental form and they are above all in this world. They are like the sun that passes in the sky. The sun is seeing all and blessing all. Similarly the lotus feet of the Supreme Lord are above all in this world, seeing all and blessing everyone. Before any work is performed, before any activity is taken up, the Vedic way is to remember the lotus feet of Visnu. We are moving under the watchful eye of the Supreme Lord at all times – we are under His glance, we are under His care, we are under His guardianship. Therefore there is no need for fear.
Fear in the Vedas is called bhaya. In varying degrees everyone is fearful in this world. Because of fear so much suffering is there. But there is no need of fear if we always remember that above everything the Supreme Lord is there, the Supreme controller. His watchful eye, His grace is always upon us. If we remember this then there is no need of fear and one can live life free from anxiety.
How to approach transcendence? That is the main subject of the Vedas. For those who are not ready to accept transcendence, for those who are not ready to accept the guardianship of the Supreme Lord, there are many other departments of knowledge to help in this temporary life. And gradually they may awaken to understand the ultimate value of human life.
Ancient Vedic civilization based itself on the transcendental goal, not on material achievements. Temples were grand and gorgeous whist people’s homes were very simple. Why did they live like that? We look back on them now and wonder that if they had the ability to build such marvelous wonders in stone, why didn’t they build homes for themselves that would last for hundreds of years? It is because they knew that ultimately this world is not our home. The temple represents transcendence –the abode of the Supreme Lord. That is grand and glorious. That will stand forever. But our life? Thousands upon millions of us we will simply come and go. This world is not our home – we cannot stay here forever. They applied this idea practically and lived very simply. Why do you want to build a home here? You cannot remain here forever. You have to fix your gaze, your consciousness, on the higher world and pass this life in a simple manner. At the end, when our body falls into the dust or is consigned to flames, our eternal consciousness will reach that transcendental world.
The Vedic people lived by the conception that the Supreme Absolute Truth, Visnu or Krsna, is always above all. In this way they lived happily.
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