[Advaita-l] Comments of an ISCKON follower
kuntimaddi sadananda
kuntimaddisada at yahoo.com
Tue Mar 20 10:58:33 CDT 2012
Subbuji - PraNAms.
In the vishiShTaadvaita, the saayujya mukti involves everything what Sri Velukudi Krishnan swami said - except for two factors.
Jiiva is still anupramaanaat - only a part of the total body of Iswara.
While he enjoys all the things mentioned except the creative power of the Iswara. Even though he is tiny he enjoys he infinite happiness that Iswara enjoyes.
In advaita Sujujyam means recognition of oneness - when we say pot space merges with the total space - or ring merges with gold - That is advaitic sayujya. It is an clear understanding that apparent duality is not reality but is mityaa only. That is suyujya in the sense the jiiva had the notion of separateness from jagat and Iswara. That dissolution of the notional division with the recognition of oneness is advaitic saayujya - in the same context that he becomes Brahman - not that he was separate from Brahman before.
As long as one understands this, there should not be a problem since the very name a-dvaita indicates the negation of notional duality that is experienced.
Hari Om!
Sadananda
--- On Tue, 3/20/12, V Subrahmanian <v.subrahmanian at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> I just heard Sri Velukudi Krishnan Swami, a noted scholar
> of
> Vishishtadvaita say: 'parama sAmyApatti' is the sAyujya
> mukti according to
> this school. This involves the jiva going to Vaikuntha
> and attaining all
> the 'attributes' of Vishnu like satyakAmatva,
> satyasamkalpatva, and
> enjoying the bhoga that Vishnu enjoys, along with Him,
> They say: Vishnu 'gives' these jiva-s His own self.'
>
Advaita does not
> have any such concept. We have the total giving up as
> mithyA the jivatvam
> and realizing one's Brahmatvam. There is no 'sAyujyam'
> in this. The very
> word 'sAyujya' involves a two-entity pre-requisite where one
> 'joins' the
> other, yet the two entities remaining in tact.
> In Advaita there is only
> one Reality which is to be realized. There is no
> joining something/someone
> else. That forms the core of the sAyujya mukti concept
> and hence is not in
> any way the Advaitic mukti.
>
> subrahmanian.v
>
>
>
> On Tue, Mar 20, 2012 at 8:16 AM, Shyam Subramanian <shyamsub at gmail.com>wrote:
>
> > Dear Sunilji,
> >
> > I am sure the scholars in the list will be able to
> explain the difference
> > better. Whatever I understood from the bhAshyA and the
> > translations was that the sAlokya,sAmIpya,sArUpya and
> sAyujya all pertain
> > to saguNa brahman - hence sAyujya ("unifying with
> saguNa brahman" ?) cannot
> > be considered to be "brahmAtmanA saMsthitiH".
> >
> > As regards Sayujya mukti let us consider the statement
> in the Ramayana,
> > > which you must be aware is considered equal
> to Veda (as Ramayana itself
> > > declares). Lord Ram offered Sayujya Mukti to
> Hanuman and on Sayujya mukti
> > > one does not have any individual body left. How
> can then sayujya mukti be
> > > anything other than complete dissolution of
> individuality. Othyer types
> > of
> > > Mukti are not real mukti as it is known that even
> after attaining sarupya
> > > Mukti ravana had to take birth albeit it happened
> due to acurse. That
> > shows
> > > that in all forms of Mukti other than the
> SayujyaMukti one is vulnerable
> > > to taking birth. With all respects to Sri
> CandraSekhara BhAratI SvAminaH
> > > has anybody ever asked him for such
> clarification?
> > >
> > >
> > Just curious, can you give me the source (kANDa,
> adhyAya, verse) for the
> > above statements/incidents in the vAlmIki rAmAyaNa ? I
> couldn't find the
> > word sAyujya mentioned in the rAmAyaNa at all.
> >
> > Regards,
> > Shyam
> >
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