[Advaita-l] Crossing death is not immortality
ravi chandrasekhara
vadhula at yahoo.com
Sun Jun 26 11:56:29 CDT 2016
Pranam,
Then how does one "obtain Gyana " ?Performance of svadharma, nitykarmas, doing good deeds, avoiding bad deeds , and follwoing yamas/niyamas surely help but what is needed for self realization to end cycle of birth and death ?
One can try to remain equal to joy and sorrow as much as humanly possible and one can "intellectually" comprehend the fallacy of maya, samsara, etc but that that is not real Gyana.
Any thoughts ?
Ravi Chandrasekhara
On Sunday, June 26, 2016 6:42 AM, Jaldhar H. Vyas via Advaita-l <advaita-l at lists.advaita-vedanta.org> wrote:
On Thu, 23 Jun 2016, D.V.N.Sarma డి.వి.ఎన్.శర్మ via Advaita-l wrote:
> It seems that there was a tradition prevalent in ancient times that death
> can be crossed by ritual.
There is still a tradition now.
> Here avidya is interpreted by Sankara as ritual. Crossing death is
> different from immortality.
>
The Vedantin does not doubt that karma (of which rituals are the archetype
but karma is all volitional action not just ritual.) will not lead to good
or bad outcomes in future lives but becomes karma is finite, its phala is
also finite.
> My question is, what do we mean by “crossing death by avidya or yajna or
> ritual”.
So if one diligently follows his svadharma it will result in various
levels of heavenly reward.
For example One of Indras names is Shatakratu because He performed 100
ashvamedha yajnas. In the Vishnupurana there is a famous story about
Indra getting very full of Himself so Devarshi Narada decides to teach Him
a lesson. He points out a column of ants marching under Indras throne and
explains that each had once been an Indra. They had reached that exalted
position through their good deeds but having eventually exhausted their
karmaphala they sank back down to the condition of ants.
By all means one should perform the
appropriate karma for ones station in life but if one believes that is
all there is, it is a type of ignorance. Jnana is superior. Jnana is the
true imortallity because it is not subject to the corrosion of time. the
supreme goal in life should be to renounce karma and seek jnana and if
that is not possible, at least to perform karma without regard to the
phala.
--
Jaldhar H. Vyas <jaldhar at braincells.com>
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