Nobody
wants to be known as a sinner, but all the same we keep
transgressing the bounds of morality and disobey the divine law.
We wish to enjoy the fruits of virtue without being morally good
and without doing anything meritorious.
Arjuna
says to Bhagavan Krsna: "No man wants to commit sin. Even
so, Krsna, he does evil again and again. What is it that drives
him so? ". The lord replies "It is desire. Yes, it is
desire, Arjuna ".
We
try to gain the object of our desire with no thought of right or
wrong (Dharma or Adharma). Is fire put out by ghee poured into
it? . No, it rises higher and higher. Likewise, when we gratify
one desire, another, much worse, crops up. Are we to take it,
then, that it would be better if our desires were not satisfied?
- No. Unfulfilled desire causes anger, so too failure to obtain
the object we hanker after. Like a rubber ball thrown against the
wall such an unsatisfied desire comes back to us in the form of
anger and goads us into committing sin. Krsna speaks of such
anger as being next only to desire (as an evil).
Only by banishing desire from our hearts may we remain free from sin. How is it done? We cannot but be performing our works. Even when we are physically inactive, our mind remains active. All our mental and bodily activity revolves around our desires. And these desires thrust us deeper and deeper into sin. Is it, then, possible to remain without doing any work? Human nature being what it is, the answer is "No". "-- It is difficult to quell one's thinking nor is it easy to remain without doing anything-- ", says Tayumanavasvamigal. We may stop doing work with the body, but how do we keep the mind quiet? The mind is never still. Apart from being until itself, it incites the body to action.
We
are unable either to efface our desires or to cease from all
action. Does it then mean that liberation is beyond us? Is there
no way out of the problem? Yes, there is. It is not necessary
that we should altogether stop our actions in our present
immature predicament. But instead of working for our selfish
ends, we ought to be engaged in such work as would bring benefits
to the world as well as to our inward life. The more we are
involved in such work the less we will be drawn by desire. This
will to some extent keep us away from sin and at the same time
enable us to do more meritorious work. We must learn the habit of
doing work without any selfish motives. Work done without any
desire for the fruit thereof is Punya or virtuous action.
We sin in four different ways. With our body we do evil; with our tongue we speak untruth; with our mind we think evil; and with our money we do so much that is wicked. We must learn to turn these very four means of evil into instruments of virtue.
We
must serve others with our body and circumambulate the Lord and
prostrate ourselves before him. In this way we earn merit. How do
we use our tongue to add our stock of virtue? By muttering, by
repeating, the names of the Lord. You will perhaps excuse
yourself saying: "All our time is spent in earning our
livelihood. How can we think of God or repeat his names? " A
householder has a family to maintain; but is he all the time
working for it? How much time does he waste in gossip, in
amusements, in speaking ill of others, in reading the papers?
Can't he spare a few moments to remember the Lord? He need not
set apart a particular hour of the day for his japa. He may think
of God even on the bus or the train as he goes to his office or
any other place. Not a paisa is he going to take with him finally
after his lifelong pursuit of money. The Lord's name
(Bhagavannama) is the only current coin in the other world.
The
mind is the abode of Isvara but we make a rubbish can of it. We
must cleanse it, install the Lord in it and be at peace with
ourselves. We must devote atleast five minutes every day to
meditation and resolve to do so even if the world crashes around
us. There is nothing else that will give us a helping hand when
the world cosmos is dissolved.
It
is by helping the poor and by spreading the glory of the Lord
that we will earn merit.
Papa,
sinful action, is two-pronged in its evil power. The first
incites us to wrong-doing now. The second goads us into doing
evil tomorrow. For instance, if you take snuff now you suffer
now. But tomorrow also you will have the same yearning to take
the same. This is what is called the vasana that
comes of habit. An effort must be made not only to reduce such
vasana but also cultivate the vasana of virtue by doing good
deeds.
It
is bad vasana that drags us again and again into wrong-doing.
Unfortunately, we do not seem to harbour any fear on that score.
People like us, indeed even those known to have sinned much, have
become devotees of the Lord and obtained light and wisdom. How is
Isvara qualified to to be called great if he is not
compassionate, and does not protect sinners also? It is because
of sinners like us that he has come to have the title of
"Patitapavana" [he who sanctifies or lifts up the
fallen with his grace]. It is we who have brought him such a
distinction.
"Come
to me, your only refuge. I shall free you from all sins. Have no
fear (sarvapapebhyo
moksayisyami ma sucah).
" The assurance that Sri Krsna gives to free us from sin is
absolute. So let us learn to be courageous. To tie up an object
you wind a string round it again and again. If it is to be untied
you will have to do the unwinding in a similar manner. To
eradicate the vasana or sinning you must develop the vasana of
doing good to an equal degree. In between there ought to be
neither haste nor anger. With haste and anger the thread you keep
unwinding will get tangled again. Isvara will come to our help if
we have patience, if we have faith in him and if we are rooted in
dharma.
The
goal of all religions is to wean away man- his mind, his speech
and his body- from sensual pleasure and lead him towards the
Lord. Great men have appeared from time to time and established
their religions with the goal of releasing people from attachment
to their senses, for it is our senses that impel us to sin.
"Transitory is the joy derived from sinful action, from
sensual pleasure. Bliss is union with the Paramatman. " Such
is the teaching of all religions and their goal is to free man
from worldly existence by leading him towards the Lord.
Courtesy: http://www.kamakoti.org/hindudharma/part1/chap2.htm
Courtesy: http://www.kamakoti.org/hindudharma/part1/chap2.htm
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