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Now, with this
philosophical or cosmical background of our understanding of the entire scheme
of creation, we can have some idea as to what will happen to us after our death
here. And one of the questions put by Arjuna is: What is the way in which a
person has to conduct himself at the time of his departure from this world, for
the sake of contacting God? The major part of the Eighth Chapter is taken up
with this discussion of the fate of the soul after death. But all this
exposition is implicit in this very precise enunciation of the cosmological
basis of the whole of the pattern of creation, which involves the pattern of
our mutual relationships among ourselves as well as the relation between
ourselves and the world of Nature outside. Whatever we think deeply in our
hearts and feel perpetually in our consciousness, throughout our life, as if it
is a part of our very existence itself, that shall fructify itself into a form
of experience after we leave this world. This is the basic psychology of
rebirth, transmigration or metempsychosis. Rebirth is not a punishment that is
meted out to a person by God, or the Creator. It is a natural law operating on
account of the very finitude of the individual, and also on account of the
inseparability of the finite from the Infinite. Transmigration is a blind
groping, in darkness, by the individual, in the direction of the Supreme
Reality. By fumbling and falling down and getting up several times, one learns
by experience the way to God. Birth and death, as a series of experiences,
constitute a kind of training given to us, by the trial-and-error method, so
that we do not immediately learn the wisdom of life even if we take millions of
births and die several times, because the trial-and-error method is not always
the way of knowledge proper; it is not the way of direct illumination. We fall
down several times and then, somehow, gain some idea as to how we have fallen,—that
is a different matter. But knowledge is an inward enlightenment which prevents
us from falling into the pit, rather than the strange thing which expects us to
fall down and then learn that we should not fall again.
Whatever we entertain
in our hearts, as the dearest of our objectives, that we shall become, that we
shall contact, that we shall experience, and that we shall have. Every desire
has to be fulfilled, for no desire can go unfulfilled in the inexhaustible
scheme of God’s Kingdom. Therefore, every little desire, though it may look
small and insignificant on the surface, has the support of the whole cosmos at
its back, just as every little drop and ripple in the ocean has the force of
the ocean at the base. That is why every desire gets rewarded. It is connected
finally with the Fulfiller of all desires. Whatever we ask shall be given to us
in this infinite reservoir and resourceful treasury of God’s creation. And if
we entertain the thought of the Supreme Absolute, God Himself, at the time of
passing, we shall contact Him, and reach Him. But we should also be careful to
note that it is not given to every person to think of God at the time of death,
because the last thought is the fruit of the tree of the life that we lived
throughout this empirical sojourn. We cannot sow the seed of thistle and thorn
and expect apples to come out from that shrub. Whatever we have sown, that we
shall reap. This is the law of action and reaction. When we live a life of
aspiration for God, we should not go by the theological dogma of it being
possible for one to think of God at the time of death, while today one can
think anything one likes. We have to emphasise again that, just as the fruit of
a tree is nothing but the essence of the whole tree, and it cannot be anything
different from what the tree is in essence, our last thought is the cumulative
force with which the whole personality rushes out like a rocket to its
destination, as a consequence of what we have thought and felt and done
throughout our life. We cannot think something there at the end which we have
not at all thought when alive here in our normal life. Just as butter comes out
of milk as its cream and essence, the last thought comes as a cream of what we
have thought throughout our life. It cannot be entirely different. So, the idea
that we can think of God at the time of death, and Yoga is only for old people
is a stupid notion of those who do not know the law of things, because,
firstly, one does not know when that last moment will come. It can be just now,
it can be tomorrow, it can be today, and to imagine that it is to come after
fifty years is obviously the greatest ignorance one can conceive. Secondly, how
could we be sure that we would be thinking of the Absolute when we are passing!
Mostly, one will be shocked, the nerves will appear to crack, the mind will
become unconscious and the person will be taken unawares; at that time who can think
of God?
The practice of Yoga
is enjoined upon every seeker throughout his life, for the purpose of
entertaining this supreme completeness, which is the cumulative outcome of the
whole of thought, feeling and will, a veritable cosmic thought which one has to
enshrine in one’s heart as the final goal. Here, again, we have a little
philosophy behind the entertaining of thoughts and feelings in our lives, how
they have a cosmical significance and decide our future because of their
relationship with the total pattern of creation. What happens to us after we
die? Where do we go? To some extent, this question has been answered by what we
have said already. Whatever we want, that we shall get; and where we wish to
go, there we will be taken; and what we have done here, that will be repaid to
us. Very terrible law, and yet deeply consoling. It is impartial like justice,
and the law of gravitation, or the working of the universe. There are no
friends and no foes for this law. It becomes, therefore, incumbent on every
seeker of Truth to be honestly aspiring for God, to live the life of a search
for the Spirit, rather than a seeking for material possessions and the pleasure
of the senses. The Karma that we perform in life has to be set in tune with the
great Will of God, a reference to which has already been made earlier. If we
regard our actions as our own personal effort directed for an ulterior motive
or a little material benefit, that force, that particular action, will recoil
upon us as the Karmaphala or the fruit of action. But, what for is the
philosophy of the Bhagavadgita if not to enlighten us on the fact that all
action is divine action with a universal motivation. If we can plant ourselves
on this knowledge of the cosmicality of all activities that take place in the
world, we become instruments in the hands of the Universal Power, and we are no
more agents of action but vehicles of action. Then, it is unavoidable on our
part to entertain the thought and feeling of God as the supreme Actor or the
Agent of everything. A life that is propelled by the principle of Karma-Yoga cannot avoid the enshrining of God-Thought throughout its tenure. If we forget
the presence of the mighty Absolute even for a moment, action becomes our
action, and it rebounds upon us, and we shall be responsible, then, for its
consequences. We are, therefore, to perpetually maintain the consciousness of
our inseparability from the Supreme Creator.
This is a mighty
gospel before us of God’s creation, of birth and death, and the fate of the soul
after the passing from this body. Some more explanation is offered in this very
Chapter on the peculiar courses followed by the soul after death, a subject
which is dealt with in detail in the Upanishads but very briefly touched upon
in the Bhagavadgita. There are various avenues of exit from this world. And the
way in which we shall leave this plane, the path that we shall trek, will
depend upon the thoughts that we entertained, once again to repeat the same
point. The extent of the unselfishness that motivated our life here will decide
also the extent of our success in approximating God-realisation. The Gita
mentions two important paths; known as the Northern and the Southern, or the
path of Light and the path of darkness, as they are usually called. The path of
Light is supposed to be that particular way of the ascent of the soul by which
it rises from one stage of perception to another, from level to level. These
are all mystical steps inexplicable by ordinary language, and unintelligible to
the mind. Commentators have gone into great details in the explanation of these
paths, but they are all inadequate in the end. No one can know what these
mysteries are. But suffice it to say that the path of Light implies a gradually
ascending series of movements of the consciousness of the soul in the direction
of larger and larger dimensions of experience, until it reaches the consummate
position, viz., merger in God, entry into the being of the Absolute. It
is available only to those who have practiced meditation, throughout their
lives, on God, in an unselfish manner, expecting nothing from God, and seeking
only union with God.
But the path of
darkness is the path of return. Whatever good we do in this world is repaid in
its own coin and our good deeds bear fruit in the after life. And just as our
bank-balance can get exhausted one day if we go on drawing cheques
continuously, our good deeds can exhaust themselves by experience. And when the
momentum of our good deeds is spent out by experience in our future lives, we
are supposed to revert to the condition from where we started. Hence, actions
should not be performed with any personal motivation. Even when we perform a
charitable deed, it should not be done as if it is a prerogative of our effort.
The great point made out in the statement, ‘let not the left hand know what the
right hand does,’ has a philosophical meaning behind it, apart from its being
an injunction on good motivation. Our good deeds are not supposed to be ‘our’
deeds, they do not belong to ‘us’, for no action can belong to us, really. But
if we insist, ‘I have done a good deed, I have performed a charitable act, I
have shown mercy,’ then we shall reap the fruit of that mercy and good deed, no
doubt. When the force of that particular action is over, we are reborn, to
continue our old work, again. Otherwise, when we do our deeds and works in this
world as a vehicle through which God’s Will operates, neither good nor bad will
cling to our personality. The good and the bad are words which we use to signify
the quality of an action, and when the action is not ours, the quality also
does not belong to us, it goes to him who has done it. All this is difficult
for us to contemplate, for we are not made in this way. We cannot think in an
impersonal manner. We cannot imagine, even for a moment, that we are not the
doers of deeds. We have to be very humble on the spiritual path and cannot
imagine that we are on the topmost pedestal. Who can believe, even for a
second, that one is not the doer of action? We may not say this in words, but
do not we feel in our hearts that we are doers? Well, this is a very serious
matter, indeed. But, if God has taken possession of us, and if we know that
these two paths, the Northern and the Southern, or whatever they are, are only
the empirical movements of the consciousness lodged in the body, and that no
such passage would be necessary for the soul that is united with God, to such a
soul that we are to be, liberation is assured, and God becomes the All-in-All,
the Friend and Supporter and the Benefactor in every way.
God comes nearer and
nearer to us as we proceed through the Chapters of the Gita. In the very early
Chapters, no mention was made, practically, of God. It was all an emphasis on
self-discipline and effort for self-integration; then we were introduced into
the cosmology and the creative forces that were operating behind things. And
then the question was raised as to what happens to one after one leaves the
body, and our relationship with God, the Creator, was discussed. The Eighth
Chapter somewhat stands midway between the earlier chapters and the later ones,
giving us a taste of something of the earlier phases and something of the
future ones, also. From the Ninth Chapter onwards, the religious consciousness
gets unfolded, whereby to live life would be to live religion, and to exist in
the world would mean to live for God.
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