
Religious scriptures do their best to inform us of the ultimate objective in life, i.e. finding God and developing a relationship with Him. While this assertive approach certainly helps us move forward in spiritual life, there are still some questions that are left unanswered. For example, if material life is so horrible, and a life devoid of God is not worth living, why was this world created in the first place? According to Vedic philosophy, the answer is that the spirit souls cajoled God into creating this phantasmagoria known as material life. Essentially, God knew this place was horrible, but not wanting to interfere with our independence, He let us come here anyway.
While this sheds some light on the issue of creation, it doesn’t answer a larger question. Why would God allow us to suffer in this way? He knows more than we do after all, so He easily could have stopped us from coming here. While mankind has searched for the answer to this question since the beginning of time, a good way to try to understand God’s intentions is to study the nature of love and the enjoyment derived from it. In this regard, the storyline from a typical movie or television show can give us hints into the life cycle of the soul and how the soul trapped in this cycle can ultimately see a happy end to its time on earth.
Let us review the story line of a typical movie. This framework also applies to television sitcoms and dramas. The beginning of a movie starts with the introduction to the characters. The audience member is made aware of the setting of the movie, its main characters, and the basic scope of the actions that will take place. Following this introduction, the basic problem of the movie is established. Without a central problem that needs solving, a movie or television show will be boring to watch. If there wasn’t a problem to be solved, the viewer would have no interest in the story. The movie experience would be akin to watching paint dry.
The secret lies in the fact that we have to watch the entire movie in order to derive the full benefit. For example, say we were to attend an action movie and arrive late. By some mischance or other, we take our seats during the last half hour of the movie. We would only see the ending, i.e. the climax. We’d see the major struggle and the ultimate victory of the good guys. Yet there wouldn’t be much enjoyment derived out of this experience. We only enjoy a movie if we get to follow along with the struggles of the main characters. Without knowledge of the initial problem, and the several failed attempts at solving that problem, the ultimate resolution doesn’t give us as much joy. We need the struggle in order to savor the victory. This one concept can teach us a lot about why we are put on this earth and how we can go about achieving the happiest of endings.
“For the soul there is never birth nor death. Nor, having once been, does he ever cease to be. He is unborn, eternal, ever-existing, undying and primeval. He is not slain when the body is slain.” (Lord Krishna, Bhagavad-gita, 2.20)
Karma is any activity which leads to the development of a material body. Usually karma is equated with good and bad results, but in reality, it deals exclusively with the development of an outer covering for the soul. Good and bad karma is anything that brings about good and bad results in relation to the material body. Therefore karma really has nothing to do with the soul. The soul may be placed in a higher species or a lower one, but it still remains subject to the laws of nature and reincarnation. The Vedas tell us that the point to human life is to rise above the effects of karma; to secure salvation for the soul. The aim of human life is to end reincarnation and bring the soul back to its original home, the spiritual sky where God resides.
“Whatever state of being one remembers when he quits his body, that state he will attain without fail.” (Lord Krishna, Bg. 8.6)
Based on these facts, we see that the original problem for the living entity, the cause of all other problems, is its residence in the material world. As long as one has material desires at the time of death, they are forced to take birth in this temporary and miserable world. In order to reside in this material world, one must assume a material body. The secret to success is finding a way out of this misery and pain. This is where our story begins. Our problem has been defined, but not the solution.
We don’t have to wait until the time of death to experience this frustration. Material life means constantly going through cycles of happiness and despair, gain and loss, ups and downs. Our problems stem from the false mindset of “I” and “Mine”. Thinking in these terms, we’re always accepting and rejecting things. One day we’re accepting a gym membership, while the next day we are swearing off of exercise. One day we’re accepting a significant other through marriage, while the next day we are rejecting the same person through divorce. These interests toggle back and forth like a light switch.
Eventually a person grows tired of material enjoyment. Their frustration will lead them to spiritual life. They’ll want to know why they are put through so much trouble and how they can get out of it. Yet not all spiritual paths are the same. In this world, one will find different religious systems, each of which is based on the different qualities that people inherently possess. Therefore a person may take to a sub-standard or inferior spiritual discipline in the beginning stages. For example, the opposite extreme of material enjoyment is renunciation. Material enjoyment is known as bhoga, while dry renunciation is known as tyaga. Unable to find happiness through the pursuit of bhoga, a person will try their hand at tyaga. Tyaga can involve many different exercises: from mental speculation about the differences between matter and spirit, to severe penances and difficult yoga postures.
Just like with bhoga, tyaga can provide some temporary form of happiness. Yet this enjoyment doesn’t last long, for we see that many yogis take to drinking and smoking after their yoga sessions. Great transcendentalists also come back down to material life and take to philanthropy and charity. So material enjoyment doesn’t do the trick and neither does dry renunciation. It sure seems like all hope is lost, doesn’t it? If this is where our movie [the story of our life] ended, it certainly wouldn’t be a movie worth watching. Luckily for us, there is another way towards salvation, the right way.
“The thoughts of My pure devotees dwell in Me, their lives are surrendered to Me, and they derive great satisfaction and bliss enlightening one another and conversing about Me.” (Lord Krishna, Bg. 10.9)
“After many births and deaths, he who is actually in knowledge surrenders unto Me, knowing Me to be the cause of all causes and all that is. Such a great soul is very rare.” (Lord Krishna, Bg. 7.19)
For those who find Krishna, the extreme joy that results can be directly related to the repeated suffering, in the form of defeat after defeat, which was endured in the past. These defeats represented a form of hopelessness. When there is despair, one gives up their hope of victory. If you think you have a chance at winning and you end up succeeding, it certainly brings about joy. But if you achieve victory after thinking that all hope was lost, the enjoyment derived is unmatched. This is the phenomenon that great writers have tapped into since the beginning of time. Lord Krishna, being the original person and poet, invented this concept. By allowing the jiva souls to come to earth and search after Him, the Lord gave these souls the opportunity to eventually experience the highest form of bliss.
