
Freedom is preferred to tyranny. Who would choose to be told what to do, what to think and what to say over being able to determine these things for yourself? The constitutional makeup of the individual is such that the free will propensity is certainly present, but it has one small, but potentially insurmountable, limitation: the playing field of activity. The individual souls roaming the visible land in various bodies share a common trait in that they are sparked by an internal fire, one that can never be completely doused, quelled, or reduced in intensity. But the capability of this fire to burn depends on the association, its fuel if you will. Therefore, for freedom to gain its true potency, for the massive fire of spiritual energy to continue raging forever and ever, an outer covering that allows for the uninhibited movement and freedom of spiritual action must be assumed.
“O chief of the Bharatas, whatever you see in existence, both moving and unmoving, is only the combination of the field of activities and the knower of the field.” (Lord Krishna, Bhagavad-gita, 13.27)
Activities in knowledge are those that lead to the ultimate favorable condition in the future, a disposition that doesn’t flicker in steadiness and doesn’t cease to provide happiness at any future time. In order for such a situation to be found, the natural desires of the soul, the identifying element within any form of life, must be met. There is a difference between body and spirit for conditioned entities, those roaming in a temporary land, life after life through the cycle of reincarnation. Because the soul is the actor, the impetus for all activity, there must be a playing field available that can provide happiness to the spiritual spark within rather than to its outer covering. Activities in sense gratification are driven by illusion because they only speak to the needs of the blunt senses, which are completely tied to the body and thus temporary in their constitution. A diseased man with rashes and spots all over his skin will have a fervent desire to scratch wherever it itches. But this practice isn’t recommended because the scratching will only bring temporary relief coupled with long-term negative side effects like scars.
The soul’s penchant is for freedom, so there must always be activity. Even when restraint is practiced, there still must eventually come some positive engagement that serves as an outlet for the potential for the free exercise of energy that is bottled up within the body. Activities on the playing field known as the material world fail to keep the supreme energy of the soul ignited at all times. The pains and misery caused by mundane sense gratification keep the fire in the belly of the individual lit to a very small degree. Thus the potential for benefitting from spiritual freedom remains untapped.
“The individual soul in the body of a baby cannot show the full power and potency of a grown man, but the Supreme Personality of Godhead Krishna, even when lying on the lap of His mother as a baby, could exhibit His full potency and power by killing Putana and other demons who tried to attack Him.” (Krishna, The Supreme Personality of Godhead, Vol 2, Ch 32)
Living beings of the earthly realm have varying capabilities that depend on the specific makeup of their personal playing field known as the body, but entities in the upper planetary systems have even greater capabilities. They can live for hundreds of thousands of years and control the massive collection of material elements like the rain, sunshine and geographical phenomenon like mountains and oceans. But even these entities, who are known as devatas, or demigods, in the Vedic tradition, are checked in their exercise of freedom. Evidence of this limitation was visible during the torrential downpour instigated by Indra, the king of the heavenly realm, upon the residents of Vrajabhumi during Krishna’s time. Lord Indra has so many names due to his immense potencies and his courageous fighting abilities displayed in the numerous battles against the powerful elements of the world opposed to the saintly class, the asuras. Even with all their strengths, since the devatas are not completely liberated in consciousness, the fire represented by their spiritual potency remains limited in its burning abilities. As such, even when a heavy downpour is brought upon the innocent residents of a farm community, the Supreme Lord, in the form of a small child, can lift up a gigantic hill with His finger and hold it up as an umbrella for days on end to save the townspeople from ruin. No ordinary child, even a heavenly one, could accomplish such a task.
“All the demigods and their exalted qualities, such as religion, knowledge and renunciation, become manifest in the body of one who has developed unalloyed devotion for the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Vasudeva…” (Shrimad Bhagavatam, 5.18.12)
Isn’t Krishna a sectarian figure, a Hindu God? The Supreme Lord, who is fully potent in the areas of beauty, wealth, strength, fame, renunciation and wisdom, is not limited by geographic scope or blind sentiment. His mercy is universally distributed, and His position is always unchanged, irrespective of how anyone chooses to view Him. If even one hundred percent of the world’s population didn’t believe in God or took an ordinary living entity to be supreme, the position of the true Deity wouldn’t change. Generally, there are three different angles of vision adopted by those who are spiritually inclined. We can think of these viewpoints as gradually ascending scales in clarity of vision. Those who understand that there is a God, but don’t really know what He looks like, where He lives, and what His nature is, are understood to be on the platform of Brahman realization. Brahman can be thought of as a giant light of truth, knowledge, wisdom and bliss. Brahman realization is also referred to as the impersonal viewpoint, one where a higher authority power is acknowledged, but the actual relationship of the individual to the higher entity is not readily identified.
The direct presence of the Absolute Truth is within the heart of every living entity, and thus He is responsible for all outcomes to activity. Since the Supreme Truth resides within everyone, surely a discipline which seeks to connect with this authority figure would be deemed a valid religion. But without proper education following an unbroken chain of disciplic succession starting from the original person Himself, the true nature of the spiritual entity responsible for the results of action and the workings of the material elements will not be known. As such, the natural loving spirit of the soul, which goes hand-in-hand with the free will propensity, remains checked. For the service mentality to bear tangible fruits, activity must be tied to an object. In order for something to be considered an object, it must have names, qualities, forms and activities.
This brings us to the highest realization, the viewpoint which is perfect in every respect. The understanding of Brahman can be compared to seeing a giant hill from far away and taking it to be only a small cloud. Just the outskirts of the hill are seen, thus there is no complete information as to the nature of the giant body or the creatures inhabiting the area. Paramatma realization, the viewpoint where the Supreme Soul is seen to be residing within everyone’s heart, represents a clearer picture of the hill, where the distance to the land mass has decreased. The most complete realization, that of seeing the Absolute Truth as Bhagavan, is reserved for those who are actually on the hill and regularly traversing it, deriving tremendous enjoyment from such association. Even Bhagavan realization is limited in a sense, for one can never completely understand the Supreme Lord. But understanding that God is Bhagavan is enough to grant the soul eternal freedom in the sphere of activity that never fails to provide pleasure, while at the same time completely eliminating any negative reactions.
Krishna, as the source of all energy, is the most potent spiritual fire. Irrespective of the fuel He takes on in the form of visible elements, His energy and potency never fade out or get limited in any way. For the individual sparks emanating from the supreme fire, there are always limitations, especially when the field of activity has no direct relationship to the Supreme Lord. Only in those engagements where association with Bhagavan is the intended objective do the fire burning propensities of the individual spirit take on a large magnitude. Regardless of the specific activity, the aim of spirituality is to remain always connected with Bhagavan, seeing to His pleasure and maintaining a firm link in consciousness. The easiest and most potent practice of this discipline is the regular chanting of the holy names, “Hare Krishna Hare Krishna, Krishna Krishna, Hare Hare, Hare Rama Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare”. The name is the most powerful aspect of the Supreme Lord because it automatically reawakens consciousness of His forms, pastimes and qualities. The other aspects of the Supreme Lord don’t automatically complete the picture in the same way.
By following the instructions laid down by the authority figures, who tell us to make devotional service our life’s primary engagement, a spiritual body can be assumed. In the liberated state, the distinction between the knower of activities and the field itself vanishes. The field becomes the instrument that allows the freedom capability to be utilized properly. Anyone who regularly hears about Krishna, chants His name, serves His devotees, offers obeisances to the deity and to the humble servants preaching His message, takes on a humble attitude, and remains committed to the cause of devotional service will surely reassume their original, spiritual body and thus be granted eternal association with the Supreme Lord.
