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From just limited association with an organized religion, one gets a basic familiarity with the concept of heaven. “You do good in this life in order to find a better lot in the next. If you are a good person, you are rewarded. If you are a bad person, you get punished.” At first glance, this concept is very easy to dismiss. For starters, no one is sure of the afterlife. Tomorrow is the after of today. We can try to predict what will happen tomorrow, but we are never entirely accurate. I can think about what I am going to eat tomorrow, which restaurant I will visit for lunch. But when tomorrow comes, something could change the plans. I might even change my mind, wanting to eat something else instead. If we can’t predict the next day, which occurs relatively soon, how can we know for sure what the afterlife is?
This uncertainty contributes strongly to the widespread disregard of religious doctrine. But this needn’t be the case, as the pursuit of a better future takes place always. Without really understanding God, man thinks he can find heaven using his own effort. Through difficult physical work, he seeks to travel to new territories, hoping that life will be better there than in the present land. And yet all the difficult work proves fruitless, for the same problems of birth, death, old age and disease are present. Work applied in genuine spiritual life yields a much better result, and the effort isn’t nearly as difficult. Travelling many thousands of miles isn’t required, just a shift in consciousness.
Consider man’s innate yearning to explore. In more recent times, this has taken him to outer space and to areas within it like the moon. Despite the acclaimed space travel, under a sober analysis one would have to face some serious questions. “So you’ve gone into outer space, but what have you gained? Did you prolong your life? Did you find a fountain of youth or something? Did you find a way to prevent death? Did you discover the cause to birth?”
Despite all the work that went into the travel, nothing tangible was learned about man and his purpose to life. From ancient Sanskrit texts like the Bhagavad-gita, we learn that man finds heavenly and hellish conditions all the time, without having to travel far. Indeed, because of duality what is hellish for one person may not be so for another. To me, having to watch daytime television is the greatest punishment. I can’t stand the talk shows that are nothing more than fluff, having no substance to them. To another person, the same television programming is enjoyable. These pleasant and miserable conditions appear and disappear at regular intervals, like the changing of seasons.
“O son of Kunti, the nonpermanent appearance of happiness and distress, and their disappearance in due course, are like the appearance and disappearance of winter and summer seasons. They arise from sense perception, O scion of Bharata, and one must learn to tolerate them without being disturbed.” (Lord Krishna, Bhagavad-gita, 2.14)
The eternal spiritual realm, the only true heaven, cannot be found through physical travel. It is not the distance that makes this realm difficult to reach. The sole requirement for entry is purity in consciousness. The desire of the individual indicates the level of purity. In the impure state, I think I can find heaven on my own, just by travelling somewhere. I think I can make up my own do’s and don’ts, a system of right and wrong, to find lasting happiness. I think I can ignore God, denounce Him, or usurp His authority. Instead of worshiping Him, I can get others to worship me.
In the pure consciousness, I want only to serve Him. I cannot conquer over the material nature. Those who follow the Vedic tradition but still don’t want to serve God inherently understand this limitation. Therefore they pray to Goddess Durga to make their stay in the difficult material land a little less miserable. Still, I can’t always get what I want. I am not God because if I was, I would never be frustrated in my desires.
In Closing:
Since of God you do not know,
Think by yourself to heaven can go.
Millions of dollars airplane to make,
Then long and difficult journey to take.
But what new knowledge have you found?
Is not destiny still to be dust in the ground?
From Vedas get knowledge of heaven real,
Reach it when pure love for God to feel.
