Geeta - The Kalpataru
Date: Sep 10, 1984
Location: Prasanthi Nilayam, AP
Humans have, perforce, to engage themselves in some action or other. They have to be active, either physically or mentally or both. Apart from securing a contented and happy life, man craves for wealth, for fame, for power and possessions and popular esteem. But, the central teaching of the Geeta is disinterested activity, that is to say, activity suffused with enthusiasm and intelligence, done with perfection, without hope or expectation of rewards and even fruits. "You are entitled to do the work but not to the fruits thereof," says Krishna to Arjuna. The process is really more pleasant and satisfying than the end product. When a person engages himself in arranging for the celebration of a wedding, he forgets his fatigue, the expense or time and money while dispatching invitations, deciding the menu, decorating the house, receiving guests and kinsmen, and supervising the ceremony. When the wedding is over, the joy declines and the fatigue comes into consciousness. The aftermath tastes insipid.
Leave The Result Of Your Work To The Will Of God
When work is undertaken with an egotistic attitude, impelled by selfish motives and inspired by hopes of self-advancement, it feeds greed and pride, envy and hatred. Then, it fastens the bond and fosters the feeling of attachment to more and more profitable works. It promotes ingratitude to those who lent their hands and brains and to God Himself who endowed the person with the urge and the skill. "I did it," one says when it fails. Resentment, depression and despair follow when the work results in failure.
The more deeply one is attached to the fruits, the more intense and painful is one’s grief when one is disappointed. The only means, therefore, to escape from both pride and pain is to leave the result to the Will of God, while one is happy in the thought that one has done one’s duty with all the dedication and care that one is capable of. No one can do better than his best. The body is gifted with all its inherent excellences and defects so that it can be used, every moment of life, for purposes that can sanctify time through service, sacrifice and love.
The word Karma translated as work or action also connotes the rites prescribed by the Vedas (ancient sacred scriptures) in the section named so. They are aimed at securing for the persons performing them a variety of material gains. Some of them promise as reward even a sojourn in heaven. But, they are all result-oriented. Though they cleanse the mind and foster renunciation, they yield the best results only when they have the attainment of world peace and world prosperity as the goal. Karma then becomes Karmayoga, karma yoked with unselfish ideals. All acts undertaken by persons after surrendering their wills and wants to the Lord (Sarva Dharmaan parityajya, Maam ekam Sharanam Vraja—Giving up all ideas of do’s and don’t’s, surrender to Me alone) become so holy and so pure that they do not bind one, either by the iron chain of misery or the golden chain of exultation.
Karma Has To Be An Act Of Fulfillment And Adoration
The Geeta does not encourage inertia, indifference or slothfulness. It recommends Karma as a Yoga (Divine communion), as an activity in tune with the Divine will, directed to the promotion of one’s spiritual consummation. Karma has to be an act of fulfillment, of adoration and of one’s duty to oneself and others. The Geeta marks out the steps and the path towards the realization of this goal. It accepts all attitudes as valuable and sublimates each one into a sadhana (spiritual effort). It elevates the Karma kanda into a means for the uplift of the self and the advancement of mankind. It is Kalpavriksham (Wish-fulfilling Tree), which bestows boons to aspirants of all levels of commitment.
It is an ocean of spiritual wisdom from which each one can bring away as much as the vessel he carries with him can hold. The rational seeker, the active sadhaka and the devotional aspirant all get equal attention and care from the Lord. In fact, the Geeta infuses into every act of daily life the sublimity of Vedanta, the immanence and transcendence of the Divine Principle. The Vedanta is interpreted in such simple terms that even the common man can understand and observe them in daily life.
The Geeta is the authentic Messenger of God; it conveys His Message in clear, convincing fullness. It is the Mother’s comforting counsel for mankind. Grasping it, man can swim safe across the storm-ridden sea of life. It is the surest guide to the sadhaka. It is a mine of mantras; it is an ever-active fountain of Vedantic truths. It is the royal road to victory for seekers of Freedom. It renders that road a path of flowers.
Mandir, Prasanthi Nilayam, on 10-9-1984