Sunday, March 24, 2019

A Description of the Hellish Planets 5th Canto Chapter 26 of Srimad Bhagavatam.

A Description of the Hellish Planets

Srimad Bhagavatam Canto 5 Chapter 26 Text 1 to Text 40:

By His Divine Grace A C Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada.



The Twenty-sixth Chapter describes how a sinful man goes to different hells, where he is punished in various ways by the assistants of Yamarāja. As stated in the Bhagavad-gītā (3.27):

prakṛteḥ kriyamāṇāni
guṇaiḥ karmāṇi sarvaśaḥ
ahaṅkāra-vimūḍhātmā
kartāham iti manyate

“The bewildered spirit soul, under the influence of the three modes of material nature, thinks himself to be the doer of activities, which are in actuality carried out by nature.”

The foolish person thinks he is independent of any law. He thinks there is no God or regulative principle and that he can do whatever he likes.

Thus he engages in different sinful activities, and as a result, he is put into different hellish conditions life after life, to be punished by the laws of nature.

The basic principle of his suffering is that he foolishly thinks himself independent, although he is strictly under the control of the laws of material nature.

These laws act due to the influence of the three modes of nature, and therefore each human being also works under three different types of influence. According to how he acts, he suffers different reactions in his next life or in this life.

Religious persons act differently from atheists, and therefore they suffer different reactions.

Śukadeva Gosvāmī describes the following twenty-eight hells:

Tāmisra,
Andhatāmisra,
Raurava,
Mahāraurava,
Kumbhīpāka,
Kālasūtra,
Asi-patravana,
Sūkaramukha,
Andhakūpa,
Kṛmibhojana,
Sandaṁśa,
Taptasūrmi,
Vajrakaṇṭaka-śālmalī,
Vaitaraṇī, Pūyoda,
Prāṇarodha,
Viśasana,
Lālābhakṣa,
Sārameyādana,
Avīci,
Ayaḥpāna,
Kṣārakardama,
Rakṣogaṇa-bhojana,
Śūlaprota,
Dandaśūka,
Avaṭa-nirodhana,
Paryāvartana,
Sūcīmukha.

A person who steals another’s money, wife or possessions is put into the hell known as Tāmisra. A man who tricks someone and enjoys his wife is put into the extremely hellish condition known as Andhatāmisra.

A foolish person absorbed in the bodily concept of life, who on the basis of this principle maintains himself or his wife and children by committing violence against other living entities, is put into the hell known as Raurava. There the animals he killed take birth as creatures called rurus and cause great suffering for him.

Those who kill different animals and birds and then cook them are put by the agents of Yamarāja into the hell known as Kumbhīpāka, where they are boiled in oil. A person who kills a brāhmaṇa is put into the hell known as Kālasūtra, where the land, perfectly level and made of copper, is as hot as an oven.

The killer of a brāhmaṇa burns in that land for many years. One who does not follow scriptural injunctions but who does everything whimsically or follows some rascal is put into the hell known as Asi-patravana.

A government official who poorly administers justice, or who punishes an innocent man, is taken by the assistants of Yamarāja to the hell known as Sūkaramukha, where he is mercilessly beaten.

God has given advanced consciousness to the human being. Therefore he can feel the suffering and happiness of other living beings. The human being bereft of his conscience, however, is prone to cause suffering for other living beings.

The assistants of Yamarāja put such a person into the hell known as Andhakūpa, where he receives proper punishment from his victims. Any person who does not receive or feed a guest properly but who personally enjoys eating is put into the hell known as Kṛmibhojana. There an unlimited number of worms and insects continuously bite him.

A thief is put into the hell known as Sandaṁśa. A person who has sexual relations with a woman who is not to be enjoyed is put into the hell known as Taptasūrmi. A person who enjoys sexual relations with animals is put into the hell known as Vajrakaṇṭaka-śālmalī.

A person born into an aristocratic or highly placed family but who does not act accordingly is put into the hellish trench of blood, pus and urine called the Vaitaraṇī River. One who lives like an animal is put into the hell called Pūyoda. A person who mercilessly kills animals in the forest without sanction is put into the hell called Prāṇarodha.

A person who kills animals in the name of religious sacrifice is put into the hell named Viśasana. A man who forces his wife to drink his semen is put into the hell called Lālābhakṣa.

One who sets a fire or administers poison to kill someone is put into the hell known as Sārameyādana. A man who earns his livelihood by bearing false witness is put into the hell known as Avīci.

A person addicted to drinking wine is put into the hell named Ayaḥpāna. One who violates etiquette by not showing proper respect to superiors is put into the hell known as Kṣārakardama. A person who sacrifices human beings to Bhairava is put into the hell called Rakṣogaṇa-bhojana.

A person who kills pet animals is put into the hell called Śūlaprota. A person who gives trouble to others is put into the hell known as Dandaśūka. One who imprisons a living entity within a cave is put into the hell known as Avaṭa-nirodhana.

A person who shows unwarranted wrath toward a guest in his house is put into the hell called Paryāvartana. A person maddened by possessing riches and thus deeply absorbed in thinking of how to collect money is put into the hell known as Sūcīmukha.

After describing the hellish planets, Śukadeva Gosvāmī describes how pious persons are elevated to the highest planetary system, where the demigods live, and how they then come back again to this earth when the results of their pious activities are finished. Finally he describes the universal form of the Lord and glorifies the Lord’s activities.

SB 5.26.1

Translation:

King Parīkṣit inquired from Śukadeva Gosvāmī: My dear sir, why are the living entities put into different material situations? Kindly explain this to me.
Purport:

Śrīla Viśvanātha Cakravartī Ṭhākura explains that the different hellish planets within this universe are held slightly above the Garbhodaka Ocean and remain situated there.

This chapter describes how all sinful persons go to these hellish planets and how they are punished there by the assistants of Yamarāja. Different individuals with different bodily features enjoy or suffer various reactions according to their past deeds.

SB 5.26.2

Translation:

The great sage Śukadeva Gosvāmī said: My dear King, in this material world there are three kinds of activities — those in the mode of goodness, the mode of passion and the mode of ignorance. Because all people are influenced by the three modes of material nature, the results of their activities are also divided into three.

One who acts in the mode of goodness is religious and happy, one who acts in passion achieves mixed misery and happiness, and one who acts under the influence of ignorance is always unhappy and lives like an animal. Because of the varying degrees to which the living entities are influenced by the different modes of nature, their destinations are also of different varieties.

SB 5.26.3

Translation:

Just as by executing various pious activities one achieves different positions in heavenly life, by acting impiously one achieves different positions in hellish life.

Those who are activated by the material mode of ignorance engage in impious activities, and according to the extent of their ignorance, they are placed in different grades of hellish life. If one acts in the mode of ignorance because of madness, his resulting misery is the least severe.

One who acts impiously but knows the distinction between pious and impious activities is placed in a hell of intermediate severity. And for one who acts impiously and ignorantly because of atheism, the resultant hellish life is the worst.

Because of ignorance, every living entity has been carried by various desires into thousands of different hellish planets since time immemorial. I shall try to describe them as far as possible.

SB 5.26.4

Translation:

King Parīkṣit inquired from Śukadeva Gosvāmī: My dear lord, are the hellish regions outside the universe, within the covering of the universe, or in different places on this planet?

SB 5.26.5

Translation:

The great sage Śukadeva Gosvāmī answered: All the hellish planets are situated in the intermediate space between the three worlds and the Garbhodaka Ocean. They lie on the southern side of the universe, beneath Bhū-maṇḍala, and slightly above the water of the Garbhodaka Ocean.

Pitṛloka is also located in this region between the Garbhodaka Ocean and the lower planetary systems. All the residents of Pitṛloka, headed by Agniṣvāttā, meditate in great samādhi on the Supreme Personality of Godhead and always wish their families well.

Purport:

As previously explained, below our planetary system are seven lower planetary systems, the lowest of which is called Pātālaloka. Beneath Pātālaloka are other planets, known as Narakaloka, or the hellish planets. At the bottom of the universe lies the Garbhodaka Ocean. Therefore the hellish planets lie between Pātālaloka and the Garbhodaka Ocean.

SB 5.26.6

Translation:

The King of the pitās is Yamarāja, the very powerful son of the sun-god. He resides in Pitṛloka with his personal assistants and, while abiding by the rules and regulations set down by the Supreme Lord, has his agents, the Yamadūtas, bring all the sinful men to him immediately upon their death.

After bringing them within his jurisdiction, he properly judges them according to their specific sinful activities and sends them to one of the many hellish planets for suitable punishments.

Purport:

Yamarāja is not a fictitious or mythological character; he has his own abode, Pitṛloka, of which he is king. Agnostics may not believe in hell, but Śukadeva Gosvāmī affirms the existence of the Naraka planets, which lie between the Garbhodaka Ocean and Pātālaloka.

Yamarāja is appointed by the Supreme Personality of Godhead to see that the human beings do not violate His rules and regulations. As confirmed in Bhagavad-gītā (4.17):

karmaṇo hy api boddhavyaṁ
boddhavyaṁ ca vikarmaṇaḥ
akarmaṇaś ca boddhavyaṁ
gahanā karmaṇo gatiḥ

“The intricacies of action are very hard to understand. Therefore one should know properly what action is, what forbidden action is, and what inaction is.” One should understand the nature of karma, vikarma and akarma, and one must act accordingly.

This is the law of the Supreme Personality of Godhead. The conditioned souls, who have come to this material world for sense gratification, are allowed to enjoy their senses under certain regulative principles.

If they violate these regulations, they are judged and punished by Yamarāja. He brings them to the hellish planets and properly chastises them to bring them back to Kṛṣṇa consciousness. By the influence of māyā, however, the conditioned souls remain infatuated with the mode of ignorance.

Thus in spite of repeated punishment by Yamarāja, they do not come to their senses, but continue to live within the material condition, committing sinful activities again and again.

SB 5.26.7

Translation:

Some authorities say that there is a total of twenty-one hellish planets, and some say twenty-eight. My dear King, I shall outline all of them according to their names, forms and symptoms. The names of the different hells are as follows:

Tāmisra,
Andhatāmisra,
Raurava,
Mahāraurava,
Kumbhīpāka,
Kālasūtra,
Asipatravana,
Sūkaramukha,
Andhakūpa,
Kṛmibhojana,
Sandaṁśa,
Taptasūrmi,
Vajrakaṇṭaka-śālmalī,
Vaitaraṇī,
Pūyoda,
Prāṇarodha,
Viśasana,
Lālābhakṣa,
Sārameyādana,
Avīci,
Ayaḥpāna,
Kṣārakardama,
Rakṣogaṇa-bhojana,
Śūlaprota, Dandaśūka,
Avaṭa-nirodhana,
Paryāvartana,
Sūcīmukha.

All these planets are meant for punishing the living entities.

SB 5.26.8

Translation:

My dear King, a person who appropriates another’s legitimate wife, children or money is arrested at the time of death by the fierce Yamadūtas, who bind him with the rope of time and forcibly throw him into the hellish planet known as Tāmisra.

On this very dark planet, the sinful man is chastised by the Yamadūtas, who beat and rebuke him. He is starved, and he is given no water to drink. Thus the wrathful assistants of Yamarāja cause him severe suffering, and sometimes he faints from their chastisement.

SB 5.26.9

Translation:

The destination of a person who slyly cheats another man and enjoys his wife and children is the hell known as Andhatāmisra. There his condition is exactly like that of a tree being chopped at its roots. Even before reaching Andhatāmisra, the sinful living being is subjected to various extreme miseries.

These afflictions are so severe that he loses his intelligence and sight. It is for this reason that learned sages call this hell Andhatāmisra.

SB 5.26.10

Translation:

A person who accepts his body as his self works very hard day and night for money to maintain his own body and the bodies of his wife and children. While working to maintain himself and his family, he may commit violence against other living entities. Such a person is forced to give up his body and his family at the time of death, when he suffers the reaction for his envy of other creatures by being thrown into the hell called Raurava.

Purport:

In Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam it is said:

yasyātma-buddhiḥ kuṇape tri-dhātuke
sva-dhīḥ kalatrādiṣu bhauma-ijya-dhīḥ
yat-tīrtha-buddhiḥ salile na karhicij
janeṣv abhijñeṣu sa eva go-kharaḥ

“One who accepts this bodily bag of three elements [bile, mucus and air] as his self, who has an affinity for an intimate relationship with his wife and children, who considers his land worshipable, who takes bath in the waters of the holy places of pilgrimage but never takes advantage of those persons who are in actual knowledge — he is no better than an ass or a cow.” (Bhāg. 10.84.13)

There are two classes of men absorbed in the material concept of life. Out of ignorance, a man in the first class thinks his body to be his self, and therefore he is certainly like an animal (sa eva go-kharaḥ).

The person in the second class, however, not only thinks his material body to be his self, but also commits all kinds of sinful activities to maintain his body. He cheats everyone to acquire money for his family and his self, and he becomes envious of others without reason.

Such a person is thrown into the hell known as Raurava. If one simply considers his body to be his self, as do the animals, he is not very sinful.

However, if one needlessly commits sins to maintain his body, he is put into the hell known as Raurava. This is the opinion of Śrīla Viśvanātha Cakravartī Ṭhākura. Although animals are certainly in the bodily concept of life, they do not commit any sins to maintain their bodies, mates or offspring.

Therefore animals do not go to hell. However, when a human being acts enviously and cheats others to maintain his body, he is put into a hellish condition.

SB 5.26.11

Translation:

In this life, an envious person commits violent acts against many living entities. Therefore after his death, when he is taken to hell by Yamarāja, those living entities who were hurt by him appear as animals called rurus to inflict very severe pain upon him. Learned scholars call this hell Raurava. Not generally seen in this world, the ruru is more envious than a snake.
Purport:

According to Śrīdhara Svāmī, the ruru is also known as the bhāra-śṛṅga (ati-krūrasya bhāra-śṛṅgākhya-sattvasya apadeśaḥ saṁjñā). Śrīla Jīva Gosvāmī confirms this in his Sandarbha: ruru-śabdasya svayaṁ muninaiva ṭīkā-vidhānāl lokeṣv aprasiddha evāyaṁ jantu-viśeṣaḥ. Thus although rurus are not seen in this world, their existence is confirmed in the śāstras.

SB 5.26.12

Translation:

Punishment in the hell called Mahāraurava is compulsory for a person who maintains his own body by hurting others. In this hell, ruru animals known as kravyāda torment him and eat his flesh.

Purport:

The animalistic person who lives simply in the bodily concept of life is not excused. He is put into the hell known as Mahāraurava and attacked by ruru animals known as kravyādas.

SB 5.26.13

Translation:

For the maintenance of their bodies and the satisfaction of their tongues, cruel persons cook poor animals and birds alive. Such persons are condemned even by man-eaters. In their next lives they are carried by the Yamadūtas to the hell known as Kumbhīpāka, where they are cooked in boiling oil.

SB 5.26.14

Translation:

The killer of a brāhmaṇa is put into the hell known as Kālasūtra, which has a circumference of eighty thousand miles and which is made entirely of copper. Heated from below by fire and from above by the scorching sun, the copper surface of this planet is extremely hot.

Thus the murderer of a brāhmaṇa suffers from being burned both internally and externally. Internally he is burning with hunger and thirst, and externally he is burning from the scorching heat of the sun and the fire beneath the copper surface.

Therefore he sometimes lies down, sometimes sits, sometimes stands up and sometimes runs here and there. He must suffer in this way for as many thousands of years as there are hairs on the body of an animal.

SB 5.26.15

Translation:

If a person deviates from the path of the Vedas in the absence of an emergency, the servants of Yamarāja put him into the hell called Asi-patravana, where they beat him with whips. When he runs hither and thither, fleeing from the extreme pain, on all sides he runs into palm trees with leaves like sharpened swords.

Thus injured all over his body and fainting at every step, he cries out, “Oh, what shall I do now! How shall I be saved!” This is how one suffers who deviates from the accepted religious principles.

Purport:

There is actually only one religious principle: dharmaṁ tu sākṣād bhagavat-praṇītam. The only religious principle is to follow the orders of the Supreme Personality of Godhead. Unfortunately, especially in this Age of Kali, everyone is an atheist. People do not even believe in God, what to speak of following His words. The words nija-veda-patha can also mean “one’s own set of religious principles.”

Formerly there was only one veda-patha, or set of religious principles. Now there are many. It doesn’t matter which set of religious principles one follows: the only injunction is that he must follow them strictly. An atheist, or nāstika, is one who does not believe in the Vedas.

However, even if one takes up a different system of religion, according to this verse he must follow the religious principles he has accepted. Whether one is a Hindu, or a Mohammedan or a Christian, he should follow his own religious principles. However, if one concocts his own religious path within his mind, or if one follows no religious principles at all, he is punished in the hell known as Asi-patravana.

In other words, a human being must follow some religious principles. If he does not follow any religious principles, he is no better than an animal. As Kali-yuga advances, people are becoming godless and taking up so-called secularism. They do not know the punishment awaiting them in Asi-patravana, as described in this verse.

SB 5.26.16

Translation:

In his next life, a sinful king or governmental representative who punishes an innocent person, or who inflicts corporal punishment upon a brāhmaṇa, is taken by the Yamadūtas to the hell named Sūkaramukha, where the most powerful assistants of Yamarāja crush him exactly as one crushes sugarcane to squeeze out the juice. The sinful living entity cries very pitiably and faints, just like an innocent man undergoing punishments. This is the result of punishing a faultless person.

SB 5.26.17

Translation:

By the arrangement of the Supreme Lord, low-grade living beings like bugs and mosquitoes suck the blood of human beings and other animals. Such insignificant creatures are unaware that their bites are painful to the human being.

However, first-class human beings — brāhmaṇas, kṣatriyas and vaiśyas — are developed in consciousness, and therefore they know how painful it is to be killed. A human being endowed with knowledge certainly commits sin if he kills or torments insignificant creatures, who have no discrimination.

The Supreme Lord punishes such a man by putting him into the hell known as Andhakūpa, where he is attacked by all the birds and beasts, reptiles, mosquitoes, lice, worms, flies, and any other creatures he tormented during his life.

They attack him from all sides, robbing him of the pleasure of sleep. Unable to rest, he constantly wanders about in the darkness. Thus in Andhakūpa his suffering is just like that of a creature in the lower species.

Purport:

From this very instructive verse we learn that lower animals, created by the laws of nature to disturb the human being, are not subjected to punishment. Because the human being has developed consciousness, however, he cannot do anything against the principles of varṇāśrama-dharma without being condemned. Kṛṣṇa states in Bhagavad-gītā (4.13), cātur-varṇyaṁ mayā sṛṣṭaṁ guṇa-karma-vibhāgaśaḥ:

“According to the three modes of material nature and the work ascribed to them, the four divisions of human society were created by Me.”

Thus all men should be divided into four classes — brāhmaṇas, kṣatriyas, vaiśyas and śūdras — and they should act according to their ordained regulations. They cannot deviate from their prescribed rules and regulations.

One of these states that they should never trouble any animal, even those that disturb human beings. Although a tiger is not sinful if he attacks another animal and eats its flesh, if a man with developed consciousness does so, he must be punished. In other words, a human being who does not use his developed consciousness but instead acts like an animal surely undergoes punishment in many different hells.

SB 5.26.18

Translation:

A person is considered no better than a crow if after receiving some food, he does not divide it among guests, old men and children, but simply eats it himself, or if he eats it without performing the five kinds of sacrifice. After death he is put into the most abominable hell, known as Kṛmibhojana.

In that hell is a lake 100,000 yojanas [800,000 miles] wide and filled with worms. He becomes a worm in that lake and feeds on the other worms there, who also feed on him. Unless he atones for his actions before his death, such a sinful man remains in the hellish lake of Kṛmibhojana for as many years as there are yojanas in the width of the lake.

Purport:

As stated in Bhagavad-gītā (3.13):

yajña-śiṣṭāśinaḥ santo
mucyante sarva-kilbiṣaiḥ
bhuñjate te tv agham pāpā
ya pacanty ātma-kāraṇāt

“The devotees of the Lord are released from all kinds of sins because they eat food which is first offered for sacrifice. Others, who prepare food for personal sense enjoyment, verily eat only sin.”

All food is given to us by the Supreme Personality of Godhead. Eko bahūnāṁ yo vidadhāti kāmān: the Lord supplies everyone with the necessities of life. Therefore we should acknowledge His mercy by performing yajña (sacrifice). This is the duty of everyone. Indeed, the sole purpose of life is to perform yajña. According to Kṛṣṇa (Bg. 3.9):

yajñārthāt karmaṇo ’nyatra
loko ’yam karma-bandhanaḥ
tad-arthaṁ karma kaunteya
mukta-saṅgaḥ samācara

“Work done as a sacrifice for Viṣṇu has to be performed; otherwise work binds one to this material world. Therefore, O son of Kuntī, perform your prescribed duties for His satisfaction, and in that way you will always remain unattached and free from bondage.”

If we do not perform yajña and distribute prasāda to others, our lives are condemned. Only after performing yajña and distributing the prasāda to all dependents — children, brāhmaṇas and old men — should one eat. However, one who cooks only for himself or his family is condemned, along with everyone he feeds. After death he is put into the hell known as Kṛmibhojana.

SB 5.26.19

Translation:

My dear King, a person who in the absence of an emergency robs a brāhmaṇa — or, indeed, anyone else — of his gems and gold is put into a hell known as Sandaṁśa. There his skin is torn and separated by red-hot iron balls and tongs. In this way, his entire body is cut to pieces.

SB 5.26.20

Translation:

A man or woman who indulges in sexual intercourse with an unworthy member of the opposite sex is punished after death by the assistants of Yamarāja in the hell known as Taptasūrmi. There such men and women are beaten with whips. The man is forced to embrace a red-hot iron form of a woman, and the woman is forced to embrace a similar form of a man. Such is the punishment for illicit sex.

Purport:

Generally a man should not have sexual relations with any woman other than his wife. According to Vedic principles, the wife of another man is considered one’s mother, and sexual relations are strictly forbidden with one’s mother, sister and daughter. If one indulges in illicit sexual relations with another man’s wife, that activity is considered identical with having sex with one’s mother.

This act is most sinful. The same principle holds for a woman also; if she enjoys sex with a man other than her husband, the act is tantamount to having sexual relations with her father or son. Illicit sex life is always forbidden, and any man or woman who indulges in it is punished in the manner described in this verse.

SB 5.26.21

Translation:

A person who indulges in sex indiscriminately — even with animals — is taken after death to the hell known as Vajrakaṇṭaka-śālmalī. In this hell there is a silk-cotton tree full of thorns as strong as thunderbolts. The agents of Yamarāja hang the sinful man on that tree and pull him down forcibly so that the thorns very severely tear his body.

Purport:

The sexual urge is so strong that sometimes a man indulges in sexual relations with a cow, or a woman indulges in sexual relations with a dog. Such men and women are put into the hell known as Vajrakaṇṭaka-śālmalī.

The Kṛṣṇa consciousness movement forbids illicit sex. From the description of these verses, we can understand what an extremely sinful act illicit sex is. Sometimes people disbelieve these descriptions of hell, but whether one believes or not, everything must be carried out by the laws of nature, which no one can avoid.

SB 5.26.22

Translation:

A person who is born into a responsible family — such as a kṣatriya, a member of royalty or a government servant — but who neglects to execute his prescribed duties according to religious principles, and who thus becomes degraded, falls down at the time of death into the river of hell known as Vaitaraṇī. This river, which is a moat surrounding hell, is full of ferocious aquatic animals.

When a sinful man is thrown into the river Vaitaraṇī, the aquatic animals there immediately begin to eat him, but because of his extremely sinful life, he does not leave his body. He constantly remembers his sinful activities and suffers terribly in that river, which is full of stool, urine, pus, blood, hair, nails, bones, marrow, flesh and fat.

SB 5.26.23

Translation:

The shameless husbands of lowborn śūdra women live exactly like animals, and therefore they have no good behavior, cleanliness or regulated life. After death, such persons are thrown into the hell called Pūyoda, where they are put into an ocean filled with pus, stool, urine, mucus, saliva and similar things. Śūdras who could not improve themselves fall into that ocean and are forced to eat those disgusting things.

Purport:

Śrīla Narottama dāsa Ṭhākura has sung,

karma-kāṇḍa, jñāna-kāṇḍa, kevala viṣera bāṇḍa,
amṛta baliyā yebā khāya
nānā yoni sadā phire, kadarya bhakṣaṇa kare,
tāra janma adaḥ-pate yāya

He says that persons following the paths of karma-kāṇḍa and jñāna-kāṇḍa (fruitive activities and speculative thinking) are missing the opportunities for human birth and gliding down into the cycle of birth and death.

Thus there is always the chance that he may be put into the Pūyoda Naraka, the hell named Pūyoda, where one is forced to eat stool, urine, pus, mucus, saliva and other abominable things. It is significant that this verse is spoken especially about śūdras.

If one is born a śūdra, he must continually return to the ocean of Pūyoda to eat horrible things. Thus even a born śūdra is expected to become a brāhmaṇa; that is the meaning of human life. Everyone should improve himself.

Kṛṣṇa says in Bhagavad-gītā (4.13), cātur-varṇyaṁ mayā sṛṣṭaṁ guṇa-karma-vibhāgaśaḥ: “According to the three modes of material nature and the work ascribed to them, four divisions of human society were created by Me.”

Even if one is by qualification a śūdra, he must try to improve his position and become a brāhmaṇa. No one should try to check a person, no matter what his present position is, from coming to the platform of a brāhmaṇa or a Vaiṣṇava. Actually, one must come to the platform of a Vaiṣṇava. Then he automatically becomes a brāhmaṇa.

This can be done only if the Kṛṣṇa consciousness movement is spread, for we are trying to elevate everyone to the platform of Vaiṣṇava. As Kṛṣṇa says in Bhagavad-gītā (18.66), sarva-dharmān parityajya mām ekaṁ śaraṇaṁ vraja:

“Abandon all other duties and simply surrender unto Me.” One must give up the occupational duties of a śūdra, kṣatriya or vaiśya and adopt the occupational duties of a Vaiṣṇava, which include the activities of a brāhmaṇa. Kṛṣṇa explains this in Bhagavad-gītā (9.32):

māṁ hi pārtha vyapāśritya
ye ’pi syuḥ pāpa-yonayaḥ
striyo vaiśyās tathā śūdrās
te ’pi yānti parāṁ gatim

“O son of Pṛthā, those who take shelter in Me, though they be of lower birth — women, vaiśyas [merchants], as well as śūdras [workers] — can approach the supreme destination.” Human life is specifically meant for going back home, back to Godhead. That facility should be given to everyone, whether one be a śūdra, a vaiśya, a woman or a kṣatriya.

This is the purpose of the Kṛṣṇa consciousness movement. However, if one is satisfied to remain a śūdra, he must suffer as described in this verse: tad evātibībhatsitam aśnanti.

SB 5.26.24

Translation:

If in this life a man of the higher classes [brāhmaṇa, kṣatriya and vaiśya] is very fond of taking his pet dogs, mules or asses into the forest to hunt and kill animals unnecessarily, he is placed after death into the hell known as Prāṇarodha. There the assistants of Yamarāja make him their targets and pierce him with arrows.

Purport:

In the Western countries especially, aristocrats keep dogs and horses to hunt animals in the forest. Whether in the West or the East, aristocratic men in the Kali-yuga adopt the fashion of going to the forest and unnecessarily killing animals.

Men of the higher classes (the brāhmaṇas, kṣatriyas and vaiśyas) should cultivate knowledge of Brahman, and they should also give the śūdras a chance to come to that platform. If instead they indulge in hunting, they are punished as described in this verse. Not only are they pierced with arrows by the agents of Yamarāja, but they are also put into the ocean of pus, urine and stool described in the previous verse.

SB 5.26.25

Translation:

A person who in this life is proud of his eminent position, and who heedlessly sacrifices animals simply for material prestige, is put into the hell called Viśasana after death. There the assistants of Yamarāja kill him after giving him unlimited pain.

Purport:

In Bhagavad-gītā (6.41) Kṛṣṇa says, śucīnāṁ śrīmatāṁ gehe yoga-bhraṣṭo ’bhijāyate: “Because of his previous connection with bhakti-yoga, a man is born into a prestigious family of brāhmaṇas or aristocrats.” Having taken such a birth, one should utilize it to perfect bhakti-yoga.

However, due to bad association one often forgets that his prestigious position has been given to him by the Supreme Personality of Godhead, and he misuses it by performing various kinds of so-called yajñas like Kālī-pūjā or Durgā-pūjā, in which poor animals are sacrificed. How such a person is punished is described herein.

The word dambha-yajñeṣu in this verse is significant. If one violates the Vedic instructions while performing yajña and simply makes a show of sacrifice for the purpose of killing animals, he is punishable after death. In Calcutta there are many slaughterhouses where animal flesh is sold that has supposedly been offered in sacrifice before the goddess Kālī.

The śāstras enjoin that one can sacrifice a small goat before the goddess Kālī once a month. Nowhere is it said that one can maintain a slaughterhouse in the name of temple worship and daily kill animals unnecessarily. Those who do so receive the punishments described herein.

SB 5.26.26

Translation:

If a foolish member of the twice-born classes [brāhmaṇa, kṣatriya and vaiśya] forces his wife to drink his semen out of a lusty desire to keep her under control, he is put after death into the hell known as Lālābhakṣa. There he is thrown into a flowing river of semen, which he is forced to drink.

Purport:

The practice of forcing one’s wife to drink one’s own semen is a black art practiced by extremely lusty persons. Those who practice this very abominable activity say that if a wife is forced to drink her husband’s semen, she remains very faithful to him.

Generally only low-class men engage in this black art, but if a man born in a higher class does so, after death he is put into the hell known as Lālābhakṣa. There he is immersed in the river known as Śukra-nadī and forced to drink semen.

SB 5.26.27

Translation:

In this world, some persons are professional plunderers who set fire to others’ houses or administer poison to them. Also, members of the royalty or government officials sometimes plunder mercantile men by forcing them to pay income tax and by other methods.

After death such demons are put into the hell known as Sārameyādana. On that planet there are 720 dogs with teeth as strong as thunderbolts. Under the orders of the agents of Yamarāja, these dogs voraciously devour such sinful people.

Purport:

In the Twelfth Canto of Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam, it is said that in this Age of Kali everyone will be extremely disturbed by three kinds of tribulations: scarcity of rain, famine, and heavy taxation by the government.

Because human beings are becoming more and more sinful, there will be a scarcity of rain, and naturally no food grains will be produced. On the plea of relieving the suffering caused by the ensuing famine, the government will impose heavy taxes, especially on the wealthy mercantile community.

In this verse, the members of such a government are described as dasyu, thieves. Their main activity will be to plunder the wealth of the people. Whether a highway robber or a government thief, such a man will be punished in his next life by being thrown into the hell known as Sārameyādana, where he will suffer greatly from the bites of ferocious dogs.

SB 5.26.28

Translation:

A person who in this life bears false witness or lies while transacting business or giving charity is severely punished after death by the agents of Yamarāja. Such a sinful man is taken to the top of a mountain eight hundred miles high and thrown headfirst into the hell known as Avīcimat.

This hell has no shelter and is made of strong stone resembling the waves of water. There is no water there, however, and thus it is called Avīcimat [waterless]. Although the sinful man is repeatedly thrown from the mountain and his body broken to tiny pieces, he still does not die but continuously suffers chastisement.

SB 5.26.29

Translation:

Any brāhmaṇa or brāhmaṇa’s wife who drinks liquor is taken by the agents of Yamarāja to the hell known as Ayaḥpāna. This hell also awaits any kṣatriya, vaiśya, or person under a vow who in illusion drinks soma-rasa. In Ayaḥpāna the agents of Yamarāja stand on their chests and pour hot melted iron into their mouths.

Purport:

One should not be a brāhmaṇa in name only and engage in all kinds of sinful activities, especially drinking liquor. Brāhmaṇas, kṣatriyas and vaiśyas must behave according to the principles of their order. If they fall down to the level of śūdras, who are accustomed to drink liquor, they will be punished as described herein.

SB 5.26.30

Translation:

A lowborn and abominable person who in this life becomes falsely proud, thinking “I am great,” and who thus fails to show proper respect to one more elevated than he by birth, austerity, education, behavior, caste or spiritual order, is like a dead man even in this lifetime, and after death he is thrown headfirst into the hell known as Kṣārakardama. There he must suffer great tribulation at the hands of the agents of Yamarāja.

Purport:

One should not become falsely proud. One must be respectful toward a person more elevated than he by birth, education, behavior, caste or spiritual order. If one does not show respect to such highly elevated persons but indulges in false pride, he receives punishment in Kṣārakardama.

SB 5.26.31

Translation:

There are men and women in this world who sacrifice human beings to Bhairava or Bhadra Kālī and then eat their victims’ flesh. Those who perform such sacrifices are taken after death to the abode of Yamarāja, where their victims, having taken the form of Rākṣasas, cut them to pieces with sharpened swords.

Just as in this world the man-eaters drank their victims’ blood, dancing and singing in jubilation, their victims now enjoy drinking the blood of the sacrificers and celebrating in the same way.

SB 5.26.32

Translation:

In this life some people give shelter to animals and birds that come to them for protection in the village or forest, and after making them believe that they will be protected, such people pierce them with lances or threads and play with them like toys, giving them great pain.

After death such people are brought by the assistants of Yamarāja to the hell known as Śūlaprota, where their bodies are pierced with sharp, needlelike lances. They suffer from hunger and thirst, and sharp-beaked birds such as vultures and herons come at them from all sides to tear at their bodies. Tortured and suffering, they can then remember the sinful activities they committed in the past.

SB 5.26.33

Translation:

Those who in this life are like envious serpents, always angry and giving pain to other living entities, fall after death into the hell known as Dandaśūka. My dear King, in this hell there are serpents with five or seven hoods. These serpents eat such sinful persons just as snakes eat mice.

SB 5.26.34

Translation:

Those who in this life confine other living entities in dark wells, granaries or mountain caves are put after death into the hell known as Avaṭa-nirodhana. There they themselves are pushed into dark wells, where poisonous fumes and smoke suffocate them and they suffer very severely.

SB 5.26.35

Translation:

A householder who receives guests or visitors with cruel glances, as if to burn them to ashes, is put into the hell called Paryāvartana, where he is gazed at by hard-eyed vultures, herons, crows and similar birds, which suddenly swoop down and pluck out his eyes with great force.

Purport:

According to the Vedic etiquette, even an enemy who comes to a householder’s home should be received in such a gentle way that he forgets that he has come to the home of an enemy. A guest who comes to one’s home should be received very politely.

If he is unwanted, the householder should not stare at him with unblinking eyes, for one who does so will be put into the hell known as Paryāvartana after death, and there many ferocious birds like vultures, crows, and herons will suddenly come upon him and pluck out his eyes.

SB 5.26.36

Translation:

One who in this world or this life is very proud of his wealth always thinks, “I am so rich. Who can equal me?” His vision is twisted, and he is always afraid that someone will take his wealth. Indeed, he even suspects his superiors. His face and heart dry up at the thought of losing his wealth, and therefore he always looks like a wretched fiend.

He is not in any way able to obtain actual happiness, and he does not know what it is to be free from anxiety. Because of the sinful things he does to earn money, augment his wealth and protect it, he is put into the hell called Sūcīmukha, where the officials of Yamarāja punish him by stitching thread through his entire body like weavers manufacturing cloth.

Purport:

When one possesses more wealth than necessary, he certainly becomes very proud. This is the situation of men in modern civilization. According to the Vedic culture, brāhmaṇas do not possess anything, whereas kṣatriyas possess riches, but only for performing sacrifices and other noble activities as prescribed in the Vedic injunctions.

A vaiśya also earns money honestly through agriculture, cow protection and some trade. If a śūdra gets money, however, he will spend it lavishly, without discrimination, or simply accumulate it for no purpose.

Because in this age there are no qualified brāhmaṇas, kṣatriyas or vaiśyas, almost everyone is a śūdra (kalau śūdra-sambhavaḥ). Therefore the śūdra mentality is causing great harm to modern civilization.

A śūdra does not know how to use money to render transcendental loving service to the Lord. Money is also called lakṣmī, and Lakṣmī is always engaged in the service of Nārāyaṇa. Wherever there is money, it must be engaged in the service of Lord Nārāyaṇa.

Everyone should use his money to spread the great transcendental movement of Kṛṣṇa consciousness. If one does not spend money for this purpose but accumulates more than necessary, he will certainly become proud of the money he illegally possesses. The money actually belongs to Kṛṣṇa, who says in Bhagavad-gītā (5.29), bhoktāraṁ yajña-tapasāṁ sarva-loka-maheśvaram:

“I am the true enjoyer of sacrifices and penances, and I am the owner of all the planets.”

Therefore nothing belongs to anyone but Kṛṣṇa. One who possesses more money than he needs should spend it for Kṛṣṇa. Unless one does so, he will become puffed up because of his false possessions, and therefore he will be punished in the next life, as described herein.

SB 5.26.37

Translation:

My dear King Parīkṣit, in the province of Yamarāja there are hundreds and thousands of hellish planets. The impious people I have mentioned — and also those I have not mentioned — must all enter these various planets according to the degree of their impiety.

Those who are pious, however, enter other planetary systems, namely the planets of the demigods. Nevertheless, both the pious and impious are again brought to earth after the results of their pious or impious acts are exhausted.

Purport:

This corresponds to the beginning of Lord Kṛṣṇa’s instructions in Bhagavad-gītā. Tathā dehāntara-prāptiḥ: within this material world, one is simply meant to change from one body to another in different planetary systems. Ūrdhvaṁ gacchanti sattva-sthā: those in the mode of goodness are elevated to the heavenly planets.

Adho gacchanti tāmasāḥ: similarly, those too engrossed in ignorance enter the hellish planetary systems. Both of them, however, are subjected to the repetition of birth and death. In Bhagavad-gītā it is stated that even one who is very pious returns to earth after his enjoyment in the higher planetary systems is over (kṣīṇe puṇye martya-lokaṁ viśanti).

Therefore, going from one planet to another does not solve the problems of life. The problems of life will only be solved when we no longer have to accept a material body. This can be possible if one simply becomes Kṛṣṇa conscious. As Kṛṣṇa says in Bhagavad-gītā (4.9):

janma karma ca me divyam
evaṁ yo vetti tattvataḥ
tyaktvā dehaṁ punar janma
naiti mām eti so ’rjuna

“One who knows the transcendental nature of My appearance and activities does not, upon leaving the body, take his birth again in this material world, but attains My eternal abode, O Arjuna.” This is the perfection of life and the real solution to life’s problems. We should not be eager to go to the higher, heavenly planetary systems, nor should we act in such a way that we have to go to the hellish planets.

The complete purpose of this material world will be fulfilled when we resume our spiritual identities and go back home, back to Godhead. The very simple method for doing this is prescribed by the Supreme Personality of Godhead.

Sarva-dharmān parityajya mām ekaṁ śaraṇaṁ vraja. One should be neither pious nor impious. One should be a devotee and surrender to the lotus feet of Kṛṣṇa. This surrendering process is also very easy. Even a child can perform it.

Man-manā bhava mad-bhakto mad-yājī māṁ namaskuru. One must always simply think of Kṛṣṇa by chanting Hare Kṛṣṇa, Hare Kṛṣṇa, Kṛṣṇa Kṛṣṇa, Hare Hare/ Hare Rāma, Hare Rāma, Rāma Rāma, Hare Hare. One should become Kṛṣṇa’s devotee, worship Him and offer obeisances to Him. Thus one should engage all the activities of his life in the service of Lord Kṛṣṇa.

SB 5.26.38

Translation:

In the beginning [the second and third cantos of Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam] I have already described how one can progress on the path of liberation. In the Purāṇas the vast universal existence, which is like an egg divided into fourteen parts, is described. This vast form is considered the external body of the Lord, created by His energy and qualities. It is generally called the virāṭ-rūpa.

If one reads the description of this external form of the Lord with great faith, or if one hears about it or explains it to others to propagate bhāgavata-dharma, or Kṛṣṇa consciousness, his faith and devotion in spiritual consciousness, Kṛṣṇa consciousness, will gradually increase. Although developing this consciousness is very difficult, by this process one can purify himself and gradually come to an awareness of the Supreme Absolute Truth.

Purport:

The Kṛṣṇa consciousness movement is pushing forward the publication of Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam, as explained especially for the understanding of the modern civilized man, to awaken him to his original consciousness.

Without this consciousness, one melts into complete darkness. Whether one goes to the upper planetary systems or the hellish planetary systems, he simply wastes his time.

Therefore one should hear of the universal position of the virāṭ form of the Lord as described in Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam. That will help one save himself from material conditional life and gradually elevate him to the path of liberation so that he can go back home, back to Godhead.

SB 5.26.39

Translation:

One who is interested in liberation, who accepts the path of liberation and is not attracted to the path of conditional life, is called yati, or a devotee. Such a person should first control his mind by thinking of the virāṭ-rūpa, the gigantic universal form of the Lord, and then gradually think of the spiritual form of Kṛṣṇa [sac-cid-ānanda-vigraha] after hearing of both forms.

Thus one’s mind is fixed in samādhi. By devotional service one can then realize the spiritual form of the Lord, which is the destination of devotees. Thus his life becomes successful.

Purport:

It is said, mahat-sevāṁ dvāram āhur vimukteḥ: if one wants to progress on the path of liberation, he should associate with mahātmās, or liberated devotees, because in such association there is a full chance for hearing, describing and chanting about the name, form, qualities and paraphernalia of the Supreme Personality of Godhead, all of which are described in Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam.

On the path of bondage, one eternally undergoes the repetition of birth and death. One who desires liberation from such bondage should join the International Society for Krishna Consciousness and thus take advantage of the opportunity to hear Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam from devotees and also explain it to propagate Kṛṣṇa consciousness.

SB 5.26.40

bhū-dvīpa-varṣa-sarid-adri-nabhaḥ-samudra-
pātāla-diṅ-naraka-bhāgaṇa-loka-saṁsthā
Translation:

My dear King, I have now described for you this planet earth, other planetary systems, and their lands [varṣas], rivers and mountains. I have also described the sky, the oceans, the lower planetary systems, the directions, the hellish planetary systems and the stars.

These constitute the virāṭ-rūpa, the gigantic material form of the Lord, on which all living entities repose. Thus I have explained the wonderful expanse of the external body of the Lord.

Thus end the Bhaktivedanta purports of the Fifth Canto, Twenty-sixth Chapter, of Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam, entitled “A Description of the Hellish Planets.”

— Completed in the Honolulu temple of the Pañca-tattva, June 5, 1975.

The Orbits of the Planets. Srimad Bhagavatam Canto 5 Chapter 22

The Orbits of the Planets

Srimad Bhagavatam Canto 5 Chapter 22: ‘The Orbits of the Planets’ text 1 to text 17 by His Divine Grace A.C Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

In this chapter the orbits of the planets are described. According to the movements of the moon and other planets, all the inhabitants of the universe are prone to auspicious and inauspicious situations. This is referred to as the influence of the stars.

The sun-god, who controls the affairs of the entire universe, especially in regard to heat, light, seasonal changes and so on, is considered an expansion of Nārāyaṇa. He represents the three Vedas — Ṛg, Yajur and Sāma — and therefore he is known as Trayīmaya, the form of Lord Nārāyaṇa.

Sometimes the sun-god is also called Sūrya Nārāyaṇa. The sun-god has expanded himself in twelve divisions, and thus he controls the six seasonal changes and causes winter, summer, rain and so on.

Yogīs and karmīs following the varṇāśrama institution, who practice haṭha or aṣṭāṅga-yoga or who perform agnihotra sacrifices, worship Sūrya Nārāyaṇa for their own benefit. The demigod Sūrya is always in touch with the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Nārāyaṇa.

Residing in outer space, which is in the middle of the universe, between Bhūloka and Bhuvarloka, the sun rotates through the time circle of the zodiac, represented by twelve rāśis, or signs, and assumes different names according to the sign he is in.

For the moon, every month is divided into two fortnights. Similarly, according to solar calculations, a month is equal to the time the sun spends in one constellation; two months constitute one season, and there are twelve months in a year.

The entire area of the sky is divided into two halves, each representing an ayana, the course traversed by the sun within a period of six months. The sun travels sometimes slowly, sometimes swiftly and sometimes at a moderate speed. In this way it travels within the three worlds, consisting of the heavenly planets, the earthly planets and outer space. These orbits are referred to by great learned scholars by the names Saṁvatsara, Parivatsara, Iḍāvatsara, Anuvatsara and Vatsara.

The moon is situated 100,000 yojanas above the rays of the sunshine. Day and night on the heavenly planets and Pitṛloka are calculated according to its waning and waxing. Above the moon by a distance of 200,000 yojanas are some stars, and above these stars is Śukra-graha (Venus), whose influence is always auspicious for the inhabitants of the entire universe.

Above Śukra-graha by 200,000 yojanas is Budha-graha (Mercury), whose influence is sometimes auspicious and sometimes inauspicious. Next, above Budha-graha by 200,000 yojanas, is Aṅgāraka (Mars), which almost always has an unfavorable influence.

Above Aṅgāraka by another 200,000 yojanas is the planet called Bṛhaspati-graha (Jupiter), which is always very favorable for qualified brāhmaṇas. Above Bṛhaspati-graha is the planet Śanaiścara (Saturn), which is very inauspicious, and above Saturn is a group of seven stars occupied by great saintly persons who are always thinking of the welfare of the entire universe. These seven stars circumambulate Dhruvaloka, which is the residence of Lord Viṣṇu within this universe.

SB 5.22.1

Translation:

King Parīkṣit inquired from Śukadeva Gosvāmī: My dear lord, you have already affirmed the truth that the supremely powerful sun-god travels around Dhruvaloka with both Dhruvaloka and Mount Sumeru on his right. Yet at the same time the sun-god faces the signs of the zodiac and keeps Sumeru and Dhruvaloka on his left. How can we reasonably accept that the sun-god proceeds with Sumeru and Dhruvaloka on both his left and right simultaneously?

SB 5.22.2

Translation:

Śrī Śukadeva Gosvāmī clearly answered: When a potter’s wheel is moving and small ants located on that big wheel are moving with it, one can see that their motion is different from that of the wheel because they appear sometimes on one part of the wheel and sometimes on another.

Similarly, the signs and constellations, with Sumeru and Dhruvaloka on their right, move with the wheel of time, and the antlike sun and other planets move with them. The sun and planets, however, are seen in different signs and constellations at different times. This indicates that their motion is different from that of the zodiac and the wheel of time itself.

SB 5.22.3

Translation:

The original cause of the cosmic manifestation is the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Nārāyaṇa. When great saintly persons, fully aware of the Vedic knowledge, offered prayers to the Supreme Person, He descended to this material world in the form of the sun to benefit all the planets and purify fruitive activities. He divided Himself into twelve parts and created seasonal forms, beginning with spring. In this way He created the seasonal qualities, such as heat, cold and so on.

SB 5.22.4

Translation:

According to the system of four varṇas and four āśramas, people generally worship the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Nārāyaṇa, who is situated as the sun-god. With great faith they worship the Supreme Personality as the Supersoul according to ritualistic ceremonies handed down in the three Vedas, such as agnihotra and similar higher and lower fruitive acts, and according to the process of mystic yoga. In this way they very easily attain the ultimate goal of life.

SB 5.22.5

Translation:

The sun-god, who is Nārāyaṇa, or Viṣṇu, the soul of all the worlds, is situated in outer space between the upper and lower portions of the universe. Passing through twelve months on the wheel of time, the sun comes in touch with twelve different signs of the zodiac and assumes twelve different names according to those signs.

The aggregate of those twelve months is called a saṁvatsara, or an entire year. According to lunar calculations, two fortnights — one of the waxing moon and the other of the waning — form one month. That same period is one day and night for the planet Pitṛloka. According to stellar calculations, a month equals two and one quarter constellations. When the sun travels for two months, a season passes, and therefore the seasonal changes are considered parts of the body of the year.

SB 5.22.6

Translation:

Thus the time the sun takes to rotate through half of outer space is called an ayana, or its period of movement [in the north or in the south].

SB 5.22.7

Translation:

The sun-god has three speeds — slow, fast and moderate. The time he takes to travel entirely around the spheres of heaven, earth and space at these three speeds is referred to, by learned scholars, by the five names Saṁvatsara, Parivatsara, Iḍāvatsara, Anuvatsara and Vatsara.

Purport:

According to solar astronomical calculations, each year extends six days beyond the calendar year, and according to lunar calculations, each year is six days shorter. Therefore, because of the movements of the sun and moon, there is a difference of twelve days between the solar and lunar years.

As the Saṁvatsara, Parivatsara, Iḍāvatsara, Anuvatsara and Vatsara pass by, two extra months are added within each five years. This makes a sixth saṁvatsara, but because that saṁvatsara is extra, the solar system is calculated according to the above five names.

SB 5.22.8

Translation:

Above the rays of the sunshine by a distance of 100,000 yojanas [800,000 miles] is the moon, which travels at a speed faster than that of the sun. In two lunar fortnights the moon travels through the equivalent of a saṁvatsara of the sun, in two and a quarter days it passes through a month of the sun, and in one day it passes through a fortnight of the sun.

Purport:
When we take into account that the moon is 100,000 yojanas, or 800,000 miles, above the rays of the sunshine, it is very surprising that the modern excursions to the moon could be possible. Since the moon is so distant, how space vehicles could go there is a doubtful mystery.

Modern scientific calculations are subject to one change after another, and therefore they are uncertain. We have to accept the calculations of the Vedic literature. These Vedic calculations are steady; the astronomical calculations made long ago and recorded in the Vedic literature are correct even now. Whether the Vedic calculations or modern ones are better may remain a mystery for others, but as far as we are concerned, we accept the Vedic calculations to be correct.

SB 5.22.9

Translation:

When the moon is waxing, the illuminating portions of it increase daily, thus creating day for the demigods and night for the pitās. When the moon is waning, however, it causes night for the demigods and day for the pitās.

In this way the moon passes through each constellation of stars in thirty muhūrtas [an entire day]. The moon is the source of nectarean coolness that influences the growth of food grains, and therefore the moon-god is considered the life of all living entities. He is consequently called Jīva, the chief living being within the universe.

SB 5.22.10

Translation:

Because the moon is full of all potentialities, it represents the influence of the Supreme Personality of Godhead. The moon is the predominating deity of everyone’s mind, and therefore the moon-god is called Manomaya. He is also called Annamaya because he gives potency to all herbs and plants, and he is called Amṛtamaya because he is the source of life for all living entities.

The moon pleases the demigods, pitās, human beings, animals, birds, reptiles, trees, plants and all other living entities. Everyone is satisfied by the presence of the moon. Therefore the moon is also called Sarvamaya [all-pervading].

SB 5.22.11

Translation:

There are many stars located 200,000 yojanas [1,600,000 miles] above the moon. By the supreme will of the Supreme Personality of Godhead, they are fixed to the wheel of time, and thus they rotate with Mount Sumeru on their right, their motion being different from that of the sun. There are twenty-eight important stars, headed by Abhijit.

Purport:

The stars referred to herein are 1,600,000 miles above the sun, and thus they are 4,000,000 miles above the earth.

SB 5.22.12

Translation:

Some 1,600,000 miles above this group of stars is the planet Venus, which moves at almost exactly the same pace as the sun according to swift, slow and moderate movements. Sometimes Venus moves behind the sun, sometimes in front of the sun and sometimes along with it. Venus nullifies the influence of planets that are obstacles to rainfall. Consequently its presence causes rainfall, and it is therefore considered very favorable for all living beings within this universe. This has been accepted by learned scholars.

SB 5.22.13

Translation:

Mercury is described to be similar to Venus, in that it moves sometimes behind the sun, sometimes in front of the sun and sometimes along with it. It is 1,600,000 miles above Venus, or 7,200,000 miles above earth.

Mercury, which is the son of the moon, is almost always very auspicious for the inhabitants of the universe, but when it does not move along with the sun, it forbodes cyclones, dust, irregular rainfall, and waterless clouds. In this way it creates fearful conditions due to inadequate or excessive rainfall.

SB 5.22.14

Translation:

Situated 1,600,000 miles above Mercury, or 8,800,000 miles above earth, is the planet Mars. If this planet does not travel in a crooked way, it crosses through each sign of the zodiac in three fortnights and in this way travels through all twelve, one after another. It almost always creates unfavorable conditions in respect to rainfall and other influences.

SB 5.22.15

Translation:

Situated 1,600,000 miles above Mars, or 10,400,000 miles above earth, is the planet Jupiter, which travels through one sign of the zodiac within the period of a Parivatsara. If its movement is not curved, the planet Jupiter is very favorable to the brāhmaṇas of the universe.

SB 5.22.16

Translation:

Situated 1,600,000 miles above Jupiter, or 12,000,000 miles above earth, is the planet Saturn, which passes through one sign of the zodiac in thirty months and covers the entire zodiac circle in thirty Anuvatsaras. This planet is always very inauspicious for the universal situation.

SB 5.22.17

Translation:

Situated 8,800,000 miles above Saturn, or 20,800,000 miles above earth, are the seven saintly sages, who are always thinking of the well-being of the inhabitants of the universe. They circumambulate the supreme abode of Lord Viṣṇu, known as Dhruvaloka, the polestar.

Purport:

Śrīla Madhvācārya quotes the following verse from the Brahmāṇḍa Purāṇa:

jñānānandātmano viṣṇuḥ
śiśumāra-vapuṣy atha
ūrdhva-lokeṣu sa vyāpta
ādityādyās tad-āśritā

“Lord Viṣṇu, who is the source of knowledge and transcendental bliss, has assumed the form of Śiśumāra in the seventh heaven, which is situated in the topmost level of the universe. All the other planets, beginning with the sun, exist under the shelter of this Śiśumāra planetary system.”

Thus end the Bhaktivedanta purports of the Fifth Canto, Twenty-second Chapter, of Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam, entitled “The Orbits of the Planets.”



An important historical letter by His Grace Ravindra Svarupa dasa ACBSP meant to protect ISKCON from outside influences.

An important historical letter by His Grace Ravindra Svarupa dasa ACBSP meant to protect ISKCON from outside influences.

16 July, 1998



By His Grace Ravindra Svarupa dasa ACBSP.

In 1990 I was persuaded by some who were then taking siksa from Narayana Maharaja to visit him. In the course of our discussion, the invocation of Sri Isopanisad somehow came up, and I rendered the meaning and purport the way it was presented by Srila Prabhupada,mentioning that this world (‘idam’), as an emanation from the ‘purnam’, is also ‘purnam’.

Narayana Maharaja immediately cut me off, and pronounced (in quite an ex cathedra manner) that I understood the text incorrectly. “No!” he said.

“The material world is not purnam.”‘Idam’ did not refer to this material world, which cannot be purnam. Rather, he said, ‘idam’ refers to Visnu-tattva expansions like Balarama. They are purnam.

I was a bit shocked. Here I was Prabhupada’s disciple, yet he was telling me Prabhupada was in error in his books.

Of course, I understood at once that Narayana Maharaja had to be ignorant of Prabhupada’s books. He had not been enlightened by Prabhupada’s brilliant account of just what it meant for this material world to be realized as a complete whole.

It seemed weird to give an interpretation that ignored the context of the invocation, and to ignore the fact that everywhere in the Upanisads and the Bhagavatam ‘idam‘ is conventionally used to stand for ‘this world’; and how strange it is to use a neuter singular pronoun to refer to Balarama and other expansions.

To give him the benefit of the doubt, I assume he had some authority for his gloss of the sruti mantra. At any rate, Prabhupada’s understanding is clearly far more profound.

I actually felt sorry for Narayana Maharaja that he had not received the benefit of Prabhupada’s teaching.

Although during our meeting Narayana Maharaja showed himself skillful at managing statusrelations, adroit in assuming the role of the teacher and putting me in the position of a pupil, he blew it (as far as I was concerned), and I decided to keep my distance. I had premonitions of trouble.

When, a few years later, it became known that Narayana Maharaja was claiming to be Prabhupada’s (first, senior-most) disciple, and even his designated successor and therefore our own authorized siksa guru, I remembered our 1990 meeting, and I could not accept this claim at all!

Didn’t Prabhupada emphasize the importance of his books for us?

Didn’t he tell us that association with him via his books was better than his personal association?

Now, how is a person who has never even bothered to read Prabhupada’s books to be considered his siksa disciple? How is he to represent Prabhupada to us?

I’ve been told that the claim Narayana Maharaja makes for himself has inflated over time. At first, he seemed to present himself simply as a friend, a benign siksa guru. By now, however, he has announced himself as the successor-acarya to Prabhupada, the authorized acarya of ISKCON.

And he tells the disciples of Prabhupada, “I know your guru better than you do!” And one-time followers of Prabhupada, like Yadurani dasi, proclaim the obvious conclusion: ”We can’t know Prabhupada unless we go through Narayana Maharaja!”

She says, “Only an uttama adhikari can understand an uttama adhikari,” which does makeone wonder how she is supposed to be able to understand Narayana Maharaja.

Two years ago, Lokanatha Swami brought ISKCON’s parikrama party to Kesavji Gaudiya Math in Mathura, where Narayana Maharaja addressed them.

It became quite emotional. He said that he used to “lie under the Tamal tree” and to “rest his head in the lap of Giriraja.” He said that even Lokanatha Swami used to be his friend. But all of them left him. They deserted him.

And then, when the parikrama party had left, Narayana Maharaja turned to his disciples and said,

“Not one of these is a true follower of Srila Prabhupada! I am the only true follower of Srila Prabhupada!”

Other witnesses have heard him voice the same idea still more recently: “I am the successor to Srila Prabhupada,” he says. Even: “I am ISKCON.”

I find it strange indeed that Prabhupada, who was so careful to explain things to us, revealed nothing of this occult plan for succession.

It seems he transmitted it, in private code, to Narayana Maharaja. For example, Narayana Maharaja explains that Prabhupada’s statement that Narayana Maharaja could show Prabhupada’s disciples how to put their spiritual master in his samadhi, has an esoteric meaning.

To us, it may have seemed that Prabhupada was speaking about funeral services, but it is revealed to Narayana Maharaja the deep meaning, that samadhi is Prabhupada’s eternal absorption and participation in Radha-Krishna lila, and so on. (Well, “only an uttama-adhikari can understand an uttama adhikari.”)

These so-called “instructions” are cited to establish Narayana Maharaja’s authority over us. In fact they will be persuasive only to those who have already accepted his authority, and so believe in the validity of his personal “realizations” about Prabhupada’s intentions.

On his authority you accept that this statement of Prabhupada (and maybe every statement?) bears an esoteric meaning in addition to an exoteric one, and you accept Narayana Maharaja as the authoritative interpreter of that esoteric meaning.

I fear we are being led down the primrose path of deviation. If we were to accept Narayana Maharaja’s claims, we would be disregarding Prabhupada’s explicit directions to us, and, in so doing, reenacting the error of the Gaudiya Matha in disobeying the orders of its founder-acarya.

While Prabhupada’s alleged directions to Narayana Maharaja are known only to him and depend upon our accepting his authority as an explicator of Prabhupada to us, Prabhupada’s instructions to us are clear and open and direct, and he has WARNED us of the folly of deviating from them:

Srila Prabhupada - "Why this Gaudiya Matha failed? Because they tried to become more than guru. He, before passing away, he gave all direction and never said that ‘This man should be the next acarya.’

But these people, just after his passing away they began to fight, who shall be acarya. That is the failure. They never thought, ‘Why Guru Maharaja gave us instruction so many things, why he did not say that this man should be acarya?’

They wanted to create artificially somebody acarya and everything failed. They did not consider even with common sense that if Guru Maharaja wanted to appoint somebody as acarya, why did he not say? He said so many things, and this point he missed? The real point? And they insist upon it. They declared some unfit person to become acarya.

Then another man came, then another, acarya, another acarya. So better remain a foolish person perpetually to be directed by Guru Maharaja. That is perfection. (Room conversation, Bombay: August 16, 1976)

As Prabhupada’s disciple, do you wonder what it would be like to stand before him and explain why you promoted Narayana Maharaja as ISKCON’s next acarya? And on whose authority?

Well, as it turns out on inspection, strictly on Narayana Maharaja’s. Because you blindly believe Narayana Maharaja when he proclaims, “I understand your Guru Maharaja better than you do.”

This is my doubt: That my God-brothers and sisters who are following Narayana Maharaja are doing so blindly, and they have been beguiled into accepting a pretender.

Narayana Maharaja as deviating from Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura Prabhupada

Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura Prabhupada radically reformed the Gaudiya Tradition, transforming it into a global preaching mission for the modern world. His work was not much appreciated by many, prominent among them the babajis of Vraja, who felt that he was deviating by his emphasis on vigorous preaching rather than the esoteric cultivation of raga-marga.

His disciples were constantly assailed by the charge that their Guru Maharajawas a deviant who could not offer them the “real thing.”

As you know, a number of them succumbed, most prominently the unauthorized “successor-acarya” Ananta Vasudeva dasa (later reinitiated in the babaji community as Puri Goswami).

A number of our own God-brothers also fell prey to the same attack, even while Prabhupada was present.

And the attack continues to this day. My doubt here is whether Narayana Maharaja has become an instrument of this attack against the mission of Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura.

What he is now preaching and delivering clearly comes from outside the line of Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura.

He did NOT get this from Bhakti Prajnan Kesava Maharaja, his diksa guru. Narayana Maharaja has acknowledged that there was no practice of raga marga in that matha, no “rasa-katha” but rather discourse about Prahlada Maharaja, Dhruva Maharaja, and so on.

Narayana Maharaja was apparently not satisfied with this, for, as he once confessed, he left his spiritual master’s temple without permission, and he went to Govardhana. In great distress, crying, Bhakti Prajnan Kesava Maharaja came and brought him back.

But later, after the departure of his Guru Maharaja, Narayana Maharaja returned to the babajis of Govardhana, and from among them he accepted a rasika guru, supposedly the one who “pushed the switch” which made the “current of bhava flow.”

It troubles me greatly that after his guru’s departure Narayana Maharaja did something his guru had forcibly prohibited in his presence.

This babaji, then, is Narayana Maharaja’s siksa guru — a personage, as you yourself argue, who often can be more prominent than the diksa guru. Whatever it is that Narayana Maharaja is giving comes from this babaji. This is his lineage.

It is clearly not the lineage from Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura. I don’t know anything about this babaji, but given the judgment about Radha-Kunda babaji by our recent acaryas, we have the obligation to be doubtful.

Don’t we have to ask a few questions about this babaji, and whoever else in that community Narayana Maharaja may have learned from? What did Narayana Maharaja actually get? Is it the real thing?

As you know, there is a shadow or simulacrum of authentic spiritual emotion that can fool even an experienced devotee.

At any rate, we know that Narayana Maharaja, against the order of his spiritual master, went to the babajis for spiritual instruction. (I am sure he can offer a clever rationalization for this. Indeed, it is surely the same one he provides Prabhupada’s disciples to justify our own disobedience of Prabhupada’s instructions in order to surrender to him. History repeats itself.)

My misgiving is that, in taking siksa from Vrindavan babajis, Narayana Maharaja is acting contrary to the desires of Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasavati Thakura, and as a result is undermining the great acarya’s achievements.

There are some particulars that support this misgiving. Let me present one glaring instance.

Narayana Maharaja, of course, finds a great difference between preaching activities of the sankirtana movement on the one hand and activities of solitary bhajana on the other.

He dismisses book distribution as an inferior activity, as karma-yoga (at best). It is not actual bhakti, but bhaktyabhasa, bhaktyaropya.

On one occasion, when the accomplishments of a great ISKCON book distributor were extolled, Narayana Maharaja was quite dismissive, and he said that the result would be that in his next life the book distributor might qualify for advanced association (of a rasika bhakta), but that was all. LOL

Yet Srila Prabhupada, as you may still recall, did not recognize such a dichotomy between Gauranga’s seva and Gopijanavallabha’s seva, for, as he famously commented:

“Book distribution is in the mood of the gopis.”

Srila Prabhupada tells us that he attained this realization from his Guru Maharaja:

Srila Prabhupada - "In Vrndavana there are prakrta-sahajiyas who say that writing books or even touching books is taboo. For them, devotional service means being relieved from these activities.

Whenever they are asked to hear a recitation of Vedic literature, they refuse, saying, “What business do we have reading or hearing transcendental literatures? They are meant for neophytes.”

They pose themselves to be too elevated to exert energy for reading, writing and hearing. However, pure devotees under the guidance of Srila Rupa Gosvami reject this sahajiya philosophy.

It is certainly not good to write literature for money or reputation, but to write books and publish them for the enlightenment of the general populace is real service to the Lord. That was Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati’s opinion, and he specifically told his disciples to write books.

He actually preferred to publish books rather than establish temples. Temple construction is meant for the general populace and neophyte devotees, but the business of advanced and empowered devotees is to write books, publish them and distribute them widely.

According to Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura, distributing literature is like playing on a great mrdanga.

Consequently we always request members of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness to publish as many books as possible and distribute them widely through out the world.

By thus following in the footsteps of Srila Rupa Gosvami, one can become a rupanuga devotee".
(Madhya 19.132, purport)

This understanding of the unity of Lord Caitanya and Lord Krsna, and their seva — so fully realized and implemented by Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura to form his revolutionary, dynamic sankirtana movement—seems to have eluded Narayana Maharaja.

Why should service to the sankirtana mission of Lord Caitanya be seen by Narayana Maharaja as something quite different from service to Krishna in Vraja? How has that happened? Has some contamination entered?

In this connection, I am enclosing an exact (unedited) typescript of Prabhupada’s preface to the original edition of the second volume of Srimad Bhagavatam (1964). Here, Prabhupada replies to criticisms of his activity. These very same criticisms of “brhat-mrdanga preaching,” voiced by the sahajiya babajis of Vraja, are unfortunately being recycled by Narayana Maharaja.

Prabhupada begins by saying:

Srila Prabhupada  - "The path of fruitive activities i.e. to say the path of earn money and enjoy life as it is going on generally, — appears to have become also our profession although we have renounced the order of worldly life!

They see that we are moving in the cities, in the Government offices, banks and other business places for promoting the publication of Srimad Bhagwatam. They also see that we are moving in the press, paper market and amongst the book binders also away from our residence at Vrindaban and thus they conclude sometimes mistakenly that we are also doing the same business in the dress of a mendicant!"

And Srila Prabhupada winds up by voicing his heart-felt conviction:

Srila Prabhupada - "Even though we are not in the Himalayas, even though we talk of business, even though we deal in rupees and n.P. still, simply because we are 100 per cent servants of the Lord and are engaged in the service of broadcasting the message of His glories, — certainly we shall transcend and get through the invincible impasse of Maya and reach the effulgent kingdom of God to render Him face to face eternal service, in full bliss and knowledge.

We are confident of this factual position and we may also assure to our numerous readers that they will also achieve the same result simply by hearing the glories of the Lord. (Jannama sruti matrena puman bhavati nirmala.)

Narayana Maharaja explains Prabhupada’s high praise for book distribution and book distributors a mere tactic to encourage those of us without the samskara for raga-marga.Therefore it is worth noting that this preface was written about his own activities and some years before he had any neophytes to encourage.

To recapitulate: In differing from Srila Prabhupada’s teachings, Narayana Maharaja also differs from Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura’s teachings. As it turns out, Narayana Maharaja went outside the Sarasvata community to take instructions from babajis, and nowhere brings back into that community opinions that are characteristic of sahajiya babajis and that are anathema to Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura Prabhupada.

This misgiving leads me to a fuller explication of a related doubt.

Narayana Maharaja and certain sahajiya symptoms

Lord Caitanya says (CC. Madhya. 156-157):

bāhya, antara, — ihāra dui ta’ sādhana
‘bāhye’ sādhaka-dehe kare śravaṇa-kīrtana
‘mane’ nija-siddha-deha kariyā bhāvana
rātri-dine kare vraje kṛṣṇera sevana

“There are two processes by which one may execute this raganuga bhakti– external and internal. When self-realized, the advanced devotee externally remains like a neophyte and executes all the Sastric injunctions, especially hearing and chanting. However, within his mind, in his original purified self-realized position, he serves Krsna in Vrndavana in his particular way. He serves Krsna twenty-four hours, all day and night.”

And Rupa Gosvami says in Bhakti-rasamrta-sindhu (1.2.295)

seva sadhaka-rupena siddha-rupena catra hi
tad-bhava-lipsuna karya vraja-lokanusaratah

“The advanced devotee who is inclined to spontaneous loving service should follow the activities of a particular associate of Krsna in Vrndavana. He should execute service externally as a regulative devotee as well as internally from his self-realized position. Thus he should perform devotional service both externally and internally.”

I understand that it is characteristic of the sahajiya to transgress this injunction to keep the activities of the siddha-deha and the sadhaka-deha separate. The sahajiya is known for displaying in his mundane body and relationships actions that belong only to the spiritual body and its relationships.

There are several habitual actions of Narayana Maharaja that give the appearance of such an improper conflation.

The first I may call as witness is his well-known disposition to crookedness. He is extremely cavalier with the truth. For instance, he often lies outright about what transpired when he visits some ISKCON temple. (His claim that he was “locked out” of the Houston temple is a notable example.)

Even some of his own followers have found his disposition to dissimulate hard to reconcile themselves to. However, they have been told that it is a symptom of his transcendental position, and they have acquiesced to it.

Narayana Maharaja himself justifies his behavior on these grounds: “Unless you learn to be crooked, you cannot qualify for Vrindavan.” He points out that the Yamuna is crooked, that Krishna’s staff is crooked, and so on.

In effect, he has announced to his own followers that he is free to deceive them, and that they should, as part of their surrender, agree to be deceived. In this matter, Narayana Maharaja reminds me greatly of Kirtanananda, who used to do something similar.

If you found that he has lied to you or cheated you, and you call him on it, he would preach that dishonesty in Krishna service was a virtue, and ask, after all, for Whom were you cheated?

If you were persuaded by this, he felt free to cheat you again and again.

During Kartika in 1997, Narayana Maharaja was holding a darsana in which a number of disciples of Gaura Govinda Maharaja were present. He announced that last night Gaura Govinda Maharaja had appeared to him in a dream, and after speaking some words (I can’t recall the matter of it), Gaura Govinda Maharaja merged into Narayana Maharaja’s body.

Is this a true dream? Or, in the mood of crookedness, is it the opportunistic psychological manipulation of susceptible people.

Yet if he has a (transcendental) license to be crooked, why should we take as truthful all those accounts of his deep relation with Prabhupada, his reported dreams of Prabhupada, and even his effusive public glorification of Srila Prabhupada?

There was a time when Narayana Maharaja criticized Prabhupada in public. He pointed out ”mistakes” in his books and “mistakes” in naming of certain Deities.

Now, however, he claims that he never said these were Prabhupada’s mistakes but those of his followers, and he never criticized Prabhupada.

This is not true.

The truth (if it matters) is that in private Narayana Maharaja still belittles or criticizes Prabhupada, while praising him in public: a crooked course. And of course, if the private is made public he simply denies it happened.

In Srimad Bhagavatam we have read that in Kali-yuga truthfulness is the last leg of dharma; it now seems that Narayana Maharaja is intent on establishing crookedness as the last leg of dharma.

In fact, truthfulness is required always of the sadhaka, and to supplant it with the”crookedness” of the siddha is a perfect illustration of sahajiya contamination.

The other area in which Narayana Maharaja seems to conflate the mundane and the transcendent realms is in his relationship with women. Here he outrageously transgresses the behavior proper to a sannyasi.

Many have witnessed the ritual in which a group of dreamy-eyed women massage his feet. Narayana Maharaja’s spokesmen deny this, but we can dismiss their denial.

Like him, they are acolytes of the higher crookedness, and there is ample testimony from those still bound by mundane honesty. One well-brought-up European lady reports encountering Narayana Maharaja during his tour of the Continent.

Women sat at his feet, stroking and massaging his lower limbs. One lady was languorously caressing the soles of his feet with her fingertips.The observer found this tableau charged with eroticism. Beckoned to join the group, she could not bring herself to do it. Instinctively, she felt repelled.

He also forms relationships with women by unabashedly using the language of carnal courtship and seduction. “Now you belong completely to me,” he will tell one girl. Or: “Now your heart is mine forever,” “I have captured you and will keep you.” And so on.

Given the above public actions, the following, less public, conduct needs, I think,investigation. I have it on reliable authority that in addition to his personal servant Naveen, Narayana Maharaja is attended in Mathura by two “kumaris” — two unmarried girls in their twenties. He often spends time alone with them, behind closed doors.

You may remember when certain acaryas in ISKCON indulged in similarly questionable behavior, and yet misgivings and criticisms became suppressed or repressed by the notion that the “acaryas” were advanced beyond the regulative principles.

Although deluded followers had been convinced by this teaching, the truth at last came out. Could this be happening again?

In my time, I have seen how many remained convinced that, say, Kirtanananda Swami, was an uttama-adhikari (whose acts were beyond judgment of the lower), and how otherwise quite intelligent men swore he was pure and fair and bright. You ignore the warnings of Srila Prabhupada and of Rupa Goswami at your peril.

Indeed, it seems to me that something eerie has happened to the intelligence of those disciples of Prabhupada who have become followers of Narayana Maharaja.

There is a mystery about this that needs solving. How it is that many disciples of Prabhupada have been able to so thoroughly neglect Prabhupada’s instructions with an apparently good conscience?

For example, they hear Narayana Maharaja say—within the smaller circle—that he has no taste for Bhagavad-gita, no attraction for Puri or Dvaraka, no interest in Rama or Narasingha.

What has happened to them, that their memory has become corrupted, so that they can’t recall Prabhupada’s unequivocal judgment about those who make such statements?

To cite one example:

Srila Prabhupada - "Therefore those who are sahajiyas, they simply go to the pastimes of Lord Krsna with the gopis. Other things: “Oh, no, no. That is not Krsna’s pastimes. That is not Krsna’s pastimes.” That is, they differentiate the absolute activities of the Absolute. That is called sahajiya.

The sahajiyas will never read Bhagavad-gita, will never read. [Sarcastically:] Because they have been elevated to the mellows of conjugal love. Therefore they have no interest in Bhagavad-gita. (Lecture on Srimad-Bhagavatam 6.3.20-23; Gorakhpur, February 14, 1971)

What influence does Narayana Maharaja exercise to make us disobey Srila Prabhupada? We can begin to understand it, I think, by looking at the reason Satsvarupa Maharaja stopped hearing from Narayana Maharaja.

He was the first of ISKCON leaders to reject Narayana Maharaja as a teacher. When a crisis arose concerning the others who continued under his tutelage, I asked Satsvarupa Maharaja what made him decide to quit.

He told me, “I discovered that I was reading Srila Prabhupada through the eyes of Narayana Maharaja. And I decided I had better take my Srila Prabhupada straight.”

To be sure, Narayana Maharaja has his own interpretation of why Satsvarupa Goswami left. He took it that Satsvarupa Maharaja was afraid of losing his disciples to Narayana Maharaja;out of fear and possessiveness, Satsvarupa Goswami stopped associating with Narayana Maharaja and forbade his disciples from doing so.

Now, I accept Satsvarupa Maharaja’s account. He is by nature transparently honest — even, some say, to a fault. His own account is characteristically direct, simple and guileless.

Narayana Maharaja’s interpretation inadvertently reveals much about Narayana Maharaja’s mentality (it is offensive), but nothing of Satsvarupa Maharaja’s.

Satsvarupa Maharaja noticed how some subtle and powerful change was happening in his hearing of Prabhupada, and Prabhupada was now coming to him in a distorted or crooked manner. He was hearing Prabhupada differently, and this gave him such qualms that he took remedial measures.

Such a change indicates the level on which Narayana Maharaja was able to act. What Narayana Maharaja is able to do is to corrupt one’s buddhi, intelligence. As devotees, our intelligence has been formed through our assimilation of Srila Prabhupada.

To keep our intelligence chaste (vyavasayatmika-buddhi), Prabhupada left us his instructions and directions, particularly in his books.

Repeatedly, he stressed that “the secret of success in spiritual life is to take the order of the spiritual master as one’s life and soul.”

It is clear enough that that Narayana Maharaja differs greatly from Srila Prabhupada, but the deviation is explained away by claiming that Prabhupada was, in effect, a lower-level guru (a teacher of vaidhi-bhakti only) while Narayana Maharaja is a higher-level guru (a giver of raga-marga).

In essence, then, those who follow him may set aside significant parts of Srila Prabhupada’s teachings and directions as a kind of outgrown elementary instruction. In effect, Narayana Maharaja gives them the way to (respectfully) disregard Srila Prabhupada’s teachings without suffering the pang of conscience.

Although Prabhupada sought to keep us from being misguided by stressing, over and over,the virtue of strict fidelity to the instruction of the guru, Narayana Maharaja has circumvented this safeguard by sabotaging the denotation of “guru.”

While all of us thought that “fidelity to the guru” meant simply “fidelity to Prabhupada,” Narayana Maharaja has enabled some to now understand it as “fidelity to Narayana Maharaja.” This is an instance of “corruption of intelligence.”

How has Narayana Maharaja been so effective in thus replacing Srila Prabhupada with himself? A large part of it rest upon his ability to convince some of us that he was Prabhupada’s first and most intimate disciple, that Prabhupada handed us over to him, that he knows Prabhupada better than we do, and so on.

Yet all these claims turn out to have no evidentiary basis. They are accepted simply on Narayana Maharaja’s authority. Having been accepted, they are then used to establish his authority.

To me, this is smacks of blind or sentimental following. I am afraid you have been fooled.

I have given further reasons for doubting Narayana Maharaja’s claims to be Prabhupada’s follower or designated successor and an advanced Vaisnava. He acts in an envious manner to Vaisnavas and seems to be driven by a competitive spirit of domination.

He is unacquainted with Prabhupada’s teachings and he differs from them in many ways. He has gone outside the line of Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura for instruction, and he does not follow the directions given by Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura.

He receives teachings on his “raga-marga” from babajis, and gives evidence having absorbed, in the process, sahajiya contamination.

All these things make me seriously doubt his claim to be an advanced rasika Vaisnava and successor to Srila Prabhupada. Instead he seems to be some kind of talented pretender or imposter, who has seduced, beguiled and misled many people.

Before we accept someone as a guru, we should examine that person with critical intelligence. I have done so, and I cannot accept Narayana Maharaja.

From what I have seen, most of my God-brothers and -sisters choosing to follow Narayana Maharaja have not used their intelligence in this matter. Instead, they have surrendered their intelligence and let it become corrupted. They have accepted Narayana Maharaja improperly.

For a start, you might read Prabhupada’s Cc. Madhya-lila 19.159 and purport.

There different kinds of unsaintly behavior (nisiddha-acara) are described, such as kuTinaTi (duplicity), jiva-himsana (killing the soul), labha (desire for profit), puja (desire for adoration)and pratisTha (desire for distinction)

These are all weeds that kill the true creeper of bhakti. I have claimed to find some of these weeds quite evident in the person of Narayana Maharaja. If I am right,then you may ask, why do so many apparently intelligent, well-intentioned, and perceptive people follow him?

There is an answer in that purport. “Sometimes these unwanted creepers look exactly like the bhakti-lata creeper.

They appear to be of the same size and the same species when they are packed together with the bhakti-lata creeper, but in spite of this, the creepers are calledupa Sakha [unwanted].

A pure devotee can distinguish between the bhakti-lata creeper and amundane creeper, and he is very alert to distinguish them and keep them separate.”

There is a counterfeit creeper that can fool even otherwise discerning people. I fear that just such a counterfeit is present in this case. I have taken some pains to try to tell you why.

Please consider what I have presented. It is not too late to return to the service of Srila Prabhupada, who saved you and who will save you still.

I hope you are well,

Your servant in the service of Srila Prabhupada,
Ravindra Svarupa dasa ACBSP.
7th Aug 1998











Friday, March 22, 2019

Srila Prabhupada comments on his own possible past life as a sinless doctor.

If it is true that Srila Prabhupada said he came directly from Goloka (nothing like that is mentioned by Prabhupada on Vaniquotes), then Srila Prabhupada has said both, including he had a previous birth in this material world.

So why just except he came directly from Goloka when he also suggested he had a past life time in this material world?

There is even a book, called Bhṛgu-saṁhitā, which reveals information about one's past, present and future lives according to astrological calculations.

Srila Prabhupada comments on his own possible past life.

Srila Prabhupada - "So far I am concerned, I cannot say what I was in my previous life, but one great astrologer calculated that I was previously a physician and my life was sinless." (Letter to Tamala Krsna - Los Angeles 21 June, 1970)

Lecture on SB 2.9.1 -- Tokyo, April 20, 1972:

Srila Prabhupāda - "From Bhṛgu-saṁhitā it was ascertained that I was a big physician in my last life, very spotless character, no sins, like that.

So it may be. But actually I have no remembrance that I was a physician. So what do we know? I might have been a very big physician, influential physician, having a good practice, but where is all...? All gone.

So this situation, our contact with matter, is just like dream. Actually we are not fallen. Therefore, because we are not fallen, at any moment we can revive our Kṛṣṇa consciousness.

As soon as we understand that, "I have nothing to do with. I am simply Kṛṣṇa's servant. Eternal servant. That's all," immediately he becomes liberated.

Exactly like that: as soon as you... Sometimes we do that. When the fearful dreaming becomes too much intolerable, we break the dream. We break the dream when it becomes intolerable.

Similarly, we can break this material connection at any moment as soon as we come to the point of Kṛṣṇa conscious.

"Oh, Kṛṣṇa is my eternal master. I am His servant." That's all. This is the way.

Actually we are not fallen. There cannot be any fallen. The same example: Actually there is no tiger; it is dreaming. Similarly, our fallen condition is also dreaming. We are not fallen.

We can simply give up that illusory condition at any moment. At any moment.

So if you study all these verses very nicely, you get all this knowledge quickly". Lecture on SB 2.9.1 -- Tokyo, April 20, 1972.

As explained above, Prabhupada does mention a possible past life recorded on Vaniquotes.

However, this idea that He specially came from Goloka to write Books has no reference in Vaniquotes.

This means we are not getting direct information like the recorded lecture given above.

Therefore the discussion with Upendra and Bhavananda is just heresy, not saying it's not true, but are saying there is no clear recorded reference to prove it.

This means someone sentimentally could add their speculation to it as well.

As Srila Prabhupada suggested himself, he also could of come from a previous life in this material world to write Books directed by his Spiritual Master and Lord Krishna Chaitanya Mahaprabhu.













Thursday, March 21, 2019

And who knows what each of us have done over millions of life times? Each soul (jivatma) is beginningless and will never cease to be.

And who knows what each of us have done over millions of life times?


We must never forget, as devotees, the reason for a sinful human being's server hash punished.

All punishment by material nature is for the purpose of rehabilitation so that the soul within the decaying material body is again rewarded the opportunity and take birth in a material human body so that they can again attempt to realize their "original perpetual position" as the servant of the servant of Lord Krishna.

Lord Krishna Chaitanya is the Supreme Personality of Godhead and cause of all causes, His universal material creation is set up to rehabilitate the fallen souls who enter this material creation and NOT annihilate them which is not possible anyway.

As the Bhagavad Gita tells us, the jiva soul is beginningless and endless and CANNOT be destroyed when the gross material bodily vessel is destroyed, no matter WHAT sinful horrible acts one has performed as a human being!!

Karma good and bad pious or impious is only created by human beings in the middle planetary system out of the 14 different ones.

Karma is also NEVER created on the higher material heavenly planets or on the lower hellish planets.

Nor is karma created in the lower species of life that is dominated by instincts not Karma.

Of course impious karma put them in this condition of lower life forms in the first place but the progress of getting out  of the lower species is evolving from a lower species to to the next one on the ladder.

This takes millions of years until again it leads to the soul again takes birth as a human being.

1 - Coming via the monkey is the mode of ignorance.
2 - Coming through a Lion or Tiger is the mode of passion.
3 - Coming through a Cow or Bull is the mode of Goodness

In all three conditions below, karma is NOT created -

1 - Heavenly planets.
2 - Hellish planets.
3 - Lower species of life.

 This means all "good and bad" actions (Karma) are only possible while in a human body on Bhuloka the middle planetary system.

All karma goes on until what has been accumulated is exhausted then from the heavenly, hellish and lower species, one again takes birth in the middle planetary system and "again" given a human form where they are again responsible for their good and bad actions.

Only the human species in the Bhurloka Planetary System it karma created.

In this way, everyone, even Hitler, Stalin, Churchill, Bundy, Dharma, EVERYONE gets unlimited chances.

This is because there is no such thing as "ETERNAL DAMNATION" in Vedic teachings. Karma is NOT eternal, eventually even the most opulant and hellish karma comes to an end.

The fact is, all of us in previous lives have done horrible nasty unspeakable things, otherwise how else have we ended up in this degrading age of Kali-yuga of hypocrisy, quarrel?

Kali-yuga is the most degraded Godless age where man is trying to build the Kingdom of God WITHOUT God.

Kali-yuga is also an age where man believes the material body they are in, is them, they deny the existence of the soul (jivatma) or individual life force that moves from material bodily container to another material body when the material body expires (dies)

Srila Prabhupada once said "demons" in Satya yuga take birth in Kali-yuga as sinful lusty meat eaters who foolishly think they are the material body they are getting around in" (Conversation with devotees in room Febuary 1973 Sydney Australia)

Only in the human form can the jivatma or soul try again to find a path way to ventuall finnish up all material activity.

THE STAGE IN ENDLESS

But some punishments CAN seem like an almost eternity, so be careful!!

Stop being sinful by exploiting and using others.

There is no such thing as a permanent hell, NOTHING is forever in the material creation.

The fallen jiva HAS to pay dearly for their sins of abuse, exploitation, arrogent pride and patronizing others.

The nonsense Christian concept of "Eternal Damnation" is total fantasy to a devotee of Krishna,
everyone gets UNLIMITED CHANCES "once" their sins are paid for.

Any God who teaches "Eternal Damnation" is a cruel uncaring nonsene God.

The endeavour of seeking perfection will always continue no matter what one has done.

This endevour of seeking perfection may take a long, long time as Gita tells us, taking many, many births before one AGAIN becomes sinless, a pure devotee of Krishna and reaching their ORIGINAL possition from where they fell from.

So in this life, if one takes genuinely to Lord Caitanya Mahaprabhu's Sankirtan Movement, then even the biggest SINNER WILL be saved!! 🎩


Compiled by Gauragopala dasa Acbsp

Are you trying to figure out what's going on in this material universe?

Trying to figure out what's going on?

Ultimately we are eternal servants of Krishna Lord the Supreme Personality of Godhead and cause of ALL causes.

What does the implicationcation of foolishly coming to this mundane material creation and accepting different material counterfeit identities mean?

A old yogi at Rishikesh told me that we have all been here for so, so long that we, long long ago, in another time and place, like now, also occupied the many material bodies around us over an enormous amount of time

This is because time and space is not fixed and flowing in one forward direction.

Time and space flows in all directions and dimensions.

Like the lotus flower Brahma sits on, each petal represents it own movement of time.

Ultimately this means past, present and future all exist at the same time.


This further means at death of the gross material vessel, the subtle body carrying the soul does not only move forward, one can take birth back in 1938 or 1974 or anytime in the future.

Time does NOT flow in one direction just forward, no it flows in ALL directions past, present and future in different dimensions simultaneously.

The implications relate to the material body ONLY, not the individual soul.

We are all individual spiritual beings originally Krishna Conscious servants of the Lord.

This only relates to the outward "material bodies" which are the projected material mundane dreams of the individual soul (jivatma) when ignoring Krishna

And we are given all material facilities while in the material creation by Maha Vishnu as He sleeps and dreams the entire material creation made up with billions of Brahmanda universes all coming from Maha Vishnu's Body.

We therefore simply get all material bodies and fascilities from Maha Vishnu.

The spiritual person or jivatma is ALWAYS an individual  however, the material energy is what is really all one.

And yes, with the right qualifications and being trained up by material nature for many births to acquire the ksrma, you can experience of material life of ANY of those material bodies throughout history.

Scary because that means Stalin, Hitler and the Walrus.

This is how the impersonal material energy works, it is all moved by the desires of the individual jivatma trapped in this bizarre material creation and it's unlimited material bodily containers  it offers.

Think about it.