--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, anonymousff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I am interested to know what does it mean to be liberated?
>
Jaya Guru Deva Datta


>From Gita:

http://www.dattapeetham.com/india/bhaktimala/oct2000/gitajoct2000.html

Lessons from Bhagavad Gita - 84

(From the discourses of Pujya Sri Swamiji)

"Knowing these paths, O Partha, no yogi is deluded. Therefore, O Arjuna, at all 
times be 
steadfast in Yoga". (27-VIII)

The yogi who has known these two paths, the bright and the dark, is not 
deluded. He 
knows and is fully convinced that the dark path leads to Samsara or worldly 
bondage and 
the bright path to liberation. So he rejects the dark path and takes up the 
bright one which 
will lead him to immortality.

He who goes along with the bright path has to take to the practice of yoga 
seriously. This 
path consists of penance, self-control, knowledge, celibacy, meditation etc. 
The practice 
of these disciplines will help him in gaining perfect control over his mind. 
Therefore the 
Lord advises Arjuna to be a yogi and absorb himself in God-consciousness. 

"Having known this, the Yogi transcends all merits accruing from the study of 
the Vedas, 
sacrifices, austerities and gifts, and reaches the Primordial Supreme State." 
(28-VIII)
The scriptures declare that a man who performs sacrifices (Yajnas), 
austerities, study of 
the Vedas, giving away charities to the needy etc., earns lot of merit (Punya). 
But if he 
performs those actions with the selfish idea of enjoying the results, he may go 
to heavenly 
worlds and enjoy the fruits of his actions. but as soon as the merits are 
exhausted he will 
have to take birth again into this world of bondage and miseries. 

The yogi is fully aware of the fact that desire-motivated actions, however 
noble, cannot 
give him Mukti (liberation) as they will only keep him in the path which will 
bring him back 
to this worldly existence. Therefore by renouncing the fruit he performs all 
his actions as a 
dedication to God. As such he attains to the Primordial Abode of the Supreme 
Godhead. 
Therefore whatever a man does must be in strict consonance with the path of 
Yoga. Yoga 
means freedom from attachment to enjoyment and equanimity with regard to 
happiness 
and misery. Anyone can become a yogi by proper discipline to the mind and 
performing 
the right kind of action.

Thus ends the eighth chapter entitled ÔAkshara Brahma YogaÕ.

Now begins the ninth chapter of the Bhagavad Gita. The title of this chapter is 
ÔRaja Vidya 
Rajaguhya YogaÕ, the Yoga of Sovereign Science and Sovereign Secret. ÔRaja 
VidyaÕ means 
sovereign science and ÔRaja GuhyaÕ means sovereign secret. In short it means 
supreme 
knowledge and supreme secret.

In the eighth chapter in verses 8 and 9, the Lord spoke about the system of 
Yoga in which 
the Yogi has to control the senses and confine the mind in the heart. Then he 
has to fix 
his life-breath in the head by making it pass through the middle chord Ð 
Sushumna. 
Holding it there steadily and uttering the monosyllabic ÔAumÕ, the Yogi leaves 
the body. 
Such a Yogi reaches the Supreme Brahman in due course of time by successively 
reaching 
the realms of deities of fire, light etc. This attainment of liberation by 
stages is called 
Krama Mukti (gradual liberation).

In this connection, some people may think that the attainment of Brahman is 
possible only 
through the aforesaid process and not through any other. In order to obviate 
such an 
apprehension the Lord said as follows:

"Now I shall reveal to you, who do not cavil, this profoundest secret combined 
with 
realization, by knowing which you shall be freed from all evil." (1-IX)
Brahma Jnana, the knowledge of the Supreme Being, is the profoundest secret 
(guhyatamam). This knowledge combined with its direct experience brings 
liberation from 
all evils.

Theoretical knowledge obtained from the study of scriptures is referred to as 
Jnana. This 
knowledge is indirect. Vijnana is the direct experience of the truth enshrined 
in the 
scriptures through intuition. This direct experience is ÔAparokshaÕ. When one 
learns from 
others that sugar is sweet his knowledge is indirect. But when he tastes the 
sugar and 
finds out by himself that it is sweet his knowledge is ÔAparokshaÕ (direct 
experience).
Brahma Jnana can not be grasped by those who are not pure at heart. To them who 
are 
selfish and full of jealousy this knowledge is the supreme secret. It is beyond 
their 
understanding. One may possess lot of intelligence and other qualifications, 
but unless 
one is free from envy (Asuya) one can not realize the truth. Of all the bad 
qualities envy is 
the worst as it is the source of all evils.

People generally take delight in finding fault with others. They see evil even 
in good 
things. Arjuna did not have this quality and so he was entitled to receive this 
secret 
knowledge from the Lord. And the Lord is going to reveal that to him.

"This (the knowledge of Brahman) is the sovereign science, the sovereign 
secret, the 
supreme purifier, immediately comprehensible, unopposed to Dharma, imperishable 
and 
very easy to perform." (2-IX).

The knowledge of Brahman is the sovereign science or the king among all 
sciences (Raja 
Vidya) as it is the highest knowledge and is full of radiance.

Sri Guru Datta







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