Monday, January 28, 2013

Does Bhagwad Geeta only talks about war and killing.

Geeta also treats non violence.In Bhagwad gita Chapter 10 verse (4-5) Sri krishna mentions that Non violence orginates from him.In chapter 16 verse (2).Shri krishna mentions that non violence is a divine quality.Both verse is presented for your pursual.When Shri krishna is Asking Arjuna to do his duty as in swadharma he is asking the one who is in Raj dharma to perform his duty of Raj dharma.He is not asking untrained people to Go and fight war with trained soldiers.He is not asking us to take law in our own hands.He says violence by the one in power to protect the rule of law is not prohibited,but conditions apply.
 
 
Chapter 10. The Opulence of the Absolute
TEXT 4-5
buddhir jnanam asammohah
ksama satyam damah samah
sukham duhkham bhavo 'bhavo
bhayam cabhayam eva ca
ahimsa samata tustis
tapo danam yaso 'yasah
bhavanti bhava bhutanam
matta eva prthag-vidhah
SYNONYMS
buddhih--intelligence; jnanam--knowled ge; asammohah--freedom from doubt; ksama--forgiveness; satyam--truthfulness; damah--c ontrol of the senses; samah--control of the mind; sukham--happiness;duhkham--distress; bhavah--birth;� �abhavah--death; bhayam--fear; ca--and; abhayam--without fear; eva--also; ca--and; ahimsa--nonviolence;samata--equ ilibrium; tustih--satisfaction; tapah--penance; danam--ch arity; yasah--fame; ayasah--infamy; bhavanti--become; bh avah--natures; bhutanam--of living entities; mattah--from Me; eva--certainly;prthak-vidhah--differently arranged.
TRANSLATION
Intelligence, knowledge, freedom from doubt and delusion, forgiveness, truthfulness, self-control and calmness, pleasure and pain, birth, death, fear, fearlessness, nonviolence, equanimity, satisfaction, austerity, charity, fame and infamy are created by Me alone.
 
 
chapter 16
TEXT 1-3
 
sri-bhagavan uvaca 
abhayam sattva-samsuddhir 
jnana-yoga-vyavasthitih 
danam damas ca yajnas ca 
svadhyayas tapa arjavam
 
ahimsa satyam akrodhas 
tyagah santir apaisunam 
daya bhutesv aloluptvam 
mardavam hrir acapalam
 
tejah ksama dhrtih saucam 
adroho nati-manita 
bhavanti sampadam daivim 
abhijatasya bharata
 
SYNONYMS
 
sri-bhagavan uvaca--the Supreme Personality of Godhead said; abhayam--fearlessness; sattva-samsuddhih--purification of one's existence; jnana--knowledge; yoga--of linking up; vyavasthitih--the situation; danam--charity; damah ca--and controlling the mind; yajnah ca--and performance of sacrifice; svadhyayah--study of Vedic literature; tapah--austerity; arjavam--simplicity; ahimsa--nonviolence; satyam--truthfulness; akrodhah--freedom from anger; tyagah--renunciation; santih--tranquility; apaisunam--aversion to fault-finding; daya--mercy; bhutesu--towards all living entities; aloluptvam--freedom from greed; mardavam--gentleness; hrih--modesty; acapalam--determination; tejah--vigor; ksama--forgiveness; dhrtih--fortitude; saucam--cleanliness; adrohah--freedom from envy; na--not; ati-manita--expectation of honor; bhavanti--become; sampadam--qualities; daivim--transcendental; abhijatasya--of one who is born of; bharata--O son of Bharata.
TRANSLATION
 
The Blessed Lord said: Fearlessness, purification of one's existence, cultivation of spiritual knowledge, charity, self-control, performance of sacrifice, study of the Vedas, austerity and simplicity; nonviolence, truthfulness, freedom from anger; renunciation, tranquility, aversion to faultfinding, compassion and freedom from covetousness; gentleness, modesty and steady determination; vigor, forgiveness, fortitude, cleanliness, freedom from envy and the passion for honor--these transcendental qualities, O son of Bharata, belong to godly men endowed with divine nature.

Proof That God Does Exist

Vedanta says that Brahmn is ultimate reality. All other beings and things are unreal. But when we ask questions about the nature of Brahmn, the Upanishads describe it as neti, neti – not this, not this. Therefore, they describe the ultimate reality, Brahmn, in negative terms alone.

Swami Sivananda is not satisfied with the negative description of Brahmn because it is impossible for the mind to conceive of an absolute nothing. He argues that ‘Brahmn is not void. It is not blankness or emptiness’. It is not shunyata.

Brahmn, he upholds, is paripoorna, full, because all desires melt there. Brahmn to him ‘is something, after seeing which there is nothing more to be seen, after becoming which there is nothing more to become, after knowing which there remains nothing to be known’.

Brahmn is that which is all-pervading, which surrounds us from all sides - around, above, and below. It is satchidananda or existence, knowledge and bliss. It is that which has no other. It is without a second, endless, eternal, one and one alone. It is everlasting, the one continuous experience-whole.

Hence Swami Sivananda has described Brahmn in term of positive attributes. He upholds that Brahmn has six attributes: ‘jnana,divine wisdom; vairagya, dispassion; aishwarya, power; bala, strength; sri, wealth and kirti, fame.’.

He is nitya, eternal; ananta, infinite and ananda, supreme bliss. He is unchanging amidst changing phenomena. He is permanent amidst the impermanent, and imperishable amidst the perishable. He is what the Gita calls “Jyotishamapi tat jyoti, Light of all lights,”.  He is the Adhisthana or support of the phenomenal world.

Brahmn is the sutradhara, string-puller of all bodies of beings. He is the antaryamin, inner ruler of all beings. He is in you and you are in Him. Each of the five primary elements is a manifestation of His qualities.

Brahmn is swatantra or independent. He has satkama, good desires and satsankalpa, pure will.  Since karmas are jada or insentient, on their own they cannot yield fruits, so it is Brahmn who dispenses fruits of actions of jivas. He is all-merciful; quenching the thirst of  jivas. He satiates our hunger. He dispenses justice to all. The five activities of God are:  Srishti, Creation;, sthiti, preservation, samhara, destruction, tirodhana or tirobhava, veiling; and anugraha, grace,

Swami Sivananda accepts that Brahmn is beyond the reach of the senses and mind that is why its existence cannot be proved by scientific experimentation. It is purely a question of faith and refers to the intuitive side of man. However, His existence can be inferred by certain empirical facts or common experiences in daily life.

One can also prove the existence of Brahmn conceptually. One cannot think of impurity, duality, disagreement, variety and mortality without thinking of purity, oneness, agreement, unity and immortality. The possibility of the relative implies reality of the Absolute.

Finally, Swami Sivananda questions an atheist who wants conclusive proof for the existence of Brahmn: ‘Can you give proof for the non-existence of Brahmn?’ He asserts that no one has succeeded in proving that Brahmn does not exist.

‘Whether the owl accepts the presence of light or not, there is always light’. Likewise, whether you accept the existence of Brahmn or not, He always exists. Even the one who claims the non-existence of Brahmn is himself Brahmn. Likewise, the one who claims that there is only shunya, void, forgets that that the knower who knows the shunya is himself Brahmn.