Forms
Of God
Answers by His Holiness Romapada Swami
Maharaja
Q.1) In Bhagavad Gita, Krishna claims
Himself to be the only supreme Lord. But in Siva Gita (which is in Padmapurana)
Siva claims that He is the only supreme Lord. Various puranas praise various
Lords to be the supreme absolute truth. This is very much confusing and this
suggests the possibility of scriptures being man made. It is obvious that
Bhagavad Gita or Srimad Bhagavatam are not special since Siva Gita and other
puranas can sufficiently counter the claims made by the above said scriptures.
So how to know who the Almighty is?
Answer:
Different puranas and literatures are
meant for those under different modes of nature - goodness, passion or
ignorance. Each emphasizes different objects of worship according to the
particular modes. According to the mode one is situated in, one's faith varies
(Ch 17, Bhagavad-gita). For example, someone influenced by mode of ignorance
may resort to witch-craft or violence or some such unclean/harmful practices to
attain their desires; someone in mode of passion may rely on their own
capabilities or the favor of someone influential, but one situated in goodness
may believe in righteous performance of duties and performing sacrifices to God
as the means to good fortune. The Vedic literatures are meant to cater to all
these classes of people, by strengthening the kinds of faith they are already
inclined to in such a way that gradually they can be elevated to the mode of
goodness and beyond. Because there are literatures for different kinds of
people, obviously such literatures! glorify different objects and highlight
different practices as the supreme goal and means. Thus some fearsome practices
of worshiping Goddess Kali may be repulsive to one in the mode of goodness, but
that is what a person in ignorance can strongly place faith in.
Alternative to the hypothesis of
scriptures being man-made, (the differences being due to different authors'
personal opinions), such differences may also suggest the work of a higher
intelligence to encompass and provide for the spiritual upliftment of entire
humanity regardless of the wide spectrum of their modes of nature, their
corresponding faith, and their level of spiritual evolvement. This is the
actual fact, because all the myriad Upanishads, puranas, upapuranas and so on
were all compiled by one person --- Srila Vyasadev --- for the above said
purpose.
A simple analogy may illustrate this
idea: a professor in Math can outline syllabus for Math instruction for
elementary, high school and university Math courses. Elementary math teaches
that a greater number can never be subtracted from a smaller number, but as one
learns the concept of negative numbers in higher grades, one knows better. Thus
although the elementary and high school math seem contradictory, it is taught
by the same person for those with different capabilities. If we understand that
the same authority is behind all the different instructions, then it is easy to
reconcile all contradictions.
True, it could be bewildering to sort
through these seemingly contradictory statements and understand the final
conclusion, and more often than not people resign thinking that everything must
be relative, or that the Absolute is something void. Such conclusions are
products of mundane logic and hence fallacious. It is like concluding that all
math is wrong. The fact is that in such contradictory statements, both
statements may be true, but one truth is a higher truth than the other! One
fool-proof way to understand the real conclusion is to understand what the
author himself has to say in conclusion.
At this point it becomes necessary to
understand that Bhagavad-gita and Srimad Bhagavatam are in fact special
evidences even among the other Vedic literature.
Srimad Bhagavatam, especially, is called
amala purana (or spotless purana) meaning that it is beyond the three modes of
material nature unlike the other puranas which give instructions within the
modes of nature; thus it is identified as para-dharma. The Bhagavatam is
described as the mature fruit of the Vedic tree, just as of all parts of a
fruit-bearing tree, it's ripened fruit is the most desired. There is indication
even within the other puranas that among all the puranas Srimad Bhagavatam is
the emperor, or ultimate authority. The puranas themselves indicate that any
contradictions among them should be resolved by consulting Srimad Bhagavatam.
(The author's intention is not to
confuse us, so he himself gives hints and indications where to look for the
final truth. Scriptural evidences of this are quoted in Jiva Gosvami's Tattva
sandarbha.)
The Bhagavatam was written by Vyasasdev
in his complete maturity. As the history goes, Vyasadev completed all the Vedic
scriptures including the Vedanta sutras and the puranas etc., and was still
feeling despondent when he was instructed by Narada to compose a literature
simply dedicated to the Absolute Truth without any distraction. (Please refer
SB Ch 4-6) It was then that Vyasadev writes Srimad Bhagavatam, wherein he
himself declares that all other literatures that don't exclusively glorify the
Supreme Absolute Truth propound "a cheating religion" but the
Bhagavatam is devoid of all such cheating mentality and that the only Supreme
Truth is Vaasudeva, the son of Devaki. (Cf. SB 1.1,2)
As mentioned before, other puranas do
glorify some other Deity as exalted, and in a sense, it is true. For instance,
Devi Bhagavat may glorify Durga as the creator, maintainer and annihilator of
the cosmic manifestation and so on. This is a fact, these are not to be taken
as mere stories to impress faith upon less intelligent. But as said before all
these are relative truths, and thus dependent upon an Absolute Truth which is
Krishna. Durga is the immediate cause of creation etc, whereas the efficient
cause of all causes is Krishna. When Lord Brahma receives transcendental
knowledge after thousands of years of penance, he offers prayers to the Supreme
Lord and there he describes the entire cosmic situation. He states there that
Durga creates, maintains and annihilates just as instrument to carry out the
will of Govinda (Cf. Brahma Samhita) Similarly, Lord Shiva is in one sense non-
different from Krishna; he is but a transformation of Vishnu, just as yogurt is
but a transfor!
mation of milk. His glories cannot be
minimized. Within the created region, he is the 'Mahesvara', the controller of
all other isvaras, greater than even Lord Brahma. Thus his supremacy in the
material world is established, even within Vaishnava literatures and the statements
such as the one referred to by you are not false. However, even Lord Shiva is
NOT SUPREMELY INDEPENDENT of Krishna. Sri Krishna alone claims "There is
no other Truth beyond Me." (Bg. 7.7) Lord Shiva is thus himself one of
principal acaryas of the four bona fide sampradayas teaching Krishna bhakti to
his followers. Even Sankaracarya (who is but an incarnation of Lord Shiva with
a special mission to preach impersonalism and bewilder the atheists) concludes
that only Narayana is beyond the material realm: 'narayana paro 'vyaktat' etc.
Finally, I would like to mention that
transcendental truth cannot be established merely by logical arguments and
counter-arguments. Vedic authority is the final evidence, and in order to
reconcile different interpretations of its conclusions, we may use logical
inferences that establish the truth.
However, as Krishna recommends (Bg
4.34), the only way to conclusively understand the truth is by receiving
guidance from self-realized souls or as said in Mahabharat, to follow such
mahajanas as Prahlada, Bhisma, Brahma, Shiva, Narada etc. and by the grace of
God.
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