PROFESSOR LIFE AND MARRIAGE
Nimai now set up His own
Academy in the Hall (mandap) of the family temple of the goddess Chandi which
formed part of the frontal division of the residence of Mukunda-Sanjaya, a
person of great good fortune and an opulent citizen of Nabadwip. The whole
family of Mukunda-Sanjaya was devoted to the Lord. The spacious Chandi-Mandap
accommodated a very large number of students. The Lord organised the body of
His students into a school and taught them at this place. Thus was formed the
Academy under Sree Gauranga as Professor for the pursuit of learning.
The variety of Nimai
Pandit’s interpretations and refutations knew no limit. In these erudite
performances the Professors of Nabadwip were a standing subject of His regrets.
He used to say that in the Iron Age those, who were ignorant of the elementary
process of joining together two syllables (sandhi), which forms the opening
chapter of the science of language, passed themselves off as Professors of the
Shastras. “I challenge them to expose My mal-interpretations. I would admit
they deserve their high-sounding designations of ‘Bhatta’ and ‘Misra,’ if they
can point out any flaws in my interpretations” The learned performances of all
the Professors were declared to be ‘only tissues of elaborate falsehoods which
prevented them from realising the necessity of learning about the Truth by
submission to Feet of Truth Himself. If those learned men had possessed the
requisite degree of sincerity and clearness of thinking, they would have been
inquisitive to know what He had to tell them.’ But they were perfectly content
with their ephemeral and misleading speculations and did not feel the least
inclination even to give a hearing to their Challenger.
So it is not the
manipulation of so-called material advantages by the pursuit of the different
branches of empiric study that can rescue empiric learning from the charge of
mischievous worthlessness. The relation of empiric learning itself to the Truth
and to oneself must be grasped, if it is to be of any real use to a person. The
absence of this knowledge vitiated the whole thing ab initio. It is owing to
this fundamental defect that such studies only added to the delusions of
obstinately ignorant persons. If those studies had been conceived and carried
out in the proper spirit, they would have certainly led them to the Truth. But
the real object and method of study are hidden from the view of deliberately
ignorant persons and the knowledge of them can be had only from those who know
about Him by unconditional submission at His Holy Feet. The Professors of
Nabadwip did not know this, and their interminable labours accordingly only
served to multiply their delusions and falsehoods which led their pupils and
themselves farther away from the Truth Who is admittedly the Only Goal of all
learning.
Sree Sachi Devi now bethought
of finding a suitable bride for her youthful Son. There lived at Nabadwip a
most worthy Brahmana of the name of Sree Ballabha Acharya who managed his
household in the spirit of King Janaka of yore. He had a daughter whose name
was Lakshmi and who was the same as Sree Lakshmi Devi of Vaikuntha. The Brahmana
constantly thought of a suitable Husband for his daughter. Lakshmi was
well-known to Sree Sachi Devi and Nimai Himself.
Kaviraj Goswami has
recorded the follovving incident of the Boyhood of Nimai in his work Sree
Chaitanya-charitamrta. In His Boyhood Nimai was extremely turbulent and a
source of trouble to everybody. He took particular delight in teasing the
people while they were in the act of bathing in the Ganges. The details of these
occurrences, as described by Thakur Brindavandas, have already been reproduced.
Nimai, as we saw, did not spare even the girls from His turbulent attentions.
One day as the daughter of Ballabha Acharya was preparing to worship the gods
after her bath in the Ganges, the Lord saw her and felt an inclination to make
her acquaintance. Lakshmi also was delighted to see the Lord. The love between
Lakshmi and the Supreme Lord is eternal. It now manifested itself under the
guise of childish behaviour. They expressed Their mutual joy under pretence of
worshipping the gods. The Lord said to her, ‘Worship Me. I am the Great Lord
(Maheshwara). By worshipping Me you will get such Husband as you wish to have.’
Lakshmi accordingly placed on His Body flowers sprinkled with the sandal-paste
and did reverence by putting on Him garlands made of the mallika flower. The Lord began to laugh on receiving
her devotion and accepted the desire of her heart by reciting the shloka of the
Bhagavatam spoken by Sree Krishna to the milkmaids, ‘Loyal maidens, I have
become aware of the meaning of your worship which has. indeed, given Me very
great pleasure. Your hopes are worthy of fulfilment.’
The Lord also wished to
perform the duties enjoined by the Shastras on a householder, as He was now
settled in the household life. The spiritual duties of a householder cannot be
discharged properly without co-operation of a helping female partner. The Lord
accordingly conceived the desire of entering the state of matrimony. In the
words of the Smriti, ‘the house itself is not called the household. The
mistress is the real household. Being united to her by marriage a person
attains the four coveted objects of life, viz., the proper performance of his
duties, necessaries, objects of desire and liberation.’
While He was in this mood,
the Lord accidentally came across the daughter of Ballabha Acharyya on her way
to the Ganges. He was then returning home from His studies. The sight kindled,
in the hearts of both, the love that already existed there in its perfection.
The Lord smiled as He met His Own Lakshmi. Sree Lakshmi Devi also greeted in
her mind the Twin Lotus Feet of the Lord before They went back to their
respective homes. ‘Who, asks Thakur Brindavandas, ‘can understand the Pastimes
of Sree Gaursundar ?’
The institution of
marriage, as every other institution, misses its proper object if it does not
serve the Supreme Lord. The prospect of carnal enjoyment, which the institution
seems, to the ungodly, to offer, is the snare that requires to be most
carefully avoided. The Union of Lakshmi and Narayana is the Source of ali
manifest and non-manifest existence. Sree Narayana is the only Lord of all
created things. He creates through the medium of Sree Lakshmi Devi. This
eternal Marriage of Sree Lakshmi Narayana is hidden from the view of mortals by
the shadow of the desire for carnal enjoyment falling across their vision.
The Shastric institution of
marriage is intended to reclaim bound jivas from the deadly slough of
carnality. If they follow the life enjoined by the Shastras for the married
state, they will thereby be enabled to progress towards freedom from the
fascination of carnality. The bound jiva, misled by his sensuous hankering and
preferring his own selfish enjoyment to the constant and eternal service of his
Lord, is, of course, free to speculate about the advantages and disadvantages
of the institution of marriage from the purely secular point of view. But such
speculative attitude, however carefully one may try to guard oneself against
the natural and inevitable consequences of carnality, will only forge a
stronger chain to bind him to an unnatural and miserable existence.
The external gloss supplied
by godless speculation only aggravates the real mischief by hiding the unspirituality
of all empiric conceptions of one’s duty. The Greek opinion that the gods are
opposed to the happiness of man through malice is true in this sense. The gods
always try to prevent the sensuous happiness of man. This is most beneficial in
its possible results for humanity. The so-called happiness for which man
hankers is but gilded misery, because the soul in the conditioned state
understands and cares only for the things of this world. This is the disease to
which all people of this world are subject. This malady is increased if the
cause of it is strengthened. By increased hankering for new opportunities of
material enjoyment, the cause of the malady is not likely to be removed.
The quest of happiness
itself is not unnatural. But if we want to be happy, we must first of all try
to understand what can make us truly happy. Desire for sensuous enjoyment is
the cause of unhappiness. Abstinence from such enjoyment also will not do, as
it leads to a worse form of misery. Desire to serve the Lord for the sake of
service can alone make us happy. Every activity can give us happiness to the
extent that it is really service of Godhead, or, in other words, to the extent
that it tends to absolute subimission to Him.
The marriage of Lakshmi and
Narayana does not belong to the category of the carnal marriage of sensuous
jivas The marriage of the fettered jivas becomes successful, according to the
Shastras, only if it succeeds in reclaiming them from the bondage of carnality.
When this result is actually produced by faithfully following the injunctions
of the Shastras, there should necessarily remain no carnal desire in such
persons and, therefore, no further sensuous necessity of such bodily union.
This is, however, only the negative result. By the elimination of carnality one
also gets rid of the delusion that the soul can be either male or female, or
have any sex in the worldly sense. No individual soul can be an object of
reciprocal enjoyment of another individual soul, either as male or as female.
Spiritual love for Godheasd is the sole Enjoyer and the jiva is the object of
His exclusive enjoyment. Godhead is the only Lover, the jiva belongs to the
category of His beloved. Godhead is the Possessor of power, the jiva is a
particle of His obeying power.
The jiva, as an
inintegfrated particle of Krishna’s power, can be truly cognisant of Krishna as
the sole Proprietor of himself. But the jiva is not the direct plenary Power of
Krishna, but a detached particle of His Plenary Power. The Integrated Plenary
Power of Krishna is eternally and unswervingly obedient to Krishna and never
loses sight of Him. The jiva can be cognisant of Krishna only, if he submits to
function in the line of the direct Power under the latter’sdirection.
subordination to the direct Power of Krishna, in the case of the jiva, is the
same as subordination to Krishna Himself Who is not directly cognisable by him.
Sree Lakshmi devi is the Plenary Power of Krishna. Through her Krishna
manifests Himself to His dissocxiated particles of His Power. The jiva may
become a conscious partner in this process, if he subordinates his freedom of
will, a gift of the Divinity, to the direction of the Will of Krishna,
manifested for his guidance through Sree Ladshmi Devi. Sree Lakshmi devi is the
consort of Sree Narayana, and the jiva, in his proper nature, is the eternal
servitor of sree Narayana, under Sree Lakshmi devi as a detached particle of
Her Essence. This cannot be realised by the bound jiva til he wakes to his true
nature and is thereby freed from all taint of mundane sensuous hankerings.
The marriage of Godhead, as
every other Act of His, is identical with Godhead and as such is an object of
our worship. The instinct of sexuality, that is so strong in all fallen jivas,
is the peverted reflection of the highest function of his real nature which
seeks eternally to subordinate herself to Godhead through serving love. This
spiritual impllse of serving love appears in bound jivas in the unwholesome
perverted form of lust seeking for its own gratification. This is, indeed, the
worst of all the perversions appearing in this world and also the one that is
the most difficult to get rid of. Man and woman in this world understand well
enough the process of exploiting one another’s liust for the reciprocal
gatification of their senses. They choose to think gratuitously that, as God
Himself has endowed them with the sexual impulse, it must, therefore, be also
His intention that it is their duty to avail of the opportunity so mercifully
provided. Moderate and well-considered sexuality thus comes to be wrongly
regarded as a part and parcel of our proper nature and the institution of
marriage for the carnal purpose is looked upon as providing the convenient and
proper conditions for the exercise of this lefitimate God-given impulse. The
idea of a human being without any sexual weakness hence comes to be regarded
with the greatest suspicion, being considered as either an impossibility or an
abnormality.
But as a matter of fact
carnal sexuality is not any impulse of our higher nature, It is a hankering for
material enjoyment which can, by its nature, only gratifyor disgust the
material body and mind which have no substantive kinship with the soul. The
corresponding pure spiritual impulse is completely free from the desire of any
selfish enjoyment. Our soul possesses spiritual senses which abstain from
seeking their own gratification by a spontaneous tendency. They want to
provide, and not to intercept for themselves, all enjoyments for the Divinity.
This service on the spiritual plane has no grossness or impurity which we, from
our experience of the corresponding material process, associate with the object
of carnal marriage.
The marriage of individual
souls with Godhead is the establishment of unreserved spiritual reciprocal communion
with the Divinity which is confusedly reflected in an unwholesome and inverted
form in the sexual impulse of this world. The realisation of the most intimate
spiritual communion is the fulfilment of the same spiritual impulse. The
pursuit of sexual gratification of oneself is the obstacle in the way of such
realisation and is, in fact; the greatest punishment that is suffered by the
jiva by reason of his desire for enjoyment.
God does not accept the
carnal sentiment, which is the worst form of aversion to Godhead, an act of
personal disloyalty to the sole Enjoyer of all the spiritual senses of the jiva
whose highest function consists in serving the Lord with all his spiritual
senses. This spiritual service is available to the jiua, only if he happens to
be in the state of perfect subordination to Godhead under the unconditional
direction of Sree Lakshmi Devi, the Plenary Power Who is the Eternal Consort of
the Lord. Sree Narayana communes directly with Sree Lakshmi Devi and the latter
carries out the Divine Will in an infinity of ways. The jiva is enabled to
commune with Godhead as a particle of thc gratuitous extension of the Divine
process by submitting to be a humble agent of Sree Lakshmi Devi Who is entitled
to impart to him, for the purpose, a particle of the pure impulse by which She
ever serves Her sole Lord. This is the most intimate reciprocal communion, or
spiritual marriage, of the jiva with the Divinity. Those, who cherish the
marriage of Lakshmi and Narayana, are by such devotion freed from the fell
delusion of carnal sexuality on the attainment of the reciprocal spiritual
communion with Divinity, which is the very highest form of service for the
jiva. The fallen jiva is prepared to admit, at any rate in practice, the
inexorable penal laws of physical Nature, but, with strange perversity, is
viciously disposed to oppose as irrational the existence of the far more
inexorable code of love that regulates the affairs of the spiritual world.
But the Authority of
Godhead is no less Absolute in the realm of spirit than it is in this
prison-house of the physical world. The scientists try to understand, without
questioning their rationale, the absolute potency, or authority, of the laws of
this material universe. It is necessary to carry the same rational attitude
into all enquiries regarding the spiritual world where, however, the laws of
this physical world cannot prevail. The scientific spiritual method for
attaining to the knowledge of the spiritual world, should, therefore, by strict
analogy, also possess the following order of development, viz., (1) actual
perception of the spiritual world, (2) gathering of spiritual experience, (3)
analysis of such experience, (4) acquisition of right conduct by assimilated
knowledge. As the spiritual realm happens to be wholly unknown to us, we must
be disposed to take the help of the experience of those who have access to it,
if we hope to have even the initial working knowledge of its conditions during
this short span of human life. All this is in strict analogy with the method of
empiric science.
On the very day that Sree
Gaursundar met Lakshmi Devi, a Brahmana match-maker (match-making by the way
was then an honoured offce as it should be) who bore the name of Banamali Acharya,
providentially made his appearance before Sachi Devi. The Brahmana, after
making his obeisance to mother Sachi, accepted a seat which was cordially
offered by her. Thereafter Banamali Acharya broached his proposal: ‘It was high
time for her to think about the Marriage of her Son. Sree Ballabha Acharya, who
also lived at Nabadwip, offered an unexceptionable connection as regards
family, character and piety of life. His Daughter was the goddess Lakshmi
Herself by the fame of Her beauty and disposition. Sachi Devi might accept this
connection if she deemed it desirable.’ Mother Sachi replied, ‘My Son is a
fatherless Boy. Let Him live and study. I am not thinking of any other thing
just now.’ The Brahmana felt utterly discouraged by this dry rejoinder and left
with a heavy heart.
Banamali Acharya fell in
with the Lord on His way back from His Academy, Who embraced him by way of
merriment. The Lord asked where he had been. The Brahmana said he had been to
His mother to propose His Marriage. He could not understand why she did not
take it at all seriously. On hearing of this the Lord became silent. He took
His leave of him with a smile and returned home. He laughingly asked His mother
why she had not received the Acharya in a gracious manner. Sachi was delighted
on catching the hint from her Son and sent for the Brahmana on the day
following. She then said to him, ‘Settle as expeditiously as possible the
affair that you mentioned yesterday.You have my full consent.’
Thereupon, taking the dust
of the feet of Sachi, the Brahmana immediately set out for the home of Ballabha
Acharya. When Banamali Ghatak presented himself before Ballabha Acharya the
latter received him with great respect. Having accepted a seat duly offered by
Ballabha Acharya, Banamali proceeded to ask him forthwith to fix an auspicious
day for the marriage of his Daughter. ‘The Son of Purandar Misra, by Name
Bishwambhar, most learned and possessed of all good qualities, was the only
eligible Bridegroom for his daughter.’ That was also the proposal which Banamali
had to make to him. He accordingly advises Ballabha Acharya to accept the same,
provided, of course, it really commended itself to him.
Ballabha Acharya was filled
with the greatest joy on receiving the proposal. He said that such a Son-in-law
was to be had only by sheer good fortune. ‘If Krishna is gracious to me or the
goddesses Lakshmi and Gauri are pleased towards my daughter, only then, and not
otherwise, I shall deserve to have such Son-in-law. Be pleased to put forth
your best endeavour by all means to settle this affair with the least possible
delay. But there is one point which I feel ashamed to mention. I am poor. I am
unable to afford any dowry. It is only my daughter whom I shall give away and
five myrobalans as her dowry. This is my request to you. You are to obtain
their assent to this.’ On hearing these words of Ballabha Acharya, the Ghatak
felt a deep joy at the success of his mission and, coming back to Sachi,
delivered to her the happy news and asked her to fix an auspicious day for the
ceremony. All friends of the family were filled with gladness on hearing the
happy tidings and applied themselves assiduously to make every preparation for
the due solemnization of the Nuptials of Sree Lakshmi and Sree Narayana.
The preliminary (adhibas)
ceremony was duly performed on an auspicious day, to the accompaniment of
dance, song and a great variety of music. The Brahmanas recited the Veda on all
sides. Nimai took His seat in the centre of the gathering. The friends and Brahmanas
performed this ceremony of betrothal by making offerings of perfumes and
garlands to the Lord. The Brahmanas were specially pleased, being treated to
excellent perfumes, sandal-paste, betel and garlands. Ballabha Acharya came
over to the home of Sachi and, having duly performed the same rite, returned
with a joyous heart to his residence.
Rising early next morning
the Lord bathed, gave away alms and honoured the Manes with due worship. There
was n great jubilation of dance, song and music. On all sides there arose a
mighty tumult, amidst shouts of ‘give and take.’ There was a multitudinous
gathering of loyal matrons, well-wishers, friends Brahmanas and good people.
Mother Sachi joyfully offered to the ladies, who were present, fried rice,
plantain, vermilion, betel and oil. The gods and their consorts assuming human
forms merrily assembled to witness the Marriage of the Lord. Ballabha Acharya
also performed the worship of the gods and departed ancestors in the customary
manner.
At the hour of twilight, in
an auspicious moment, the Lord set out in marriage procession to the house of
Ballabha Misra. No sooner did the Lord arrive at the residence of Misra, the
minds of Misra and all his family were filled with a boundless joy. Misra with
due respect and a glad heart helped his Son-in-law to the Bridegroom’s Seat. He
then brought out his daughter Lakshmi, decked in all Her ornaments, to the
Presence of the Lord. The people began to shout the Name of Hari. They lifted
Lakshmi Devi from the ground and carried Her on their shoulders through the
function of perambulating the Lord seven times. Then, after making Her
obeisance to Him, Lakshmi stood before the Lord with the palms of Her hands
joined in the attitude of supplication. Then the Two threw flowers at Each Other,
and Both Lakshmi and Narayana were very much pleased. Lakshmi then placed a
beautiful garland at the Feet of the Lord and, making obeisance, made the
formal surrender of Herself. The crowd thereupon raised a paean of triumph on
all sides, singing with many voices he Name of Hari so that no other sound
could be heard. The holy rite of beholding Each Other’s Face was next performed
in the same manner. Then the Lord was seated with Lakshmi on His Left Side. The
Lord was in the first bloom of youth, surpassing the god of love in beauty, by
Whose Side Lakshmi now took Her seat. The beauty and joy that manifested
themselves in the house of Misra no one has power to describe.
Thereafter Ballabha sat
down to the function of giving away his Daughter. It seemed as if Bhismaka
himself had re-appeared in this world. After robing the Body of the Lord with
rich clothing, garlands and sandal-paste, the best of Brahmanas washed His
Lotus Feet, by Whose adoration Brahma, his prime ancestor, had been enabled to
create the world. He then bestowed his Daughter in Marriage in due form. The Brahmana
was immersed in the sea of bliss. It was now the turn of the matrons who duly
performed the customary rites of the family.
The Lord passed the night
in the house of Ballabha Acharya. On the following day He set out for His own
home in the company of Lakshmi. All the people rushed out to have a Sight of
the Lord as He was taken home on the shoulders of men, in a do1a, with Lakshmi
seated by His Side. Lakshmi and Narayana were both richly decorated with
perfumes, garlands, ornaments, crowns, sandal-paste and collyrium. All the
people praised Them, as they caught a glimpse of the Divine Pair. The ladies
were specially affected by the Sight. That fortunate Maiden must have long worshipped
Hara and Gauri with Her heart’s best devotion. Could such Husband be obtained
by a girl except through extraordinary good luck? Some said that the Bridegroom
and Bride seemed to be Hara and Gauri themselves. Some said, ‘They were Indra
and Sachi, or Rati and Madana.’ Some said, ‘They were Lakshmi and Narayana.’ A
group of ladies declared them to be ‘ Seeta and Rama, shining with incomparable
Beauty, seated together on the dola.’ Thus said all those ladies. They beheld
Lakshmi and Narayana with an auspicious intent. In this manner the Lord
returned Home at night-fall with the tumult of dance song and music.
Then Sachi Devi accompanied
by the Brahmana matrons, with great joy, led her Daughter-in-law into the
house. She satisfied all the Brahmanas and the dancers and musicians by lavish
gifts of money, clothing and sweet words. We have it on the authority of Thakur
Brindavandas that those who listen to this holy narrative of the Lord’s
Marriage are completely freed from the bondage of this world.
As Sree Lakshmi Devi took
Her place by the Side of the Lord, ‘The Home of Sachi glowed with a
transcendent radiance. Sachi noticed, always both inside and outside the house,
a wonderful flaming brilliance which could not, however, be definitely located.
‘She sometimes saw a blazing tongue of fire by the side of her Son; but as she
turned to see again, it had vanished. She experienced off and on the fragrance
of the lotus flower. Her amazement reached its climax and made her thoughtful.
Mother Sachi mused, ‘I understand the cause of it. Lakshmi abides in this
Maiden. For this reason I perceive the Light and the Fragrance of the Lotus.
There is now also no pinch of the poverty of the bygone days. Ever since this
Lakshmi, my Daughter-in-law, came into the house, wealth in every form has been
pouring in from all sides in a most unaccountable manner.’ Mother Sachi often
spoke in this strain. The Lord still chose to remain unmanifest. No one can
understand the Will of God or how He sports at any time. When God does not make
Himself known even Lakshmi Herself cannot know. This is testified by all the
Scriptures, by the Vedas and: the Puranas, that he alone can know the Supreme
Lord whom He Himself favours.
I have retained the actual
words of Thakur Brindavandas in describing the Marriage of Sree Gaursundar with
Sree Lakshmi Devi. The Activities of Sree Chaitanya are not like those of
mortal men. They were manifested in this world for the purpose of healing the
disease of mortality by Their contemplation. Most fallen souls, who are
denizens of this world, like nothing better than marrying and giving in
marriage. It may be supposed that the detailed narrative of the Marriage of
Sree Chaitanya has been recorded by His devotee to serve as a model to be
followed by the fallen jivas and as sanctioning the institution of marriage
itself for ensuring spiritual progress. Such a conclusion would also be most
acceptable to those who are disposed to find a religious sanction for
carnality.
But the associates of Sree
Chaitanya have cautioned us in unmistakable terms against initiation of the
conduct of Sree Chaitanya. The Marriage of Sree Chaitanya is not a carnal
affair. It is not to be understood as the glorification of the mundane
institution of marriage. If Sree Chaitanya is regarded as a mortal, His
Marriage will naturally be considered as :an affair like that of man and woman
of this world. Those who choose to think in this way are of course free to
follow the dictate of their empiric judgment. Only the associates and true
followers of Sree Chaitanya, who have recorded the true meaning of the Events
of His Career for the benefit of humanity and who have acquired the eligibility
to be heard, by fully acting up to their professions, require us to forget
tenttively the stubborn insinuations of our worldly experience which is bound
to fail utterly to give us the knowledge of the reality of which we stand in
such urgent need.
The details of the Marriage
of Sree Gaursundar should be listened to from the lips of sadhus, i.e., of
those who are wholly devoted to the exclusive service of Godhead. God is the
sole Proprietor of our senses. When our senses are directed Godward, they lose
their grossness engendered by their wrong employment on subjects of this world.
If the spiritual instinct, corresponding to sexuality, could be directed
towards Godhead, it would be realised as the spiritual impulse of love. So long
as it deliberately courts its stultification by directing itself to non-God for
support, it finds itself stranded on this unwholesome mundane plane. Lust is
the perversion of love into a loathsome mundane entity due to Its adulterous
and perverted application amounting to a suicidal crime against its own nature.
In other words, when the faculty of amorous love is exercised by the soul, who
is free from alI mundane hankering towards the All-holy, it is love. Once this
change of direction is really established, the substantive existence of the
spiritual function corresponding to lust is realised on the automatic
elimination of all mundane unwholesomeness. The spiritual function possesses
perfectly wholesome nature and permanent substantive existence. The
corresponding mundane function is devoid of both these essential
characteristics. This is altogether inconceivable to the materialised mind.
The perception of the
associated correlatives of inferiority and superiority, grossness and
wholesomeness, evil and good, smallness and greatness etc. is the inevitable
concomitant of our gross sensuous experience. God reserves the right of appearing
to any and every entity as He pleases. And as soon as He chooses to favour an
entity by His acceptance of his service, he is instantly freed from all
grossness by such acceptance. The marriage-rite of a Bengali Brahmana has
nothing inherently spiritual in it. But it is nevertheless an Eternal Activity
for God to accept these rites and all rites, and by such Acceptance they are
necessarily freed from all grossness and imperfection. Those, who do not want
to enter fully into this real meaning of the Activities of the Divinity when
They become visible in this world, earn only damnation by their mis-reading of
the Scriptures.
The marriage-rite of a
Bengali pseudo-Brahlnana is categorically different from that of Sree Chaitanya
for the reasons suggested above. The former produces and aggravates the malady
of carnality. Such a result cannot be avoided by merely choosing to imagine
that the sensuous affair is sanctioned by the Divine; because the Divine
Marriage is located wholly above the plane of the conditioned soul. The sight
or contemplation of the Divine Event re-acts on the conditioned soul, if he
does not oppose the process by the persistent abuse of his freedom of will in
the matter of sexuality. The result of such re-action is spiritually beneficial.
The nonspiritual, even in the case of the votary of intangible ahstractions,
can only re-act on the non-spiritual and complicate the non-spiritual
condition. The actual Existence and redeeming Potency of the Divinity is
unconsciously, but none the less decisively, denied by the idealist whose
vision is completely deluded by the subtler potency of matter by reason of such
attitude. Gaursundar is Godhead Himself. The contemplation of His
Marriage-Rite, in its minutest details with an enlightened serving faith
elicited by the instructions of the good preceptor, is bound to re-act on the
fettered soul and free him from the bondage of carnality.
We are servants of Krishna.
We are not masters of anything. Sree Lakshmi Devi is the Eternal Consort of
Sree Gaursundar and serves Him as Consort. Sree Gaursundar is the Lord of Sree
Lakshmi Devi. The jiva cannot be the Lord of any entity. The marriage
institution of this world establishes a mundane connection between two material
bodies inside which two offending jivas are imprisoned. Having lost all
consciousness of his real, i.e., spiritual nature, the bound jiva, supposing
his physical body to be identical with himself, falls under the power of the
physical senses and considers himself as an enjoyer of sensuous pleasure
accruing from such reciprocation of bodily and mental activities. The sexual
relationship in the flesh is the perverted caricature by material symbols of
the state of intimate spiritual communion of the individual soul with God in
his pure natural state. The institution of marriage is sinful if the jiva
regards it as a means of his sensuous gratification, as such amorous activities
necessarily tend to prolong the bondage of matter and consequent forgetfulness
of Godhead. The bodily marriage is harmful and unnatural. In the conditioned
state it may not be always possible to avoid the married state in a natural
way. But it is always possible even for a married couple to honestly try to
steer clear of carnality. They are enabled to do this if they learn the nature
of the real connubial connection, which is possible only in the Supreme Lord,
from the lips of sadhus. Being thus enlightened by the mercy of sadhus, one is
enabled to realise the true meaning of Shastric provisions in regard to
marriage that are intended to unite individual souls to God by the gradual but
complete elimination of all carnal desire. Sometimes also a self-realised soul
(sadhu) may adopt the married state in order to serve God by setting an example
to fallen jivas embodying the shastric ideal of the married state. But nothing
is gained by lifeless imitation of the external conduct of such a person. It is
necessary first of all to seek for true enlightenment at the feet of the
guileless and sincere servants of the Lord. To the understanding, enlightened
by the causeless mercy of sadhus, the real significance of the sacrament of
marriage discloses itself. Conditioned souls have no right of entry into the
spiritual realm until and unless they are enabled to realise the necessity of submitting
to the purgatorial process of the cleansing of all worldly dirt by the
unconditional service of the true devotees of Godhead.
The ladies of the
neighbourhood gave vent to their opinion that the Bride and Bridegroom were no
other than Lakshmi and Narayana; or, in other words, They were regarded as
Godhead and His Eternal Consort. This was also fully applicable to the case.
But we should be on our guard against the utterly profane carnal sentimentalism
that proposes to regard every newly married pair as resembling Lakshmi and Narayana,
or, for the matter of that, which proposes to regard any jiva as the husband or
wife of another by his spiritual nature. The mundane relation of husband and
wife is of the flesh, being the grossly perverted eternal relation that unites
mediately the individual soul, in his state of grace, with the Fountain head of
All-existence through his willing, unconditional submission to the guidance of
the pleanary Power. It is sheer folly to confound the one with the other.
Similarly those are also
equally deluded who choose to regard the issue born of such bodily union as
being on a level with Divine Gopala. Such people affect to be innocently
unconscious of the eternal difference that separates this nether world, its
concerns and the conditioned souls from the Divinity and His Own. The jiva
commits a great offence against Godhead when he marries another jiva for the
practice of carnality, and a sacrilege when he chooses to regard such bodily
union as Divinely ordained. The soul of the jiva can be neither wife nor
husband in the worldly sense. He has nothing to do with this world. The flesh
and all its concerns are the snare which entraps the soul who is disinclined to
serve Godhead and seeks, in lieu of the spiritual and absolutely pure service
of the Lord, his own selfish enjoyment. So long as the desire for such
enjoyment retains possession of the mind of the jiva, he is apt to turn a deaf
ear to the Word of God always warning him from without and within against the
seductions of the flesh. To such a person the world appears to be a place of
legitimate sensuous enjoyment. When such a person also sets up as a preacher of
the Word of God, he is bound to mis-interpret the Scriptures in order to make
them tally with his own sensuous outlook and often carries this
mis-interpretation to such lengths that he feels no scruple in representing his
sensual activities as being indentical with the service of God on the ground
that they are also applauded by all other sinners. It is these pseudo-preachers
who also declare the consummation of carnal marriage between one jiva . and
another as identical with the institution sanctioned by the Scriptures. Let us
beware of these pseudo-preachers who are infinitely worse than even the
proverbial wolves in sheep’s clothing. One should on principle refuse to be
instructed in the Word of God by a worldling who deceives himself and others by
putting on the holy garb of a servant of God, and should avoid the society of
such a person as that of an open enemy of Godhead. Toleration of such persons
is the worst cruelty to oneself as well as to the person himself, being an
offence at the Feet of the Lord and against the express teaching of all
Scriptures. These hypocritical teachers of the religion are worse than even the
rankest of atheists by profession.