Guest guest Posted January 12, 2010 Report Share Posted January 12, 2010 Chapters 14 and 15-Duties of the householder-GrhasThaDharma 1. A house holder should discharge all his duties as an offering to the Lord. 2. He should serve the great (mahaanthah) and sages. 3. He should earn only as much as that necessary for maintaining his family and to perform his duites. 4.He should do his duties in a detached manner appearing as though attached. (This implies that detachment is not indifference.) 5. One who amasses wealth more than what is necessary is a thief. 6.He should treat all beings like himself. 7. He should be contented with what he is destined to have and enjoy that according to the propriety of time and place. 8. To one who is always filled with happiness born out of contentment nothing gives sorrow like the thorns and stones on the way do not worry the one who is wearing footwear. Narada telling Yudhishtira `santhushtaH kena vaa raajan varthetha api vaariNaa?', meaning that one who is contented will live even on water, goes on to say that people lead a dog's life due to their desire for sensual pleasures. Of the six enemies of man, the first three , kama ,krodha and lobha are deadly, which the next three, moha, madha and maathsarya follow as a consequence. Narada said that when a man is hungry or thirsty all the other desires will go away and when one is afraid the anger goes but the lobha, avarice does now leave even by owning the whole world. Kama can be conquered by will power, and where there is no kama, krodha, anger, does not arise. Lobha can be overcome by the perception of evil in a desired object and moha or illusion goes away by spiritual knowledge, arrogance, madha, is removed by resorting to holy people, maathsarya , jealousy, naturally is absent when the avarice is destroyed. The three kinds of sorrow, aadhibouthika , the one due to other beings, aadhi dhaivika, due to destiny, aadhyanthika, due to our own body and mind, should be met with by mercy towards all, equanimity and yoga(control of body and mind) respectively. Thamas and rajas, are to be conquered by cultivation sathva which also is to be conquered for self evolution by equanimity. Ignorance of reality is the sleep induced by thamas which gives rise to three kinds of dream, namely, vasthubhedha buddhi,, seeing difference in entities, kriyaa bahdha buddhi, difference in actions and phala bhedha buddhi, difference in results. These three dream states are to be got rid of by the knowledge of bhaavdhvaitha, kriyaadhvaitha and dhravyaadhvaitha, said Narada. bhavaadhvaitha means the perception of unity between the cause and the effect. To the weaver the cloth and the thread or one and the same , similarly the clay and the pot to potter and ornament and gold for the goldsmith. This removes the bhedha buddhi towards one thing and another, vasthubedhabuddhi. Kriyaadhvaitha consists in offering all actions by body, mind and speech to the Lord. This removes the sense of agency in a doer which creates the bhedha buddhi of kriya, action. dhravyaadhavatha- Detachment from the fruit of action which gives the perception of the difference in the results of the actions of our selves and that of others. Narada concluded saying that the householder who thus does his duties with detachment and devotion offering all his actions to the Lord attains salvation even if he remains in the worldly life as a grshastHa. Narada further cited his own story to illustrated that by service to the holy men one can reach the highest. Before he was born as the son of a servant woman he was a gandharva named Upabrmhana and lived a luxurious life, Once the prajapathis called the gandharvas and apsaras to sing about the leelas of the Lord and Upabramhana sang love songs and was cursed to become a sudra and therefore he was born to the servant woman when due to his service to the sages he acquired knowledge and in the next janma he was the manasaputhra of Brhama and became the devarishi. Then worshipped by Yudhishtira, Narada took leave of him and Yudhishtira was filled with wonder hearing from him that Krishna was the parabrahman. Thus ends the seventh skandha of Srimadbhagvatham Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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