Guest guest Posted September 12, 2009 Report Share Posted September 12, 2009 Balaramavathara It is difficult to distinguish Balamramavathara from Krishnavathara as Balarama was always together with Krishna as adisesha. It is due to his superhuman powers he is elevated to the status of a separate avathara and also because he is considered to be the personification of sankarshaNa, one of the four vyuha forms of the Lord , Vasudeva, SankarshaNa, Pradhyumna and AnirudDha The weapons of Balarama , the plough and the mace signify viveka and vairagya. The mind is ploughed with viveka and the hard lumps of earth in the form of desire are broken by the mace of vairagya. Krishnavathara It is a voluminous task to point out the significance of Krishnavathara. In short He is the embodiment of Gita as He is called yogesvara and jagathguru. He showed Himself to be jagathguru from His birth itself when He gave His instructions to Vasudeva. Each and every incident of His life is pregnant with meaning. Bhagavatham says, Krishnasthu bhagavan svayam. It is the poornavathara in which the divinity was manifest throughout. But not all understood Him as he Himself said in Gita janma karma cha me dhivyam evam yo vetthi thathvathaH thyakthvaa punarjanmam na ethi—(BG.4.9) "the one who knows My birth and actions in reality is not born again after leaving hia body.," as it requires devotion and insight to understand His real identity. naaham prakaasah sarvasya, "I am not manifest to all" He says in the Gita, (BG.7.25) Those who are ignorant considered Him as a human being. avajaananthi maam mooDaaH maanusheem thanum aaSritham (BG.9.11) the fools consider Me as he one who has a human form. Krishna manifested Himself as the son of Devaki and was not born. No mother could give birth to a son with four arms wielding sankha chakra etc! Desika says in his Yadhvabhyudhaya that the Lord was born to Devaki as the Sun to the eastern direction which means that just as the Sun only appears in the east Krishna also appeared as the son of Devaki. His killing asuras means the destruction of evil impulses The Mahabharatha war was .the eternal conflict between the good and the evil that is happening in the mind always. The Lord is on the side of dharma and the actions of Krishna in making Pandavas win the war were only the act of the Lord who sees that the punishment is meted out to the evildoers. One who does adharma will meet his end through adharma only. So there was nothing that could be termed as adharma on the part of Krishna who was only acting as the dispenser of the result of karma karmaphaladhaatha. This is what he meant when he said `aham paandava pakshapaathee,' in Mahabharatha. The Lord has no partiality as He says samoaham sarvabhootheshu na me dhveshyo asthi na priyah(BG>9.29), I am impartial to all beings . There is no one dear to Me nor an enemy," in the Gita. His retribution is for redemption as the mother punishes the child for stopping it from evil. The meaning of the word Krishna is the one who gives the greatest joy besides the meaning that he is the one who attracts.karshathi ithi krshNaH. krshirbhoovaachakaH Nasthu nirvrthi vaachakaH; nithaanthnirvrthH krshNaH ithi vishNoH krshNa naama. KrishiH means earth and the particle `Na' denotes joy. Limitless joy is KrishnaH and hence the Lord Vishnu is called Krishna. Brahman is defined as sath chith ananda. Ramavathra is the sath, vaamana is the chith and Krishna stands for ananda, pure unalloyed joy. anandalahari. The common notion that one should act like Rama and listen to Krishna is absurd and forwarded by those who are ignorant of the significance of Krishnavathara. The love of gopis and Radha towards Krishna , the main reason for this misconception is full of meaning. When the mind is fully engaged in the Lord it becomes the flute in His hand, a hollow tube with full of holes through which all the impurities have been washed off. Then His fingers move through the holes and fills it with divine music. When the mind wants to unite with Him but is not able to do so due to egocentric impulses that separates it from Him , the resulting sorrow is depicted as the viraha of the gopies and Radha. The gopies went to meet Krishna but they were never missed at home, says Bhaagavatha Puraana. Their union was one of spirit and not of body. When the thought is centered on the object of love it is the union of the spirit. When every thought that occurs is centered on the Lord the devotee's mind becomes a stage for Rasleela. Each thought is the gopi having Krishna as its object. This idea is brought out beautifully in the sloka anganaam anganaam anthare Maadhavo Maadhavam Maadhavam anthare anganaa there was a Krishna between each gopi and there was a gopi between each Krishna. Then what happens is the divine music played by Devakinandhana, sanjagou veNunaa dhevakeenandhanaH, When all thoughts merge into one like the big fish swallowing the smaller ones or like a big wave absorbing the small waves, the mind is filled with only one thought which is represented by the concept of Radha, who is the jiva, the individual soul. She represents the yogi described in the Gita, as yoginaam api sarveshaam madhgathenaanthraathmanaa sraddahaavaan bajathe yo maam sa me yukthathamo mathaH (BG.6.47) "Of all the yogis the one whose mind and intellect is engrossed in Me, one who contemplates on Me with faith is integrated in yoga, in My opinion" When the jiva turns towards the Lord it finds that it is unable to do so blinded by ego born out of ignorance. Then the Acharya advises the jiva to shed its ego and approach the Lord with humility and love. This is the part played by the sakhi friend of Radha, in the legends of Radha-Krishna. The Lord is ever merciful and ready to receive the jiva with outstretched arms and He is as eager to unite with the jiva, if not more, as the jiva itself The story of Gitagovinda, a lyric by Jayadeva, depicts the above idea beautifully. We go away from the Lord due to our ignorance and start blaming Him for our troubles which are all due only to our separation from Him. When He tries to contact us we spurn Him thinking that He does not care for us. But He does not mind our rebuff and patiently tries to bring us back to where we belong. Finally we come to realise that He had been kind to us all along though we were not aware of it till now. The gopis and Uddhava are the examples of bhakthiyoga described in the Gita. Macchitthaa madhgathapraaNaaH bodhayanthah parasparam kaThyanthaScha maam nithyam tushyanthi cha ramanthi cha (BG.10.9) "With mind engrossed in Me, with their lives centered in Me, they communicate with each other and talk about Me always and enjoy that with contentment." The rasleela was told by Sukha , a realized soul and heard by Parikshith who had given up all desires and ready to leave the world, and others who were present were the rshis. So it is of highest philosophical and devotional import. Kalki avathra. Nothing much is known about Kalki avathara but that the Lord will incarnate as Kalki with sword as His weapon to destroy the evil in kaliyuga and set up the krthayuga again. It signifies the destruction of desire, which is the root cause of evil, born out of ignorance, by the sword of jnana, as said in the Gita, paapmaanam prajahi hyenam jnaana vijnaananaaSanam (BG.3.41), kill this (desire) which is the root of sin and which destroys both knowledge and realization As a wise man will learn from every experience in his life the stories in the Puranas and Ithihasas are full of meaning for those who care to look for it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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