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Sri Sadhguro Pahimam Parama Dayalu Rakshamam

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Dear Members

" Hindu Dharma " is a book published by Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan which contains

English translation of two volumes of the Tamil Book " Deivatthin Kural " ; which

is a collection of invaluable and engrossing speeches of Sri Sri Sri

Chandrasekharendra Saraswathi MahaSwamiji.

 

http://kamakoti.org/hindudharma/part5/chap18.htm

 

The Threefold Purpose of Yajna

 

The Vedic sacrifices have threefold purposes. The first is to earn the

blessings of the deities so that we as well as all other creatures may be happy

in this world. The second is to ensure that, after our death, we will live

happily in the world of the celestials. But our stay in devaloka, the celestial

world, is not for all time. It will last only until such time as we exhaust the

merit earned by us in this world. The joy known in the celestial world is also

not full or entire unlike the bliss experienced by great devotees and jnanins.

It is nowhere equal to the bliss of the Atman: which is also described as

" experiencing " Isvara.

Sankara has stated in his Manisa-Pancaka that the joy that Indra knows is no

more than a drop in the ocean of Atma-ananda or the bliss of Self-realisation.

However, life in svarga, the paradise of the celestials, is a thousand times

happier than life on earth with its unceasing sorrows. The second purpose of

performing sacrifices is to earn residence in this paradise.

The third purpose is the most important and it is achieved by performing

sacrifices, as taught by the Gita, without any expectation of reward. Here we

desire neither happiness in this world nor residence in paradise. We perform

sacrifices only because it is our duty to invoke the blessings of the Gods for

the welfare of the world. In this way our consciousness will be cleansed, a

pre-requisite for enlightenment and final liberation. In other words the

selfless performance of sacrifices means that we will eventually be dissolved in

the Paramatman.

Sankara, who has expounded the ideals of Self-realisation and jnana, says:

" Vedo nityam adhiyatam taduditam karma svanusthiyatam " (Chant the vedas every

day. Perform with care the sacrifices and other rites they enjoin upon you). The

Acharya wants us to conduct sacrifices not for happiness in this world, nor for

the enjoyment of the pleasure of paradise. No, not for any petty rewards.

Sankara exhorts us to carry out Vedic works without our hearts being vitiated by

desire. This, according to his teaching, is the way to make our mind pure in

order to realise the Self.

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