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Válmiki

Yoga-Vāsistha, Book 5: Upaśama-Khanda (On Quietism). Chapter 42 - Spirituality of Prahlāda

Vasistha continued- The lotus-eyed Hari, having said thus much to Prahlāda, departed with the whole concourse of the assembled gods, Kinnaras and men, from the abode of the Asura.

Then did Prahlāda and his associates throw handfuls of flowers on the departing god, as he was mounted on the back of the king of birds 1.

The god crossed the heavenly Ganges and reached at the milky ocean, where he took his serpent couch as the black bee sits on the lotus­-leaf.

The God Visnu sat on his serpent seat with as much case; as Indra sits in heaven in the assembly of the gods; and as the lord of the demons, was made to sit in the infernal region wholly devoid of all his cares.

I have now related to you, Rāma! the whole narrative of Prahlāda's coming to his sense, from the state of his insensibility; and this account is as charming to the holy hearer, as the cooling moon-beams are refreshing to the tired traveller.

The man that ponders in his mind, the manner of Prahlāda's resuscitation to life; is regenerated in that felicitous state, from the sinfulness of his former condition.

A cursory rehearsal of his narration, wipes off the sins of men; while the deep consideration of its spiritual sense, leads one to his eternal salvation.

The ignorant are released from their ignorance, and the deep thinker is released from his sins; therefore do not neglect to ponder well on it, for the remission of all your sins.

The man who considers well the manner of Prahlāda's gaining his proficiency, gets a remission of all the sins committed by him in his repeated previous states of life.

Rāma said- Tell me sir, how the sound of the pāncajanya conch-shell roused the mind of the devout Prahlāda from its immersion in holy meditation.

Vasistha replied: - Know Rāma, that there are two states of liberation attending on sinless persons, the one is the emancipation of one in his embodied state in this life, and the other is after his departure from here.

The embodied liberation means one's continuance in his living body, but with a state of mind freed from its attachment to worldly things, and liberated from the desire of fruition and reward of all his meritorious acts.

The disembodied liberation is obtained after the soul is released from the body, and is settled in the Supreme Spirit. It is an enfranchisement from the recurrence of future life and birth in this mortal world.

The living liberated man is like a fried grain, whose regerminating power is parched within itself, and the desire of whose heart is purified from every expectation of future reward or regeneration.

He remains in the pure, holy and magnanimous state of his mind, who resigns himself solely to the meditation of the Great Soul, and continues as if he were asleep in his living and waking states.

Being thus entranced in his inward meditation, he continue in a torpid state for a thousand years, and wakes again to his senses, if he is allowed to live long ever after that period.

Prahlāda remained thus with his holy thoughts suppressed within himself, until he was roused from his trance by the shrill sound of the conch-­shell.

Hari is the soul of all beings, and he who assimilates himself to that god in his thought; becomes identified with the supreme soul, which is the cause of all.

No sooner the god thought that Prahlāda should come to his sense, than his sensation came immediately to him at the divine will.

The world has no other cause, but the divine spirit; which with the assistance of the causal elements, takes different forms on itself at the time of creation; and therefore it is the spirit of Hari that constitutes the world.

The worship of God in spirit, presents Hari to the spiritual sight; and the worship of Hari in his outward from, represents the figure of the soul and the inner mind.

Do you, O Rāma! put out the visible sights from your view, and look at the inmost soul within yourself; begin thus accustomed to spiritual meditation, you will soon have the sight of your God.

The world presents a scene of the gloomy rainy weather, with showers of woes falling on all sides; it is likely to freeze us in ignorance, unless we look to the sun of our reason 2.

It is by grace of God that we can avoid the delusions of the world, as we may escape from a goblin by means of a spell.

It is at the will of the spirit, that the thick darkness of the mind, is dispersed and cleared off a time; the world is a net work of delusion, which is scattered like a smoke by the breeze of reason.

Footnotes

1. Garuda- the eagle or bird of heaven

2. or, unless we abide under the sunshine of reason




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