What is emancipation?
A.~ That condition in which the souls are freed.
Q. Freed from what?
A.~ What they desire to be freed from.
Q. What do they desire to be freed from?
A.~ From pain ( or misery)
Q. Being freed from pain what do they attain and where do they live?
A.~ They attain happiness and live in God.
Q. What re the causes of Bondage and Emancipation?
A.~ Obedience to the Will of God, dissociation from sin, ignorance, bad company, evil influences and bad habits, the practice of truthfulness in speech, the promotion of public good, even-handed justice, righteousness and the advancement of knowledge, worship of God - Glorification, Prayer and Communion -in other words, the practice of yoga, study and tuition or instruction of others, and advancement of knowledge by righteous efforts, the employment of best means towards the accomplishment of one's object, the regulation of one's conduct in strict accordance with the dictates of even-handed justice which is righteousness, and so on are the means of obtaining Emancipation, whilst the reverse of these, disobedience to the Divine Will and the like lead to Bondage.
Does the soul in the state of Emancipation keep its individuality or is it absorbed (into God)?
A.~ It lives and keeps its individuality.
Q.Where does it live?
A.~ In God.
Q. Where is God? And does an emancipated soul remain in some definite place or go about just as it desires?
A.~ It remains its innate power, activity and attributes but no physical body. It is said in the Shatapatha Braahmana:-
"An emancipate soul has no physical body or bodily organs but it retains its pure natural attributes and powers. By virtue of its innate powers, an emancipate soul has the principle of hearing when it wants to hear, the principle of touch when it wants to feel, the principle of sight when it wishes to see, the principle of taste when it desires to taste, the principle of smell when it wants to smell, the principle of thought for thinking, the principle of judgement for ascertaining truth, the principle of memory for remembering, the principle of individuality for feeling its individuality. It can possess this so-called - composed of the principles of sensation and thought, etc., at its will. Just as when the soul is embodied, it depends upon its physical body and bodily organs to carry out its will, so does it enjoy the bliss of Emancipation through the use of its innate power.
What is the nature of this power, and of how many kinds is it?
A.~ Really it is of one kind, but it may be said to consist of the following 24 varieties:-
1. Strength; 2. Energy; 3. Attraction; 4. Suggestion; 5. Motion; 6. Intimidation; 7. Analytic power; 8. Skill; 9. Courage; 10. Memory; 11. Discernment; 12. Desire; 13. Love; 14. Hatred; 15. Association; 16. Dissociation; 17. Dividing power; 18. Combining power; 19. Power of sight; 20. Hearing; 21. Touch; 22. Taste; 23. Smell; 24. Knowledge.
By the help of these very powers the soul attains and enjoys happiness even in Emancipation. If the soul, when emancipated, were to be absorbed into Brahma, who would then enjoy the bliss of emancipation. Those who regard the dissolution of soul as emancipation are no doubt immersed in ignorance, because the Emancipation of the soul consists in its exemption from all sin and suffering and in the enjoyment of perfect bliss in the All-pervading, All-blissful, Infinite, Omnipotent God. Mark! What the Vedaant Shaastra says on the subject:-
"According to Baadri the soul as well as the mind - the principle of thought - is present in Emancipation." VEDAANT SHAATRA 4: 4, 10. In other words, Baadri, otherwise known as Paraashar, the father of Vyaasa, does not believe in the absorption of the soul ( into God) nor in its dissolution, nor in that to the principle of thought in the state of Emancipation. Similarly, the great teacher Jaimini holds that "an emancipated soul possesses the principle of thought as well as well as the spiritual or subtle body - the principles of sensation, and the nervauric forces. The soul and the principle of thought, etc., are not absent during emancipation."VEDAANT SHAASTRA 4: 4, 11.
Again the sage Vyaasa believes "both in the presence and absence of these powers in the state of emancipation, in other words, he holds that the soul exists and retains all its powers that are pure, whilst unholiness, sinfulness, pain and ignorance and the like are absent." VEDAANT SHAASTRA 4: 4,12
"That condition of the soul in which it possesses a pure manas - principle of thought, the five principles of sensation, and in which the deliberations of the principle of discernment are true and constant, is called the supreme state or Emancipation." KATHOPANISHAD, 2: 6, 10.
"That Supreme Spirit, Who is free from sin, decay and death, pain and sorrow, hunger and thirst, Whose thoughts and desires are the very essence of truth, should be sought after. It is by contact with the Divine Spirit that an emancipated soul attains to all the conditions it wishes for, and realizes all its desires, and it is through the knowledge of the Supreme Soul that it learns the means of salvation and the ways of self-purificcation." CHHAANDOGYA UPANISHAD, 8:7, 1.
So this emancipated soul sees al through pure spiritual eyes, and a pure manas and thereby enjoys extreme bliss. The soul that rests in the All-Glorious, Supreme Being - Omnipresent, Omniscient Spirit, the Inward Controller of all - Whom all men of learning, imbued with piety and desirous of obtaining salvation, worship and adore (by the practice of yoga), enjoys the beatitude of emancipation. Verily it obtains all its heart's desires and whatsoever worlds and states it wishes to attain to. The emancipated soul leaves off its mortal coil and roam about in space in the All-pervading God by the help of the Spiritual body.
As long as the soul is embodied, it can never be free from worldly pains and sorrows. Prajapati said to Indra, 'Listen, O thou who art wealthy and worthy of great respect! This physical body is mortal. It is in the jaws of death very much like a goat under the jaws of a lion (meaning that death can overtake this body at anytime). It is the dwelling place of the formless and immoral soul, which is, therefore, constantly afflicted with pain or engrossed in pleasure, because an embodied soul can never be free form worldly joys or sorrows. On the other hand, the un-embodied, emancipated soul, that lives in God, can neither be affected by joys nor by sorrows. It continually enjoys perfect bliss.
Does the soul, once being emancipated, ever become subject to birth and death again?
It is said in the Chhaandogya Upanishad:-
"The soul after being emancipated never comes back again into this world." CHHAANDOGYA 8:7, 1.
"Again it is written in the Vedaant Shaastras:
"The Veda declares there is no coming back, no coming back declares the Veda."VEDANT SHAASTRA 4: 4, 33.
The Gita also says:-
"That Supreme State from which it - the soul - never falls back (into this world) is mine."
It is clear from these quotations that that alone is called (the state of) Emancipation from which the soul never returns into this world. What is your view?
A.~ It is not true that the emancipated soul never returns to this world because the Veda contradicts this view.
"Whose name should we hold sacred; Who is that All-glorious, Resplendent Being Who is imperishable among all the perishable things; Who having made us enjoy the bliss of emancipation again invests us with bodies and thereby gives us the pleasure of seeing our parents? It is the All-glorious, Eternal, Immortal, All-pervading, Supreme Being Whose name we should hold sacred. He, it is, Who helps us to enjoy the bliss of Emancipation and then bring us back into this world, clothes us with bodies, and thereby gives us the pleasure of seeing our parents. The same Divine Spirit it is Who regulates the period of Emancipation and lords over all." RIG VEDA 1:24, 2.
Again says the Saankhya Shaastra,
"Souls live in Bondage and Emancipation as they are at the present time. There is no everlasting (Atyanta) Bondage or emancipation." SAANKYA 1:159.
Q. But the Niyaaya Shaastra says:-
"(Atyanta) Everlasting freedom from pain alone is called Emancipation, because it is only freedom form false ideas, ignorance, vices (such as covetousness) and from engrossment in sensual gratification and contraction of evil habits, and consequent immunity from birth and pain, that brings about Emancipation which is everlasting.*
A.~ The word Atyanta does not necessarily always mean everlasting, because we very often say that such a man is
* Even the word Everlasting in English does not mean unending, it sometimes used to express the same idea as atyanta, i.e., extreme - Tr.
in atyanta pain or enjoys atyanta pleasure. Now here atyanta means extreme. What we, therefore, mean is that that man is in extreme pain or enjoys extreme pleasure. Similarly the word atyanta in the above quotations means extreme, not everlasting or etenal.
If the soul returns to this world form the state of emancipation, what is the duration of Emancipation then?
A.~ "The emancipated soul returns to this world from the state of emancipation in the Omnipresent God till after the end of the Grand-Dissolution (Mahaakalpa) and, thereafter, parts with that bliss and is again born into this world." MUNDAK UPANISHAD 3: 2, 6.
The period covered by Grand-Dissolution is calculated thus:-
Time is first divided into four yugas or cycles:-
Satyuga (Golden age)…………………………………..1,728,000 years.
Dvaaparyuga (Silver age)………………………………1,296,000 years
Tretaayuga (Bronze age)…………………………………864,000 years
Kaliyuga (Iron or dark age)………………………………432,000 years
----------- -
Total ………. 4,320,000 years
Thus 4,320,000 years make one Chaturyugi
2,000 Chaturyugi is 8,640, 000,000 years and is equal to an Ahoratra (Day and Night)
30 Ahoratras equal one Maasa (month)
12 Maasas equal one Prantakal (Grand-dissolution).
Thus, the duration of Emancipation = 100 x 12x 30 x 2000 x 4,320,000 = 311, 040,000,000,000 years.
Q. All others writers teach and all the world believes that the emancipation is that condition from which no souls returns to this world and becomes subject to births and deaths.
A.~ This view can never be true. Firstly, when the powers of the soul, its instruments (such as body and bodily organs), and its means are all finite, how could the reward extend over an infinite period? Secondly, the soul does not possess infinite capacity, infinite means and infinite activity to enjoy infinite bliss, how could it then enjoy Everlasting happiness? How could the end be eternal when the means to accomplish it are non-eternal? Thirdly, if no souls came back from the state of emancipation, the world should become bereft of them.
No, there can be no dearth of souls, because the emancipated souls are replaced by new ones that God creates.
A.~
- Firstly, if that be the case the soul would become non-eternal (mortal), because a thing that is created must perish. Therefore, according to your own view the soul even on obtaining emancipation would perish, hence emancipation becomes non-eternal.
- Secondly, in the place wherein emancipated souls live - otherwise called Heaven - there will be a great deal of hustling, crowding and jostling, as there will be no end of increase in the population for the simple reason that immigration will be so great, whilst emigration will be nil.
- Thirdly, there can be no perception of pain. For example, you would not know sweet taste from bitter or bitter from sweet, if you would only taste one of them - sweet or bitter - all your life-time, because it is only by comparing the flavours of things possessing opposite tastes that we form an idea of both. If a man were always to eat and drink sweet things only, he would not enjoy them so much as one who tastes all kinds of food.
- Fourthly, if God were to give the soul unlimited happiness as the fruit if its actions that are limited (finite), His justice would be destroyed. A wise man does not put on his man's shoulders a load heavier than he can carry. If a man can only carry a load of eighty pounds and his master puts a weight of eight hundred pounds on his head, he is certainly worthy of censure. Similarly, it would not be right for God to load the soul, possessed of finite power and finite knowledge, with everlasting happiness.
- Fifthly, if you say that God creates new souls, the material out of which He creates them will eventually run short; because a bank, however wealthy it may be that has a constant drain on it, but has no income, is sure to become bankrupt sooner or later. It follows, therefore, that this arrangement alone - viz., Emancipation and then return from it - is the right one.
- Sixthly, there is no man who would prefer life-imprisonment (or hanging) to imprisonment for a shorter term. There being no return from Emancipation, it differs from life-imprisonment only in this respect that one has not to work there.
With regard to Emancipation as absorption into God (which is the plea of salvation according to some people)it is like death by drowning one-self into the sea.
The soul can enjoy eternal bliss..
and be emancipated everlastingly just as God lives in enjoyment of Perfect and Everlasting Bliss and is Eternally free from worldly joy and sorrow, pleasure and pain.
A.~ God is infinite by nature, His essence, powers, attributes are all infinite. He can, therefore, never be subject to ignorance, pain and bondage, etc. The soul, even when emancipated, remains, finite in knowledge, though pure in nature. Its attributes, powers and activity all remain finite. It can, therefore, never be like God.
This being the case, Emancipation is no better than birth and death. It is useless, therefore, to endeavour to obtain it.
A.~ It is not like birth and death. The bliss of Emancipation extends over the period of Creations and Dissolutions for thirty-six thousand times. Is uninterrupted happiness with perfect absence of pain extending over such a long period trifling? You eat and drink to-day, though you know you will be hungry again before the day is out. Why do you try to appease your hunger and quench your thirst then? If it is considered necessary to endeavour to appease hunger and quench thirst, acquire worldly possessions, and temporal power and fame, have a wife and children and the like, why is it not the same for emancipation? Though death is certain, yet we work in order to live. In like manner, though the return from emancipation is certain, still it is extremely desirable that we should do our best to obtain it.
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