Origin of the Jiva - Tatastha Shakti - Marginal Plane - Falldown from Spiritual World? - Krsna Talk 53

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by
Swami B.G. Narasingha
Devotee: I have read the book "Our Original Position" (OOP) published by the Iskcon GBC Press in which it is stated that the jivas (living entities) come to this material world after falling from grace in the spiritual world. Is this 'fall philosophy' correct according to sastra and previous acaryas?
Swami Narasingha: No, it is not at all the correct understanding of how the jivas came into material existence. The book (OOP) does not properly represent Gaudiya Vaisnava philosophy nor does it properly represent the teachings and conclusions of our spiritual master Srila A.C. Bhaktivedanta Svami Prabhupada.
One of the authors of OOP has stated that in his opinion the
views in OOP provide broad evidence of a fall/no fall paradox
of the soul's origin being rooted in Gaudiya Vaisnava tradition
as follows:
"OOP provides broad evidence from within the Gaudiya
Vaisnava tradition to show that Srila Prabhupada's paradoxical
claims on the soul's origin are firmly rooted in that tradition."
(Heresy and the Jiva Debate by Howard Resnick [Hrdayananda
Dasa Gosvami] - The Hare Krsna Movement -The Post-charismatic
Fate of a Religious Transplant)
Having gone through OOP in great detail, we fail to see
how the authors have done anything other than ignore the
crucial points surrounding the jiva issue, misinterpret
the sastra (Gaudiya Vaisnava tradition) and create imaginary
interpretations. Truthfully speaking, outside of the limited
circle of Iskcon, no Gaudiya Vaisnava philosopher accepts
the OOP book as authoritative. The book reads like the papal
dogma of Christianity rather than the philosophy of Gaudiya
acaryas. In fact the authors of OOP make statements that
are so absurd, no intelligent person will take them seriously.
According to the OOP book A.C. Bhaktivedanta Svami Prabhupada
sometimes says the jiva falls from association with Krsna
and sometimes he says the jiva does not fall. This then
becomes a paradox. A paradox is a statement, proposition
or situation that seems to be absurd or contradictory, but
in fact is or may be true. OOP therefore suggests that the
jiva falls and doesn't fall simultaneously. But when A.
C Bhaktivedanta Svami Prabhupada himself states the conclusion,
then the so-called 'paradox' created by some of his followers,
vanishes.
According to the Bhaktivedanta purport on Srimad Bhagavatam
3.16.26:
"The conclusion is that no one falls from the spiritual
world, or Vaikuntha planet, for it is the eternal abode."
This conclusion, which completely negates the so-called
paradoxical view created in the OOP book, is also upheld
by sastra and previous acaryas such as Jiva Gosvami, Bhaktivinoda
Thakura, Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura, and all bona
fide devotees in the Gaudiya Vaisnava sampradaya. The conclusion
is that the jivas, that are now conditioned by the modes
of material nature and originate in the 'tatastha' or the
marginal plane of existence, did not fall from the spiritual
world.
Ignoring the conclusion of their spiritual master, the
authors of the OOP book insist that the jiva falls from
the spiritual world. Thus their opinions are taken simply
as faulty interpolations.
The actual position of the jiva is marginal. The marginal
plane, as the origin of the jivas between the material and
spiritual worlds, has been stated in sastra and by previous
acaryas. There, in that marginal plane, the jivas are in
a state of equilibrium but due to their innate nature they
gradually become attracted to either the spiritual or material
energy of the Supreme Person.
When one accepts the direct meaning of the sastra (amnaya
vakya) it is understood that the jivas are tattastha-sakti
- i.e. they are the marginal potency of Godhead.
BRHADARANYAKA UPANISAD states the following about the
marginal position of the jiva:
tasya va etasya purusasya dve eva sthane
bhavata "The jiva-purusa should inquire about two locations,
the material world and the spiritual world. The jiva is
situated in a third position, called svapna sthana, on the
border between these two places. Situated in this marginal
place, he can see both the material and spiritual worlds".
(Brhadaranyaka Upanisad 4.3.9)
tad yatha maha matsya ubhe kule' "Just as a large fish living in the river wanders
from one bank to the other, so the jiva is of similar quality,
and is equipped to wander in the Karana waters between the
material and spiritual worlds (svapnanta and buddhanta)."
(Brhadaranyaka Upanisad 4.3.18)
JIVA GOSVAMI writes in his commentary to Sri Brahma-samhita
5.21 and quotes Sri Narada-pancaratra:
yat-tatastham tu cid rupam sva-samvedyad
vinirgatam "Although spiritual and conscious by nature, the
jiva lives on the border between the spiritual and material
worlds. When it chooses to enter the material world, it
becomes contaminated by the modes of nature. That is said
to be the spirit soul."BHAKTIVINODA THAKURA writes
the following in numerous books:
ubhaya-kula dekhite dekhite bhogecchara
udaya haile tahara cit-surya-svarupa krsna haite bahirmukha
haya
"The moment that the jivas desire to enjoy independently
while gazing at the two banks of the river, they become
averse to Krsna, who is like the sun."
tini cit u jadera sandhi-sthale tatastha-sakti-karttrka
prakatita haiya sei sthana haite cijjagata u mayika-jagata
ubhaya sthana dekhite lagilen. Ektu bhagavaj jnanakrsta
haiya yahara sei jnana-samsarga-prasanga cidabhilasi hailen,
tahara nitya-bhagavadusmukhata-prayukta cicchakti-vilasagata-hladini-bala-prapta
haiya krsna-parsada-rupe cijjagate nita hailen. Yahara svecchakrame
anyaparsvasthita mayate mohita haiya lobha karilam, tahara
mayakarttrka ahuta haiya mayika jagate akrsta haoyaya mayadisa
karanarnavasayi purusavatara-karttrka jada-jagate niksipta
hailen. Iha kevala tahadera nitya bhagavadvaimukhyera phala.
Maya-madhyagata ihavamatra mayavrtti avidya tahadigke lipta
kavila. Avidyalipta haiya tahate abhinivesa karate avidya-bandh
karme cakre padilena. Esthale karma-phala-bhoji paksira
sahita tahadera tulana haila.
"The jiva appeared by the marginal energy at the
dividing line between spirit and matter. From that position,
he began to gaze at the spiritual and material worlds. Those
jivas who were attracted somewhat to realization of the
Supreme Person became desirous of the spiritual realm because
of that contact of knowledge. They then obtained strength
from the hladini potency of the abundant cit sakti, which
made them favorable to the Lord eternally, and they were
brought into the spiritual world as associates of the Lord.
Those who, by their own free will, became bewildered and
became greedy for maya situated on the opposite side, being
beckoned by maya, then became attracted to the material
universe, and were thrown in the universe by Karanarnavasayi
Visnu, the controller of maya. That was but the result of
their eternal aversion to the Supreme Lord. The moment they
entered the material realm, they became overcome by ignorance,
the function of maya. Overcome by ignorance, they fell into
the wheel of binding karma in order to become fully absorbed
in their task." (Mahaprabhura-siksa ch.7)
"It should be understood that the jiva soul is neither
produced of this material world, nor created in the transcendental
world. They are originated from the marginal line between
the transcendental and mundane spheres." (Tattva
Viveka 2.4,page 55)
"Among the unlimited potencies of Sri Krsna, there
is one known as tatastha-sakti (border-potency). From that
sakti comes out the jiva-souls remaining at the junction
of the two worlds, viz., the transcendental and the mundane
ones, may contact them both. In its composition it is only
the atomic cit (pure sentience) . . . On account of the
purity in its composition, it has got the capacity for being
the eternal denizen with divine bliss in the transcendental
power." (Jaiva Dharma, chapter 4)
"A jiva is a spark of the eternal consciousness.
A jiva is first situated on the line of demarcation between
the material world and the spiritual world. There those
jivas who do not forget their relation with Krsna derive
the power of consciousness and are drawn into the spiritual
world, they come in eternal touch with Krsna and enjoy beatitude
arising from the worship of Krsna. And those who forget
Krsna and give themselves up to maya's enjoyments, maya
with her own force draws them into herself. It is from that
very moment that we fall into the misery of this world."
(Jaiva Dharma, chapter 7)
"The semblance or dim reflection of the internal
Cit-potency is the jiva-sakti (potency) or tatastha-sakti
stationed in between cit-jagat and a-cit-jagat or mayika-jagat
whereas the shadow or perverted reflection of that internal
cit potency is the maya-sakti or external a-cit potency.
All the jivas emanate from the tatastha-sakti of God and
accordingly the mundane worlds emanate from the maya-sakti
of God." (Bhagavat-arka Marici-mala, chap. 1,
Intro)
"The jiva-souls are emanated from the jiva-sakti
of Sri Krsna and they are spiritual but atomic. In the very
self of the jiva-soul or in his constitution practically
there remains no maya. As jiva-souls are atomic in size
and being emanated from the tatastha-sakti of Sri Krsna
(viz. from the intermediary-potency which exists in between
cit-jagat and mayika-jagat) jiva-soul is liable to be subjected
to maya when he becomes averse to his constitutional right
of serving the Lord. Jiva-soul in bondage misconstrues himself
as the doer and enjoyer, therefore is affinated to the adopted
bodies that are provided by prakrti. A jiva by dint of spiritual
virtue may possess steadfast devotion to Sri Krsna and getting
rid of worldly affinity goes back to the abode of bliss."
(Bhagavat-arka Marici-mala, ch. 7, text 34, purport)
"The constituent particles, in the form of pencils
of effulgence of Maha-Visnu are manifest as the individual
souls (jivas)." (Brahma-samhita 10, purp.)
"The cit-potency of God is boundless, so is His maya-potency
also enormous; between them are the innumerable minute jivas.
The Jivas emanate from the tatastha-sakti (border potency)
of Sri Krsna; so is the nature to tatastha (border potency)
of Sri Krsna." (Jaiva Dharma, chapter 15)
"The root of all actions is the desire for acts,
the root of which again is avidya. Avidya is the name for
the forgetfulness of soul's essential nature that 'I am
Krsna's servant.' This avidya did not commence within the
course of the mundane time. That root of karma of the jiva
arose when he was at the tatastha position. As such, the
beginning of karma is not to be traced within mundane time,
and, on that account karma is beginning-less." (Jaiva
Dharma)
"There are two types of jivas liberated from maya,
nitya-mukta, eternally liberated, and baddha-mukta, those
who were bound but became liberated. The jivas who were
never bound by maya are called nitya-mukta. The nitya-muktas
are also of two types, aisvarya gata nitya mukta and madhurya
gata nitya mukta. The former are the associates of Lord
Narayana in Vaikuntha and are the atomic particles from
Mula Sankarsana. The latter are the associates of Lord Krsna
in Goloka. They are the atomic particles of Sri Baladeva
situated in Goloka Vrndavana." (Jaiva-Dharma,
Chapter 17)
BHAKTISIDDHANTA SARASVATI THAKURA has written on the nature
of jiva as follows:
"Before acquiring material designations, the living
entity is supremely pure. Even though he is not engaged
in serving the Supreme Lord, he remains situated in the
neutral position of santa-rasa due to his marginal nature.
Though the living entity born from the marginal potency
does not at that time exhibit a taste for serving the Lord
due to a lack of knowledge of self-realization, his direct
propensity of serving the Supreme Lord nevertheless remains
within him in a dormant state. Though the indirect propensity
of material enjoyment, which is contrary to the service
of the Lord, is not found in him at that time, indifference
to the service of Hari and the seed of material enjoyment,
which follows that state of indifference, are nevertheless
present within him. The living entity, who belongs to the
marginal potency, cannot remain indifferent forever by subduing
both devotional and non-devotional propensities. He therefore
contemplates unconstitutional activities from his marginal
position. As a sleeping person dreams that he is active
in the physical world without actually being involved in
activities, when the dormant indifferent living entity of
the marginal potency exhibits even a little apathy to the
service of the Supreme Lord and situates himself in a neutral,
unchanging condition for even a little time, he is infected
by impersonalism. That is why the conditioned soul desires
to merge in the impersonal Brahman, thus exhibiting his
mind's fickle nature. But due to neglecting the eternal
service of the Lord and thereby developing the quality of
aversion to the Lord, he cannot remain fixed in that position.
In this way aversion to the Lord breaks his concentration
of mind and establishes him as the master of this world
of enjoyment.
"Due to being situated in the marginal position,
living entities who are averse to Hari assume the nature
of mixed consciousness; in other words, when the marginal
energy living entities mix with the external energy, they
consider themselves the enjoyers and then enter the material
world. The cause of the spirit soul's coming to live in
this world in aversion to Krsna is his misuse of his free
will. When this aversion becomes strong, the living entities
accept a material mind and body in order to enjoy the temporary
material world and thus come under the control of fruitive
reactions. And when, on the strength of pious activities,
they become transcendental to the varnasrama principles,
which distinguish superior and inferior behavior in this
world, they become paramahamsas by perfecting themselves
through sadhana. Those who become paramahamsas are the Hari-janas.
And those who fall from the platform of paramahamsa and
engage in fruitive activities while associating with matter
are situated on the platform of varnasrama. (From 'Brahmana
& Vaisnava')
"Lying in between the cit (internal spiritual) and
acit (external deluding cosmic) potencies of the Lord, the
jiva souls are freed from the shackles of the triple qualities
of maya by the loving service to the Supreme Lord Sri Krsna."
(From the essay - Sri Krsna)
"Jivas are of two kinds - (1) Nitya-Mukta (eternally
free), (2) Nitya-Baddha (eternally enslaved). Free jivas
are never enslaved. They are serving the Supreme God in
five different functions in His eternal blissful abode,
where there is no change, no destruction, no misery. Jiva,
once entered there never comes back here. The inconceivably
narrowest line of demarcation between land and water or
the line where land and water meet is called 'tata'; so
also the meeting line of the cit world or the eternal abode
of the Supreme Lord and the acit world or the tata region
of Maya is called tata. The power of the Supreme Lord displayed
at the tata is known as the tatastha (lying at the tata)
or marginal power. All the jivas being the display of this
power, have the inherent oscillating tendency and capability
of going to the cit or the acit world. Tata not being a
resting place, jivas must go this side or that; those preferring
the acit, fell into the clutches of the octopus Maya, when
these mortal costumes of mind and body were put on him as
a punishment. The satanic frenzy in which the jiva dislikes
the blissful and eternal service of his Master and prefers
to quench his thirstful desires of enjoying matter, opens
before him a perpetual spring of liquid fire and poison
at which he begins to drink deep. Thus in going to lord
it over Maya, jiva became enslaved by her." (Vaisnavism
-Real and Apparent)
SRIDHARA DEVA GOSVAMI MAHARAJA spoke of the origin of
the jivas as follows:
"The brahma-jyoti, the non-differentiated marginal
plane, is the source of infinite jiva souls, atomic spiritual
particles of non-differentiated character. The rays of the
Lord's transcendental body are known as the brahma-jyoti,
and a pencil of a ray of the brahma-jyoti is the jiva. The
jiva soul is an atom in that effulgence, and the brahma-jyoti
is a product of an infinite number of jiva atoms.
"Generally, souls emanate from the brahma-jyoti which
is living and growing. Within the brahma-jyoti, their equilibrium
is somehow disturbed and movement begins. From non-differentiation,
differentiation begins. From a plain sheet of uniform consciousness,
individual conscious units grow. And because the jiva is
conscious it is endowed with free will. So, from the marginal
position they choose either the side of exploitation or
the side of dedication.
"Because the soul is very small, his freedom is also
imperfect; a soul in the marginal position is very vulnerable.
Freedom does not mean absolute freedom. Because the soul's
existence is small, his freedom is defective, there is the
possibility of committing a mistake. Freedom of the minute
soul does not mean perfect freedom. Complete freedom would
be perfect reality, but the minute soul is endowed with
the smallest atomic freedom. This is the position of the
atoms of consciousness, and this is why they are vulnerable.
They may judge properly or improperly; that is the position
of those who are situated in the marginal position. If the
soul were not endowed with the freedom to determine his
position, we would have to blame God for our suffering.
But we cannot blame God. The starting point of the soul's
suffering is within himself." (Sri Krsna - Reality
the Beautiful, ch-4, Origin of the Soul)
BHAKTI PRAJNANA KESAVA MAHARAJA states as follows:
"When the thoughts of a jiva in the tatastha realm,
which is in between the spiritual and material worlds, gravitates
towards independence and its accompanying temporal, material
pleasures; the immediate result is forced descent to the
material universes." (Vaisnava-vijaya)
SRI PURI GOSVAMI MAHARAJA has this to say about the jiva:
"The characteristic of the marginal potency is of
its being able to be influenced by both the spiritual and
material energies.
From Brhadaranyka-sruti 2.1:
yathagneh ksudra visphurlinga vyuccharanti "Just as many tiny sparks are emitted from a blazing
fire, similarly many varieties of minute living entities
are produced from the Supreme Lord. This living entity has
option to either stay in the material world or attain the
spiritual world, he is in the middle position at the demarcation
between these two worlds and has equal opportunity to go
to either of these worlds. This marginal position can be
described for more clarity: Just as a huge fish can move
either to one bank or the opposite bank, similarly the living
entity, from his MARGINAL POSITION can go either to the
material or spiritual worlds, and is dependent on whether
he is dreaming (in illusion) or awake in knowledge. The
word 'tatastha' is further examined. The boundary
between the land and the water is called the bank (tatastha).
This is usually a narrow strip so minute that it cannot
be seen with a naked eye. If we compare the spiritual world
to the ocean and the material world to be the land, that
minute strip or boundary is the corresponding position of
the living entity. Both these worlds are huge in comparison
to the minute living entity. Thus in the middling position
being the marginal energy, partial characteristics of both
sides are present in the living entity. By proper spiritual
cultivation, he can be spiritualized or conversely in being
ignorant, can fall into the material whirlpool. Originally,
the living entity is constituted of spiritual elements,
not material. Nevertheless, it can be overcome by the force
of material attraction. Without the association of pure
devotees, the living entity cannot be released from his
precarious position. In Caitanya-caritamrta is described
how the living entities, though minute sparks of the Supreme,
are either bonded or eternally liberated." (Bhakti
Siddhanta Sara - Essence of Pure Devotion, ch -Yogamaya
& Mahamaya)
OUR CONCLUSION
From sastra and the opinions of acaryas as quoted above
it is quite clear that there is no possibility of fall down
from the spiritual world, Vaikuntha or Goloka Vrndavana.
That Iskcon leaders continue to preach the apa-siddhanta
(false conclusion) of the fall of the jiva from the spiritual
world (as they have done in the OOP book) is indeed unfortunate
and misleading.
In 1981 Iskcon leaders challenged the wisdom of Srila
Sridhara Deva Gosvami when he tried to help them with a
correct understanding of the marginal position of the jiva,
but they returned his kindness with insult and offense.
Having offended such a pure Vaisnava and calling him a 'mayavadi'
for upholding the position of the jiva as marginal, Iskcon
has now adopted the 'fall philosophy' that is tantamount
to impersonalism (because such a 'fall philosophy' suggests
the fallibility of the spiritual world) as their institutional
doctrine. This is clearly an anartha (bhrama-tattva)
that results from Vaisnava-aparadha.
In 1987 Iskcon leaders made an official apology to Srila
Sridhara Maharaja for their offensive behavior towards him
but then they continued to neglect his instructions and
guidance in the matter of properly understanding Gaudiya
Vaisnava philosophy. That Sridhara Deva Gosvami Maharaja
should be approached and accepted as an authority on philosophical
issues and questions was the direct instruction of A.C.
Bhaktivedanta Svami Prabhupada to his disciples shortly
before he departed from this world in 1977. The statements
of Iskcon leaders in this regard have been documented in
the book, Our
Affectionate Guardians.
In order to gain an accurate understanding on the origin
of the jiva and numerous other philosophical and devotional
topics, literally a thousand devotees or more have turned
away from Iskcon to seek spiritual guidance elsewhere. One
would think that losing so many devotees and even losing
prominent leaders and gurus would urge that society to re-assess
their understanding of Gaudiya Vaisnava philosophy, but
unfortunately it does not. Iskcon leaders continue to lead
their members into a philosophical abyss, while they feast
on the bitter fruits (nimboli) of misconception.
The onus is now on Iskcon leaders to either accept the
conclusions of sastra and acaryas as mentioned in this article
or to prove the statements of sastra and the acaryas to
be faulty. In particular we would be interested to see how
they will prove the statement of A.C. Bhaktivedanta Svami
Prabhupada as faulty when he states, "The conclusion
is that no one falls from the spiritual world, or Vaikuntha
planet, for it is the eternal abode."
idam ca paraloka-sthanam ca sandhyam trtiyam
svapna-sthanam tasmin sandhye sthane tisthan ete
ubhe sthane pasyati idam ca paraloka-sthanam ca
nusancarati purvam ca param caivam
evayam purusa etav ubhav antav
anusancarati svapnantam ca buddhantam ca
ranjitam guna ragena sa jiva iti kathyate
evam eva asmad atmanah sarve lokah sarve devah sarvani bhutani
vyuccharanti
(Extensive quotes on this topic from sastra and acaryas are available at the following URLs):
Tulsi Deva & origin of the jiva