Chapter 5: Unconditional Service

Try to adjust yourself through sound only, the subtlemost element of this plane. Through sound, go on cultivating spiritual life; and that too must be approached with a serving attitude, otherwise it will be futile. We are recommended to approach divinity through the most subtle element of this gross world. Although it is apparently nothing to us at present, this divinity is actually everything.

So, accept the subtlemost thing. But if the very life is absent, our search will be futile. Learn to give yourself, learn to ‘die,’ to embrace so-called death at every second. Even in this world we find the ‘do-or-die’ attitude in ambitious politicians, social workers, etc. In every duty and at every step they are ready to sacrifice their lives for the cause. If one embraces that do-or-die principle of life, he is sure to progress very intensely and become a great success.

Here also, when approaching the high spiritual life, you must invite death at every step. Give yourself with the most intense desire: do or die. At every point, keep your life as your guarantee: “I shall succeed or I shall die.» Approach the sound, giving yourself with this spirit. No giving — no getting. If you can desire to give with such an intensified nature, you will be transformed into a bona fide candidate for the higher world.

Service means self-giving, self-dedication, and this should be our attitude to approach that plane. In that way, all the coatings of ego will vanish one by one, and the genuine self will come from within and select its own soil: “This is my home.» So many coverings are deviating us in different directions, taking us far, far away from our svarūpa, our real noble self — a servant in the highest plane of the whole organism. The Beautiful is playing, dancing in His own sweetness and affection, and we can reach Him, following such a course of ‘door-die’ at every moment.

Through self-giving I can acquire my fortune, and not as a master sitting in my chair gathering information from different quarters to utilise for my selfish plans. Adau śraddhā tataḥ sādhu-saṅga ‘tha bhajana-kriyā (B.r.s. Purva, 4.15): to progress with faith, keeping the association of devotees and dedicating one’s activities to the Lord, means this — you must go forward in your life with the spirit that you are willing to give away this life. ‘Do-or-die’ is, of course, not in the physical sense but the internal sense (bhajana-kriyā). This is self-giving, ego-giving.

Tato ’nartha-nivṛtih syāt: if you can adopt this, the undesirable things within you will disappear very easily and swiftly. Tato niṣṭhā: then you will find a continuous connection with such a principle in your life. That principle will always act continuously, and other fleeting, mean desires won’t be able to approach or touch you. Next, you will find ruchi, a real taste for divinity. Otherwise, before that continuous stage, whatever taste we may think we have is only treachery and not real taste. Niṣṭhā means nairantarya: when we are established in twenty-four hours a day continuous connection with that charming substance, a real taste will arise, and we can rely on that taste. Any taste that we may find in any other position is unreliable. Twenty-four hours a day connection with divinity — eliminating all other charms of this world — is necessary. Then, the ruchi, the conscious taste that arises in us, is a reliable guide.

After that, āsakti, natural affinity, arises, and then the symptoms of bhāva, the ‘bud’ stage of the ‘flower’ of prema, divine love, makes its appearance. This is the way of our progress. But if there is any imitation, only offences will be created. Those offences will be recorded in that circle of the examiners of the upper quarter, and they will give a stamp of disqualification that we are criminal and unfit. This will go against us and hamper our future progress.’Thus, we must be very careful not to commit offence, aparadha. It is better to be a newcomer with a new introduction than to have a criminal record, for that will go against us. We must be very, very careful in our quest for the highest objective of our eternal life. This caution has been especially given by our Guru Mahārāja, Śrīla Bhakti Siddhānta Saraswatī Ṭhākura, and he attracted us to the line of exclusive devotion.

Sevonmukhe, serving attitude was foremost. Our Guru Mahārāja did not allow us to read much, even of the lower types of scriptures dealing with general sādhana or practices, not to speak of the higher books. Rather, we were expected to actually follow those practices by hearing from the proper source and practising accordingly whatever was instructed from there. Serving — learn to give yourself properly. There are different methods of service: śravaṇa, hearing; kīrttana, chanting; smaraṇa, remembering; vandana, praying, etc. Śrīla Rūpa Goswāmī has mentioned sixty-four kinds of devotional practices, and it is has also been further mentioned that there are one thousand types of devotional practices. But practices are not very important; the very life of the practice is all-important, for this is self-dedication. Thus we should be very particular to learn that dedication is work under a Vaiṣṇava.

Try to get practical training, working under a proper agent; that will help you most to learn and practise true dedication. Guidance must come from above. It may be very rare, but it is most valuable. We must selflessly surrender to whatever directive descends from above. “I won’t serve my whims or the whims of men of my level, but whatever comes from the plane above, I shall obey very eagerly.» This is the key, and this is service.

Sevonmukhatā, serving attitude, means what? One day, during the latter days of his presence in the world, our Guru Mahārāja Śrīla Prabhupāda said to a certain sannyāsī who had led a full twenty years of life in the mission, “You did not see me — you could not see who I am. Like a zamindar you have kept some householder senators under you, and from them you periodically give a donation to me. You have become like a broker, but you should be wholesale mine — my agent. You are not doing that. You are dependent on those householders while maintaining some connection with me. This is not necessary. You are not a member of this world. You are mine alone. Whatever I say, you should do. You should not sell yourself to anything or any proposal of this world. You are to be wholesale my servant.» Thus, this necessary attitude is rarely to be found. We should surrender to whatever flows from the higher plane and thereby substantiate its reality.

virachaya mayi daṇḍaṁ dīnabandho dayaṁ vā
gatir iha na bhavattaḥ kāchid anyā mamāsti
nipatatu śata-koṭir nirbharaṁ vā navāmbhas
tad api kila payodaḥ stūyate chātakena

The bird known as Chātaka always looks above for rainwater, but it will never take any water from the ground even if there is an abundance there. He waits only for whatever water will come from above. Sufficient rain may come, or thunder may come, yet he will not take even a single drop from the earth. Our attitude should be like that. We must follow whatever instruction and direction comes from above, and never try to fulfill any plan from the mundane world. “The Director, the Master, the Lord above — I am connected with Him.» This sort of practice is conducive.

We may chant the name, hear the musical kīrttana, etc., but the very life will be present only as much as our activity is on the order descending from the plane above, and as much as that order is earnestly being carried out by us. In that way, we may be taken above. We may be promoted to the higher layer by preparing ourselves only to carry out the order from above, without question. If we are certain that the order is coming from the higher layer, we should surrender without question. By living at the disposal of the higher, we learn selfless service of the higher, which is not of any mundane source. This is our necessity: Vaiṣṇava-sevā and Guru-sevā — service to the Vaiṣṇava and Guru. By Guru-bhakti alone — devotion to the service of Śrī Gurudeva — in one stroke, all desirable pursuits will be accomplished (etat sarvaṁ gurau bhaktyā, puruṣo hy añjasā jayet, Bhā: 7.15.25). There are also many symptoms by which to recognise the genuine Guru, and by obeying the directions of the higher, we can make progress towards the higher; we may hope to be selected by the higher and be taken up to that layer if we are considered sufficiently qualified. This attitude will be the main tenure of our lives if we want to go to the high, super-conscious region.

In the Vedānta-sūtra, it is mentioned that the process to reach that region is by revealed truth and not by reason (tarkāpratiṣṭhānāt). If we apply reason, we shall be nowhere. Among expert arguers, there may always be one more expert — in this way, on and on, no end. Thus, tarka, reason and argument, is inconclusive (apratiṣṭha). Intellectualism has no standing here, because super-consciousness is beyond our jurisdiction. It cannot be an object of our intellect. By serving, by honouring, by self-giving, by heart-giving, and never otherwise, can we invite that high guest. It is not possible to capture and encage Him by intrigue and conspiracy. Such an attempt will betray Satan in another colour.

Not only self-abnegation, but self-surrender is necessary to approach God. Deep self-surrender will take us into connection with the higher, noble substance, and it must be cultivated by all means. And service is not service to māyā. I must be very careful to perceive that I am not merely serving māyā, who has apeared in a charming or godly’ form. In our present position we must be extremely cautious regarding who and what we are serving. The main wave will be jñāne prayāsam udapāsya (Bhā: 10.14.3): hatefully discard (ud-apa-asya) all proposals that your intellect may offer you. Whatever the intellect can judge and accept or reject must necessarily be of a lower type. So, you are to summarily reject that, and understand that you must bow down your head (namanta eva).

The beginning of your interest is to bow down your head, and your heart will be captured automatically. Try to connect with that section where you will always be with folded palms, and where you can never be master. Such abnegation and courage of selfgiving is necessary if you want to live in the higher plane. Otherwise, you may reign in hell. According to Satan’s word, “it is better to reign in hell than to serve in heaven.» But just the opposite is necessary.

Even tears and crying have no value if the inner tendency of self-giving is absent. Sevā, service, means self-giving, and that is the standard principle in the life of a devotee. This self-giving must really be to the higher sphere and not just haphazardly around us, for that is another way to be captured by hateful things.

Jñāna, knowledge, is generally regarded as being very pure. By the majority of people, jñāna is considered to be very innocent because it has no relationship with gross, material things. It is always admitted that to handle the gross material energy is very unwholesome (śaśvad abhadram); and knowledge is considered by the higher personalities to be very pure, very innocent and spotless (jñānam alaṁ nirañjanam). But if it is not connected with Kṛṣṇa, such knowledge must be hatefully rejected.

naiṣkarmyam apy achyuta-bhāva-varjitaṁ
na śobhate jñānam alaṁ nirañjanam
(Bhā: 1.5.12)

Here, in the Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam, it is said that knowledge is widely considered to be spotless, pure and innocent, but if it is not connected with the positive absolute good, then it is your enemy. A qualified candidate will consider things in this way. Jñāna-śūnyā-bhakti: Surrender is so pure, that any connection with knowledge, which is considered to be very innocent and pure — even that must be hatefully rejected. Such a degree of surrender is necessary for the higher association of genuine devotion.

Both the charm of material acquisition, and the charm of the mastery of knowing everything, are to be rejected (jñānakarmādy-anāvṛtam). It is not possible for you to know anything about the infinite, either in magnitude or quality. The infinite is a flow of autocracy, so what can you know of it? Therefore, knowledge means more than storing so many relative or false incidents, and selling’ that information to the world in order to fulfill some other function such as personal name and fame. Hatefully give this up and engage in unqualified and unconditional service. That is noble, and that will take you up to the nobler region.

Thus, karma and jñāna — handling matter and handling knowledge — both are discouraged. Knowledge won’t be allowed to enter that ‘market’ where the absolute will and autocracy reign. No rule and regulation can work there. False gathering and false store have got no standing there.

Only surrender, and we will have that high relationship. Serving attitude is our friend. We are a unit of serving attitude, and service means to surrender to the higher. And the higher means the plane uncontaminated with material and intellectual acquisition. We must serve such a higher plane.