The modes make Krishna seem irrelevant and the world seem
irresistible by Chaitanya Charan Das Based on Bhagavad Gita Chapter 07.
Perception, or more
specifically false perception, is the basis of illusion. The Bhagavad-gita(07.13) explains that we can’t know Krishna due to the delusion created by the
modes. The working of the modes can be analyzed as having two primary effects:
make Krishna seem irrelevant and make the world seem irresistible.
The illusion created
by the modes doesn’t need to make us outrightly atheistic to keep us in its
clutches, though it can do that too. But more frequently the modes operate more
subtly – rather than making us think that God is non-existent, they make us
think that he isn’t relevant, that he doesn’t matter.
The illusion of God’s
irrelevance works hand-in-hand with another illusion: that of the world’s
irresistibility. We are by our very nature pleasure-seeking beings. Gita wisdom
explains that we are souls, spiritual beings meant to delight eternally in God,
Krishna, who is the all-attractive reservoir of all pleasure. The notion that
God is irrelevant implies also that he is not the source of our happiness. So
we turn towards the default source of happiness, the world with its many
promises of pleasure through its multifarious sense objects. Indeed, the more
disconnected from God we become, the more worldly sense objects seem
irresistible, thereby making us go further and further away from happiness in
our very search for happiness.
Only by studying Gita
wisdom seriously and purifying ourselves diligently through the practice of
bhakti-yoga can we realize that Krishna far from being irrelevant is actually
indispensable in our quest for happiness. Nothing can provide meaningful
lasting satisfaction if it is not connected with him. The more such
realizations inspire us to cement our spiritual connection with Krishna through
selfless loving service, the more we find lasting happiness
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