Chaitanya Charan Das Based on Bhagavad Gita Chapter 04.
When we are watching TV and suddenly the image and sound
goes off, we may presume that the problem is in transmission. But if we find
that our neighbor’s TV is still working well, then we understand the problem is
not in transmission, but in reception.
The process of disseminating scriptural knowledge is
something like TV transmission. At the dawn of creation or at other cosmically
consequential moments, Krishna transmits the current of wisdom to exalted
spiritual seers who transmit it down through a lineage of similarly exalted
spiritual seers. These seers receive that wisdom not just in head but also in
their heart, thereby becoming linked in a bond of love with their teachers and
ultimately the original and supreme teacher Krishna. Such seers internalize,
exemplify and share that wisdom with others, thus continuing the transmission.
The Bhagavad-gita (04.01-02) points to such transcendental transmission of
wisdom, but then cautions that the wisdom in the course of time tends to gets
lost (04.03). Yet time itself is not the cause of the interruption, for Krishna
states in the same verse that he is going to restore the transmission at that
very time.
The problem is in the reception. The Gita (04.10) lists the
reception blockers: attachment (“I don’t care about this spiritual stuff; I
want to enjoy here-and-now”), apprehension (“I don’t know what’s out there; how
can I court the danger of exploring?”) and anger (“Different people have
different philosophies – who knows what’s right? Best to forget this whole
spiritual business.”) Even if we aren’t getting reception, the transmission
continues and transforms, as demonstrated through the examples of many
successful seekers (04.10).
By continuing to study scripture in saintly and learned
association, we can remove the reception-blockers and gradually relish
Krishna’s wisdom and its culmination: eternal ecstatic love.
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