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© 2012 - 2024, Swetha Sundaram The articles on this blog are a collection of the author's studies and/or inferences made by the author from such studies. The posts on the vedic civilizations and symbolisms in vedic texts is the result of intense study undertaken by the author and the inferences made by the author from these studies. Please ensure to cite this blog if using material from this blog.

Saturday, 6 April 2013

Srimadh Bagawatham - Is God cruel for making us take birth?




Now that we have accepted the existence of God, why are we created? Who is responsible for our fate? What is the purpose to be achieved by us in life?
We know that we don’t take birth just because our parents desired to have children as there are many childless couples in this world who wish to have children. There are also many couples who do not want children but are blessed with children. Hence our birth is not because of our parents’ wish to have a child but because the Lord caused us to take birth and assigned our parents to us. We are created as a sport by the Lord. The act of creation, destruction and preservation is but a game to Him!

In the above Nachiar Thirumozhi pasuram, Andal Nachiar confirms that creation, preservation and dissolution are but a sport for Him.
If He wants to play, why should He use us as a toy? Think of the number of natural calamities like tsunamis and earthquakes which cause sufferings, think of the day to day sufferings faced by a physically handicapped person, people struggling to get a meal and people trying to endure the aches and pain caused by diseases. These are also the result of His creation and how could He make us suffer just so that He can play His game? It is because of the above sufferings that most people believe that God is non-existent.
The Vedas state that He is always happy. Thus even when we suffer, He is happy. Doesn’t this make Him cruel?
There are two types of happiness.  We are happy when we are satisfied. The second kind of happiness is when we laugh mockingly at someone. The Lord experiences both these types of happiness. When we follow His rules and strive to reach Him He is happy because He is satisfied with us. When we go against Him and harm other people, He is happy because He makes fun of us because like an elephant throwing sand on its head after a bath, we work foolishly to harm ourselves. For example, there was a servant who worked for a landlord. The servant was foolish but wished to obtain a raise. His friend advised him to approach his master when the master was in a good mood. One day the master asked the servant to purchase some oil. In those days people had to take a container with them and fill it with oil at the store. Oil didn’t come prepackaged in bottles and cans. The master saw the servant leave with a sack.
‘Where are you off to with the sack?’ asked the master.
‘to get oil,’ replied the servant.
The master started to laugh loudly mocking the servant’s foolishness. Whoever heard of filling a sack with oil! The servant thought that the master was happy and approached the master that instance for a raise. We can all imagine what happened next!
Like the master laughing at the servant, the Lord laughs at us when we keep getting stuck in Samsara.
He is not cruel because He doesn’t give us a random body and a random life. We are assigned a body, a family, an occupation, wealth, health etc. according to our past karmas.  If He assigned our subsequent births at random then He will be at fault.  He will then have the fault of troubling us and He will be cruel because we suffer. As He doesn’t assign our subsequent births at random, He is not cruel. We get rewarded for our good deeds and are punished for the bad deeds. When we suffer, the papams earned by us are spent thus reducing the amount of papams in our karmic account. Every time we are happy, the punyams accumulated in our karmic account are being spent. The papams and punyams do not cancel each other; they have to be spent separately in order to bring the karmic account to zero.
Even in a common game like cricket there are rules to be followed. A batsman is rewarded six runs or four runs for hitting boundaries and is called out if the ball is caught by a fielder. Why do we need rules in a game? Why can’t the batsman be allowed to play even after he had been called out? Why should each team play with 11 members in their team? If a worldly game like cricket should have rules including reward and penalty why shouldn’t the Lord’s game of creation have the same?
We will examine the purpose of our life and find out who should take responsibility for our fate in my subsequent posts.

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