Dancing To God’s Flute Tune (Part 3)
A very significant aspect of a life in which you begin your day with the words of God, the flute of knowledge, is the close bonding with a knowledgeful Father, the Supreme Soul and not only the Father as an ocean of peace, love and joy, the experience of which is an inclusive aspect of meditation. Whereas meditation will fill the soul with virtues and powers, the flute of knowledge or gyan murli fulfills the desire of the soul for spiritual wisdom, which it has carried with it in every birth in the latter part of the world drama, since it came under the influence of spiritual ignorance. Also, as shown in the Mahabharat, another scripture in which the incorporeal point of light has been depicted mistakenly in the form of a physical Krishna; the ones with whom God remained as a companion, the 5 Pandavs i.e. who were few as compared to the 100 Kauravs; but became victorious because they received the knowledge that God possessed. This knowledge has also been shown in the form of weapons like the swadarshan chakra, which is a symbol of the knowledge of the self and its complete role in the world drama and also as arrows which destroyed the weaknesses inside the soul.
The above depiction in the Mahabharat and the other depictions of Krishna in the Gita and Bhagavatare symbolic in nature and not historic or factual, which represent events which happened when the Supreme being of light, God came down on the planet Earth to take his children, the human souls, back to the soul world (the home of all souls), which exists beyond the physical world of 5 elements, from where the souls come down in the world during each repetition of the world drama. Whereas the Mahabharat represents the war between virtues and weaknesses and God as a source of support to help us fight the war, the Gita throws light on the versions of knowledge received from God by us and the Bhagavat explains the various personality traits of God as an innocent, playful entity and his relationship with us, his soul-beloveds or gopis. All three scriptures are a remembrance of the present time when God, the non-physical spiritual Father, is with us.
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