A Study of Moksha, Its Distinction from Paradisical Reward, and What the Tradition Actually Promises
Abstract: The concept of liberation, moksha, in
Sanatana Dharma is frequently and consequentially misread as essentially
equivalent to the concept of heaven in the Abrahamic traditions: a pleasant
post-mortem state that the deserving soul attains as the reward for a righteous
life. This misreading distorts the tradition's actual understanding of what
liberation is, how it is achieved, and why it matters. Moksha in the
tradition's primary philosophical understanding is not a place one goes to, not
a reward one receives, and not a state that begins after death. It is the
recognition of what one already and always is, available in principle at any
moment of sufficient clarity, and defined not by the pleasantness of its
conditions but by the permanent dissolution of the misidentification that was
generating suffering. This article explores the tradition's understanding of
moksha and its multiple dimensions, the distinction between the heavenly realms
(svarga) and genuine liberation, why moksha is not fundamentally about reward,
and what the tradition's promise of liberation actually consists of in its most
philosophically serious forms.
Keywords: Moksha, liberation, heaven, svarga, Vedanta,
Bhagavad Gita, Advaita, Dvaita, recognition, misidentification, Sanatana
Dharma, after death
Introduction
Heaven, in the traditions where the concept is most
developed, is essentially a reward: a pleasant place or state that the soul
attains after death as compensation for the virtuous conduct or correct belief
it maintained during its earthly life. The soul is distinguished from its
heavenly reward. The soul goes to heaven; it does not become heaven. The reward
is external to the soul and conditional on the soul's having earned it through
specific conduct or having received it through specific grace. And the heavenly
state is, in most accounts, permanent: once attained, it is not lost.
The Sanatana tradition's concept of moksha overlaps
with this in some dimensions and diverges from it radically in others. The
tradition does describe heavenly realms, svarga loka and higher celestial
realms, that are pleasant destinations for souls whose accumulated merit
qualifies them for temporary residence there. But these are not moksha. They
are not liberation. They are, in fact, specifically contrasted with liberation
in the tradition's philosophical texts, because the tradition holds that even
the most exalted heavenly realm is still within samsara, still part of the
cycle of conditioned existence, and that the soul that has spent its
accumulated merit in the pleasures of svarga will eventually be born again in a
lower realm when the merit is exhausted.
Svarga Is Not Moksha: The Crucial
Distinction
The Bhagavad Gita makes this distinction explicitly
and emphatically, in a context that is worth attending to carefully. Krishna is
describing those who follow the Vedic path of ritual action primarily for the
sake of heavenly reward, and his description of what they attain is both
precise and sobering:
त्रैविद्या मां
सोमपाः पूतपापा
यज्ञैरिष्ट्वा स्वर्गतिं
प्रार्थयन्ते। ते
पुण्यमासाद्य सुरेन्द्रलोकमश्नन्ति दिव्यान् दिवि
देवभोगान्। ते
तं भुक्त्वा
स्वर्गलोकं विशालं
क्षीणे पुण्ये
मर्त्यलोकं विशन्ति।
एवं त्रयीधर्ममनुप्रपन्ना गतागतं कामकामा
लभन्ते॥
Traividya mam soma-pah puta-papa
yajnyair ishtva svarga-gatim prarthayante, Te punyam asadya surendra-lokam
ashnanti divyan divi deva-bhogan, Te tam bhuktva svarga-lokam vishalam kshinye
punye martya-lokam vishanti, Evam trayidharma anuprapanna gatagatam kama-kama
labhante.
(Those who study the three Vedas
and worship Me through sacrifice, drinking soma and becoming purified of sins,
pray for passage to heaven. Reaching the holy realm of Indra, they enjoy
heavenly pleasures. Having enjoyed that vast heaven, when their merit is
exhausted they return to the mortal world. Thus, following the dharma of the
three Vedas, desiring desires, they obtain repeated coming and going.)
Bhagavad Gita, Chapter 9, Verses
20-21
Gatagatam: coming and going, again and again. The
Gita's assessment of heaven-oriented practice is that it produces, at best, a
temporary respite from the cycle of birth and death, a pleasurable interlude
that eventually exhausts itself and returns the soul to the very cycle it
seemed to escape. This is not liberation. Liberation, in the Gita's
understanding, is precisely the permanent dissolution of the gatagatam, the end
of the coming and going, not a more pleasant stop within the cycle.
What Moksha Actually Is
The tradition's accounts of what moksha actually is
vary across its different philosophical schools, but they share a common core:
liberation is not the attainment of something new but the removal of what was
preventing the recognition of what is already and always the case. In the
Advaita Vedanta framework, liberation is the recognition of the Atman's
identity with Brahman, the dissolution of the misidentification that was making
the absolute appear to be a limited individual self trapped in conditioned existence.
In the Dvaita framework, liberation is the soul's full and permanent
participation in the divine's presence in Vaikuntha, freed from the limitations
of material embodiment. In the Vishishtadvaita framework, liberation is the
soul's complete recognition of its nature as the divine's body, participating
in the divine's fullness as an active and loving member of the divine's own
being.
What all of these accounts share is the understanding
that liberation is not primarily about the external conditions of the liberated
state, pleasant as those conditions may be, but about the quality of
consciousness that the liberation produces or reveals. The liberated
consciousness is one that has been freed from the specific misidentification
and the specific craving and aversion that constituted bondage. It is not that
things become pleasant after liberation. It is that the need for things to be a
specific way in order to be at peace has been dissolved at its root.
न तस्य रोगो
न जरा
न मृत्युः
प्राप्तस्य योगाग्निमयं
शरीरम्।
Na tasya rogo na jara na mrityuh
praptasya yogagni-mayam shariram.
(For one who has attained a body
made of the fire of yoga, there is no disease, no old age, no death.)
Shvetashvatara Upanishad, 2.12
Na rogo na jara na mrityuh: no disease, no old age, no
death. This description of the liberated state from the Shvetashvatara
Upanishad describes not conditions that the liberated consciousness enjoys but
conditions that no longer apply to it. Liberation is freedom from the specific
vulnerabilities of conditioned existence: from the disease, old age, and death
that are the inevitable companions of bodily identification. This freedom is
not the granting of immortality to a soul that was previously mortal. It is the
recognition that what one fundamentally is was never subject to disease, old
age, or death in the first place: it was the identification with the body that
made these appear to be one's own vulnerability, and liberation is the
dissolution of that identification.
Liberation in Life: Jivanmukti
One of the most important features of the tradition's
understanding of moksha, and one that most clearly distinguishes it from the
concept of heaven, is the teaching of jivanmukti: liberation while still alive,
in the body, in the world. The tradition holds that the recognition that
constitutes liberation is not dependent on death: it can occur, and in the
cases of the great saints and sages it does occur, while the person is still
embodied and actively engaged in the world. The jivanmukta, the one liberated
while living, continues to function in the world, continues to speak and act
and relate, but does so from the ground of a recognition that has permanently
dissolved the misidentification that constituted bondage.
This teaching is the final refutation of the heaven
misreading: if liberation can occur while the person is still alive, it clearly
is not a post-mortem state. It is a quality of consciousness, a quality of
understanding and recognition, that is available in principle in any moment and
that does not require the dissolution of the body to occur. The body may
continue after liberation, as the tradition explains through the concept of
prarabdha karma. But the liberation is not conditional on the body's
dissolution and is not primarily about what happens after it.
Conclusion
Moksha is not heaven. This is not a pedantic
distinction. It reflects a fundamentally different understanding of what the
spiritual life is for, what it aims at, and what it promises. The heavenly
framework holds out the prospect of pleasant post-mortem conditions as the
reward for a specific quality of life or a specific quality of belief. The
moksha framework holds out the prospect of the permanent dissolution of the
misidentification that generates suffering, available in principle now,
regardless of external conditions, as the fruit of genuine understanding and
genuine practice.
The tradition's most serious philosophical teachers
have always been clear that liberation is not about going somewhere better. It
is about recognising what is already here, what was always here, what could
only be missed through the specific quality of misunderstanding that the entire
tradition of dharmic life and philosophical inquiry is designed to address. The
heaven that the tradition's popular traditions describe is a genuine and real
destination, a pleasant interlude in the cosmic journey. But it is not the
destination. The destination is the recognition of what one already is. And
that is something no place, however pleasant, can provide.
References and Suggested Reading
Bhagavad Gita, Chapter 9
Shvetashvatara Upanishad
Adi Shankaracharya, Vivekachudamani (on jivanmukti)
Swami Vivekananda, Jnana Yoga (1896)
S. Radhakrishnan, Indian Philosophy, Volume 2 (1927)
Ramana Maharshi, Who Am I? (Nan Yar)