A Study of the Liberated Person Who Remains in the World, in the Light of the Gita and Advaita Vedanta
Abstract: Most religious traditions
locate liberation, if they believe in it at all, after death. The soul is freed
when the body finally falls away, when the concerns and entanglements of
earthly life have been dissolved by death's irreversible severance. The Bhagavad
Gita, along with the broader Advaita Vedantic tradition that draws on it, makes
a claim that is considerably more radical: liberation is available while the
person is still alive, still embodied, still moving through the ordinary
conditions of human existence. This state is called jivanmukti, liberation
while living, and the liberated person is called a jivanmukta. This article
explores what the Gita means by liberation, how the text describes a person who
has arrived at this state, what the relationship is between the jivanmukta and
the world they continue to inhabit, how this concept connects with the
sthitaprajna and the trigunatita, and why the possibility of living liberation
matters so much to the tradition's understanding of the purpose and potential
of human life.
Keywords: Jivanmukti, liberation,
moksha, Bhagavad Gita, Advaita Vedanta, Sthitaprajna, trigunatita, Atman,
Brahman, Sanatana Dharma, embodied freedom, prarabdha karma
Introduction
Liberation, in most Western
religious frameworks, belongs to the afterlife. Whatever transformation awaits
the deserving soul occurs on the other side of death, after the body has been
set aside and the soul stands before whatever reckoning or reception the
tradition believes in. The body itself is rarely the site of liberation. It is
usually the obstacle to it.
The Bhagavad Gita, and the Advaita
Vedantic tradition that interprets it most rigorously, take a strikingly
different position. The body is not the obstacle. Identification with the body,
the misunderstanding of the self as bounded by the physical form, is the
obstacle. And since misunderstanding can be dissolved, it can be dissolved
while the body is still present and the person is still moving through the
world. The Gita's liberated person, the jivanmukta, is not a post-mortem
achievement. They are someone alive, engaged, in the world, and yet
unmistakably free.
This is not a minor doctrinal
point. It changes the entire character of the spiritual aspiration the Gita
puts before the reader. Liberation is not a distant hope for what happens after
death. It is a living possibility, available in this body, in this life, to
anyone who has done the necessary interior work. That is a claim worth
examining carefully.
What Liberation
Means in the Gita's Framework
The Gita uses the word moksha,
liberation, with a specific technical meaning that is different from its
popular sense of heaven or paradise. Moksha is not a pleasant place one goes
to. It is the cessation of the misidentification that has been causing suffering.
The root of human bondage, in the Gita's analysis, is the identification of the
Atman, the pure awareness that is one's true nature, with the body-mind
complex. This identification generates the sense of being a separate, bounded,
potentially threatened self, which in turn generates desire, aversion, fear,
and the whole machinery of suffering.
Liberation is the dissolution of
this misidentification. When the Atman is recognised directly as what it
actually is, unlimited, unchanging, not born and not dying, the sense of being
a separate threatened self loses its grip. The person continues to function in
the world. The body continues to breathe and move. The mind continues to think.
But the one who was mistaking the body-mind for the self has seen through that
mistake, and seeing through it is irreversible.
ब्रह्मभूतः प्रसन्नात्मा न शोचति न काङ्क्षति। समः सर्वेषु भूतेषु मद्भक्तिं लभते पराम्॥
Brahma-bhutah
prasannatma na shochati na kankhsati, Samah sarveshu bhuteshu mad-bhaktim
labhate param.
(One who is thus
transcendentally situated at once realises the Supreme Brahman and becomes
fully joyful. Such a person neither laments nor desires, and is equally
disposed toward every living being. In that state they attain pure devotion
unto Me.)
Bhagavad Gita,
Chapter 18, Verse 54
Brahma-bhutah: one who has become
Brahman, or more precisely, one who has recognised their identity with Brahman.
Prasannatma: one whose self is clear and joyful. Na shochati na kankhsati:
neither grieving nor desiring. These qualities describe not a post-mortem state
but a living condition, and the verse's grammar makes clear that this is a
state the person enters here, in this life, on the path to even further
recognition.
The Jivanmukta and
the Continuing Body
One of the most practical questions
the jivanmukti teaching raises is why the liberated person continues to have a
body at all. If the karma that was driving the cycle of birth and death has
been dissolved by the recognition of one's true nature, why does the body not simply
fall away?
The Advaita tradition, which the
Gita inspires and which Adi Shankaracharya systematises, offers a precise
answer through the concept of prarabdha karma. Karma, the tradition says, can
be understood in three categories: sanchita karma is the accumulated karma from
all past lives; agami karma is the karma being generated in the present life;
and prarabdha karma is that portion of the accumulated karma which has already
begun to bear fruit and which has set the present life in motion. At the moment
of liberation, the recognition of the self's true nature destroys the root of
new karma-generation. Sanchita karma, the unmanifest store, is incinerated by
knowledge. Agami karma, future karma, is no longer generated. But prarabdha
karma, the karma that has already set the present body in motion, must play
itself out. The body continues until it has exhausted the momentum that brought
it into being.
यथा दीपो निवातस्थो नेङ्गते सोपमा स्मृता। योगिनो यतचित्तस्य युञ्जतो योगमात्मनः॥
Yatha dipo
nivata-stho nengате sopama smrita, Yogino yata-cittasya yunjato yogam atmanah.
(As a lamp in a
windless place does not flicker, so the yogi of disciplined mind who is
absorbed in the yoga of the self does not waver.)
Bhagavad Gita,
Chapter 6, Verse 19
The lamp in a windless place is
still burning. It has not gone out. But its flame is perfectly steady, unmoved
by any external disturbance. This is the image of the jivanmukta's continued
existence in the world: still present, still functioning, the flame of
consciousness still burning, but with a steadiness that the ordinary self,
buffeted by the winds of desire and aversion and circumstance, cannot maintain.
The lamp is not extinguished. It is still.
The Jivanmukta in
the World: Service Without Bondage
One of the most important features
of the jivanmukti teaching is that the liberated person does not become useless
to the world. The tradition is full of figures who, having arrived at
liberation, continued to teach, to serve, to engage with the needs of those
around them. The liberation does not produce withdrawal. It produces a quality
of engagement that is, if anything, more genuinely useful than anything the
unliberated person can offer, precisely because it is uncontaminated by the
self-interest and fear that distort ordinary human helpfulness.
यो मां पश्यति सर्वत्र सर्वं च मयि पश्यति। तस्याहं न प्रणश्यामि स च मे न प्रणश्यति॥
Yo mam pashyati
sarvatra sarvam ca mayi pashyati, Tasyaham na pranashyami sa ca me na
pranashyati.
(For one who sees
Me everywhere and sees everything in Me, I am never lost, nor is that person
ever lost to Me.)
Bhagavad Gita,
Chapter 6, Verse 30
The person who sees the divine in
all beings and all beings in the divine is not someone retreating from the
world. They are someone for whom the world has ceased to be a place of
threatening otherness and has become, in a very direct sense, the body of the
divine itself. Their engagement with other beings is therefore not a duty they
are performing from a sense of obligation. It arises naturally from the
recognition that what they are seeing in the other is not ultimately different
from what they have recognised in themselves.
Jivanmukti and the
Three Portraits
The Gita does not use the word
jivanmukta explicitly, but it draws three detailed portraits of the liberated
person that together constitute a complete picture. The sthitaprajna of Chapter
2, the person of steady wisdom, unmoved by misery and unintoxicated by
pleasure. The trigunatita of Chapter 14, the person who has transcended all three
gunas, who neither hates nor clings to any quality of experience. And the
brahma-bhutah of Chapter 18, the person who has become established in Brahman
and whose joy is no longer conditional on circumstances.
These three portraits describe the
same state from different angles. The sthitaprajna portrait looks at it from
the angle of the mind and its relationship to experience. The trigunatita
portrait looks at it from the angle of the gunas and their transcendence. The
brahma-bhutah portrait looks at it from the angle of the fundamental
recognition of identity with the ultimate reality. Together they form a
remarkably consistent and three-dimensional picture of what a human being looks
like when liberation has genuinely been lived rather than merely theorised.
गुणानेतानतीत्य त्रीन्देही देहसमुद्भवान्। जन्ममृत्युजरादुःखैर्विमुक्तोऽमृतमश्नुते॥
Gunan etan atitya
trin dehi deha-samudbhavan, Janma-mrityu-jara-duhkhair vimukto 'mritam ashnute.
(When the embodied
being transcends these three gunas born of the body, it is freed from birth,
death, old age, and their associated suffering, and attains immortality.)
Bhagavad Gita,
Chapter 14, Verse 20
Amritam ashnute: attains
immortality. Not after death. Here. In this body, having transcended the gunas,
the liberated person has arrived at what the tradition calls the deathless, not
as a future state but as the recognition of what was always already the case.
The Atman was never born and never dies. The jivanmukta has simply stopped
believing otherwise.
Conclusion
The concept of jivanmukti is the
Bhagavad Gita's most generous and most demanding promise. Generous because it
makes liberation a this-life possibility rather than a posthumous reward.
Demanding because it asks for the complete dissolution of the misidentification
that most people have never questioned, the assumption that they are the
body-mind complex, the separate, bounded, vulnerable self that needs things to
go a certain way in order to be at peace.
The jivanmukta is not a person who
has achieved a special state. They are a person who has stopped achieving and
stopped striving in the ego's sense, because they have recognised that what
they were seeking was never absent. The peace that the Gita promises is not a
peace that circumstances will eventually deliver. It is a peace that has always
been present at the root of experience, covered over by the noise of
misidentification. Jivanmukti is what happens when that noise is finally,
genuinely, seen for what it is.
समं सर्वेषु भूतेषु तिष्ठन्तं परमेश्वरम्। विनश्यत्स्वविनश्यन्तं यः पश्यति स पश्यति॥
Samam sarveshu
bhuteshu tishthantam parameshvaram, Vinashyatsv avinashyantam yah pashyati sa
pashyati.
(One who sees the
Supreme Lord dwelling equally in all beings, the imperishable within the
perishable, truly sees.)
Bhagavad Gita,
Chapter 13, Verse 27
Yah pashyati sa pashyati: the one
who sees, truly sees. This is the Gita's final word on what liberation looks
like from the inside. Not a dramatic transformation, not a vanishing into a
cloud of light, but a seeing, a recognition, a finally clear perception of what
was always present. That seeing, the tradition insists, is available now. It
has always been available. The question is only whether one is willing to look.
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