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Can a person attain Moksha, if he/she do not pray or worship God but still continually does good work throughout his life?

Aby
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    sarva dharmaan parityajya maamekam sharanam vraja aham twaa sarvapaapebhyo mokshayishyaami maa shuchah - Bhagavad Gita- Chap 18.66 - Abandon all varieties of religion and just surrender unto Me. I shall deliver you from all sinful reactions. Do not fear. i don't no exat meaning of this but may be its use ful – Bhavin Aug 07 '15 at 07:42
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    also in this link full descreption of above sloka : http://www.esamskriti.com/essay-chapters/Bhagavad-Gita~-Chap-18(Part~3)-Moksha-Sannyaasa-Yogah~-Yoga-of-Liberation-by-Renunciation-1.aspx – Bhavin Aug 07 '15 at 07:43
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    Well, ordinary virtuous deeds don't suffice to get you Moksha, but karma yoga as outlined in the Bhagavad Gita, where you do your duty but renounce your sense of entitlement to the fruits of your actions, can get you Moksha. It's also possible to do one single action that suffices to get you Moksha, and that action is called Sharanagati or completely surrender to the lotus feet Vishnu, which I discuss here: http://hinduism.stackexchange.com/q/7971/36 Once you've surrendered, you don't need to do anything further: you'll naturally acquire Bhakti and feel the urge to perform devotional service. – Keshav Srinivasan Aug 07 '15 at 07:52
  • Bhavin beat me to the Gita quote about Sharanagati! – Keshav Srinivasan Aug 07 '15 at 07:53
  • I agree to what is written in texts but isn't in a way God is forcing us to worship him. Also, what about people from other religions or atheists who work all god and according to karma yoga, do they never get Moksha/Mukti. – Aby Aug 07 '15 at 12:38
  • Yes. One can attain moksha without worshipping god and by being a true good being. – Dinesh Aug 24 '15 at 12:12

1 Answers1

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Yes absolutely yes! It is possible to get Moksha by simply doing good deeds all your life. How?

Karma Yoga

Karma yoga implies performing good deeds (or any deeds for that matter) without expecting anything in return. This is the path exemplified by the great Lord Buddha. He neither believed nor advocated a belief in God. He simply asked everyone to follow the Truth.

Lord Krishna says in the Gita:

Therefore, without being attached to the fruits of activities, one should act as a matter of duty, for by working without attachment one attains the Supreme. [Gita 3:19]

Also in the Gita, Lord Sri Krishna says (thanks @KeshavSrinivasan for the reference)

You have a right to perform your prescribed duty, but you are not entitled to the fruits of action. Never consider yourself the cause of the results of your activities, and never be attached to not doing your duty. [Gita, 2:47]

Why?

In order to understand this, there are two sub questions:

What is the cause of suffering ?

The cause of suffering is

  1. Expectations (AKA desires AKA attachments).

For example, when you are in an examination, suppose that you didn't study anything. If you get 80%. You are overjoyed. But at the same time, suppose you studied everything. If you get 90% still you will be sad because you expected 100%. This is a simple scenario which can be extended upwards.

Sri Swami Vivekananda says that

It is our desire that binds us. If we take the results of actions, whether good or evil, we will have to bear them. Several quotes about desire by Swami Vivekananda

  1. Bad Karma

All that you do, comes back to You. This is the law of Karma. Thus if you do good deeds to others, good things come back to you.

Sri Swami Vivekananda on the importance of right action:

We are responsible for what we are, and whatever we wish ourselves to be, we have the power to make ourselves. If what we are now has been the result of our own past actions, it certainly follows that whatever we wish to be in the future can be produced by our present actions; so we have to know how to act.

What is the meaning of Moksha ?

Moksha simply means that cessation of suffering. The destruction of the cause of suffering, leads to permanent happiness. By destruction of desires, there is no more karma in this world and therefore birth and death ceases.

Sri Swami Sivananda on Karma Yoga (selfless service without desires)

In the practice of Nishkama Karma Yoga, there is no loss of effort. There is no harm. There is no transgression also. Even a little of this practice can protect you from great fear of rebirth, of death with its concomitant evils. You will reap the fruits of Karma Yoga, viz. Jnana. There is no uncertainty here. The path of Karma Yoga eventually leads to the attainment of Bliss of the Self.

Is there an example of a karma yogi?

Lord Buddha set an example for humans along the path of Karma Yoga:

Sri Swami Sivananda says that karma Yoga by Sri Swami Sivannada:

If you really want to grow in the spiritual path you must do all sorts of service daily till the end of your life. Then only you are safe. Do not stop doing service when you have become a famous Yogi. The spirit of service must enter every nerve, cell, tissue and bone of your body. It must become ingrained in you. Then only you will become a real, full-blown, practical Vedantin. Is there any greater Vedantin or Karma Yogi than Lord Buddha ? He still lives in our hearts, because that spirit of service was ingrained in him and he spent his whole life in serving others in a variety of ways. He is indeed a magnanimous soul, one without a second. You can also become a Buddha if you apply yourself diligently to selfless service with the right mental attitude.

So in conclusion, by doing good deeds without attachment of results, we are attacking the two cause of suffering:

  1. Karma (by doing good deeds)
  2. Moha (by removing attachment)

All the best.

Sai
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    You should add "Karmanye vadhikaraste" Gita verse (2.47) to your answer. That's the most famous verse about Karma Yoga. – Keshav Srinivasan Aug 07 '15 at 15:38
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    By the way, I think one important difference between Karma Yoga and Buddhism is that in the Bhagavad Gita, Krishna talks about doing the Kartavyas, the duties required of you by the Vedas. Buddha, on the other hand, rejected the authority of the Vedas. I don't think Buddha would advise Arjuna to perform Yagnas or rule the kingdom according to the Manu Smriti, for instance. So even though both the Bhagavad Gita and Buddhism advocate renouncing attachment in some sense, their prescriptions for exactly what actions you should do are different. – Keshav Srinivasan Aug 07 '15 at 15:47
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    @KeshavSrinivasan added that quote. Thanks Keshav! As far as difference between Buddhism and Hinduism, I know that you don't like to believe in Buddha's teaching as perfectly vedantic, but I do. But that is left for another discussion, really nothing to do with this question. Whatever it may be, the teachings of the Buddha may be called 'pure' Karma Yoga, because it talks about doing Karma, without the submitting to any authority, not even Vedas. All the best. – Sai Aug 07 '15 at 16:04
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    Buddha's philosophy is influenced by Samkhya and Buddhism influenced many facets of Vedantic thought. Later Vedic schools like Nyaya, Vaisheshika and Buddhist schools like Madhyamaka heavily cross pollinated ideas. I wouldn't isolate Buddha out of Hindu Dharma. An essay on this topic by Koenraad Elst : http://koenraadelst.blogspot.com/2013/08/when-did-buddha-break-away-from-hinduism.html (see the last paragraph). – Bharat Aug 07 '15 at 23:45
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    Good question and good answer. Sankara deals with this very question in with very lengthy answers in his commentary on the Gita to verse II.10 and his commentary at the start of Chapter III. – Swami Vishwananda Aug 09 '15 at 10:42
  • @Sai Thanks for ur answer. This is a good answer and helped in clarifying things about karma yoga. – Aby Aug 09 '15 at 15:53
  • @SwamiVishwananda Thank you Swamiji! will go through that commentary and incorporate into this answer any points which may be in line with it. Thanks – Sai Aug 09 '15 at 16:59
  • @Aby Thank you sir, happy that your points are getting clarified and hope you continue your service to this site:):) – Sai Aug 09 '15 at 17:01
  • @Sai You can read Adi Shankaracharya's commentary on Bhagavad Gita 2.10 here: http://www.bhagavad-gita.us/bhagavad-gita-2-10/ – Keshav Srinivasan Aug 10 '15 at 22:06
  • @KeshavSrinivasan, even during Gita, Lord Krishna doesn't hold Vedas in high regards. Sai, nice answer, but I feel that it should be Karma rather than good Karma. – iammilind Aug 24 '15 at 16:07
  • @iammilind What are you talking about? When does Krishna ever speak ill of the Vedas? – Keshav Srinivasan Aug 24 '15 at 16:17
  • @iammilind thanks buddy. You are right, it is actually 'karma' and not 'good' karma. But I wanted to stress on the 'good' part. Once the detachment to fruits comes in the sadhaka, the notion of good and bad drops away automatically. But before the detachment comes, it is better to retain the feeling of 'doing good'. Thus so. All the best – Sai Aug 24 '15 at 18:20
  • @Sai "Once the detachment to fruits comes in the sadhaka, the notion of good and bad drops away automatically." I completely disagree with that. Karma Yoga involves doing your dharma without being attached to the fruit, it doesn't involve not caring about whether actions are dharmic or adharmic. – Keshav Srinivasan Aug 24 '15 at 19:52
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    @KeshavSrinivasan Well that's a separate topic for discussion I guess. We can start another chat about it. What is meant is that - Suppose Lord Krishna comes to you and tells you 'Tomorrow you need to tell a lie about this'. You would do it (by You i do not target it towards you, sorry). The reason is that God's word has a higher precedence to you than your own notion of 'dharma'. So similarly when one offers the fruits of his actions to the Lord, He is removing his notion of 'this is right and that is wrong'. He simply becomes an instrument. Does that mean he can now do Adharma, NO! – Sai Aug 24 '15 at 20:23
  • @Sai I just responded to you in the chat room we set up previously. – Keshav Srinivasan Aug 24 '15 at 23:21
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    @KeshavSrinivasan, Responding to your 24-Aug-2015 comment now, as I found the verses just today. Krishna neither speaks ill nor holds Vedas in the highest regards. There might be other places as well, but you may refer verses BG 2.42-26. Specially BG 2.45 The Vedas deal mainly with the subject of the three modes of material nature. O Arjuna, become transcendental to these three modes. Be free from all dualities and from all anxieties for gain and safety, and be established in the self. – iammilind Sep 07 '15 at 12:38