When Sri Krishna was having his
siesta, both Duryodhana and Arjuna came to his place. Duryodhana came a few
minutes earlier and, as he was full of pride, he stood beside Sri Krishna’s
head. Arjuna, as he was full of humility and modesty, stood beside Sri
Krishna’s feet.
After a while,Sri Krishna woke up and his eyes fell
on Arjuna. When he turned around he saw Duryodhana. He wanted to know why they
were there at that hour. Arjuna said, “Now you know that the battle will take
place. I need you.”
Duryodhana said, “I have also come here to take help from
you, and I have come before him so you have to fulfil my desire first.” So Sri
Krishna said, “It is true that you came before Arjuna, but I saw him first, and
he will I be given the first chance. Besides, he is younger than you. So he
will have the first choice.
Arjuna said to Krishna with great joy.
“I want you!”
Duryodhana thought: What a stupid fellow Arjuna is. He
wants Krishna alone.
Sri Krishna said, “You want me? But I will not fight. I
will only be your charioteer. One of you will have me alone and the other I
will have my vast army.”
Duryodhana felt, what could Krishna do alone and unarmed?
The best thing for him was to have Krishna’s army.
But Arjuna, being an illumined person, said to himself,
“What shall I do with his army? The best thing is to have the Lord with me. The
Lord will be able to protect me and the Lord will bring me the victory.” Arjuna
wanted Sri Krishna and Duryodhana wanted the entire army of Sri Krishna.
Moral of the story:
Now the promise was that Sri Krishna would never, never
fight. Unfortunately, he had to break his promise; he could not keep it. Twice
he ran out of the chariot. To kill whom? Bhishma. On the third and the ninth
day Sri Krishna found that Arjuna was not fighting properly against his
grandsire. Arjuna found it extremely difficult to use weapons against his
grandsire.
Sri Krishna said, “Arjuna, you are not fighting. Why?” So
he came out of the chariot with his discus. He wanted to kill Bhishma. And what
was Bhishma’s reaction? Bhishma’s joy knew no bounds. He said, “Come, O my
Lord, come! If I die in your hands then immediately I will go to heaven! I am
the most blessed person because you are coming to kill me!”
But, both times, Arjuna followed Sri Krishna and said “No,
you have to keep your promise. I won’t let you fight, I shall fight. I won’t
allow you to eat your words. You come, you sit in the chariot and drive me on.
I shall fight.
Here we learn that the Guru, the Master, can at any moment
break his own promise in order to help, to save, in order to win a victory for
the disciple. Sri Krishna was the Omniscient, Omnipotent, Omnipresent, and also
the Just. But when the question concerns a most intimate disciple, the Guru
goes against the ordinary light of morality. This was Sri Krishna’s heart for
Arjuna.
Victory Is There, Where Dharma Is!
Hare Krishna, Hare Krishna, Krishna Krishna, Hare Hare
Hare Rama, Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare.
Source: from internet
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