The gopis are considered to be Sati. The word Sati is used to represent a chaste married woman but Sayana in his commentary of the Taittiriya Aranyaka explains that the word “sati” refers to “realized souls”. Krishna plays the flute to call the gopis. The flute is given the status of a teacher, Acharya. The music is knowledge which is Brahma-Vidhya. The music flowing from the flute awakens the thirst for spiritual knowledge in the gopis. This also shows us that we can only learn Brahma-Vidhya through an Acharya. Krishna prefers to use an Acharya as an intermediary to teach us Brahma-Vidhya. Once Brahma-Vidhya is awakened, the gopis abandon their husbands to reach Krishna. The husbands represent our selfish materialistic desires.
True knowledge kills these selfish desires. The gopis want only that which is true and approach Krishna. The Raasa dance takes place in a circle. The gopis represent the jeeva atma. There is one Krishna in the middle surrounded by the gopis. Not only is there a Krishna in the middle but He also appears as a partner for each and every gopi. There are as many Krishnas as there are gopis.
The Krishna in the middle represents Paramatma in His absolute form. The Krishna dancing with each and every gopi represents His Antaryami form. As antaryami He exists as our soul. He is always with us. He exists in each and every one of us. Thus the entire Raasa dance represents the Vishwaroopa Swaroopa of God; He exists as antaryami (soul of every soul) as well as the Absolute God head.
The Raasa dance is performed with the gopis who are women. This represents that all jeeva atmas are feminine. The only male in this entire Universe is Paramatma Sri Krishna. He is known as the Para Purusha or the great Purusha. The Raasa dance shows us one of the nine relationships we share with Paramatma which is that of a husband & a wife. He is our husband. This relationship is a spiritual relationship and differs from the type of spousal relationships we are familiar to.
The gopis encircling Krishna on either side represent students and
Krishna is the object of knowledge sought by them. If we look at the two
Krishnas encircling a gopi then we see the student in the middle.
Knowledge gains importance only when there are students to learn. The
two Krishnas encircling a gopi show us the importance of the student or
the jeeva atma. The two gopis encircling a Krishna show us the supremacy
of the knowledge or Paramatma.
The Raasa dance has deep esoteric meaning and has nothing to do with
sensual indulgence. When the esoteric meaning of the dance is
illuminated, it helps us to shed our desires for materialistic sensual
pleasures. It awakens the thirst to learn Brahma-Vidhya in us; with the
help of this knowledge we can reach the feet of Paramatma. The dance
takes place at night to show us that the union with Paramatma is beyond
time and space. At nighttime the normal boundaries of time and space are
not illuminated. Night here represents the transcendental nature of the
union of a jeeva atma with Paramatma.
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