Engaging the Energy of Youth in Devotional Service
Śrīla Prabhupāda provides a comprehensive analysis of the phase of youth, demonstrating how it serves as a practical lesson in reincarnation and a testing ground for the soul. While material youth is temporary, highly agitated, and prone to illusion, it also offers boundless energy that, when properly guided and protected by Vedic principles, can be perfectly engaged in the loving service of the eternally youthful Supreme Lord.
The Transmigration of the Soul Through Youth
Śrīla Prabhupāda frequently points to the transition from childhood to youth as undeniable, everyday proof of reincarnation (dehāntara). He explains that just as the eternal soul seamlessly shifts from a boy's body into a youthful one, it will naturally transmigrate into another body at the time of death.
- Dehino 'smin yatha dehe kaumaram yauvanam jara: (BG 2.13) "The embodied soul continually passes, in this body, from boyhood to youth to old age." Thus the bodily dress is impermanent. The living entity, however, is permanent.
- A child gives up his childhood body and accepts the body of a boy, and the boy gives up his boyhood body to accept a youthful body, which he then gives up for an old body.
- It is very simple to understand. I have changed so many bodies, not only from childhood to boyhood to youth, but according to medical science we are changing bodies every second, imperceptibly. This process indicates that the soul is permanent.
The Dangers of Youthful Senses and Material Desires
The period of youth introduces intense biological and psychological changes. Śrīla Prabhupāda warns that as one reaches youth, the sex desire becomes exceptionally strong, and without spiritual discipline, an individual is easily overpowered by the urge to endlessly gratify the material senses.
- As soon as one is grown up, reaching youthful time, the sex desire is very strong, very strong.
- In youth a person becomes very lusty to enjoy all kinds of sense objects. The sense objects are form, taste, smell, touch and sound. The modern scientific method, or advancement of scientific civilization, encourages the enjoyment of these five senses.
- During youth the material desire to enjoy the material senses is certainly present, and unless one fully satisfies these lusty desires in youth, there is a chance of one's being disturbed in rendering service to the Lord.
The Illusion of Rejuvenation and Expiration of Youth
Because material sense gratification is so alluring, conditioned souls dread the onset of old age. Śrīla Prabhupāda notes the tragic irony of modern society, where elderly persons make pathetic, artificial attempts to maintain a youthful facade, failing to realize that material youth expires rapidly and leaves one totally disillusioned.
- The span of youth expires very quickly. One who wastes his life simply by committing sinful activities in youth immediately becomes disappointed and disillusioned when the brief period of youth is over.
- After forty years, one simply leads a disillusioned life because he has no spiritual knowledge. For such a person, the expiration of youth occurs in half a moment.
- In this era of ignorance even an old man wants to rejuvenate his bodily functions, put on artificial teeth, and make a pretense of youthful life, even on the verge of death.
The Need for Protection in Youth
Understanding the powerful agitations of the youthful stage, Vedic culture mandates strict social protection. Śrīla Prabhupāda explains that a young woman must be sheltered by her husband during her youth; granting unrestricted independence during this time leads to social degradation and a miserable life.
- A woman is supposed to be always dependent - in her childhood she is dependent on her father, in youth on her husband, and in old age on her elderly sons. According to Manu-samhita, she is never independent. Independence for a woman means miserable life.
- The husband is the protector of a woman during her youthful life, whereas the father is her protector during her childhood. Thus both are worshipable, but especially the father because he is the giver of the body.
- A chaste wife is one who never had any connection with men before her marriage. Once a woman is given the freedom to mingle with all kinds of men in her youth, it is very difficult for her to keep chaste. She generally cannot remain chaste.
The Eternal Youthfulness of the Supreme Lord
In stark contrast to the decaying bodies of the material world, the Supreme Personality of Godhead is free from the ravages of time. Śrīla Prabhupāda reveals that Śrī Kṛṣṇa is eternally youthful (nava-yauvana), maintaining the fresh, beautiful appearance of a boy who is just sixteen to twenty years old.
- When He (Krsna) reaches the age of pre-youth, kaisora, He does not grow any older. He simply remains in His kaisora age. He is therefore described in the Brahma-samhita (BS 5.38) as nava-yauvana.
- According to our human society, the youthful life begins at sixteen years. So Krsna is like that. He'll look always sixteen to twenty years old, not more than that. We have never seen Krsna has become old.
- I have lost my youthful energy. But God is always youthful.
Dedicating Youth to Devotional Service
Rather than wasting the prime years of life on fleeting sense gratification, one should utilize youthful vigor for spiritual advancement. Śrīla Prabhupāda constantly appeals to the younger generation to embrace the bhakti-yoga process, engaging their immense energy in preaching and spreading Kṛṣṇa consciousness.
- The Krsna consciousness movement is progressing successfully in the Western countries at the present moment because the youth in the West have reached the stage of vairagya, or renunciation. They are practically disgusted with material pleasure.
- From Revatinandana I can understand that there is immense field for preaching amongst the youth and in all parts of the country, so do not hesitate to take the bold step forward and invite everyone to become devotee of Krsna.
- Ajamila, in his boyhood, practiced chanting the name of Narayana under the direction of his father, but later, in his youth, he fell down and became a drunkard, woman-hunter, rogue and thief.
- I do not want anything; for your countrymen, for your misguided youthful generation, you have to do it.
Conclusion
Śrīla Prabhupāda masterfully unpacks the physical and spiritual implications of youth. While the transition into a youthful body proves the eternal nature of the soul, the material experience of youth itself is fraught with danger. The blazing fire of sensory desires during this stage can easily mislead an unprotected soul into deep illusion—an illusion that abruptly ends when youth inevitably fades into the miseries of old age. Authentic Vedic culture curtails this danger by enforcing protective social boundaries and engaging the living entity in God consciousness early on. Ultimately, the Kṛṣṇa consciousness movement provides the perfect outlet for the immense energy of the younger generation. By dedicating their youth to serving the eternally youthful Supreme Lord, Śrī Kṛṣṇa, devotees conquer the fleeting illusions of the material world and secure their eternal, blissful life in the spiritual sky.
Dive Deeper into Śrīla Prabhupāda's Vani
Śrīla Prabhupāda lives within his instructions. This article is a summary of the profound truths found in the Vaniquotes category Youth. We invite you to visit this link to study the complete compilation and experience Śrīla Prabhupāda's teachings in their direct, verbatim form.