Real Aim Is Spiritual Realization through Bhakti Yoga
The true aim of life is fulfilled when the living being moves beyond material ambition and turns toward spiritual realization. In these teachings, Śrīla Prabhupāda explains that human life is meant for restoring one's lost relationship with the Supreme Personality of Godhead. Through bhakti-yoga, all sincere endeavor becomes directed toward satisfying Kṛṣṇa and returning back home, back to Godhead.
Spiritual Realization Is the True Aim of Life
Human life becomes successful when one understands that material comfort, social position, and bodily pleasure cannot satisfy the soul. The real purpose is to undergo proper training, realize the spiritual nature of life, and become free from the repeated cycle of birth and death. In this way, Śrīla Prabhupāda presents spiritual realization as the actual aim behind human welfare and the perfection of life.
- The real aim is spiritual realization. But for realizing perfect spiritual life one has to undergo some training.
- Spiritual life means putting an end to birth, old age, disease and death. Getting amrta, nectar, means getting relief from birth and death, and that is the real aim of spiritual life.
- That is the real knowledge (of the relationship of the living being with the Supreme Lord) which can help society achieve the real aim of human welfare.
- The real aim, real benefit, is how to be transferred to the other nature, spiritual nature.
Bhakti Yoga Completes All Yoga Systems
Various systems of yoga may help the living being make gradual progress, but their real goal is not separate from devotional service. Karma-yoga, jñāna-yoga, and haṭha-yoga are meaningful only when they lead toward connection with the Supreme Lord. Śrīla Prabhupāda therefore identifies bhakti-yoga as the ultimate aim, because it directly restores the living being's relationship with Kṛṣṇa.
- Any yoga system means an endeavor to connect our relationship with the Supreme Lord. That is called yoga. Someone is trying to make the connection, karma-yoga. Someone is trying by jnana-yoga. Someone is trying hatha-yoga. But the real aim is bhakti-yoga.
- The real aim is bhakti-yoga. Just like different steps. You are on the first step, and other is on the second step, and other is on the third step, and other is on the fourth step. But the ultimate goal is bhakti-yoga.
- If one is unable to give up the activities of his selfish nature, then jnana and yoga are of no avail. The real aim is for a living entity to give up all selfish satisfaction and to be prepared to satisfy the Supreme.
- A householder, a gentleman or a person living with family, wife and children, his real aim is how to achieve the relationship, lost relationship, with the Supreme Personality of Godhead. His only aim is how to achieve that perfection.
Material Ambition Cannot Give Real Happiness
The conditioned soul may seek happiness through politics, intoxication, entertainment, prestige, or material benedictions, but such efforts remain rooted in ignorance. Śrīla Prabhupāda shows that people are searching for happiness, yet they do not know where genuine happiness is found. When the aim is material enjoyment, even religion or public service can become a cover for selfish ambition.
- Somebody is drinking, somebody is gambling, somebody is going to the restaurant, somebody is going to the Times Square, somebody is going here, there. Their real aim is to become happy. But because in avidya, ignorance, they are unable to become happy.
- Somebody is seeking pleasure. That is the real aim. Therefore he's going into the water. He has no business to go to the water, but because he is seeking pleasure - "Let me see if there is some pleasure. Experiment." That's all.
- I join some political party because I am finding out the opportunity how I can become a minister or how I can capture some power by going through this political party. This is my real aim. I am not serving that party, but I am serving my ambition.
- Generally, householders receive saintly persons to get their blessings, but their real aim is to become happy in the material world. Asking such material benedictions is not recommended in the sastras.
Religion and Society Must Satisfy the Supreme
Religious practice and social organization become meaningful when they cure the disease of sense gratification and train people to satisfy the Supreme Lord. Through varṇāśrama-dharma, yajña, and proper social duties, people can gradually progress toward spiritual realization. In these instructions, Śrīla Prabhupāda warns that without the real aim, religion becomes external formality and society loses its spiritual direction.
- The real aim is to be cured from the disease. So any religion which teaches to be cured from the material disease of sense gratification and teaches love of Godhead, that is perfect religion.
- If we do not follow strictly our regulative principles, routine work, then the whole scheme will be failure. Then, instead of Christianity it will be "churchianity." Everywhere this churchianity is going on. And the real aim is how to enjoy sense.
- Vedic civilization is meant for training the whole people in such a way that they'll be engaged in the performance of yajna. So that either he acts as a sudra or either he acts as a brahmin, it doesn't matter. The real aim is to satisfy the Supreme.
- The real aim is: how to become Krsna conscious. Brahmana is guiding, ksatriya is ruling, vaisya is producing food, and sudra, they have no brain; they are helping. In this way the society is very peaceful, and everyone is advanced in Krsna consciousness.
Purification Leads Back Home Back to Godhead
Austerity, knowledge, and social training are not meant for material immortality or cheating prestige, but for purification and return to the spiritual world. Demonic ambition tries to remain in the material world forever, whereas genuine spiritual practice seeks freedom from material bondage. Śrīla Prabhupāda therefore connects the real aim with returning to Viṣṇu, going back home, back to Godhead, and helping others find true happiness.
- The demons do like that, tapasya for living ever. But they will not take the real method of tapasya, to purify. Their real aim is this material world, and here they want to become immortal. That is their foolishness.
- The real aim is how to get the Nobel Prize by cheating. That is their real aim. How an educated man, learned man, will cheat.
- The real aim is to go back to home, back to Godhead, Visnu. So this is the process. If we execute varnasrama-dharma rightly, then we gradually make progress towards spiritual realization.
- We have no business. But our real aim is how people will be happy. That is our real aim.
Conclusion
The teachings gathered here show that the real aim of life is fulfilled through spiritual realization and devotional service, not through material pleasure, power, prestige, or external religiosity. By explaining that all yoga systems, social duties, austerities, and religious practices should lead toward Kṛṣṇa consciousness, Śrīla Prabhupāda gives a clear standard for human progress. When the living being gives up selfish satisfaction and seeks to satisfy the Supreme Lord through bhakti-yoga, life reaches its true perfection.
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 Real Aim. We invite you to visit this link to study the complete compilation and experience Śrīla Prabhupāda's teachings in their direct, verbatim form.