Becoming a Grhastha - The Householder Asrama
In the Vedic system of varṇāśrama-dharma, the gṛhastha-āśrama is a responsible and respectable spiritual order. Śrīla Prabhupāda teaches that human life is meant for gradual elevation, and for most people, this involves passing through the stage of household life. Unlike modern marriage, which is often based on romance and unrestricted sense gratification, becoming a gṛhastha implies accepting a regulated life of duty, spiritual cultivation, and peaceful coexistence with a wife to facilitate Kṛṣṇa consciousness.
Purpose of the Gṛhastha Āśrama
The primary purpose of becoming a householder is to regulate sex life and engage in religious duties. While the brahmacārī stage is meant for celibacy, those who cannot maintain it are advised to marry. However, Śrīla Prabhupāda makes a sharp distinction between a gṛhastha and a gṛhamedhī: a genuine householder centers his home around the service of the Lord, whereas a gṛhamedhī is attached only to wife, children, and sense enjoyment.
- Husband and wife should execute religious life, spiritual cultivation. That is the purpose of becoming householder. Grhastha-asrama. Not that I become attracted by wife and I become absorbed in simply sex relation and forget my real duty, Krsna consciousness. That is dangerous.
- One is advised to become a grhastha and not a grhamedhi.
- Vedic civilization is - first teaching is brahmacari, how to learn to avoid sex life. If one can continue without sex life he is praised, naisthika-brahmacari. If one cannot, all right you become a perfect grhastha, so many rules and regulations.
Honesty versus Hypocrisy
A recurring theme in the philosophy is the condemnation of markaṭa-vairāgya, or "monkey renunciation." If one has material desires, it is considered far more honorable to become a gṛhastha rather than falsely adopting the dress of a sannyāsī while secretly indulging in sense gratification. As Śrīla Prabhupāda often pragmatically noted, it is better to marry and live peacefully if the senses are agitated than to make a show of false renunciation.
- Markata-vairagya is not necessary. Real vairagya. We do not indulge in so-called sannyasi or brahmacari. If one is unable, he must become a grhastha.
- He (Caitanya Mahaprabhu) knows that grhastha has sex life, so He never rejected. So if you want sex life, become a grhastha. Just have a wife and live peacefully.
- Why this false dress? What is the wrong to become grhastha? I was grhastha, paka caliber grhastha.
Need for Training
There is a lamentable lack of educational institutions in modern society to train people for the different stages of life. Just as there are colleges for engineering or law, Śrīla Prabhupāda points out that there should be training for becoming an ideal householder. Without this proper education, people enter marriage without understanding its spiritual responsibilities, a situation that inevitably leads to social chaos and a classless society.
- As there are schools and colleges to train students to become chemical engineers, lawyers or specialists in many other departments of knowledge, there must be schools and colleges to train students to become brahmacaris, grhasthas, vanaprasthas and sannyasis.
- Because there is no institution to teach people how to become brahmanas, ksatriyas, vaisyas and sudras or brahmacaris, grhasthas, vanaprasthas and sannyasis, these demons want a classless society. This is resulting in chaotic conditions.
- In Vedic civilization a man is taught from the beginning of his life to become a brahmacari, then an ideal grhastha, then vanaprastha, then sannyasi, and the wife is taught just to follow the husband strictly in all conditions of life.
A Stage in the Progressive Path
Becoming a gṛhastha is not the final goal of life but a necessary step for those who need it. The progression is clearly outlined: one begins as a brahmacārī, enters household life to fulfill and regulate desires, and eventually retires as a vānaprastha. This step-by-step process ensures that one does not remain entangled in family affairs until death, leading eventually to total renunciation.
- First of all, they used to become brahmacari, to become most obedient servant of the spiritual master before becoming grhastha. Celibacy, brahmacari, then grhastha.
- For brahmana, the four asramas are compulsory. He must become a brahmacari. Then from brahmacari he becomes grhastha. Then from grhastha he must become vanaprastha. Then he must become a sannyasi.
- To become fixed, become sannyasi, the other three processes are there: to become brahmacari, to become grhastha, to become vanaprastha, stage by stage. But if one is able, he can take sannyasa.
Conclusion
The gṛhastha-āśrama serves as a safe haven for those navigating the ocean of material existence. It offers a platform to satisfy the senses within religious boundaries while keeping the ultimate goal of self-realization in sight. Whether one is a brahmacārī or a householder, the measure of success, as Śrīla Prabhupāda concludes, is not one's social status, but one's ability to please Kṛṣṇa.
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 Becoming a Grhastha. We invite you to visit this link to study the complete compilation and experience Śrīla Prabhupāda's teachings in their direct, verbatim form.