Essential Qualifications for Becoming a Teacher
In modern society, teaching is often viewed merely as a profession or a means of livelihood. However, Śrīla Prabhupāda elevates the concept of a teacher to a position of supreme responsibility. He strictly warns that without genuine spiritual qualification, anyone who attempts to instruct others is not actually a teacher but a cheater. This article examines the rigorous standards required to become a bona fide guide in human society, distinguishing between those who mislead and those who save.
Distinction Between Teacher and Cheater
A fundamental point Śrīla Prabhupāda makes is that a person possessing the four defects of conditional life—imperfect senses, the tendency to commit mistakes, being illusioned, and the propensity to cheat—is disqualified from teaching the Absolute Truth independently. If one is blind, they cannot lead other blind men. Therefore, a person who relies on their own imperfect knowledge to instruct others is engaging in deception.
- A diseased man, he cannot say, "I am perfect in health." That is not possible. Similarly, if we are defective in so many ways, and if I want to become teacher or preacher to give you the truth, then how can I give? This is not possible.
- Our senses are imperfect, and with all this paraphernalia, when we want to teach, that is not teaching; that is cheating. Because I am imperfect, how can I be teacher? That is not possible.
- If one simply becomes a teacher or professor of education but does not understand Krsna, it is to be understood that he is among the lowest of mankind.
Heavy Responsibility of Delivery
Becoming a teacher is not a frivolous affair; it is a duty that requires the capacity to save one's students from the cycle of birth and death. Citing the Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam, Śrīla Prabhupāda asserts that one should not accept the role of a spiritual master, father, or teacher unless they are competent to deliver their dependents from the grip of material nature.
- As the Bhagavatam says, one should not attempt to become a father, or mother, or teacher unless he is able to save his children from death, from the grip of material nature.
- Bhagavata says that, "If you cannot develop the spiritual life of your dependent, then don't become a spiritual master, don't become a teacher, don't become a father, don't become a husband." These things are restricted.
True Qualification
If we are all imperfect, how can anyone teach? The solution, as Śrīla Prabhupāda explains, lies in strict adherence to the paramparā system. One becomes a bona fide teacher not by inventing new philosophy, but by repeating exactly what they have heard from their own spiritual master. By acting as a transparent medium for the previous ācāryas, even an imperfect person can deliver perfect knowledge.
- I am a bona fide teacher as long as I follow the instructions of my spiritual master. That is the only one qualification for becoming a teacher. As soon as one deviates from this principle one is no longer a teacher.
- According to Caitanya Mahaprabhu's mission, every Indian can become a teacher, provided he accepts the teachings of their predecessors acarya.
- Caitanya Mahaprabhu says, janma sarthaka kari kara paropakara (CC Adi 9.41) - First of all make your life successful. Then you become a teacher.
Conclusion
To summarize, the position of a teacher is one of the highest social orders, traditionally reserved for brāhmaṇas who are learned and self-realized. However, in the current age, anyone can attain this status provided they strictly follow the instructions of Kṛṣṇa and the bona fide spiritual master. Śrīla Prabhupāda reminds us that the primary qualification is not academic brilliance, but the humble acceptance of authority and the sincere desire to distribute the mercy of Lord Caitanya to the world.
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 Teacher. We invite you to visit this link to study the complete compilation and experience Śrīla Prabhupāda's teachings in their direct, verbatim form.