Reporter (2): God is inside us.
Prabhupāda: God is inside, outside, everywhere.
Reporter (3): Who do you think Jesus Christ was?
Prabhupāda: Now, let us finish one. Jesus Christ himself said that he is son of God. That's all right. That's all right.
Reporter (2): But if you take a drop of water and you merge it back into an ocean . . . this is an example that is often given, I think, by these masters, that if you take a drop of water and you put it into an ocean, that drop becomes one with that ocean.
Prabhupāda: The drop of water becomes ocean?
Reporter (2): No, but it becomes merged in that ocean.
Prabhupāda: That's all right. Merging is different. But the ocean remains the ocean.
Reporter (2): Yes.
Prabhupāda: And you remain the drop, that's all. Because . . . now, suppose your body, material body—earth, water, air, fire—now, when this body will be decomposed, so this form will not remain. Does it mean that your body has become the whole universal material elements?
Reporter (2): No. But surely body is different from soul.
Prabhupāda: That body is a drop in the bigger material elements. That does not mean your body has become the whole material elements. Similarly, a drop of ocean water is drop always. It does not become ocean. It appears that it is mixed up, but mixed up does not mean the drop will become as ocean. That is not the fact.
Reporter (3): When they say the drop mixes with the ocean . . .
Prabhupāda: Yes.
Reporter (3): . . . it's like the human finite form merging with the infinite, and then it acquires the powers of infinite . . .
Prabhupāda: Mixes means . . . just like, the example is given: just like a green bird enters into a tree which is also green. So if . . . to my eyes it appears that the bird is mixed up, but actually that is not fact. Suppose an aeroplane, you see aeroplane is going on. Then, after some time you see there is no aeroplane; it is the same sky. It has mixed up. It has not mixed up. Your eyes are defective. It appears like mixed up, but it cannot mixed up. The airplane is keeping its identity. The bird is keeping its identity.
Reporter (2): Is the human soul, then, limited or unlimited?
Prabhupāda: Limited.
Reporter (2): Limited?
Prabhupāda: Yes.
Reporter (2): That it has boundaries and . . .?
Prabhupāda: Yes. Because you are limited, therefore you are under the control of material nature. That is being explained there. He is limited. If he keeps his limited existence, that is nice. But unnecessarily if he wants to become unlimited, that is artificial. How it can be?
Reporter (2): I seem to remember reading a chapter of the Bhagavad-gītā that said . . . I can't quite remember what chapter it was, but it said that . . . Kṛṣṇa was talking to Arjuna, and it said that Kṛṣṇa said to Arjuna, "When you realize Me," or when you realize God, or Kṛṣṇa, "you will see the whole of creation with inside . . ."
Prabhupāda: Hmm? "You?"
Reporter (2): "You will see the whole of creation with inside Me and with inside yourself." Is that a true translation?
Prabhupāda: Where it is? Cāru?
Cāru: "You will see all beings in Me and Me in all beings."