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As A Prism Contains the Sun

As a Prism
contains the Sun
so the Words of God
contain God the One
***
  
This is an e-book convertible download. See for the online version
with illustrations and links
http://www.askbaba.net/


PREMA VAHINI
1. Preface
2. Noble Qualities from the Path for the Aspirant
3. The Study of Books and One-Pointedness
4. Sadhana - The Way of Life
5. The Real Nature of the Life of Man
6. Identity of Bhakthi and Jnana
7. The Duties of Life
8. Sadguna is Jnana
9. Truth is God
10. Ahamkara causes Asanthi
11. Aspirants on the Bhakthi Path
12. Image Worship
13. Study
14. The Need for Sanathana Vidya
15. The Objective World is not Real
16. Life is a Journey depending on Samskaras
17. Engrossed in the Business of Life, Man earns just the Samskaras
18. Sanathana Dharma is the Divine Mother of Humanity
19. Sarvaantharyaami is One and Only One
20. Seeds for the Bhakthi Sprouts
21. For a Sadhaka, Today is His: but Tomorrow?
22. Path for a Bhaktha to become a Muktha
23. Manava and Danava - the Differences in Character
24. Today's Words are only the Works of Yesterday
25. Bhakthi is of Two Kinds
26. Vaanaprastha
27. Mukthi is of Four Kinds
28. Sat-Sankalpa is the Path for Attaining the Presence
29. A Good Character is the Jewel of Human Life
30. Sahajamaarga, Saadhanamarga, not the same
31. The Harvest of a Sadhaka

Preface

Dear Reader, addressing a mammoth gathering at Gudur some years ago,
Bhagavan Sri Sathya Sai Baba said, "You will not be wrong if you call
Me Premaswarupa". In fact, Baba showers Prema, seeks Prema, and
establishes Prema in the heart of the individual, the fabric of
society and the complex of nations. Humanity which has lost its way
and is shivering in terror unable to control the evil that it has
generated by its insane pranks, needs Baba's Grace and Prema, to
allay its neurosis and bring it back to the Light. Baba said years
ago that He would inaugurate His task of re-creating and re-forming
Man on the true basis of Dharma, when he completes thirty-two years
of stay here upon the Earth. In 1958, when he reached that moment, He
blessed the venture of a monthly magazine, and he named it Sanathana
Sarathi, a name full of fragrance of the Githa and the Lord's Role as
the Charioteer of whoever selects Him as the Guide. It is significant
that the very first series of articles that Baba wrote for the
Sanathana Sarathi was "Prema Vahini". These discourses are collected
in this book, as they were first presented, in English Translation.
Sathya, Dharma, Santhi and Prema are the Four Pillars of the New
World of the Sai Era and under Baba's Guidance, humanity has to
discover Santhi, through Prema. For that task, this book will be of
immense help; while reading it you are in touch with the very source
of Prema; while translating its message into action, you are visibly
led by the Grace of the Lord Himself; while enjoying the thrill of
Sadhana prescribed here, you are responding to the majesty of the
very Ocean of Mercy.

N. Kasturi, Editor, Sanathana Sarathi

Noble Qualities from the Path for the Aspirant

More than all the previous Yugas, the Kaliyuga offers multifarious
paths through which man can acquire discrimination or viveka. If it
is education that is needed, there are as many schools and
institutions as you need, and, if it is wealth that one is after,
there are various avenues by which, with effort, it can be honourably
earned. In spite of this, however, we do not find any increase in
human happiness or peace. Indeed, there is much more misery than in
previous ages!

What then is the reason? The reason lies in human behaviour, in man's
way of living itself. Human life is undoubtedly the highest in
evolution and to give it meaning, spiritual endeavour is essential,
endeavour that is pure and holy. For this way of life, character is
all important. Character makes life immortal; it survives even death.
Some say knowledge is power, but it is not true. Character is Power.
Even the acquisition of knowledge demands a good character. So, every
one must yearn to attain flawless character, without any trace of
evil.

Note that Buddha, Jesus Christ, Sankaracharya and Vivekananda, great
Sages and Saints and Devotees of the Lord, all these are treasured in
the memory of man even unto this day. What quality made them all
memorable for all time? I say, it is the character of each one of
them.

Without character, wealth, education, social status, all these are of
no avail. It is the fragrance of the flower; it gives value and
worth. Poets, painters, scientists may be great, each in his own
field, but without character, they can have no standing in society.

Doubts will certainly rise whether all those who are now greeted with
respect by Society have the character which we consider essential to
greatness. But, I am speaking of a society and a character, which
cling to certain unchanging values. Ordinarily, society attaches
varying importance to certain qualities from day to day and fashions
in character change with the vagaries of society. But the basic
nature of a flawless character is eternal; it is the same, whatever
the vicissitudes of society. In that sense, it is eternal, being
associated with another immortal entity, the Atman.

Among the qualities that make up a flawless character, Love,
Patience, Forbearance, Steadfastness, Charity - these are the
highest, these have to be revered.

The hundred little deeds that we do every day harden into habits;
these habits shape into intelligence and mould our outlook and life.
All that we weave in our imagination, seek in our ideals, yearn in
our aspirations, leave an indelible imprint on the mind. Distorted by
these, we form our knowledge, our picture of the world around us, and
it is to this picture that we get attached.

Man's present is but the result of his past and the habits formed
during that long period. Whatever be the nature of the character that
he has come by, it can certainly be modified by modifying the
accustomed process of thought and imagination.

The wickedness of no man is incorrigible. Was not Angulimala, the
dacoit, turned into a kind-hearted person by the Buddha? Did not the
thief Ratnakara become Valmiki, the sage? By conscious effort, habits
can be changed and character refined. Man has always, within him,
within his reach, the capacity to challenge his evil propensities and
to change his evil habits. By selfless service, by renunciation, by
devotion, by prayer and by ratiocination, the old habits which bind
men to earth can be discarded and new habits which take us along the
divine path can be instilled into our lives.

To discuss the nature of this character, its ways and vagaries, and
to inform about the process of reshaping it, this is the purpose of
all spiritual literature, poems, epics, books and periodicals. The
Sanathana Sarathi has just this aim in view; it does not seek either
the exhibition of erudition or the acquisition of name and fame.

But, it has to be said, that the mere reading of a book or a journal
will not vouchsafe viveka or discrimination. That which is seen,
heard or read must be put into practice in actual life. Without this,
reading is mere waste of time. If anything is read to pass time, it
passes with time and nothing remains.

The Study of Books and One-Pointedness

Books are available in plenty and at very cheap prices. Vedas,
Sastras and Puranas can be got and read by every one. There is also
no dearth of Gurus. Vidya-peeths abound and are ostensibly granting
the boon of knowledge. Facilities for training the mind are plenty
and within reach. But yet, from nowhere is heard the note of content
at having partaken of the nectar of Jnana.

When I see the heaps of books that lie around everywhere, I feel that
the wisdom inside the book cannot succeed in penetrating the heavy
binding and emerge into the light. God is hidden by the mountain
ranges of lust, anger, envy and selfishness. So too, the Sun of
Wisdom is hidden by these huge heaps of books. Though these books
have spread to all corners of the earth, we cannot say that culture
has increased or that wisdom has increased; man is still not far from
the ape. An attractive binding and title, a beautiful picture, these
are what the reader seeks, viz., transitory pleasure and momentary
contentment. Only those who, by means of discrimination, select the
books they read and practise what they read can realize the Truth and
enjoy everlasting Bliss. Only these live worth while lives. So, those
who seek the highest path and who revel in thoughts of God should
strive to read only the life histories of saints and sages and books
which help the contemplation of the Divine. Aimless reading of books
all and sundry and whatever comes to hand will make confusion only
worse confounded. It gives no profit, confers no peace.

More than all, cultivate one-pointed steadfastness, ekagrata, in
whatever you do. Samadrishti is Subha-drishti.

The Lion, though it is the King of the forest, while walking through
the wood, turns back for every few steps, for, it is afraid of being
pursued. Fear in the mind makes the vision falter. Violence within
the heart distorts the vision and distracts the sight.

Man must have Samadrishti, equal sight. All creation must appear to
his eyes as equally auspicious. He must look upon all being with as
much love and faith as he has in himself. For there is nothing evil
in creation, no, not even an iota. Evil appears as such only through
faulty vision. Creation gets coloured by the nature of the glasses we
wear. By itself it is eternally pure and holy.

Sadhana - The Way of Life

There have always been, there are and there will always be, teachers
who reveal to man and who instruct him to attain the heights which he
can reach by the fullest manifestation of his physical, mental and
intellectual powers, through one-pointed steadfastness. The mind of
man revels in external objects and in purposeless observation and
criticism of the outside world. How then can it be trained to be
steadfast?

Each one should ask himself the question: Mahatmas and Mahapurushas
were also persons like me; they were also embodied beings. When they
could attain perfection, I can also succeed, if I follow their
method. What do I gain if I spend my time in discovering the faults
and weaknesses of others?

Therefore the first sadhana is search for the faults and weaknesses
within thyself and strive to correct them and become perfect.

The unceasing toil of each succeeding day has as its aim and
justification this consummation; to make one's last days sweet and
pleasant. But, each day too, has its evening. If the day is spent in
good deeds, then the evening blesses us with deep sleep, invigorating
refreshing sleep, the sleep about which it is said that it is akin to
Samadhi.

Man has only a short span of life, here upon earth. But, even in this
short life one can, by wisely using the time with care, attain Divine
Bliss. Two men, in appearance the same, ostensibly of the same mould,
grow under the same conditions, but one turns out to be an angel
while the other stays on with his normal nature. What is the reason
for this varied development? Habits and the behaviours formed out of
these habits, and the character into which that behaviour has
solidified. Man is the creature of character.

The Real Nature of the Life of Man

To a superficial observer, the life of man appears as an endless
round of eating and drinking, toiling and sleeping. But, verily life
has a much greater meaning; a much deeper significance. Life is a
sacrifice, a yagna. Each little act is an offering to the Lord. If
the day is spent in deeds performed in this spirit of surrender, what
else can sleep be except Samadhi?

Man commits the great fault of identifying himself with the body. He
has accumulated a variety of things for the upkeep and comfort of the
body. Even when the body becomes weak and decrepit with age, he
attempts to bolster it up, by some means or other. But, how long can
death be postponed? When Yama's warrant comes each has to depart.
Before Death, position, pride and power, all vanish. Realizing this,
strive day and night, with purity of body and mind and spirit, to
realize the Higher Self, by the service of all living beings. The
body must be preserved as a vehicle for this service. But remember,
you are not this body; this body cannot be you. Tat Tvam Asi. Thou
art That. That is the highest and holiest Mahavakya; you are the
indestructible Atma Tatwa. It is for the sake of that Atma Tatwa that
you have this body and so in the attempt to realize Parameshwara here
and now, you must be prepared to offer this body, at any moment, as a
sacrifice. Utilise your authority over this body to foster the
welfare of the world. This body is but an instrument, an implement
given by God. Let it serve its purpose.

But, until the realization of the purpose for which the implement is
given, it is your duty to watch over it vigilantly and protect it
from injury and disablement. During winter woollen clothes are worn
to withstand the rigour of the cold gales. But when the cold subsides
they are discarded. So, too, when the cold gales of material life do
not affect us in the least, the material body is no longer essential.
One is conscious of only the incorporeal body.

When the rains come, earth and sky are one in the sheety downpour. It
is indeed a beautiful inspiring scene, a scene by which creation
itself is teaching you to become One, in unison with it. There are
three lessons that can be learnt - the impermanence of created
things, the role of Man as the servant, and God as the Master. This
creation is the wherewithal of the Puja; Man is the worshipper, and
God, the worshipped. The game called Life is played with these.

Man must be happy that Purushothama has placed around him newer and
newer materials for serving Him and gets done through him Puja in
various forms. He must pray for newer and newer opportunities and
exult in the chance that his hands receive. The attitude gives
immeasurable joy. To lead a life suffused with this joy is indeed
bliss.

Whatever is done from sunrise to sunset must be consecrated, as if it
is the worship of the Lord. As care is taken to pluck only fresh
flowers and keep them clean and unfaded, so too ceaseless effort
should be made to do deeds which are pure and unsullied.

If everyday, this vision is kept before the mind's eye and life is
lived accordingly, then it becomes one long unbroken service of the
Lord. The feeling of I and Thou will soon disappear; all trace of
self will be destroyed. Life then transmutes itself into a veritable
Haripaaraayanam. "I am the sevaka. This world is the offering. God is
the master who is worshipped" - when one attains this stage of
thought, feeling and action, all difference between mine and thine
will disappear.

Identity of Bhakthi and Jnana

There is no distinction between Bhakthi and Jnana. Just as Suguna
becomes Nirguna, Bhakthi too becomes Jnana. I will not agree that
Karma, Bhakthi and Jnana are separate. I do not even like to classify
one of these as first, the other as the second and next as the third.
I will not accept a mixture of all the three or even a samuchchaya, a
merger of the three. Karma is Bhakthi and Bhakthi is Jnana: A block
of Mysorepak has sweetness, weight and shape; the three cannot be
separated, one from the other. Each little part of it has sweetness,
weight and shape. We do not find shape in one part, weight in another
and sweetness in a third. And when it is placed on the tongue taste
is recognized, weight is lessened and shape is modified, all at the
same time. So too, the Jiva, the Atma, and the Paramatma are not
separate; they are one and the same.

Therefore, each individual deed must be full of the spirit of Seva,
of Prema and of Jnana. In other words each group of life's activities
must be saturated with Karma, Bhakthi and Jnana. This is verily the
Purushothama Yoga. It has to be acted in practice, not merely spoken
in words, Sadhana should be done constantly with ever-expanding heart
full of Bhakthi and Jnana. The sweetness of nectar or the Lord's name
is the charm of life; the internal joy derived from the Name is akin
to the external joy of the outer life.

When one performs a kriya as an offering to the Lord, his good, the
higher good and the highest good Swartha, Parartha and Paramartha,
all become one. First I and you become we. Next we and He becomes
identified. The Jiva (i.e. the Individual soul, I) should accomplish
identity, with the Paramatma (i.e. the Prakrithi, You) and then with
the Paramatma (i.e. the Supreme Soul, He). This indeed is the
significance of the mantra, Om Tat Sat.

Today, yesterday and tomorrow Om Tat Sat is, was and will be. 'He'
and 'I' are there always. The Sadhana is also there always. Just as
the sun is inseparable and is never apart from its rays, under no
circumstances should any aspirant be without his sadhana. It is only
when the sadhak adheres to his sadhana in such an incessant manner
can he be said to be one with Om.

The Duties of Life

The blemishes of the heart have to be washed by the moral life and
the doing of one's duty. A time may come when man becomes tired and
weak, but he should then pray thus: Lord, things have gone beyond my
capacity. I feel further effort is too great a strain. Give me
strength, O, Lord!

At first, God stands at a distance watching man's efforts, like the
teacher who stands apart when the students write out answers to his
questions. Then when man sheds his attachment to Bhoga and takes to
good deeds, and Seva, God comes encouragingly near. For, He is like
Surya Narayana, who stands waiting outside the closed door, like the
servant who knows the rights of the master and his own limitations.
He does not announce his presence or bang the door. He simply waits.
And when the Master does but just open the door a little, the sun
rushes in and promptly drives out darkness from within. When His help
is asked for, He is present by the side of man, with hands extended
to render assistance. So, what is wanted from man is only the viveka
to pray to the Lord, the Jnana to remember Him.

Sadguna is Jnana

Jnana means understanding but, it is not just an intellectual
feat. 'Eating' does not mean the placing of food on the tongue.
Eating is worth while only when the food is chewed and swallowed and
digested and assimilated in the blood stream and transformed into
muscle and bone, into strength and vigour. So too understanding or
Jnana must permeate and invigorate all the moments of life. It must
be expressed through all the organs and sense, through all the
Karmendriyas and all the Jnanendriyas. To this high stage man must
reach.

Mere accumulation of learning is not Jnana. Only Sadguna is Jnana.

In order that one might do seva, a little Bhoga too has to be gone
through. Such Bhoga is a part of yajna. To make this body-machine
function, the fuel of Anna has to be used. Anna is not yajna, but it
makes yajna possible. Therefore, eating food is not to be laughed at
as catering to greed, as Udaraposhana. It is part of worship.

Puja is not merely the plucking of a flower and placing it on top of
the image; the gardener who toiled to nurse the plant that gave the
flower is also a worshipper. It is only when food is given that the
body can function. Even the means for a sacrifice is yajna.

All Karma done for the sake of three entities is sacrifice, viz., to
utilise the world for the worship of the Lord, to establish peace and
justice in society and to control and co-ordinate the functions of
the body. The first is called Yajna, the second Dana and the third
Tapas. All human acts must subserve these three needs.

Truth is God

For attaining this stage, an ethical life is the foundation. This
ethical life is based upon discrimination between Truth and
Falsehood. Just as the pearl is retained while the shell is
discarded, the Essence, which is Truth, must be accepted and the non-
essential rejected. Then again, individual exertion and Divine Grace
should both be existent. One should also constantly practise the
great lesson that the Body and the Atma are separate. This is a
highly beneficial exercise. Such viveka or discrimination is
necessary for all aspects of life secular as well as spiritual. It is
indispensable for realizing the Truth, the Truth that persists in
Creation, Existence and Destruction - the Truth which is God Himself.

To serve this supreme Lord purity in diet has to be observed. As
regards food, the question is not how much, but of what quality. Of
course quantity too cannot be overlooked. But, why is food necessary
at all? It is needed for acquiring the strength required for Seva. In
order Sevayajna may yield fruit, food is needed and such food must be
pure. Attention has to be paid to this aspect of food.

In this way, each one should pay constant attention to his habits and
to the traits of his character. And then, the attachment to the body
will fall off and the task of securing Atmananda will be made easy.

Man has all these various duties to perform before he actually
attains realization; for it is only through such spiritual life can
he acquire purity and through that pure nature alone is it possible
for him to realize the Soul Supreme. Without getting himself engaged
in them it is no use crying in agony that he has not been able to
know the Paramathman.

In this material world, one cannot appreciate the value of spiritual
endeavour if he has had no experience of such a spiritual life and
its purity. It may be said that one can undertake spiritual endeavour
only after appreciating its value but, this is like saying that one
would get into water only after learning swimming. Swimming can be
learned only by getting into water, with a float attached to the
body. In the same way, with some float attached to the mind plunge
without fear into spiritual sadhana. Then you will yourself
understand the value of spiritual endeavour. The nature and condition
of the spiritual path are known only to those who have journeyed
along the road. They know that the path of Sathya and Viveka leads to
Paramatma. Those who have not trodden that and those who are not
aware of its existence cannot explain it to themselves or to others.

Paramatma alone is real. Paramatma is Truth, Paramatma is Love.
Meditate on Him as Truth, as Love. It is possible to realize Him, in
whatever form you meditate upon. Be always in the company of His
devotees. Through this satsanga, viveka (discrimination) and vairagya
(detachment) will be implanted and increased. These will strengthen
the spirit and endow you with inner Peace. Your mind will then merge
in Paramatma.

In everything that you do, use all the strength and talent with which
you are endowed, speaking and acting truthfully. At first, you might
fail in this and you might encounter difficulties and sufferings.
But, ultimately, you are bound to succeed and achieve victory and
Bliss. I recall here the statement, Satyameva Jayathe, Naanritham. By
your behaviour, through your way of life, you can realize the Truth,
you can realize Paramatma.

Ahamkara causes Asanthi

Man creates and developes in himself an abounding variety of selfish
habits and attitudes and he gives rise to great discontent for
himself. The impulse for all this comes from the power complex, the
greed for accumulating authority, domination and power, the greed for
things which can never be eternal and full. In fact, it is impossible
for man to attain them, up to the level of satiation. Omnipotence
belongs to Sarveswara, the Lord of All. A person might feel elated
that he has become the master of all arts, or owner of all wealth, or
possessor of all knowledge or repository of all the Sastras, but from
whom did he acquire all these? That source must indeed be greater. He
might even claim that he earned all this through his own efforts, his
labour and his toil. But surely someone gives it to him, in some form
or other. This he cannot gainsay. The source from which all authority
and all power originate is Sarveswara. Ignoring that omnipotence, to
delude one-self that the little power one has acquired is one's own,
this indeed is egoism, conceit, pride, Ahamkara.

If a person is a genuine vehicle of power, he can be recognized by
the characteristics of truth, kindness, love, patience, forbearance
and gratefulness. Wherever these reside, Ahamkara cannot subsist, it
has no place. Seek, therefore, to develop these.

The effulgence of the Atma is obscured by Ahamkara. Therefore when
Ahamkara is destroyed, all troubles end, all discontents vanish and
Bliss is attained. As the sun is obscured by mist, the feeling of
Ahamkara hides Eternal Bliss. Even if the eyes are open, a piece of
cloth or cardboard can prevent the vision from functioning
effectively and usefully. So, too, the screen of selfishness prevents
man from seeing God, who is, in fact, nearer to him than anything
else. Many an aspirant and recluse, many a sadhaka and sanyasi has
allowed all excellences won by long years of struggle and sacrifice
to slip away through this attachment to the self. For, power without
the bliss of God-realisation is a wall without a basement. Mere
punditry is of no use at all; the Vedas, the Upanishads and the
Sastras are doctrines for living out in daily practice. Whatever the
wealth of words, whatever the standard of scholarship, it is all a
colossal waste. To bring the teachings of the Vedas, Upanishads and
the Sastras into one's actual life one has to scotch the feeling, "I
know," and open one's eyes to the real Essence and Introspect on it.
Then, one can attain Bliss without fail.

The Panchanga might indicate that ten units of rain will fall, but
even if the calendar is folded ten times and squeezed not even a drop
of rain can be extracted. The purpose of the calendar is not to give
rain but only to give information about rain and its quantity. Its
pages do not contain the ten units of rain. Rain is in the clouds
above. So, too, the Sastras can give only information about
doctrines, axioms, rules, regulations and duties. The sublime
characteristics of the Vedas and the Upanishads and Sastras are that
they give instruction in the methods of attaining peace and
liberation. But they are not saturated with these essences of Bliss,
so that one can collect them by squeezing the texts. One has to
discover the path, the direction and the goal as described in them;
one has to tread the path, follow the direction, and reach the goal.
If, however, the I-consciousness produces the pride, 'I know all', a
fall is inevitable; the delusion causes death. The secret of
salvation lies in the realisation of this danger; rebirth is
inevitable, if this danger is not averted.

Aware of all this, if you get immersed in spiritual practice, the
world and its worries will not affect you. It is only when you are
far from this truth, that you suffer, feel pain and experience
travail. At a distance from the bazaar, one hears only a huge
indistinct uproar. But, as we approach it and walk into it, one can
clearly distinguish the separate bargainings. So too, until the
reality of Paramatma is known, you are over-powered and stunned by
the uproar of the world but once you enter deep into the realm of
spiritual endeavour, everything becomes clear and the knowledge of
the reality awakens within you. Until then you will be caught up in
the meaningless noise of argumentation, disputation and exhibitionist
flamboyance.

Aspirants on the Bhakthi Path

Every aspirant who seeks the eternal through the path of Bhakthi
should strive to acquire the following characteristics: He must keep
away from the turmoils, the cruelties and the falsehoods of this
world and practise truth, righteousness, love and peace. This is
indeed the path of Bhakthi. Those who seek union with God, those who
seek the welfare of the world should discard as worthless both praise
and blame, appreciation and derision, prosperity and adversity. They
should courageously keep steady faith in their own innate reality and
dedicate themselves to spiritual uplift. No one, not even a
mahapurusha or avatar can ever escape criticism and blame. But they
do not yield to threats. The real nature of the mahapurusha or the
avatar is realized by those who indulge in criticism or blame only
after wading through unbearable trouble and then, they too start to
praise. The weakness of ignorance is the cause of this failure. So,
let the aspirant keep away from all such waverers and ignorant
persons and desist from discussing with them his belief and immerse
himself in holy books and in the company of the devotees of the Lord.
Later, rich with the experience of realisation and courageous on
account of that contact with reality, they can mix in any company
without danger and even endeavour to direct other minds on to the
truth he himself has seen.

Three types can be recognized among those who seek to do good deeds
and tread the path of self-realisation.

Those who are too frightened by the troubles, losses, and
difficulties, to begin the endeavour; they are of the lowest or
adharma type.
Those who, after having depressed and defeated by obstacles and
disappointments and who therefore give up, in the middle. They are of
the middling, or the madhyama type.
Those who steadfastly adhere to the path with calmness and courage,
whatever the nature of the travel, however hard the road; those are,
of course, of the highest or the uthama type. This steadfastness,
this faith and constancy is the characteristic of the Bhaktha.
Deluded by attachment to this illusory world and attracted by
temporary joy, do not barter away the means of achieving permanent
and complete happiness. Carry on your spiritual duties with full
devotion.

Paramatma cannot be known without faith and steadfastness; Only
through Prema comes Sraddha; only through Sraddha comes Jnana; only
through Jnana comes Parabhakti; only through Parabhakti is Paramatma
attained.

How then is Prema to be cultivated? It can be done through two
methods:

Consider always the faults of others, however big, to be
insignificant and negligible. Consider always your own faults,
however insignificant and negligible, to be big, and feel sad and
repentant. By these means, you avoid developing the bigger faults and
defects and you acquire the qualities of brotherliness and
forbearance.
Whatever you do, with yourself or with others, do it, remembering
that God is omnipresent. He sees and hears and knows everything.
Whatever you speak, remember that God hears every word; discriminate
between the true and the false and speak only the truth; whatever you
do, discriminate between right and the wrong and do only the right.
Endeavour every moment to be aware of the omnipotence of God. The
body is the temple of the Jiva, so whatever happens in that temple,
is the concern of the Jiva. So, too, the world is the body of the
Lord and all that happens in it, good or bad, is His concern. From
the observed fact of the Jiva and the body, know the truth of the
unobservable fact of the Lord and the world.
The relationship of the Jiva and the Lord, the kinship between the
two can be grasped by everyone who acquires three chief instruments:

A mind unsullied by attachment and hatred;
A speech unsullied by falsehood and
A body unsullied by violence.
Joy and peace do not inhere in external objects; they are in
yourself. But people in their foolishness search for those outside
themselves in a world from which, today or tomorrow, they are bound
to depart. Therefore, awake soon. Try to know the essence of
everything; the eternal truth. Try to experience the Love which is
Paramatma itself. Discriminate at every turn, accepting what is true
and discarding the rest. So long as one has worldly desires in view,
he cannot escape sorrow.

Image Worship

There are many who cavil at image worship but its basis is really
man's capacity to see the macrocosm in the microcosm. The value of
image worship is testified to by man's experience; it does not depend
on man's imaginative faculty. What is found in the Virat Swarupa of
the Lord is found, undiminished and unalloyed, in the image Swarupa
also. Images serve the same purpose as metaphors, similies etc., in
poetry. They illustrate, amplify and make clear.

Joy comes to man, not through the shape of things but through the
relationship established with them. Not any child but her child makes
the mother happy. So also with each one and with all things. With
each and everything in the universe, if one establishes the kinship,
that Iswara Prema, verily, what an overpowering joy can be
experienced! Only those who have felt it can understand.

Study

Vedas and Puranas deserve to be read and heard. God's name is to be
recited and listened to. For some ailments, medicines are prescribed
for external application while for others, they are given for
internal use. But for this universal ailment of Bhavaroga, the cycle
of birth and death, Sravana and Kirtana and other medicines are
prescribed, for external and internal use. One has to utter as well
as hear the Lord's name. An aspirant might win God's grace, and the
Guru's grace and the grace of the devotees of the Lord. But all this
grace would be of no avail if he does not secure also another grace,
the grace of his own inner consciousness, his Anthahkarana. Without
this grace, he falls into perdition, for all the rest are no account
whatsoever.

The grace of God is not easily attainable. The feeling of I-ness,
Ahamkara, which makes one say "I am the Doer", should be plucked by
the roots from the heart. Everyone, be he learned or illiterate,
should feel an overwhelming urge to know God. God has equal affection
towards all his children, for to illumine is the nature of light.
Utilising that illumination, some can read good books and others can
do their daily tasks, whatever they are. So too, uttering God's name
one can progress in the realisation of God, another can even do
wicked deeds! It all depends on how you use the light. But the Lord's
name is without blemish, always and for ever.

The Need for Sanathana Vidya

Have not men trained themselves in countless arts and skills and
sciences? Have they not devised countless machines? Have they not
accumulated vast tons of knowledge? Nevertheless, man has not
attained peace of mind, which is so essential for happiness. Instead,
with every passing day, this vidya is dragging man into deeper and
deeper waters and peace is receding more and more into the distance.

The reason can be stated thus. These arts and sciences have only
transitory value; these machines cater for worldly comfort; this
knowledge is all about temporary, transitory things. This vidya does
not reveal to one the Innermost Secret of the Universe. There is one
secret which if known lays bare all secrets; if that problem is
solved, all are solved, there is one knot which if untied, all knots
are loosened. There is one science, which if mastered, all are
mastered. That key science is Santhana Vidya.

If a tree has to be destroyed, its taproot has to be cut; there is no
use trying to kill it by plucking its leaves one by one. It takes too
long a time, besides, it may not work. The ancient Vedic seers knew
this Vidya, but, Indians are feeling ashamed to claim them as their
kith and kin. They saw God through their ascetic endeavours and won
His Grace. They expounded the Science which they had so boldly
discovered. Seekers from other countries perused these books and said
that India had blazed a trail for the whole world. This is a well-
known fact. The lamp illumines the house but just at the very foot of
the lamp, there lurks a dark circle. India does not know or care for
that treasure. Can we ascribe this to the play of Fate and keep quiet?

In the past ages Indians performed their daily rites, sat in a
purified place, surrounded by sacredness and immersed themselves in
the study and the practice of the teachings of the Vedas and the
Upanishads. Besides, they recorded their experiences in order to
guide others and in order to bring those experiences back again into
their own consciousness. But, their children and grandchildren placed
those books on the altar and duly worshipped them. Neglect has
reduced them to dust or lumber; the palm leaves have disintegrated
and rats have eaten into them. But, eager students from the West have
sought out this lumbers and realising that it enshrines incomparable
sources of illumination and priceless pearls of Wisdom, they lift it
reverentially above their heads and acclaim it as the precious gift
of Bharathakhanda to themselves and their children. They carry it
across the seas, with joy in their eyes and thankfulness in their
hearts.

Now shall I reveal what the children of India have been doing? They
neither open the pages nor peruse the contents nor even concern
themselves about them. Only one in a million reads them, but, even he
is ridiculed as a fool and a crank. The books are laughed at as a
conglomeration of lies and legends and they argue about the
historicity of the books and their authors. They dismiss the Sanskrit
language as "Very hard to learn" and pass on the treasure to scholars
from other lands. What a sad spectacle is this? It would have been
some compensation if they attended carefully to the study of their
mother tongue; but, even this they do not do; it is neglect, neglect
everywhere.

No. I do not condemn worldly happiness. I feel glad when people are
happy. But, please do not believe that this happiness is permanent. I
want that you should study all the arts and sciences for acquiring
worldly happiness. But, I want all to remember that this happiness is
not everlasting.

Permanent happiness can be secured only through one Vidya, the
Upanishad Vidya. That is the science of God-realisation, that is the
Teaching of the Rishis. That alone can save Man and grant him peace.
There is nothing higher than that; this is an indisputable fact.
Whatever your joy and sorrow, whatever the subjects you have
specialised in for a living, have your eyes riveted on Brahma Vidya.
If intelligence alone is sharpened, without the growth and practice
of virtues, and if mere information is stored in the brain, the world
cannot progress and its welfare will be in jeopardy.

But people now seem to be losing faith in virtues, for, the
educational system does not assign any place for spiritual teaching
or training. True education does not content itself with filling the
brain with cumbersome junk. That education alone is beneficial which
gives full scope for the blossoming of all the virtues which
distinguish man.

The Objective World is not Real

Actually, men see the shadow and take it to be the substance. They
see length, breadth, height and thickness and they jump to the
conclusion that they have an object before them. They experience a
series of sensations and memories and adding them all up they infer
that there are some objects producing them. This mistaking of
Appearance for Reality is misnamed Jnana. How can it ever be Jnana?
Can the image of a person ever be "he"? If the image is taken to
be "he", can we call it knowledge? Such is the nature of all
knowledge now. What is cognised as an object, is not real at all; its
reality is not cognisable.

The Adwaithin believes "Aham Brahmaasmi", "I am Brahman". How has he
acquired that conviction? Why does he state so! Ask him and the reply
is, "The Sruthi declares so, the Guru taught like that". But,
learning it from these sources does not entitle him to make that
profound statement. If a person is a master of these three words
Aham, Brahma and Asmi, does he attain the unity with Brahmam? No,
ceaseless striving through countless births, loyal performance of
scriptural duties, these purify the mind. In such a mind, seeds of
devotion sprout and when tended with care and knowledge, flowers
bloom, fruits appear and ripen and get filled with sweetness and
fragrance. When the fruit is eaten, man becomes one with the Supreme,
the power that permeates all things, all religions and which is
eternally present and conscious and blissful.

A person may enunciate the formula "Aham Brahmasmi" correctly;
etymology may be perfect; but when he is ignorant of the 'world',
unaware of 'I' and completely in the dark about 'Brahmam', can he
ever taste the rare joy of a Jnani? It is not mastery of words and
their meaning that counts; it is awareness, experience - these are
the fundamentals.

Mud alone is real. The pot-consciousness is born of ignorance
regarding mud; mud is the basis, the substance of the pot. How can a
pot exist without mud? How can effect exist apart from the cause? The
world appears as multiplicity only to the ignorant. To a Jnani,
Brahmam alone, Brahmam upon which all else is superimposed, exists.
The Atman alone is cognised by him; there is nothing else. That is
the Adwaithic experience.

If the world is real, it must be cognised even during the stage of
dreamless deep sleep; but we are not conscious of it at all. So the
visible world is as unreal as the dream world. Just as through
illusion, a snake is imposed on a rope, the world too is imposed on
Brahmam. The snake and the rope are not seen at the same time; the
entire rope is the snake. So too, Brahmam is all this world, all this
vast variety of name and form. But, this imaginatively conceived
variety is fundamentally false, Brahmam alone is true.

The sky might be reflected in a pot of toddy, but the toddy does not
defile it. Similarly, in this vehicle, the body, the Atman dwells
pure and undefiled. The fruits of action, good or bad, fair or foul,
adhere to the vehicle, not to the Indweller, the Seer.

When such Jnana dawns, the dark shadows of the three types of Karma -
the Agaami, the Samchitha, the Praarabdha - flee before it. Yes; even
Praarabdha Karma can be overcome. For, the will of God is omnipotent
and for omnipotence there can be no limit or exception. When through
Sadhana, you win the Sankalpa of the Lord, you can with that Sankalpa
achieve victory over Praarabdha also. Do not be discouraged on any
score.

The sufferings and travails of this world are illusory and
transitory. Fix your mind firmly on this great fact and set out
bravely on the path of Sadhana, the Sadhana of Devotion.

Life is a Journey depending on Samskaras

Men are immersed in many activities and they are engaged in various
undertakings. This is a well-known fact. They are so many in numbers
that sometimes one may feel that the span of twenty-four hours is too
short for his daily activity. Drinking, eating, reading, walking,
sitting and besides, dreaming, hating, boasting, praising, weeping,
laughing, moping, hoping - all types of activities go on without end.
They fill up the span of life. These activities are all intimately
attached to the mind. This makes life a mere collection of Samskaras,
which make an impact on character and personality.

There are two types of activities, good and bad. The effect of both
on the life of man has to be considered. The acts of a body during
that tender age fade away like the writing of that boy on a slate.
When the events of one's own boyhood are thus consigned to oblivion,
how can the events of the past life be retained in the memory?
Leaving this point aside, it will be wrong to infer that only such
events as are remembered have happened, or have shaped character. The
acts and activities that have occurred and that have been thrust back
into forgetfulness by subsequent events have left a trace of their
consequences in the mind. The residue is there. When you try to bring
back to memory at bedtime the events of the day, everything that
happened from the insignificant to the significant will not answer
the summons. Those which are deeply embedded inside, these alone can
be recalled.

When such is the case with the happenings of a single day, when we
forget all events that are not associated with joy or pain, what
shall be said of events of last week or month or years? Only the
chief events are registered clearly. The rest turn hazy and recede
and disappear. These few are the Samskaras.

Performing innumerable deeds, gathering vast experience and
knowledge, learning a wide variety of lesson from a wide variety of
activities, man retains as his capital only a mere four or five of
them, strong, deep rooted, vital.

Engrossed in the Business of Life, Man earns just the Samskaras

A merchant calculates the debit and credit at the end of a week or
month or year and draws up the balance sheet, to arrive at one
figure - his earnings. So too, in this business of life, everything
ends in some bit of net earnings, all the giving and taking
concludes. At the very end of life, it is the small quantity that
will come into the memory. Those experiences that persist to the very
last moment, the two or three that well up into consciousness when
one recalls all that has happened in life, these are the real
sustainers, the genuine achievements.

This does not mean that all other acts and all other experiences have
been a waste. Forgetting them means only that their work has been
accomplished and their value realized.

When business is done with thousands of rupees, one's heart freezes
if a loss of a few thousands is sustained; the heart leaps in joy,
when a few thousands are gained. Such is the story of the business of
life. If at the point of death, one yearns to cater to the tongue, it
is proof that throughout life the tongue has to be the master. If at
the point of death, the woman remembers the child and seeks to fondle
it, the Samskara of child-love has been predominant, all through
life. It proves that all other experiences have been thrown into
oblivion.

Thus, of the Samskaras of life, some one or other, stronger than the
rest, stand out to the last. Life is like that; this has to be
learnt. The net result of all this living and toiling is that which
comes to memory at the last moment of life. Therefore, direct the
entire current of life towards the acquisition of that Samskara which
you feel best for the last moment. Fix your attention upon it, day
and night. The feeling that dominates the moment of death works with
great force in the coming life. This truth must guide man for the
journey of this life too, for Samskaras are the wherewithal for this
journey, as well as for the journey after this.

Therefore, from tomorrow, keep always before the eye of memory, death
which is inevitable, and engage yourself in the journey of life, with
good wishes for all, with strict adherence to truth, seeking always
the company of the good, and with the mind always fixed on the Lord.
Live, avoiding evil deeds, and hateful and harmful thoughts, and do
not get attached to the world. If you live thus, your last moment
will be pure, sweet and blessed. Disciplined striving throughout life
is needed to ensure this consummation. The mind has to be turned over
to good samskaras. Everyone must examine himself rigorously and spot
out his defects and struggle to correct them. When man realises his
own defects and uncovers them, it is like being reborn. He then
starts anew, from a new boyhood. This is the genuine moment of
awakening.

Life is eternally stalked by Death. But, yet, man does not tolerate
the very mention of the word "Death". It is deemed inauspicious to
hear that word, though, however insufferable the word, every living
thing is every moment proceeding nearer and nearer that event. Intent
on a journey and having purchased a ticket for the same, if you enter
a train, whether you sit quiet or lie down or read or meditate, the
train takes you willy-nilly to the destination. So too, each living
thing has at birth received a ticket to Death and has come on a
journey; so, whatever your struggles and safeguards and precautions,
the Place has to be reached some day. Whatever is uncertain, Death is
certain. It is impossible to change that Law.

Man has taught the eye, the ear and the tongue, the luxury of
constant novelty; now, he has to teach them the opposite tendencies.
The mind has to be turned towards the good; the activities of every
minute have to be examined from that standpoint. Each such deed is
the stroke of a chisel, by which the rock of human personality is
being shaped. A wrong stroke may spoil and disfigure the rock.
Therefore even the tiniest of acts has to be done with great care and
devotion.

For a drowning man, even a reed is some support. So too, to a person
struggling in the Sea of Samsara, a few good words spoken by some one
might be of great help. No good deed can go waste; no, not even a bad
deed, for, that too has its consequence. So, strive to avoid the
slightest trace of evil activity; keep your eyes pure, fill your ears
with the words of God and the stories of Godly Deeds, do not allow
them to listen to calumny. Use the tongue for uttering good words and
kind and true words. Let it always remind you of God. Such constant
effort must grant you victory. It is to earn these holy Samskaras
that one has to maintain the flow of high thoughts and feelings,
uninterrupted.

The hands should be used to perform good deeds. Have the Lord's name
within, and the practice of Swadharma without. With the hand busy
with Seva, let your mind be engrossed in all this - there is no harm.
When the rains pour on the mountain peaks and the water hurries down
the sides, no river emerges therefrom. When however the waters flow
in a single direction, first a brook, then a stream, then a torrent,
and finally, a flooded river is formed, and the rains reach the sea.
Water that runs in one direction reaches the sea; water flowing in
four directions gets dissipated and lost. Samskaras are of this type.
Of what use are they, if they merely come and go, this way today and
that way, the next? The holy stream of good samskaras must flow full
and steady along the fields of holy thoughts and finally abide in the
great Ocean of Bliss at the moment of Death. Worthy indeed is he who
reaches such a Goal.

Twenty hammer-strokes might not succeed in breaking a stone; the
twenty-first stroke might break it. But, does this mean that the
twenty blows were of no avail? No. Each of those twenty strokes
contributed its share to the final success; the final result was the
cumulative effect of all the twenty-one. So too, the mind is engaged
in a struggle with the world, both internal and external. Needless to
say success might not always be your lot. But man can attain ever-
lasting bliss by getting immersed in good works and by saturating the
mind with the love of God. Infuse every moment of life with that
love. Then evil tendencies dare not hamper the path. Since his mind
ever dwells with the Lord, he will be drawn automatically towards
good deeds only. The object of all Sadhana is the destruction of the
mind and some day, some one good deed will succeed in destroying it,
just as the twenty-first blow broke the stone. For this triumph, all
the good deeds done in the past have contributed; each little thing
counts; no good deed is a waste.

While struggling in the spiritual field, you should take Parameswara
Himself as your protector. To instill courage in the child, the
mother persuades it to walk a few steps and turn about, but she will
not allow it to loose balance, she hurries from behind it and catches
it ere it falls. Ishwara too has His Eyes fixed on the Jivi. He has
in his hand the string of the kite which is man; sometimes, he may
give it a pull, sometimes, he may loosen the hold; but whatever He
does, be confident and carefree, for it is He that holds the string.
That faith ever present, that feeling hardening into a Samskara, will
fill you with Premarasa.

The string is the bond of Love and Grace. The kite or Jivi is thus
bound to Ishwara. You must do and earn auspicious Samskaras in order
that the bond of Love and Grace may exist and get tightened.

The Samskaras make or mar the Jivi; they are the steps which take all
Jivis to the goal. Samskaras make the Jivi wade through loss and
grief. Through good Samskaras alone can man attain the Lord. So,
every Jivi has to be wholly engaged in Sathkarma. Sathkarma is the
authentic Puja. It is the best form of remembering the Lord. It is
the highest Bhajan. It spreads love, without distinction and
difference. It is service done as the duty of the Jivi.

Be engaged in such Karmas. Revel uninterruptedly in the thought of
the Lord. This is the royal road to the goal you have to reach.

Sanathana Dharma is the Divine Mother of Humanity

Sanathana Dharma is the mother of all religions, all ethical codes
and all Dharmas of this world; and Bharatha Desa is the home where
the Mother was born. Oh! How fortunate are the Bharathiyas! How
sublimely splendid is this Bharatha Desa!

The world in its entirety is the Body of the Lord of the world, and
this Bharatha desa is that Body's unique organ, the Eye. Without the
eye the body is not master of itself, is it not? Again, it can be
said that Bharatha Desa has been beautified by the two eyes; the
Vedas and the Sastras. On account of this it can be declared without
doubt that the Samskara attained by the Bharathiyas has not been
acquired by the people of any other country. Sanathana Dharma, which
teaches the truth of all religions and tolerance of all religions, is
the Dharma of all mankind. Born in various areas, flowing through
various paths, the rivers at last reach the Ocean; so too, born in
different lands, practising different ways of Dharma, people reach
the Ocean of the presence of the Lord, through different modes of
worship. Sanathana Dharma is the central location in which all these
various paths, moving in different directions, converge. Followers of
the different religions can practise this Sanathana Dharma, by being
truthful in speech, by avoiding jealousy and anger, and by acting
always with a loving heart. All those who so practise Sanathana
Dharma and, without faltering, achieve it, are entitled to be
called 'Bharathiyas'.

The Hindu religion is the only religion that has achieved and
maintained the foremost position among all religions from earliest
times and established itself permanently. The only people who have
survived without being destroyed, throughout the historic age, are
the Hindus. In this religion, more than in any other, people have
practised lives of love, equality and gratitude. The Hindus have
earned their Dharma through the discovery of philosophic principles
and through the Vedas. They have drunk deep the essence of the Vedas
which are without beginning and without end. A land so holy is a
veritable spiritual mine to the world. Just as the bowels of the
earth reveal in each area mines of different metals, in Bharatha Desa
is found in mine of Sanathana Dharma, the essence of all the
principles of all the Sastras, all the Vedas, and all the Upanishads.

As if by good luck of the Bharathiyas, along with the emergence of
the mine of Sanathana Dharma, which is as a home to them, from that
moment and for that very purpose, leaders, thinkers, commentators,
apostles and teachers have been originating in this land itself. Also
from this very Bharatha Desa arose seers, selfless karmayogis, wise
men, realised souls, and Divine personages connected with this
religion. It is through these persons that spiritual wisdom
reinforced by experience flowed all over the country. In this way
loaded with essence, Sanathana Dharma progressed throughout the
world. But, to whatever land it spread, the 'original home' is
Bharatha itself.

Look at the world today: machines, cars, engines of some new type or
other are made in one country and are exported to others. But their
original home cannot be forgotten. Such cars and engines are
manufactured only on the basis of its experience. Nothing can be done
without that basis. So too, Sanathana Dharma arose in Bharatha Desa
and people of other countries benefited from its waters through the
great personages and the books they composed. Hence, the basis of the
original home cannot be ignored. That is impossible. But it is a
matter of some concern to see today, in this Bharatha Desa the
birthplace of those holy persons who nursed and fostered this sacred
Dharma, new modes being accepted as one's Dharma, and the Sanathana
Dharma, itself being assigned and kept aside for people of other
countries, by the persons who have not even tasted the sweetness of
the Dharma, who have not grasped its meaning, and who have smothered
it in empty disputation. The reason for this is, of course, the
absence of proper guides who could show the way. But even when there
are such guides, people yield to these modern modes and get attached
to them. These are really like bazaar pakodas. They attract by their
smell, and are bought by persons who do not discriminate. Though
their Swadharama is the pure Sanathana Dharma, the fascination
exercised by outward show is absent and so it gets neglected. Truth
has no need for such decorations. Taste is the important thing. The
basic reason for this is the fact that men today are motivated by
mere whim and fancy. It has become the habit to reject the reality
and accept the Dharama of another. This is a great mistake. It is
against Dharma for Bharathiyas to be attracted by external forms and
by outward show. No other Dharma has or will have Truth and Highest
Love, above and beyond that contained in Sanathana Dharma. Sanathana
Dharma is the veritable embodiment of Truth. It is the Heritage of
all. There can be no boundary for Holiness. Holiness is one, without
a second.

Those who have attained Liberation in this life by adherence to this
Sanathana Dharma, who have earned the grace of God, who have
understood the nature of Truth, who have achieved Realisation are all
Bharathiyas. Bharathiyas have adored those who have reached that holy
stage, without distinction of caste, creed, or sex. The holiness of
that stage burns to ashes all such limitations. It is only until that
stage is reached that it becomes impossible to consider everything as
equal. So, it is necessary to embark boldly on the realisation of
Sanathana Dharma. This is the birthright of Bharathiyas.

If we examine history since its very beginnings, we can know in
detail what great personages were born, in which sections of the
Hindus. Incarnations, Divine personalities and Jeevanmuktas like
Rama, Krishna, Balarama, Janaka and Parikshit, Rajayogis like
Viswamitra all arose among the Kshatriyas. Brahmarishis, great
Pandits, Sastric Scholars, Vedic Rishis, originated in the Brahmin
section. Sudras predominate in the epic books, like Bharatha and
Bhagavatha. Among the great devotees of the Lord, members of the
lower castes form a large number. To attain holiness without being
affected by the world, and to reach Paramatma, each one's Sadhana is
important; other things like caste will not be a hindrance at all.
But, one should deserve the Grace required for it; one should become
regular and disciplined in practice.

Many Bharathiyas, however, now bring endless disgrace on the Hindu
religion by neglecting the principles of life of the above mentioned
great personages, not studying them and following their instructions,
by modifying their way of life to suit the changing times and (as the
saying goes "The hour of ruin brings wicked thoughts") by becoming
slaves to name and fame and the craving for power and position and
out of concern to promote the well-being of their wives and children
through selfish means. Still, there is no dearth of persons who love
all in equal measure, who are devoid of selfishness, who are engaged
in the promotion of the welfare of all, who have dedicated themselves
to the service of mankind and who are ready to sacrifice everything.
But they are suppressed; they are not appreciated or placed in
positions of high authority for fear there will be then no place for
the wicked, the crooked and unjust.

However broad and deep the ocean, when the earth quakes underneath,
the waters part off themselves, and when the commotion subsides, they
resume their original position. So too these good men keep away
without being caught up in it during the earthquake of injustice,
unrighteousness, selfishness and ostentation; and as soon as the
hullabaloo subsides, they re-enter the world. Evanescent authority
and self-glorification cannot be permanent "To grow is only to
decay", it is said. The present peacelessness is decay not growth.
For, see how the Bharathiyas who from the beginning, grew up in
righteous ways with pure feelings, with self-control and reverence
for the good name, who were fed on the breast-milk of the Vedas,
Sastras and Upanishads, who have welcomed and honoured even races
driven out of their own country and vouchsafed to them love in equal
measure, today, for love of power and self, accuse their own
brethren, one person impatiently envying the prosperity of another,
deceive their own brothers maddened by selfish greed, keep at arm's
length their real well-wishers, pursue only each one's selfish end,
multiply bad qualities hitherto unheard of in the Hindu fold, follow
wrong paths and ways of life, and become the target of conflict and
restlessness, on account of the absence of fear of sin, fear of God,
discipline, reverence and faith. The fall is indeed incredible.

Hindu Brethren! Children of Bharath! Followers of the Sanathana way!
Where have the manly qualities of old gone? Truth, Tolerance,
Morality, Discipline - when would you accept them? Arise, Awake, and
Establish once again Rama Rajya, resplendent with mansions of Sathya,
Dharma and Santhi. Love your Bharathiya brethren. Practise Sanathana
Dharma. Quench the burning flames of ignorance, Peacelessness,
Injustice and Envy with the waters of Love, Forbearance and Truth.
Develop the feeling of Mutualness. Sweep away all jealousy and anger.
Remember the rule of the holy personages, the characteristics of the
most eminent and of the reign of God. Each one should realise his own
faults, and understand there is no use in searching for faults in
others. That is mere waste of time; it also breeds quarrels. So, give
up that trait. If this opportunity is missed, what else can be done?
Do not yield to dejection, but say 'Finis' to all the unrighteousness
of the past. Repent sincerely and tread the path of Prayer to God,
Good Deeds and Brotherly Love. Establish the eternal Rama Rajya.

The 'Sanathana Sarathi' has been started to win this Rajya; its army
will help this effort by word and deed. Draw that chariot forward!
Gird up your loins and begin Narayana-sarana... Bharathiyas are all
the children of one Mother, Her name is Sanathana Dharma. Redeem the
debt due to the Mother. He is no son who forgets the mother. He
cannot be good who says the Mother is bad. Her breast-milk is the
very breath of our life... The giver of this Life, the Father of all
is Paramatma.

All are the children of the same parents. So, without blaming and
accusing each other, without wishing evil for one's kith and kin,
understand that your other brothers have the same attachment to the
objects they love that you have towards the things that you love. One
should not find fault with what another loves; nor should one laugh
at it. He should, on the other hand, try to love it. These are the
characteristics of the Truth and Love of Bharathiyas.

Sarvaantharyaami is One and Only One

The Vedas, the Sastras, and the messages of the Rishis, all have
proclaimed uniformly and without any possibility of doubt, from that
day to this, that Paramatma is Sarvaantharyaami, present and immanent
in everything. So too questions like the relationship between 'He who
is served', 'he who serves', and 'the wherewithal of service',
viz., 'Prakriti', have also been the subject of endless discussion.
Every Asthika has heard the Bhagavatha verse in which the great
Bhaktha Prahlada states out of his own experience that Paramatma, the
Sarvaantharyaami, need not be searched far and wide and that He is
very near the seeker himself.

'He is here, He is not there, give up such doubts;
Listen, Oh! Leader of the Danavas!
Wherever you seek and wherever you see,
There... and there... He is!'

People speak of the Lord as having a particular nature of
characteristic, as having a particular form and so on. These
statements are true only to the extent that imagination and guesswork
can approximate to Truth; they are not the fundamental Truth. Such
conceptions are valid as far as practical worldly knowledge goes;
they cannot be considered as valid knowledge of the Absolute. For, it
is impossible to see the Poornam or speak about it.

In spite of this, however, Bhakthas and aspirants have been framing,
each according to the stage of his own inner progress, some form or
other of the Divine as the basis of their devotion. They worship
Paramathma as existing in some Ayodhya or Dwaraka and nowhere else;
as found in places where some image or picture exists and nowhere
else. They worship that form itself as Poornam. Of course, it is not
wrong to do so. Only, Bhakthas should not proclaim that their belief
alone is the Truth, that those names and forms which they have
ascribed are the only names and forms of the Divine and that all
other forms and names are worthless and inferior. It should be
realised that the names and forms which are the ideals of others are
as dear and sacred to those others as other names and forms are to
oneself.

When a form is idealised like this, it really becomes a symbol of the
Universal; but, how can a mere symbol of the Universal ever become
the Universal itself? Conscious always of this, every one should
acquire, without giving room to senseless hatred, the vision that all
forms of the ideal are equally valid and true. Without this, it is
impossible to realise the Poornam. All these gross forms of the ideal
are fully saturated with the subtle Divine Principle. The taste of
the vast ocean is to be found, complete and undiminished, in every
single drop of its waters; but, this does not mean that the drop is
the ocean. Though we recognise the 'drop' and the 'ocean' as separate
entities, the nature and taste of both are identical. Similarly, the
sarvaantharyaami Paramaatma and the gross form and name which
Paramaatma assumes and through which He is realised are not separate
entities; they are identical.

When this All-pervasive, All-inclusive Pure existence is described,
the matter and the method depend on the principles of the speaker and
the tastes of the listener; when the individual name and form imposed
by the Bhaktha are transformed into the Attributeless and the
Formless, it is referred to as Brahmam; when this same Brahmam
appears with attributes and forms, it is referred to as Rama,
Krishna, Vishnu or Siva. Do not the followers of even other religions
agree that when the devotee attains the Ecstasy of Mystic Union, all
distinction between him and God disappears? The Yogis, Philosophers
of other lands and other faiths, too, accept without demur that this
distinctionless experience can be earned through Parabhakthi. Even if
some little trace of difference is retained, it is due to the
individuals own taste and desire and not anything especially basic.
It is only when name and form come in that it is named differently as
Prakriti, Paramaatma and Bhaktha. When name and form are absent,
doubt and discussion whether it is masculine, feminine or neutral
will not arise at all. Then any description fits. For something that
is above and beyond imagination, any name and form can be ascribed.
In fact, It has no attribute and no form; it is All-pervasive,
Omnipresent. When this Subtle Omnipresence is systematically
worshipped through a gross form and as having attributes, the devotee
will clearly realise its nature through the Sadhana itself. To
vouchsafe the knowledge of this Sadhana and that Truth, and to bless
the Bhakthas with that Bliss, the Attributeless Paramaatma incarnates
in this world, assuming name and form, and gives scope for all
embodied beings to have concrete experience and joy. Through these
experiences, the Incarnations facilitate the realisation that
Paramaatma is Sarvaantharyaami and Sarvabhoothaantharaatma, All-
pervasive, the Inner Atma of every thing in Creation. Lord Krishna
showed in his own form the entire Creation. Until he saw with his own
eyes how Lord Krishna had contained in His gross form of entire
Creation, even Arjuna failed to understand that Krishna was
Sarvaantharyaami.

Seeds for the Bhakthi Sprouts

The attitude of the worshipper and the worshipped is the seed of
Bhakthi. First, the worshipper's mind is attracted by the special
qualities of the object of worship. He tries to acquire for himself
these special qualities. This is the Sadhana. In the early stages of
Sadhana, the distinction between worshipper and worshipped is full
but, as the Sadhana progresses, this feeling will diminish and when
attainment is reached, there will be no distinction whatsoever.
Whatever may be the object of worship one has grasped and loved and
sought by Sadhana, one should have firm faith that Jivatma is
Paramaatma. There is only one wish fit to be entertained by the
Sadhaka: and that is the realisation of the Lord, Iswara
Saakshaatkaara. There is no room in the mind for any other wish. That
is why Kunthi Devi prayed thus to Lord Krishna: "Let us have always,
O, Jagadguru, distress and misery, if only You grant us Your Darsan,
the Darsan which destroys rebirth."

The Bhaktha who desires the Supreme and seeks to attain it should
have this mental attitude. Then, regardless of joy and sorrow,
without any worry about one's own satisfaction he will engage himself
in Sadhana firmly, uninterruptedly, and with conviction, and after
understanding the Reality, he will have full contentment.

From this point of view, there is no difference between a Jivanmuktha
and a Bhaktha; they are both beyond Ahamkara, Prakrithi with its
three attributes, and Varnashrama Dharma. The hearts of such will be
full of compassion and the urge to do good to the world. It is their
Brahmananda which impels them to act in this way. Such a Bhaktha will
have no desires, for desires are the products of 'I'-and-'mine'
feelings. Only after they are uprooted, a person becomes a Bhaktha.
There can be no room in him for desire. He is a Bhaktha of
Amrithaswarupa, Immortal Nature. For one with that Amrithaswarupa,
there can be no appetite except for the sweetness of Ananda.

For a Sadhaka, Today is His: but Tomorrow?

Yama is as Omnipresent as Siva! Yama is associated with the Deha, or
Body; He cannot affect the Jivi. Siva is associated with Jivi; but He
will not allow the body to subsist for any length of time. The body
is the essential vehicle for the Jivi to understand its real nature.
Still, who knows when it becomes the target for the attention of
Yama, the Master of the Deha? Who knows when this body will get
entrapped in the coils of Yama's ropes? The Jivi, burdened with this
easily destructible body, must grasp the above mentioned caution and
be all eager to merge in Siva, whatever the moment, that very moment!
No single moment that is passed by can be turned back. People usually
delay doing some things, today's till tomorrow, and yesterday's till
today. But, the tasks of Sadhana are not of such a nature; for them,
there is no yesterday and no tomorrow. This very moment is the
moment! The minute that has elapsed is beyond your grasp; so too, the
minute that is approaching is not yours! It is only that Jivi which
has engraved this understanding on its heart that can merge in Siva.
Without assimilating this truth in the heart, the Jivi is immersed in
the aims of today and tomorrow, based on the assumption that the body
is important; it thus lays the foundations for worldly attachment;
and so, it is born again and again with body and continues to have
the Darsan of Yama! It is the right of the Sadhaka to have
Sivadarsana and not Yamadarsana! He will not wish for it, nor even
contemplate it. Only those who have this relationship of the Deha and
the Jiva are Men. And those who have realised this principle will not
flag even to the slightest extent in their Sadhana. These days, man
is content with visualising and experiencing evanescent worldly joys.
He has no rest. Spending the nights in sleep and the days in eating
and drinking, he grows and grows, until, in his old age, Death
pursues him. Then, he cannot decide where to go or what to do; all
his senses have weakened; no one, nothing can rescue him; so he ends
as obedient meat to the jaws of Death!

How sad it is that this human life, precious as an invaluable diamond
that cannot be priced at all, has been cheapened to the status of a
worn-out worthless coin! There is no use repenting, after wasting
time without profit, without meditating on God or practising any
Sadhana to realise Him. What is the use in planning a well, when the
house has caught fire? When is it to be dug? When will water become
available? When is the fire to be extinguished? It is an impossible
task! If, at the very start, there was a well ready, how helpful it
would be on such critical occasions! Beginning to contemplate on God
during the last moments is like beginning to dig the well after the
fire has broken out. So, if from now on, one equips himself by the
contemplation of God off and on, it will stand him in good stead when
the end approaches. Start today the Sadhana that has to be done
tomorrow! Start now the Sadhana that has to be done today! One does
not know what is in store next moment; therefore, there should be no
delay in engaging oneself in the Sadhana that has to be done.
Physical stamina is also necessary for this Sadhana, and so, the body
has to be tended, though over-tending causes damage. To the degree
that is essential, it should be looked after with great care.

Path for a Bhaktha to become a Muktha

This human birth is very difficult to attain. It cannot be got for a
song. The body is as a caravansary; the mind is its watchman; the
Jivi is the pilgrim, and so, no one of these has any kinship with the
others. The pilgrim is bound for Salvation City, Mokshapuri. For a
troublefree journey, there is nothing so reliable as Namasmarana, the
Remembrance, of the name of the Lord. Once the sweetness of that name
has been experienced, the person will not have exhaustion, unrest or
sloth. He will fulfil his pilgrimage of Sadhana joyfully,
enthusiastically and with deep conviction. Still, for achieving this
Sadhana, Sadbava or Righteousness is very important. Without fear of
sin, righteousness cannot originate; love of God, too, cannot
develop. This fear produces Bhakthi which results in the worship of
the Lord.

Stupidity is the cause of man's downfall. It is like sheepishness!
When one sheep rolls into a pit, all fall into the same pit. That is
ruinous. Avoiding this, it is better to think about the good and the
bad, the pros and cons of whatever is done and then jump. Death will
not leave off any one, whatever he may be. It continues to threaten
all; if it is another's turn today, it is yours tomorrow. Look at the
blossoms in the garden! When the gardener plucks the flowers, the
buds exult that tomorrow is their turn to be gathered into his hands,
and their faces are so full of joy when they unfold in that hope. Do
they feel any sadness? Do their faces droop? Are they any the less
bright? No. The moment they know that the next day it is their turn,
they make themselves ready with great gusto and excitement. So, also,
one must be ready on the path of Sadhana, enthusiastically
remembering the name of the Lord, without worrying and feeling sad
that one's turn is tomorrow or so, because some one died today. The
body is like a tube of glass. Inside it the mind is ever changeful
and restless. Seeing its antics, death keeps laughing. The bird Jiva
is in the nine-holed pot. It is a wonder how the bird has a body; how
it came into the pot, and how it rises up and goes. The Suras, the
Munis and Naras of the Nine Khandas and the Nine Dwipas are all
undergoing the sentence of carrying about with them the burden of the
body. Now, of these, who are the friends and who, the enemies? When
egoism dies out, all are friends; there are then no enemies. This
lesson has to be remembered by all.

Man is experiencing joy and misery through the ear. Therefore,
avoiding the cruel arrows of hard words, one should use words that
are sweet, pleasant and soft; and with that softness, add the
sweetness of Truth. To make the word soft, if falsehood is added, it
would only clear the way for some more misery: A person who has
become a Sadhaka should use very soft, sweet, true and pleasant
words. Such persons can be recognised by their good qualities
themselves. Thus, of those who have become Sadhakas, the means (mind)
is Mathura, the Hrudayam (Heart) is Dwaraka, and the Deha (Body) is
Kasi. At the seat of the tenth gate, it is possible to realise the
Paranjyothi, the Supreme Effulgence. All efforts are of no avail if
the heart is not pure. Look at the fish! Living as it does
perpetually in water, has it rid itself of its foul smell to any
extent? No. The Vasana of Man will not disappear even if he is
immersed in many heart-purifying Sadhanas, so long as the heart is
full of the illusion of Egoism. Such a man, if he is desirous of
getting rid of the feeling of 'I' and 'Mine', must worship Hari. He
must become a Sadhaka, without likes and dislikes. Vikaras like these
cannot co-exist in the same heart, with the Sadhu nature. Light and
Darkness can never co-exist at the same place, at the same time. He
whose heart is ruled by the group of Six Passions can have only
Ahamkara as his Manthri (Minister). Those who have such a Manthri are
worse than foolish men, however great they claim to be as Pundits,
Sadhus or Sanyasins.

"Can a donkey carrying perfume become an elephant?" Can an ass change
into an elephant, simply by carrying a bundle of sandalwood? It can
appreciate the weight and not the scent! But the elephant pays no
regard to the weight; it inhales the sweet scent, isn't it? So too,
the Sadhaka or the Sanyasin or the Bhaktha will take in only the pure
truth, the pure essence of good activities, of Godliness, and of the
Sastras, Vedas and Upanishads. On the other hand, if for the sake of
mere scholarship, learning and disputation, one goes on arguing, he
will know only the weight of logic, missing the scent of Truth! The
on-lookers may praise them as the embodiments of the Sastras and the
Vedas; but, where even the essentials are lacking, how can there be
an embodiment? For those in search of the essence, the burden is no
consideration. If mere reason is employed, nothing worthwhile is
gained. Love (Prema) is the one big instrument for the constant
remembrance of the Lord. To keep that instrument safe and strong, the
Sadhaka needs no other appliance than the scabbard of Viveka,
Discrimination.

There are many in the world who utilise their vast learning in
disputations and believe that they are superior; this is a great
mistake. If they are really so learned, there will not be so much
disputation at all. They will assume silence as the honourable
course, because, those exalted in learning will have experienced the
essence of the Vedas, Sastras and Upanishads. They will see that the
nature of that essence, its core, the purity of the Godhead it
proclaims, are all One, however one may realise it. They know that
God appears in whatever form He is taken to have, and that He
manifests in action to any one the feelings which he associates with
Him.

Of these two, what is important is the acquisition of single-
mindedness, equanimity, free from Vikara, i.e., likes and dislikes,
and not the acquisition of argumentativeness. Why have we all these
Sadhanas, all this Japa, Dhyana, Bhajana etc.,? Is it not for
acquiring single-mindedness, one-pointedness? Once that one-
pointedness has been earned, human effort becomes unnecessary, its
inner significance will then be revealed to him. So, those eager to
become Sadhakas, to attain salvation, should not yield to arguments
and counter-arguments, they should not be enticed by wiles of bad
feeling; they should see their own faults and not repeat them again,
they should guard and protect the one-pointedness they have acquired,
with their eyes fixed on the goal they are after, dismissing as trash
whatever difficulties, defeats and disturbances they might encounter
on their path. One must dwell on such objects as would give
enthusiasm and joy, and not waste valuable time, building up doubts
regarding all things, big and small. Whatever else is unimportant,
these two have to be attended to as essential:

The conceit that one knows everything.
Doubt whether it is or is not.
These are the two chief enemies of the Sadhaka. What does it matter
who these enemies are? One should decide for oneself that one is
firmly fixed in one's Reality, if that is pure, everything is pure.
If that is true, everything is true. If you wear blue eyeglasses,
though Nature is resplendent with many colours, you see only the
colour you have worn, isn't it? If the world appears to you as with
differences that is due to the fault in you only. If all appears as
one Prema, that too is your Prema only. For both these, the feeling
in you is the cause. It is only because one has faults within him,
that he sees the world as faulty. When there is no knowledge of fault
in oneself no fault can be found even by search, for should they not
know which are the faults?

Now a question may arise whether the Lord Himself has faults, because
He too searches for faults. But how can it be said that the Lord is
searching for faults? He searches for goodness only, not for faults
and sins. Those are based on the standard of the Gunas of each. The
Lord will not examine the wealth, the family, the Gothra, the status,
or the sex. He sees only the Righteousness, the Sadbhava. Those
endowed with such Sadbhava, He considers as deserving His Grace,
whoever they are, whatever they are.

Therefore, develop Sadbhava, Goodness and Righteousness. Live and act
in Joy and Love. These two are sufficient; salvation can be attained
without fail.

Manava and Danava - the Differences in Character

Manavas or Men are full of Prema or Love. Their hearts are springs of
Mercy. They are endowed with True Speech. Peace is the characteristic
of the mind of Man. That is the innate quality of the mind. In order
to search for Peace there is no need to go anywhere else. As gold and
silver lie hidden under the earth and pearl and coral under the sea,
Peace and Joy also lie hidden in the activities of the Mind. Desirous
of acquiring these hidden treasures, if one dives and turns mental
activities inward, then, he becomes full of Prema or Love. Only those
who have so filled themselves with Love and who live in the light of
that Love can be called Men. Those devoid of Prema are Danavas,
Monsters, Sub-humans. That holy quality of Love will not remain
unmanifested off and on; it will be ever present, without change. It
is one indivisible. Those saturated with Love are incapable of spite,
selfishness, injustice, wrong and misconduct; but, in those who have
no Love, the above qualities are always above everything else.
Danavas are those who trample on Love and consider inferior qualities
as important, while Manavas are those who consider those inferior
qualities as snakes to be destroyed and Love alone as the quality to
be fostered. Bad conduct and bad habits distort the humanness of Man.
Hearts filled with the nectar of Love indicate the genuine human in
man. By Prema or Love is meant Love which is unsullied, unselfish,
devoid of impurity and continuous.

Between Manava and Danava, the difference is only Ma and Da! But the
letter Ma is soft, sweet and immortal in symbolism, while the sound
Da is merciless, lawless and burning. Are they men, who have no
sweetness in them and who endeavour to suppress the craving for
immortality? Theirs is the nature of Danavas, though the form is
human! For, it is not the form that is primary; it is the character.
How can those with human form be called men, if they have no kindness
and no rightness, and if they have the nature of Danavas? No; they
cannot be called so. Now, the sentences in my discourse are not
addressed on the basis of form; they are based on the qualities of
men. Among men, there are Danavas in plenty! They both look alike but
their qualities make them distinguishable as Manava and Danava. The
Manavas engage themselves in the soft and sweet deeds of kindness,
rightness, love and truth and they are witnesses to the possibility
of realising and manifesting one's immortality. Their good nature is
resplendent on their faces as Anand; but without that goodness, even
if he is infatuated with joy his face will indicate only the
destructive fire of the Danava; it will not have the Grace of Ananda.

Today's Words are only the Works of Yesterday

During Treta Yuga, when Narada asked Sri Ramachandra about the nature
and characteristics of His Dasas and of the Sadhakas or spiritual
aspirants, He answered as below:

"Listen, O Narada! Men who are my Dasas are full of Love; they always
stand by Dharma or Righteousness; they speak the Truth; their hearts
melt with mercy; they are devoid of wrong; they avoid sin; their
nature is wellfounded; they will renounce everything gladly; they eat
in moderation; they are engaged in doing good to others; they have no
selfishness, they are worried by no doubts; they will not lend their
ears to flattery. They are eager to listen to the praise of the good
nature of others. They have beautiful, strong and holy character.
Sadhakas are those who endeavour to acquire such qualities and
possess such a character. Now, I shall tell you about those who are
Priya to me. Any one who is engaged in Japa, Tapas and Vratha, who
has Samyama or self-control, Niyama or discipline, any one who has
Faith, Patience, Comradeship, Kindness and Joy as well as unalloyed
Prema towards Me, is Priya to Me."

"Now, about My real Bhakthas. Whoever, with Viveka and Vairagya, and
Vinaya and Vijnana, with discrimination and renunciation, with
humility and wisdom, are aware of the knowledge of Reality, whoever
are always immersed in the contemplation of my leela, whoever dwell
on My name at all times and under all conditions, and who shed tears
or love whenever the Lord's name is heard from any lip, they are My
genuine Bhakthas."

Thus answered Sri Rama to Narada. So, the Lord will protect in all
ways and at all times those who worship Him in complete and
uncontaminated Bhakthi, just as a mother protects her infants, a cow
saves her calf from danger, and the eyelids guard the eyes,
effortlessly and automatically. When the infant grows up into an
adult, the mother will not pay so much attention to its safety. So
too, the Lord does not pay much attention to the Jnani. The Saguna
Bhaktha is like an infant of the Lord; so, it has no strength except
the strength of the Lord. For the Jnani, his own strength is enough.
Therefore, until one can rely on one's own strength, one must be an
infant in the Lord's Hands, as a Saguna Bhaktha. No one can become a
Nirguna Bhaktha, without having been a Saguna Bhaktha. So, Bhakthas
should grow up like infants in the lap of the mother and thereafter,
become Jnanis who can rely on their 'own' strength and be free.
Still, both have the same source of strength, the Mother. Those
indeed are really fortunate who grasp this secret of the path of
Devotion, who develop one-pointed Bhakthi and strengthen the traits
of their character, who transform themselves into infants in the lap
of the Lord and who get everything done by him as He wishes.

Therefore, those who yearn to be Dasas, Bhakthas, Priyas and Ananya
Bhakthas should take up the corresponding path and name and act and
live accordingly: the Bhaktha should develop the above said
characteristics of devotion; the Priya should follow the Prema of the
Lord; the Ananya Bhaktha has to surrender completely to the Lord.
Mere reading and rolling on the tongue are of no avail. Ananda is the
result of Action only. This Ananda is not dependent on caste or race
or sex. Even in those days, when Sri Rama came to Sabari, she asked
him in the following manner, while Sri Rama was gladly partaking of
the feast of roots and fruits, selected and reserved by Sabari for
him after herself tasting every individual item. "Lord! I am but a
woman; in addition, I am of feeble intellect. Above all, I am low-
born. How can I praise You? I do not know what to do or how!" Then,
Sri Rama smiled and said, "Sabari! My mission is only the kinship of
Bhakthi. I have no kinship of race or caste. Of what use is it to
have status, wealth and character, without Bhakthi? Like the cloud
that does not bear rain, which wanders about in the sky, these people
without devotion are at the mercy of the winds, whatever their status
in caste, wealth, power, and fame. Bhakthas reach me through nine
paths; any one of them takes them to Me". Then, Sabari prayed and Sri
Rama responded.

"Sravanam Kirthanam Vishnossmaranam Paadasevanam
Vandanam Archanam Daasyam Sneham Atmanivedanam"

"If the devotee sincerely practises any one of these paths, He can
attain Me. I am bound by these nine forms of Bhakthi. That is why You
have been able to so easily obtain this opportunity of seeing,
touching and speaking with Me, an opportunity which even Yogis find
too difficult to get. You have realised Life's purpose today. See
Today's Words are only the Works of Yesterday!"

Bhakthi is of Two Kinds

Those who follow the above said Nine-fold Path are of two kinds. (1)
The followers of the Hard Path. (2) The followers of the Safe and
easy Path. These are sometimes referred to as (1) Bhakthi and (2)
Prapatthi. That is to say, the practice of the Markatakisora or the
young of the monkey is Bhakthi and the practice of the Marjalakisora
or the young of the cat is Prapatthi.

Devotion has to be unintermittent, uninterrupted, like the flow of
oil from one vessel to another. Though the two kinds are basically
the same, the practices are different. Without Prema nothing can be
acquired in this world. It is only when there is Prema, the Anuraga
or Attachment, in its turn, produces the desire to protect and guard.
In both the above kinds, Prema is equal, no doubt; but, in actual
manifestation, there is difference. In the Markatakisora Marga, the
child has to rely on its own strength to protect itself; wherever the
mother monkey might jump about, it has to attach itself fast to the
mother's belly and should not release its hold, even if pulled apart?
So, the Bhaktha too has to stand the test at the hands of the Lord
and hold on to the Lord's name at all times and under all conditions,
tirelessly, without the slightest trace of dislike or disgust,
bearing the ridicule and the criticism of the world and conquering
the feelings of shame and defeat. The example of this type of Bhakthi
is that first among devotees, Prahlada.

The Prapatthi Marga is not of this type; it is like the way of the
kitten, the Marjalakisora, 'Sarvabhaara Samarpitha' attitude. As the
kitten simply continues mewing in one place, placing all its burdens
on the mother cat the devotee puts complete trust on the Lord. The
mother-cat holds the kitten in its mouth and removes it to more
elevated places or transports it safely through even very narrow
passages. So too the devotee places all his burden on the Lord and
surrenders fully to His Will. Lakshmana is the example of this path.

The discipline of Prapatthi is much superior to the discipline of
Bhakthi. The characteristic of Prapatthi is complete self-surrender,
in all aspects. To serve Sri Rama, Lakshmana renounced all obstacles
in his path, like wealth, wife, mother, home and even sleep and food.
And, this, not for a day or month or year but for full fourteen
years. He felt that Sri Rama was his all, his happiness and joy, that
He would grant him everything that he needed and that his life's
purpose was only to follow Him and serve Him, and surrender his will
to Him. So, if all burdens are placed on Him and if He is followed
ceaselessly and unforgettingly, He will certainly provide everything.
This is the nature of the Prapatthi type of devotion.

Vaanaprastha

After being a householder and experiencing the sorrow, happiness and
joy and learning the true significance of all these, man has to
retire into the forest, when he reaches the age of 45 or 50, leaving
the house he has built and the place where he lived. If his wife is
alive then, he has to take her consent and entrust her to the care of
the son or her parents or take her also with him and treat her like a
brother himself being immersed in Brahmacharya. There is a great
change even in diet. He has to eat roots and fruits and drink only
milk. Things should not be baked full but only up to a third. Rice
should not be used much. If it is not possible to arrange diet for
oneself on these lines, he can visit the village near-by and collect
food by begging. But he has to bring the food into the forest and eat
it there, in his own habitation. He has to give to his dependents the
same food that he takes, for they cannot prepare food they prefer, or
get it supplied. If they do not relish it, they have to be content
with milk and fruits only, for, he must not change his routine for
satisfying others. However troublesome it may be, the discipline
should not be modified, or given up. This is to be specially noted.
He cannot have any worship, or alms giving or any such duties. Even
if he gives food or articles to others, it cannot be regarded as alms
or Dana. He cannot also receive as Dana anything from others. He must
have the same pure Love towards all in equal measure. Discarding old
clothes once a year, he must don new clothes, in the Aswija month.
The chandrayanavratha is the most important of the Vaanaprastha
vrathas. During the month, he must eat for the first fifteen days,
every day a morsel less and for the remaining fifteen, a morsel more
every day. He has to take only conjee on the New and Full Moon days.
In the rainy season, he must do Thapas standing in the rain; in
winter, he must wear wet clothes while engaged in Thapas. Performing
such asceticism systematically, he has to bathe three times a day.
The various Upanishadic statements are to be studied, their meanings
understood and experienced. If such a Vanaprastha falls victim to any
disease, the diet routine has to be cancelled and he has to live on
air and water; he shall walk on and on, in the north-eastern
direction until he dies. On the other hand, if he has no bodily
disease and if he is hale and hearty, he will experience, after he
has adopted the above disciplines, the spontaneous Dawn of True
Knowledge. By means of this Knowledge, he will attain Moksha.

Many argue how this discipline can result in the Dawn of Knowledge.
Are these not mere bodily limitations, they ask? Knowledge can arise
only by the realisation of the Principle. How can something that does
not contain the Principle which guarantees self-realisation be called
Knowledge, they argue. But this is based on a big mistake. Through
these physical regulations, Vasanas or traits are destroyed and
concentration is established. The Upanishadic statements serve to
foster and strengthen this one-pointedness, step-by-step; the
experience of the Upanishadic vakyas alone will bring about the Dawn
of Knowledge. Are not Upanishads the very Knowledge itself? With that
Jnanaswarupa as companion, realising it in one's own experience, what
need is there to search for Knowledge elsewhere? To establish Jnana
firmly in the heart, one-pointedness is essential and this can easily
be gained by the above-mentioned bodily disciplines and Tapas.
External control helps internal control in many ways. To succeed in
external controls is by comparison more difficult than to achieve
success in controlling the internal! A turn of the steering wheel in
one's hand in any direction makes the wheels of the car, which are
not in one's hand, move in the same direction. The wheels will not
turn in another direction, when the steering is turned in one. The
introspective wheels are based on the extrospective steering itself!

It is the natural basis. Sometimes, when the steering is turned in
one way, the wheels may drag another way, but this is due to the
giving up of the natural characteristic. The internal wheels, if they
have no air, which is the true essence, may behave as if there is no
relationship with the steering. But, they cannot go beyond the bounds
of steering. The steering in the hand is related to the wheels below.
If there is no such relation, the journey becomes impossible. The
connection is inevitable. Therefore, for him who has struggled with
the external tendencies and conquered them, the internal tendencies
become easily controllable. The external tendencies have name and
form and are attracted by becoming objects of experience. So, to
overcome them is a matter of some difficulty. But internal tendencies
have no form, though they may be endowed with name; they are also
experienced as Ananda: and so, they can be overcome more easily. They
can be tamed with greater ease. The bother is more for external
conduct and behaviour. These are associated with taste, form and
heaviness. The internal tendencies have no form, taste or weight.
Pure water has no form or taste. Impure water is different in all
these respects. So, to purify impure water is indeed difficult; but
pure water can be given any form required, with very great ease.

Similarly, the difficulty is all about purifying the mental
behaviour, which is spoiled by the delusions of the world; there is
no need to set right the mental behaviour which is free from such
delusions. Delusion-less behaviour is necessarily pure. It is without
any trace of defect and doubt. Why should such be set right?
Therefore, if men first control and conquer the external delusion, as
much as possible, the internal tendencies will easily move in the
direction of Atmananda. Yoga and Tapas is only another name for the
path of the control and conquest of these external tendencies and
delusions. The rules of Vaanaprastha are but methods to succeed in
this Yoga or Tapas. When man subdues delusion of all types in the
Vaanaprastha stage, the journey ends in Moksha. But, we cannot say
that Moksha has only this one path. Through whatever path Grace is
obtained that Path may be chosen. Liberation is achieved by these
rules and observances of Vaanaprastha and it can be secured by
following this Path. It also makes a man delusion-free. It gives him
one-pointedness.

Mukthi is of Four Kinds

Worship, with fixity of consciousness and purity of feeling and free
of all extraneous thought, becomes itself Bhaavasamadhi. As a result
of this Bhaavasamadhi, the Lord appears before the inner eye of the
devotee, in the form which he has chosen for worship. The vision is
not a matter of imagination; it is a 'face' experience. Without
difference of location, he can abide in the presence of the Lord, in
the self-same place. This is called Saalokyamukthi. Besides being
always with the Lord, as in Saalokyamukthi, Bhakthas realise all that
they see as the glory of the Lord. The experience is referred to as
Saamipyamukthi. Existing ever with the Lord, witnessing always the
glory of the Lord, and becoming suffused with God-consciousness is
Saarupyamukthi. This is the final fruit of bhakthi Sastra. But, at
this stage, there is yet a trace of differential feeling, so the
Adwaitha Siddhantha will not admit it as the highest. Simply because
the bhaktha has Saarupya or same Rupa as the Lord, we cannot take it
that he has powers of Creation, Preservation and Destruction, which
the Lord possesses. It is only when all trace of difference
disappears, and unity is attained that the highest stage is reached.
This is what is called, Saayujya. This comes of diving Grace, won by
the Essence of the Sadhana of each; it cannot be claimed as the fruit
of effort. The Bhaktha will aspire for this merging or Aikyam. He
wishes to serve the Lord as he pleases and to experience the joy of
the Form which he has attributed to the Lord. But, the Lord out of
His Grace, gives him not only Saalokya, Saamipya and Saarupya but
also, Saayujya! Bhakthimarga results also in the attainment of
Brahmajnana. Even if the Bhaktha does not crave for it, the Lord
Himself vouchsafes it to him. The Saayujyamukthi is also referred to
as Ekaanthamukthi.

Sat-Sankalpa is the Path for Attaining the Presence

For Maya-constituted beings, there are two Maya gates; the appetite
for sex and the appetite of the tongue. These two have to be
conquered by every man; so long as they persist, they cause sorrow.
All worldly desires are comprehended by these two; so, only those who
have mastered these two can be said to have successfully waded
through the world. These are the causes of all sins; and, sin is the
manure on which Maya thrives. Really speaking, this Maya-prapancha or
world has to serve only the purpose of just sustaining the body.
Those aspiring for Liberation have to subdue the senses. "Food for
guarding the body, dress to ward off the cold", says the Uttara Gita.
If Man, however, gets immersed in these pursuits, he will forget the
purpose for which he has come and the goal of activity and holy
endeavour. Instead, whatever activity a person may be engaged in, he
must, as automatically as he takes in breath, be contemplating on
these lines and should always be aware of this: "I am born to serve
God and to realise my true Self". All acts - wearing, eating,
walking, studying, serving, moving - should be performed in the
belief that they take one into the Presence. Everything should be
done in a spirit of dedication to the Lord.

A farmer clears and levels the land, removes the stones and thorns,
ploughs and prepares the field, manures and strengthens the soil,
waters and fertilises it, and by sowing, transplanting, weeding,
spraying and waiting, he reaps the crop; after winnowing and
threshing, he stacks the corn. All these various processes are for
the sake of the stomach; so too, one must feel that all the hunger,
thirst, joy and sorrow, grief and loss, suffering and anger, food and
appetite are but impulses helping us towards attaining the Presence
of the Lord. When one has this attitude, sin will never tarnish these
activities. The appetites too will vanish, without a vestige of name
or form.

The taste of food or of anything eaten cannot be grasped if the
person is ill or even if the mind is immersed in something else. So
also, even if one is engaged in Naamasmarana, Bhajana, Japa or
Dhyaana, if the heart is full of Thamas, or if it is wayward, no joy
can be experienced; joy can never well up under such circumstances.
The tongue will be sweet, so long as there is sugar upon the tongue.
If there is the pillar of light, Bhakthi, in the corridor of the
heart, so long as that lamp burns, there will be no darkness. The
heart will be illumined in Bliss. A bitter thing on the tongue makes
the whole tongue bitter; when qualities like greed and anger enter
the heart, the brightness disappears and darkness dominates the scene
and Man becomes the target of countless grieves and losses.
Therefore, those who aspire to attain the holy Presence of the Lord
must acquire certain habits, disciplines and qualities. The usual,
accustomed ways of life will not lead to God. They have to be
modified somewhat by means of Sadhana. Look at the crane; it walks
about pretty fast in water. But, during that walk, it cannot catch
any fish; it must, for that purpose, become slow and quiet and stand
motionless. So also, if one proceeds with greed, anger and similar
qualities, one cannot secure the fish of Sathya, Dharma and Santhi.
Whatever Sadhana a person may or may not have, he must practise
uninterrupted Naamasmarana. Then only can he master the natural
attributes of greed, anger etc. All the Sastras teach but this one
lesson: since the Lord is the universal Goal and this Journey of Life
has Him as the Destination, keep Him constantly in view and subdue
the mind which makes you wander from the path. All the good qualities
automatically gather around the person who practises control of
speech and the constant contemplation of the Lord. See! In the
Dwaaparayuga the Kauravas, even while experiencing the fruits of
their previous Punya, were engaged in Papakarma; Pandavas, on the
other hand, even while undergoing the sufferings due to their
previous Papakarma, were thinking and doing only Punya! This is the
difference between the wise and the unwise. The Kauravas were slaves
of the appetites of hunger and sex and the Pandavas did every act for
the sake of the Lord, having Sathya and Dharma as their Charioteer.
Those who are overwhelmed in grief can never feel interest in either
a feast or a fight; similarly, the real aspirant who is immersed in
thoughts of God can never taste or even think of worldly objects of
enjoyment.

A Good Character is the Jewel of Human Life

One must realise in this body itself, before death takes its toll,
the Eternal Truth and the Relationship between Man and that Truth.
The Kathopanishad exhorts: "Uththishtatha! Jagratha! Praapyavaraan-
nibodhatha!!!" Arise, Awake, Get initiated from the great. Those who
are agitated by doubts about what to accept and what to reject; those
who are blinded by illusion, and those who cannot distinguish between
darkness and light, death and immortality, all such should approach
great persons who can show the path to understand the eternal Truth,
the Self-illumined Basis of all creation. Then, this world and heaven
both will be merged in the same effulgence! For the sake of this
realisation, man should have deep yearning and hard disciplined
practice. This human birth itself is the consequence of countless
good deeds and it should not be cast aside; the chance must be fully
exploited. As the Kenopanishad says, "Nachedihaavedin
Mahatheevinashtih". The jewel in the hand should not be dropped
aside; when there are many chances of saving oneself in this life
itself, is it not a big loss if no thought is spent on ways of
escape? Therefore, the discriminating individual will endeavour by
all means at his disposal to understand the underlying Principles, to
master the teachings of the great men who traversed the spiritual
path, and to bring all this, as much as possible, into the ken of
one's own experience. Without this effort, if one discards the Path
and wastes his life, it is an insult to the very name of the species!
Instead of getting enslaved to the evanescent and the false and
wasting precious time in their pursuit, dedicate every minute to the
discovery of Truth, the contemplation of the Everlasting, Ever-true
Lord. Such dedication is the real function of the soul. The spending
of time in illusory appetites on the other hand is the drag of the
world. One should not fall a victim to the poisonous attractions of
worldly luxuries or the wiles of seductive beauty. One day, all these
fascinating senses will vanish as a story unfolded in a dream!

Whatever happens to man, education and the rest, to make him grow and
become big, these are of no use for his spiritual progress; they
bring about only his spiritual downfall. That is why this is called
Mayaprapancha. Truth, in whatever Maya it is immersed, will only
shine more effulgently. For such is the nature of truth. How can we
say that the objective world, undergoing modifications every minute,
waning and wasting, with the waywardness of appearing and
disappearing, is Eternal Truth? So, the characteristic of a Sadhaka
is the attainment of Truth, not the search of the Unreal in this
evanescent world. In this false world, there can be no Satyachara,
true living. There can only be Mithyachara, unreal living. True
living consists in the realisation of the Lord. This must be borne in
mind by every man, every moment of his life.

Sahajamaarga, Saadhanamaarga, not the same

The Sadhaka should note the distinction between the conduct of the
natural man and the aspirant. Sahaja man is one without Sahana or
Fortitude, with an Aham-kara, or conceit, and one who is full of
desires relating to the Jagath by which he is trying to have a
contented Janma. The Saadhana man is he who is engaged in
Sarveswarachinthana as ceaselessly as the waves of the Sagara or sea,
who accumulates the DHANA (treasure) of Equality and Equal Love to
all, who is content in the thought that all is the Lord's and nothing
is his. The Saadhana man will not, like the Sahaja man, easily bend
before grief or loss, anger or hatred or selfishness, hunger, thirst
or fickleness. One should master all the above things as much as
possible, and journey through life with fortitude, courage, joy,
peace, charity and humility. Realising that tending of the body is
not all important, one has to bear patiently even hunger and thirst
and be engaged uninterruptedly in the contemplation of the Lord.
Instead, quarrelling for every tiny little thing, losing one's
temper, becoming sad at the slightest provocation, getting angry at
the smallest insult, worried at thirst, hunger and loss of sleep,
these can never be the characteristics of a Sadhaka. Rice in its
natural state and rice that is boiled, can these two be the same? The
hardness of natural rice is absent in the boiled one. The boiled
grain is soft, harmless and sweet. The unboiled grain is hard,
conceited and full of delusion. Both types are Jivis and Men, no
doubt; those who are immersed in external illusions and Avidyamaya
are "Men"; those who are immersed in internal illusions or Vidya Maya
are "Sadhakas", and God is immersed in neither, devoid of both. He,
who has no external illusions, becomes a Sadhaka and when he is
devoid of even the internal illusions, he can be termed a God. Such a
person's heart becomes the seat of God. Therefore, it is possible to
deduce that all is pervaded by God. Though, of course the Lord is
situated in every heart, Sadhana is necessary so that they may
discover it for themselves. It is not possible for us to see our own
face! We must have a mirror to show us its image! So too, a basic
Marga or Path, a Sadhana Method is necessary to become devoid of
Gunas.

The Harvest of a Sadhaka

There is, in this world, no tapas higher than fortitude, no,
happiness greater than contentment, no Punya holier than mercy, no
weapon more effective than patience.

Bhakthas should consider the body as the field, good deeds as seeds
and cultivate the Name of the Lord, with the help of the Heart as the
ryot, in order to get the harvest, the Lord Himself. How can one get
the crop without the cultivation? Like cream in milk, like fire in
fuel, the Lord is in everything, more or less. Have full faith in
this. As the milk, so the cream; as the fuel, so the fire; so also,
as the Sadhana, so the Saakshaathkaara. Even if the attainment of
Mukthi is not directly realised as a consequence of taking up the
Lord's name, four fruits are clearly evident to those who have had
the experience. They are

The Company of the Great
Truth
Contentment
The Control of the Senses.
Through whichever of these gates one may enter, whether he be a
householder or recluse, or a member of any other class, he can reach
the Lord without fail. This is certain. Men crave for worldly
happiness. Analysed properly, this itself is the disease and
sufferings are but the drugs we take. In the midst of these worldly
pleasures, one rarely entertains the desire for attaining the Lord.

Besides, it is necessary to analyse and discriminate every act of man
for, the spirit of renunciation is born out of such analysis. Without
it, renunciation is difficult to get. Miserliness is like the
behaviour of a dog; it has to be transformed. Anger is enemy No. 1 of
the Sadhaka; it is like spittle and has to be treated as such. And
untruth? It is even more disgusting; through untruth, the vital
powers of all are destroyed. It should be treated as scavenging
itself. Theft ruins life; it makes the priceless human life cheaper
than a pie; it is like rotten smelling flesh. Moderate food, moderate
sleep, Prema, Fortitude, these will help in the upkeep of the health
of both body and mind. Whoever he may be, in whatever condition he
may be, if he gives no room for dispiritedness, if he has no fear at
all, and if he remembers the Lord with unshaken faith and without any
ulterior motive, all suffering and sorrow will fall away from him.
The Lord will never enquire at any time the caste to which you belong
or the Achara which you traditionally follow.

Bhakthi does not consist in wearing Kashaya cloth, the organisation
of Uthsavas, the performance of Yajnas, the shaving of hair, the
carrying of Kamandalu or Danda, the matting of the hair etc. With a
pure Anthah-karana, uninterruptedly (whatever one may be doing)
contemplating on God, feeling that everything is the Lord's creation
and therefore One, unattached to sense objects, embracing all in
equal Love, dedicated to True Speech, this is indeed, the
characteristic of Bhakthi.

Of the various types of Bhakthi, Naamasmarana bhakthi is the best. In
the Kaliyuga, the Name is the Path for saving oneself. Jayadeva,
Gouranga, Thyagayya, Thukaram, Kabir, Ramdas, all these great
Bhakthas attained the Lord through just this one Naama. Why speak of
a thousand things? Even Prahlada and Dhruva were able to enjoy the
Darsan, Sparsan and Sambhashan of the Lord through Naama only.
Therefore, if every Sadhaka will consider the name of the Lord as the
very breath of his life and have complete faith in good deeds and
good thoughts, if he will develop the spirit of service and equal
Love for all, then there can be no better Path for Mukthi. Instead of
this, if one sits in some solitary nook and holds his breath, how can
he master his innate qualities? How is he to know that he has
mastered them? Ambarisha Bhakthi, and Durvasa activities, the
combination of these two will result in the fate of Durvasa himself;
at least, in the end. Durvasa must fall at the feet of Ambarisha. May
you avoid becoming such Thrisankus; may you experience the eternal
Truth, achieving the genuine State.

Every person is apt to commit mistakes, without being aware of it.
However bright the fire or light, some smoke will emanate from it. So
also, whatever good deed a man might do, there will be mixed with it
a minute trace of evil. But, efforts should be made to ensure that
the evil is minimised, that the good is more and bad, less. Of
course, in the present atmosphere, you may not succeed in the very
first attempt. You must carefully think over the consequences of
whatever you do, talk, or execute. In whatever way you want others to
honour you, or to behave with you, in the same way, you should first
behave with others and love and honour them. Then only will those
honour you. Instead, without yourself honouring and loving others, if
you complain that they are not treating you properly, it is surely a
wrong conclusion. Besides, if only those who advise others
about "Which principles are right, which are true and good, which
conduct is best etc", themselves follow the advice they give, there
would then be no need for giving that advice at all. Others will
learn the lesson simply by observing their actual behaviour. On the
other hand, if Vedantha is spoken parrot-like to others, without any
attempt to put it into practice in one's own conduct, it is not only
deceiving others; it is even worse; it is deceiving oneself.
Therefore you must be, as you want others to be. It is not the nature
of a Sadhaka to search for faults in others and hide one's own. If
your faults are pointed out to you by any one, do not argue and try
to prove that it is right or do not bear a grudge against him for it.
Reason out within yourself how it is a fault and set right your own
behaviour. Instead, rationalising it for your own satisfaction or
wreaking vengeance on the person who pointed it out, these are
certainly not the trails of a Sadhaka or Bhaktha.

The Sadhaka should always seek the truthful and joyful; he must avoid
all thoughts of the nature of the sad and depressing. Depression,
doubt, conceit, these are Rahu and Kethu to the spiritual aspirant.
When one's devotion is well established, even if these appear they
can be easily discarded. They will only harm one's Sadhana. Above
all, it is best that the Sadhaka should be under all circumstances,
joyful, smiling and enthusiastic. Even more than Bhakthi and Jnana,
this pure attitude is desirable. Those who have acquired it deserve
to reach the goal first. This quality of joy at all times is the
fruit of the good done in past births. When a person is ever worried,
depressed, doubting, he can never attain Bliss, whatever Sadhana he
may do. The first task of a Sadhaka is the cultivation of enthusiasm.
Through that enthusiasm, he can derive any variety of Ananda. Never
get inflated when you are praised; never get deflated when you are
blamed. Be a spiritual Lion, regardless of both. One must oneself
analyse and correct one's faults; this is most important.

Now, even in matters relating to the realisation of God, one has to
be careful. Whatever inconveniences one may encounter, one must try
to carry on one's Sadhana, without any break or modification in the
disciplines. One should not be changing the Name that one has loved
and cherished and selected for Smarana. Concentration is impossible
if the Name is changed once every few days. The mind will not attain
one-pointedness. All Sadhana has this one-pointedness as its ultimate
aim; so avoiding constant adoption and rejection of Names and Forms
of the Lord, one single name must be used throughout for Japam and
Dhyanam. And, one has also to get the strong conviction that all the
Lord's Names and all the Lord's Forms are but the Name and the Form
which one is repeating in Japam and meditating on, during Dhyanam.
That Name and that Form must not give any slightest feeling of
dislike or disaffection. Taking all worldly losses, sufferings and
worries as merely temporal and transitory, and realising that all
this Japam and Dhyanam is only to overcome such grief, the Sadhaka
should keep the two things separate, without mixing up that with
this, and this with that. He must understand that the loss, suffering
and worry are external, belonging to this world, and that Japam and
Dhyanam are internal, belonging to the realm of the love for the
Lord. This is what is called Pathivratha Bhakthi, or Chaste Devotion;
the other variety, where the Sadhaka selects one Name and one Form
and after sometime discards them for another Name and Form, is called
Vyabhichara Bhakthi or Unchaste Bhakthi.

It is not a fault if it is done in ignorance; but having once known
that it is wrong and harmful, and after continuing Dhyanam and Japam
with that Name and Rupa faithfully, if they are subsequently changed,
it certainly is wrong. Sticking faithfully to the Name and Rupa is
the highest vow, and highest austerity. Even if elders advise you, do
not give up the Path approved by your mind! Of course, which elder
will suggest to you that you should change the Name of the Lord and
give up the Name that you adore? Do not consider those who tell you
to do so as an elder: consider them as dullards. Again, see that as
far as possible, the time and place of Dhyanam and Japam are not
changed and shifted. Sometimes, as while travelling, even if it
becomes necessary to change the venue, the time at least should be
kept unaltered. Even if one is in a railway train, or a bus, or some
such inconvenient surrounding, at the specified time, one must, at
least, recall to one's mind the Dhyanam and the Japam done by
oneself, at the same time in the past.

In this way, accumulating spiritual wealth, one can surely become the
master, and attain the Atma.

Every man should so lead his life that no pain is caused by him to
any living thing. That is his supreme duty. Also, it is the prime
duty of every one, who has had the chance of this human birth, to
spare a part of his energies occasionally for prayer, repetition of
the Lord's Name, meditation etc., and must devote himself to Living
with Truth, Rightfulness, Peacefulness and to good works which are of
service to others. One must be as afraid of doing acts that are
harmful to others or deeds that are sinful, as one is afraid to touch
fire or disturb a cobra. One must have as much attachment and as much
steadfastness in carrying out good works, in making others happy, and
in worshipping the Lord as he now has in accumulating gold and
riches. This is the Dharma of Man. It is to strengthen this type of
goodness that the Lord incarnates Himself in human form. But, the
question may arise, how can a non-existent thing be strengthened and
developed? Indeed, these qualities are not non-existent; they are
there in man! When these existing qualities decline and wither, the
Lord comes with the purpose of promoting them and bringing about the
decline of the forces that work in the oposite direction. It is to
make clear this purpose that Sri Krishna, in the Dwapara Yuga, while
teaching Arjuna, said:

Parithraanaaya saaddunaam
Vinaasaaya cha dushkrithaam
Dharmasamsthaapanaarthaaya
Sambhavaami yuge yuge.

That is to say, all incarnations of the Lord are for the protection
and promotion of Sadhus. This word, Sadhu, does not refer to any
single religion, caste, or familiy or stage of life, or community or
even any single species, like the human! It refers to all religions,
all stages of life, all races, and all creatures. The Lord has
revealed in the Gita His Universal Mind. It is because of this
universal message that the Gita has become so essential and so
famous. Why! Sri Krishna Himself has declared in plenty of situations
and places that He is the dutiful servant of His devotees. An example
of this is His accepting to be the Charioteer of Arjuna.

If the culture of the ordinary man himself results in such elevation,
each one can judge for himself how much more purified and holy will
be the character of those who are engaged in spiritual exercises and
the incessant contemplation of God! For both these types of people,
the quality of the character is the important criterion.

There is great difference between the Brahmanishtas (those
established in God-contemplation) of the past and the Brahmanishtas
of the present day. First it is necessary to grasp the greatness of
Brahmanishta itself. It is because this has not been done by the
present-day holy men, that poverty has come upon us. In the past,
this greatness was realised, and they were immersed in experiencing
holiness. The question may arise why such holy feelings do not arise
now; but they are not absent. For fire to increase or decrease fuel
is the only cause; there is no other reason. The more the fuel, the
more the illumination! In all humanity, every individual has the
undisputed right to feed his fire with fuel! Fire has the power to
give light, by its very nature. So, too, in the fire of the Buddhi of
the aspirant and spiritual practitioner, the fire which produces the
light of wisdom, the fuel of renunciation, peacefulness, truth,
kindness, forbearance and selfless service has to be constantly
placed; the more they do this, the more efficacious and effulgent the
Sadhakas can become. Only trees growing on fertile soil can yield
good fruits. Those which grow on saline soils will be poor. So, also
it is only in hearts which are unsullied that such holy feelings,
power and gifts can shine in splendour. The difference between the
Brahmanishtas of the past and the present is just this: the present-
day Brahmanishtas are practising the same Dhyana and the same Pranava
as their namesakes in the past, the difference arises in the decline
in self-control, so far as the field of Sadhana is concerned. When
the number of Mahapurushas who engage themselves in unflinching
meditation of God in solitary places declined, then many a suffering
descended upon the world. Those who exist today are damaging their
Brahmanishta by themselves arranging for the accumulation of all
obstacles for the carrying through of their Sadhana, by getting
enslaved to mean praise and fame, by becoming entangled in delusion,
and by restless endeavour to earn glory and to expand the
institutions they have founded. Those who yearn to establish
themselves in Brahmanishta must seek solitude, practise Dhyana and
Japa at specified times, and acquire one-pointedness through these
spiritual exercises, and always be anxious to do deeds that will
bring about the welfare of all created beings, ever engaged in
performing work without any concern for the fruit thereof. It is only
when such men come upon the earth that all suffering will cease. This
is the mark of Kritha Yuga.

Just as in the world, kind-hearted doctors run medical institutions
here and there, and serve the diseased and cure the afflicted, if,
here and there, we have also Ashramas of holy personages, who are
experts in the treatment and cure of the 'birth and death disease',
then, people can be cured from the afflictions of ignorance, untruth,
immorality and self-aggrandizement. Ignorance produces wickedness and
it can be cured only by the medicine of Brahmajnana with
supplementary doses of the drugs, Santham, Sama, Dama (Peacefulness,
Fortitude, Self-control) etc. Instead of this, the 'great men' of
today give those who approach them the medicines they demand, and the
drugs their patients relish! They thus become the instruments of
their followers and, for the sake of name and fame, they behave like
doctors dictated to by the patients! The so-called 'great' fall into
perdition, even before they taste the Bliss themselves, on account of
their weakness and foolishness, becoming a prey to the wiles of the
greed for name and fame! The main reason for the contemporary poverty
is just this. Present-day Sadhus and 'great' men have not understood
this fact and do not act according to it.

That holy essence has to be experienced and realised. One's selfish
needs have to be sacrificed. There must be constant efforts to do
good to others. One's desire should be to establish the welfare of
the world. With all these feelings filling the heart, one must
meditate on the Lord. This is the right path. If 'great men' and
those in authority are thus engaged in the service of humanity, and
in promoting the welfare of the world, the thieves of passion,
hatred, pride, envy, jealousy and conceit will not invade the minds
of men; the divine possessions of man, like dharma, mercy, truth,
love, knowledge and wisdom will be safe from harm. The police and the
rulers can overcome only external foes. They have no power to destroy
the internal enemies; they will find the task impossible. They are
not the authorities for that. The internal foes, the six enemies that
operate inside man, the Arishadvarga, can be uprooted only by the
teachings of good men, the love of God and knowledge of the Lord, and
the company of the Holy and the Great. Just as when the police and
the authorities responsible for apprehending thieves become
themselves dependent on them, the world will suffer harm at the hands
of wicked men, if the Brahmanishtas and the 'great' Sadhus give up
the path of world welfare and become the victims of sense enjoyment
and ambition to earn name and fame. The world will become enveloped
in darker ignorance and Dharma will be destroyed. Now both are as
described. Hence, the daily increase of suffering also. The whole
world will bask in peace and joy only that day when both these groups
realise the right attitudes, and with the welfare of all at heart,
ponder over the Omnipotence of the Lord. Both these are two
governments for man's two states. Spiritual elders are the rulers of
the internal state; administrative authorities are the rulers of the
external state. If both these groups act and direct properly, both
states will function to create happiness. The blame for the present
misery must therefore be shared by both. It is at such times that the
Lord resolves to vouchsafe happiness to all and to suppress ignorance
and justice. It is to make this clear that the Lord said in the
Githa:

Yadaa yadaa hi dharmasya
Glaanirbhavathi Bharatha
Abhyuththaanamadharmasya
Thadaatmaanam srijaamyaham.

O Bharatha, whenever Dharma declines and Adharma raises its head,
then I make myself born.

Really speaking, even for the advent of the Lord the prayers of the
great act as the invitation. In the external world, when the subjects
need any convenience or help, they approach the rulers and inform
them of their request. So also, in the internal state, when there is
no possibility of achieving and acquiring Bhakthi, Charity, Peace and
Truth, the great and good men, who desire to achieve them, pray to
the Lord within themselves. Then, listening to their prayers, He
himself comes into the world and showers His grace on them. The fact
is well known to all. Did not Rama and Krishna incarnate because the
Lord heeded the prayers of the sages? Many have read this in the
Ramayana and the Bhagavatha. Why, even Ramakrishna, though he was
Divinely-born prayed to Kali (for he could not bring it about) to
send some one who could preach to the whole world the Dharma that
will uproot injustice and selfishness. This is known to all who have
read his life history. Thus, prayers should be offered again and
again for the realisation of the task. No one should become desperate
and give up prayers, if they do not result in the advent of the Lord.
In the external state, how often has a person to write and how much
he has to wander about for his work to be done and, perhaps at the
end, it may not fructify at all!

Now, how is one to know the consequence of the soul's yearning? Since
this cannot be known, one has to pray until the world is established
in happiness. The happiness of the world is the sign of His arrival;
if this is understood, then it is easy to recognise the Avathar
immediately. It is then that the religion of Sathya, the religion of
Daya, the religion of Jnana and the religion of Prema will grow and
prosper. So, until these are firmly rooted, people must continue
their prayers. That is the responsibility of the people. The roadway
laid out by holy men has to be repaired now and then, by either those
who travel through it or those claiming authority over it. That is
what is called 'Teaching' or Bodha.

It is for the sake of such repairs that the Lord sends occasionally
some authorised individuals, sages and divine personages. Through the
Sadbodha or good teachings of these, the path opened by the God men
of the past is again made clear and smooth. Thus, when the Lord's
Will and the needs of Sadhus, and the teachings of great persons
produce their combined effect, the happiness of the world will be
assured, and it will be undiminished. If all humanity pray at one
time that unrest, injustice, disorder and falsehood might be
transformed into peace, truth, love and mutual service, things will
certainly become better. Now, there is no other way out. Worrying is
fruitless. This is no occasion for despair. It is against the
essential nature of man to plead weakness and want of strength.
Therefore, giving up the search for other means, men must try prayer,
service to others and mutual love and respect. They should delay no
longer, they will soon acquire contentment and joy.

People say that the service of man is the service of God, that
Manavaseva is Madhavaseva. That is a true statement. But though the
service of humanity is holy, unless it is merged in the bigger ideal,
men will not benefit, however huge the service. Mere repetition of
the slogan is useless, if service is done without faith in the
divinity of man and with an eye on name and fame and the fruits of
one's action; whatever actions one undertakes, if one has constantly
as a companion the contemplation of the Lord, and if one has faith in
the essential divinity of man, then, the statement about Manavaseva
and Madhavaseva being the same is justified. Without thoughts of
Madhava how can Madhavaseva originate? All such talk is mere show. I
won't agree to that. Instead, whatever is done with the Lord in mind,
along the path of truth, and according to the aspects of Dharma, has
to be considered as the Seva of the Lord and whatever is done for
name and fame and for the fruit thereof shall not be referred to as
Madhavaseva.

In fact, those who are immersed in the uninterrupted contemplation of
the Lord need not do any other task at all. The fruit of their prayer
itself can make the world holy. But, all cannot be thus engaged; and
so all must endeavour to prepare for that stage by purifying their
mind and diminishing their desires. The Sadhus who have achieved this
can realise things for themselves. Others cannot grasp the sameness
of Manavaseva and Madhavaseva.

But this does not mean that one can sit quiet. Grasping it is
dependent on each one's destiny, and past actions and on each one's
Sadhana. Until that happens, do Dhyanam and Japam so that the mind
will become free from the waves of feeling and full of the divine
form; also carry out deeds for the good of others; devote your time
to the service of the world, irrespective of the results thereof;
thus, you can become blessed. Otherwise, though the body may be
inactive the mind will be very busy, committing acts on its own. Such
men fall a prey to Karma, in spite of their not doing anything! When
a person has his mind fixed on the contemplation of God and the
pursuit of Truth, though his body and his senses do acts that are of
service to the world, he will not be affected by them; though he does
Karma, he will be a non-doer of Karma. The lesson of the
Bhagavadgitha is embedded in this. The heart of the person who does
not strive to cultivate his mind with holy thoughts is certain to be
the paradise of evil and wickedness. This has to be borne in mind by
all those who aspire for salvation, who seek one-pointedness, and who
hope to rise to greatness. To realise this knowledge of the Atma,
caste is not a criterion nor monkhood, nor rituals, nor scholarship
gained by study of the Sastras. Brahmanishta is the only criterion.
It is this that the Upanishad text too emphasises:

Naasramam kaaranam muktheh, darsanaani nakaaranam.
Thathaiva sarvakarmaani jnaanameva hi kaaranam.

Jnana alone is the cause of liberation; not Asrama or philosophy.

For the establishment of oneself in the contemplation of the
Omnipresent Lord, there is no limitations of time or space. There is
nothing like a holy place or a special time for this. Wherever the
mind revels in the contemplation of the divine that is the Holy
Place! Whenever it does so, that is the auspicious moment! There and
then, one must meditate on the Lord.

That is why it has been announced already before:

Na kaala niyame yaathraa,
Na desasya sthalasya cha
Yathraasya ramathe chiththam,
Thathra dhyaane na kevalam.

For meditation on God, there is no fixed time or place. When and
where the mind so desires, then and there is the time and place.

The world can achieve prosperity through such disciplined souls whose
hearts are pure and who represent the salt of the earth. Everyone
should pray, from this very minute, for the advent of such men and
try to deserve the blessings of the great and endeavour to forget the
sufferings of the day in the attempt to promote the welfare of the
world.
--- End forwarded message ---

© U. R. Love


posted: 2003-11-05 18:31:13 views since [2007-12-06 00:23:35]: 161
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