SNBS
SNBS
SNBS
(REVISED EDITION)
Published By t
THE DIVINE LIFE SOCIETY
R O. SHIVANANDANAGAR-249 192
Distt. Tehri-Garhwal, U.P., Himalayas, India
1998
PUBLISHERS' NOTE
It is, therefore, hoped that this commentary on the Bhakti Sutras will
inspire aspirants to practise Bhakti Yoga and reach the lotus -feet of the Lord.
INTRODUCTION
The Narada Bhakti Sutras is a very popular treatise in India on Bhakti
Yoga. This treatise is very lucid and practical in its exposition of the birth,
growth, development, unfoldment and expression of Bhakti. This is a very useful
book for earnest and sincere aspirants who tread the path of devotion.
The Holy Rishi Narada propounds the doctrine of love to God, a path which
can easily be followed by the ordinary man. It does not demand either great
knowledge of philosophy or total renunciation of the world.
Research students will find great help in this book in their study of the
Psychology of Bhakti.
The Sutras have an expressible charm and beauty. They make a direct appeal
to the heart. Narada speaks to all alike. There is not even the slightest trace
or tinge of sectarianism.
And they are the best authority on the Bhakti Marga. For sincere devotees
who are in need of practical spiritual instructions, in a very short compass, in
the path of devotion or divine love, there is no better book than Narada Bhakti
Sutras. The language is very simple.
The next sixteen Sutras (51 to 66) give a description of the external
marks by which Bhakti can be detected in a true devotee.
The last 18 Sutras (67 to 84) glorify the great realised souls who are
full of devotion to the Lord.
Narada said, "Your disciple Jaimini has already discussed the problem of
action in the Purva Mimamsa. You have yourself completed the enquiry of the
problem of knowledge in the Uttara Mimamsa. Now you have taken up the problem of
devotion. Its full explanation will be given by you in your Srimad Bhagavatam. I
shall explain Bhakti in the form of Sutras." So saying Narada delivered a
discourse on devotion in 84 aphorisms.
DEVOTION
The path of Bhakti consists of a gradation of steps. The desire for
release from the evil of mortality and the sufferings is its starting point.
Para Bhakti or Higher devotion is its goal. It is Para Bhakti that leads to
Mukti.
Live in the company of saints. Hear the lilas of God. Study the sacred
scriptures. Worship Him first in His several forms as manifested in the world.
Worship any image or picture of the Lord or Guru. Recite His name. Sing His
glories. You will develop devotion.
Devotion is the highest sentiment. Narada has dealt with the subject from
the point of view of sentiment alone. Whereas the Bhakti-Mimamsa of Sandilya is
an enquiry into the philosophy of devotion. The two treatises are companions.
They supplement each other.
The nine modes of Bhakti have each nine varieties. Therefore Saguna Bhakti
becomes eighty-one fold.
By fixing the mind on the Lord through love, hate, fear, friendship, many
have attained God-realisation, e.g., the Gopis through love, Kamsa through fear,
Sisupala through hate, the Vrishnis through relationship.
Bhakti Yoga is the one Yoga which directly appeals to the feelings of man.
Apara Bhakti is lower Bhakti. It is a premature stage in devotion. Mature stage
of subjective experience is known as Para Bhakti. The devotee has ineffable
inner experience of unsurprising bliss and illumination. He has God-realisation.
There are two stages in Apara or lower Bhakti. The first stage is called
Gauna or secondary; the second stage is Mukhya or primary. In Gauna Bhakti there
is the influence of Rajo Guna; in Mukhya Bhakti there is influence of Sattva
Guna. The mind is calm and serene. Meditation becomes firm and steady. The
devotee is in the presence of God. He is conscious of duality.
In Para Bhakti the devotee attains the full grace of the Lord, knowledge
and full illumination. He merges in the Lord; he loses his identity. He becomes
one with the Lord.
Your happiness depends upon the nature of the object on which you set your
heart. The only true object of love is the Lord who is omnipotent, omnipresent
and omniscient and all-merciful.
Love of God or devotion is more a practice than a philosophy. Devotion
dethrones the ego and enthrones the Lord in its place. The climax of love is the
love of God. Service of the saints, association with the saints, study of Bhakti
literature, charity, self-restraint, humility, Japa, Kirtan, prayer-this is the
preparation for the love of God.
NAMAPARADHAS
(Offence against Divine Name)
The Glory of the Names of the Lord is indescribable. A devotee should try
to avoid the sixty-four offences against Divine Name (Namaparadhas)
LIFE OF NARADA
I
Deva Rishi Narada moves about playing on his Veena, singing the praises of
Sri Hari drawing the hearts of people towards God thus radiating joy, love and
peace throughout the afflicted world. Glory to Devarishi Narada!
Narada was the son of a female servant in his former birth. A large number
of saints, sages and Sannyasins came to his village during a certain rainy
season to spend their four months of Chaturmas. Narada was a small child at that
time. His mother engaged him in their service. He was not childish. He gave up
all childish plays. He spoke a very few words. He served them beautifully and
wholeheartedly. He served all his time quietly at their feet. The Mahatmas were
very much pleased with the boy. They were extremely kind to him. As ordered by
them he ate what was left of the food left by them on the leaves. His sins were
destroyed by this act. His heart became pure. He heard the beautiful stories of
Sri Krishna recited by them. He gradually developed Bhakti. His mind became firm
and steady. The Mahatmas gave him special instructions and revealed the secret
of divine knowledge.
The Mahatmas left the village. The boy continued to practise Sadhana. He
did Bhajan.
One day a snake bit his mother and she died. The boy left the village and
went to a dense forest. He sat underneath a Peepul tree on the bank of a river
and meditated on Lord Hari.
The Lord revealed Himself in his heart. The hairs of his body stood erect.
He forgot all about the world and even the consciousness of his own existence.
He was immersed in the ocean of bliss.
Then suddenly the Form of Lord Hari disappeared. The boy was very much
grieved. He again tried to have the vision of the Lord. He heard a voice from
the sky. "O Child! You cannot again get My vision in the present birth. I
revealed Myself to you now in order to increase and strengthen your love towards
Me. You have cultivated strong devotion to Me through the influence of Satsanga
even for a short time. When you leave your present body, you will be a devotee
very near and dear to Me. You will be attached to Me and you will remember
through My grace the incidents of your present birth even after the termination
of this Kalpa."
The boy left the place and moved about in the world singing the glories
and Names of the Lord. He gave up association with the world. In course of time
his body perished. He attained the pure, divine body of a companion of God.
At the end of the Kalpa he entered the heart of Brahma through His breath
when he lay down on the ocean of dissolution, withdrawing the entire creation
within Himself. At the end of a thousand Yugas, he came out from His breath with
Maricha and other Rishis, when Brahma began to re-create the world.
Since then, Narada is moving throughout the three worlds playing on the
Veena, a gift from God Himself. Whenever Narada merges himself in divine love
and sings His sport, that very moment He appears before him.
II
Narada is endowed with the knowledge of all the truths of the Vedas. He
knows Dharma well. He has perfect knowledge of Itihasas and Puranas. He has
knowledge of the facts of the, previous Kalpa. He is a master of music. He is an
eloquent speaker. He possesses a direct vision of all the regions through his
power of Yoga. He creates quarrels for the good of the world. He is a great
teacher of Devotion. He is the very embodiment of devotion.
He advises the demon Andhaka to test the power of Siva's boon on himself.
He advises Kamsa to slay the children of Devaki. He manages to get Ravana
entangled on Vali's tail. He goes as a messenger to Indra from Sri Krishna to
remove his pride by depriving him of the Parijata. These incidents reveal the
greatness of his character.
Various scriptures name Devarishi Narada as the third Avatara of Lord
Hari. In the third chapter of Srimad Bhagavatam which gives the list of 22
incarnations, he comes after Purusha and Varaha.
Narada has been a source of noble and valuable inspiration to those who
have sought him and found him.
Maharishi Vyasa divided the Vedas into four parts for the benefit of the
people at large. He composed the Mahabharata. He wrote the 18 Puranas and yet he
was not quite satisfied. He had no peace of mind. He went to the bank of the
river Saraswati and sat there in a reflective mood.
Narada appeared before him and said "O Maharishi ! In your books you have
not sung the praise of God to the extent you described the other aspects of
Dharma. You have failed to deal at length the Bhagavata Dharma. That is the
reason why you are restless now. Now describe the Lilas of Sri Krishna for the
good of the world. You will enjoy everlasting peace." Sri Vyasa at once began to
write Bhagavatam."
Daksha became very angry. Brahma consoled him. He again procreated 10,000
children called Sabalasvas. They too went to Narayanasaras. They too became
absorbed in God and never returned.
CONTENTS
1. The Nature of Divine Love
2. Definition of Bhakti . . . . . . . . . . . .6
3. Fruits of Bhakti . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11
4. Renunciation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .25
5. Different Definitions of Bhakti . . . . . . .47
6. Supremacy of Devotion . . . . . . . . . . . 65
7. Knowledge and Devotion . . . . . . . . . . 72
8. How to Develop Bhakti . . . . . . . . . . 80
9. Glory of the company of the Wise . . . . . . 93
10. Give up Evil Company . . . . . . . . . . . 98
11. Who Crosses Maya? . . . . . . . . . . . . 104
12. Nature of Prem . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113
NARADA BHAKTI
SUTRAS
The aspirant should have faith in the grace of God. He must have intense
desire to attain God-realisation. He must have deep faith in the scripture and
in the capacity of the Teacher. He must have the capacity to understand. He must
be free from disabilities and must have all possible opportunities and
favourable circumstances. Then alone he is fit to practise Bhakti. Then alone he
will be profited.
Atha, Now: indicates that Narada Rishi is now entering into the exposition
of the nature of Bhakti and the means of attaining it, after having already
expounded the other cults and disciplines of Karma, Janana, etc.
Vyakhyasyamah: This means literally „shall comment upon‟. This work is not
a commentary in the usual sense of the term. It is a commentary on the actual
experiences of the devotees. It is not a mere speculative philosophical
exposition, based on other's experiences. It is the exposition based on the
author's own personal experiences, supported by scriptures.
DEFINITION OF BHAKTI
s:a Sa: That (i.e., Bhakti); t:Ø tu: But; A¡sm:n:Î Asmin: in this;
attachment to God."
The term Bhakti comes from the root "Bhaj", which means "to be attached to
God." Bhajan, worship, Bhakti, Anurag, Prem, Prithi are synonymous terms. Bhakti
is love for love's sake. The devotee wants God and God alone. There is no
selfish expectation here. There is no fear also. Therefore, it is called "Parama
Prem Rupa." Is the son afraid of his father, who is a Sessions Judge? Is the
wife afraid of her husband? So also a devotee entertains the least fear of God.
The fear of retribution vanished in him. He feels, believes, conceives and
imagines that his Ishtam is an Ocean of Love or Prem.
Devotion or Bhakti is exclusive love for God. The devotee wants God and
God alone. He is completely attached to God. He has no attraction or love for
any object in this world. He is absolutely free from all mundane desires. He has
no desire for the enjoyment of the next world. He does not want even Mukti.
Supreme Love does not seek a return. It does not expect a reward. The
lover wants his Beloved alone. The devotee is quite indifferent to the pleasures
of this world. He has no interest in the affairs of this world.
Mark how love develops. First arises faith. Then follows attraction and
after that adoration. Adoration leads to suppression of mundane desires. The
result is single-mindedness and satisfaction. Then grow attachment and supreme
love towards God.
In this type of highest Bhakti all attraction and attachment which one has
for objects of enjoyment are transferred to the only dearest object, viz., God.
This leads the devotee to an eternal union with his Beloved and culminates in
oneness.
Bhakti is divided into two kinds, viz., Apara Bhakti or Gauna Bhakti and
Para Bhakti. Apara Bhakti is the lower or initial stage of devotion of an
aspirant following the path of Bhakti, while Para Bhakti is the highest stage of
Bhakti.
Love grows wildly in the ignorant man's heart. There is a luscious fruit
of love in a corner of the heart, but the entire heart is strewn with thorns of
hatred, jealousy and so many other vicious qualities that the charm of love is
marred. There are the bushes of lust, anger and greed, which hide within them
the wildest animals. Love lies hidden far beneath and far beyond reach. It is as
good as nonexistent. But, in the case of a true devotee of the Lord, this love
has been cultured, and the garden of his heart is cleared of the thorns of
vicious qualities, of the bushes of lust, anger and greed. Love of God which is
the sweetest of fragrances wafts from such a heart.
t:Ø (Tu) is used to differentiate the highest Bhakti which Maharshi Narada
alludes to in this Sutra from the lower type of devotion which is actuated by
ulterior motives and desires or fear of God, etc.
You should know the difference between ordinary love, the love between
wife and husband, children and parents, friends and relations.
The word A¡sm:n:Î (asmin) is used in this Sutra to denote the object of love.
Narada's teaching is non-sectarian. He did not use the word, Brahman, Iswar,
Rama, Krishan, Siva, etc.
c: cha: and,
Devotion is real nectar. It secures freedom from the wheel of births and
deaths. Lord Yama cannot come near a devotee. The devotee attains immortality.
He lives constantly in the presence of God.
Amrita: “A” means "not" and "Mrita" means death. Amrita is that which
bestows immortality.
y:t:Î Yat: which; l:bDv:a Labdhava: having attained; p:Øm:an:Î Puman: man;
es:Dd Siddah: perfect; B:v:et: becomes; Am:àt: Amrita. Immortal; B:v:et: Bhavati:
Puman: The word Puman is specially significant. It means any man. The
practice of Bhakti and the attainment of Mukti are not restricted by any
considerations of caste, creed, colour, sex, or country. Every human being who
has faith, devotion and aspiration can cultivate Bhakti and attain God-
realisation through Bhakti. Even Nandan, Dharma Vyadha, Raidas, Kabir attained
God-realisation. Puranas speak of even animals getting the grace of the Lord.
There is the account of Gajendra.
For a devotee, Siddhis or powers are worthless. He does not care for them.
These are nothing when compared to Divine Love. He rejects even the position of
Indra or Brahma, even Mukti or liberation. His mind is filled with divine
ecstasy. He has realised the whole.
He has realised the essence and totality of all. He has attained the
source and fountain of all. And so he is perfect, immortal and thoroughly
satisfied. He cannot be attracted towards external objects, which are
incomplete, imperfect, defective and are only parts.
A Siddha is a perfect man. He has reached the goal. He has attained God-
realisation. In common parlance the word Siddha denotes a man who is endowed
with various superhuman powers or Siddhis. It is not in any such sense the word
is used here. The sign of a perfect man or Siddha is not the possession of
miraculous powers but the attainment of God-realisation or unity with the
Supreme Being.
Amrito Bhavati: He who has attained God-realisation becomes immortal. He
ever lives in the presence of God. He has his being in God. He has no more
desires and so he will not take any more body or birth. Immortality, Amritatva,
constitutes the essential nature of Bhakti.
He who has the philosopher's stone cares not for little pieces of gold.
Even so a devotee who has reached the fountain-source of everything cares not
for the little objects of this world.
The devotee loves God and serves Him and His creation. He does not strive
consciously for Mukti but God confers Mukti on His devotee unsolicited.
All weakness and Doshas (faults) vanish. People put a question: "How can
we love God whom we have not seen?" Remain in the company of Bhaktas; hear the
Lila of Bhagavan, His Aiswarya (Divine Powers) or Vibhutis, His Madhurya (grace
and beauty); serve Bhaktas; sing His names daily and do Japa of His Mantra; stay
for one year in Ayodhya or Brindavan or Chitrakute or Pandharpur, Banaras or
Ananda Kutir. You will develop love for God.
y:t:Î Yat: which (love of God); )apy: Praapya: having obtained; p:Øm:an:Î puman: (a
desires; n: na: not; Saaðc:et: Sochati: grieves: n: Na: not; ¾ðe\X Dveshti: feels
enmity; n: na: not; rm:t:ð Ramate: rejoices; uts:ahi Utsahi: one who is active
(in one's own interest); n: B:v:et: Na Bhavati: does not become or is not.
Na Kinchit Vanchati: A devotee rises above all earthly wants. His heart is
full of supreme Peace and perfect satisfaction. Therefore, he does not desire
anything else. He is conscious of the unreality and illusory nature of worldly
objects. Hence he does not take any interest in them. His thirst for sensual
pleasure has been quenched for ever by the attainment of God-realisation. His
heart is full now. Kingdom, wealth, power, etc., have no attraction for him.
The devotee who realises God is freed from grief also. Can darkness remain
in the presence of light? How can sorrow manifest when one is immersed in the
Ocean of Bliss and Prem? Grief is a mental creation. It manifests when the mind
is attached to the body and illusory connections. When the mind is obliterated,
when there is self-absorption and self-effacement by merging in the bosom of
God, how can grief approach the devotee? Absolutely impossible.
A devotee hates none. He loves all, serves all and helps all. He is ever
engaged in the good of all beings. He works for the enlightenment and uplift of
the lesser, unfortunate infant souls.
The devotee does not hate anything. Hatred is due to ignorance. How can
the devotee hate anybody when he sees Lord Hari in everything? He feels that the
world is a manifestation of the Lord and all movements and actions are His Lila.
He has no Ghrina or dislike for fecal matter, dirt, Chandala, scavenger,
cobbler, beggar, prostitute, thief, etc. He says, "I see everywhere my sweet
Lord. It is Hari who is playing the part of prostitute, thief, dacoit,
scavenger." He has an all-embracing, all inclusive, exalted mental state. This
cannot be adequately described in words. It has to be felt. Mira, Gouranga,
Hafiz, Tulasidas, Kabir, Ramadas all enjoyed this state. Tulasidas says,
"Sitaramamaya sab jaga jani karou pranam jori juga pani"-Knowing the whole world
to be the manifestation of Sita and Rama, I prostrate to all with hands bowed in
worship. "
In Purusha Sukta you will find a description of the Purusha: "The Purusha
has one thousand heads, one thousand eyes, one thousand feet." There is an echo
of these ideas in the Gita, Ch. XIII -13. "Everywhere that hath hands and feet,
everywhere eyes, heads and mouths: all-hearing. He dwelt in the world enveloping
all." Lord Krishna gives advice to Uddhava and prescribes an easy way for
reaching Him. "Know, Uddhava, that Brahmin, Chandala, ass, dog, king, beggar are
all my forms. When you meet any object, do prostration and feel My presence."
Nam Dev said to the dog; "O Vittala, my dear, in the form of dog, do not run
away with the dry bread. It will affect your soft throat. Pray, let me apply
ghee to the bread." He ran with ghee in a cup to the dog. Sri Ramakrishna
Paramahamsa prostrated before an out-caste girl: "O Mother Kali! I see Thee in
this girl". Pravahari Baba prostrated before a thief with a bag of utensils: "O
thief Narayana! Pray, accept these things. I never knew that thief Narayana was
in my cottage." Ekanath, a Maharashtra Bhakta, gave his ring voluntarily to the
thief when he entered the house. "O thief! take this ring also. Your Kartavya
(duty) is to steal the things. Thou art Krishna. Keep up this Lila." Have you
understood the sublime state of these exalted Bhaktas who have a new angle of
vision? A day will come to you also. Exert. Struggle.
Na Utsahi Bhavati : A devotee does not work to promote his own self-
interest but works for the good of all without any sense of ego or of any
feeling of external compulsion, in a spirit of service to God. As he is not
prompted by ego, as he does not wish for fruits, his actions are no actions at
all.
He does not work for his personal pleasure and profit. He has no
enthusiasm for selfish or worldly pursuits. He is not affected by success and
failure.
When the devotee has the fountain of all bliss by his side, how can there
be any desire in him for the enjoyment of worthless and trivial sensual
pleasure?
How can a trace of earthly desire remain when God, the embodiment of bliss
is attained by the devotee? Darshan of God comes in various ways, viz. in
dreams, in physical form as ordinary man, in physical form with four hands with
conch, mace, discus and lotus-flower in the hands, in the form of cosmic
consciousness which Arjuna had, in the form of Hiranyagarbha consciousness or
full Knowledge of Brhama Loka, etc. Note how Arjuna expresses his experiences of
cosmic consciousness. "Nor source, nor midst, nor end; infinite force,
unnumbered arms, the Sun and Moon Thine eyes; I see Thy face, as sacrificial
fire, blazing its splendor burneth up the worlds." God some times gives Darshan
to encourage His devotee by coming down in Viman (celestial car). Akasa Vani,
dazzling lights in space or sky are some other encouragements which God gives to
push His devotees on the path vigorously and rapidly. The devotee should not
stop his Sadhana on account of false Tushti (satisfaction) when he gets His
Darshan. He should ever rest in God. He should have perfect Nishta in God always
(Svaroop-sthiti). He should not leave off his practices till he merges himself
in the Lord in Maha-Bhava or Tanmaya state.
Give up this unquenchable thirst for sensual pleasure, woman, money and
worldly prosperity, which is the greatest obstacle in the path of devotion, and
turn your mind towards God. Here is an inexhaustible and imperishable spiritual
wealth which no dacoit can rob; a Divine Bliss which is not mixed with fear or
pain.
II
Now everything becomes natural, effortless and automatic. Effort is
necessary only as long as the ego or the feeling of separateness persists. When
these are removed and when the Light of the Divine has descended into the
devotee, he puts forth no more effort. This is confirmed by the Lord in the
Bhagavad Gita (vide chapter II-59). "The objects of the sense turn away from the
abstinent man leaving the longing behind but his longing also turns away on
seeing the Supreme."
Grief results from attachment and desire. When the devotee does not desire
anything, not even Liberation, will he grieve for the loss of any possession? On
the other hand, he will willingly renounce everything, for the sake of attaining
God and His Love.
When there is neither craving nor grief, there can exist neither elation
nor hatred-for these two pairs follow each other. Hatred and sense-delight are
rooted in desire, its frustration or its fulfillment respectively. When the
Bhakta is always immersed in the thought of his Beloved (God) and sees Him alone
in everything and in every being, how can he hate anybody? And, when there is
nothing greater than God, how can anything other than God cause elation in him?
When the devotee has attained Eternal Satisfaction in his Love, the
impulse for attaining something else disappears and with it the desire to
perform actions for the achievement of any personal gains. Only as long as there
is a sense of imperfection can there be a motive for action. In Divine Love the
Bhakta achieves Perfection. He sees the Lord in all, and all in God. Therefore
he ceases to perform actions of his own volition. A similar idea is expressed in
the Bhagavad Gita, "He who neither rejoices nor hates, nor grieves, nor desires,
renouncing good and evil, full of devotion, he is dear to Me." (Chapter XII-17).
Therefore, attain that Love of God in this very instant. All your sorrows,
desires, cravings, fear and anxieties will come to an end. You will become
perfect and you will enjoy eternal satisfaction. You will be immersed in
Perennial Bliss.
y:t:Î Yat: which (God); w:tvaa Jnatva: having known; p:Øm:an:Î Puman: (A person) m:¶aH
Mattah: Intoxicated; overjoyed; Bavaeta Bhavati: Becomes; (Iva: as it were)
In this Sutra the author says, "By knowing That" -by "That" he means God.
But in the previous Sutra he says, "On obtaining That" - and there he means
love.
Matto Bhavati: The devotee gets thoroughly intoxicated with the divine
love. He spends his days and nights in singing the praises of the Lord and in
hearing His glory. He remains merged in the Lord, also he is not conscious of
the external world.
He now laughs, now weeps, now cries, now sings aloud and now begins to
dance in divine ecstasy. Through excess of joy he gets horripilation. Sometimes
he becomes silent and sits motionless like a statue.
This is the state of identity or union with the Lord. The devotee loses
his separate existence. He has no will of his own as he has already surrendered
it completely to the Lord. He is simply an instrument in the hands of the Lord.
One of the Nayanars burnt up his hair on the head when he was not able to
get oil for burning the light in the temple.
Another cut off the nose of a queen who had plucked up a flower and smelt
it when the devotee was making a garland of flowers to be offered to Siva. The
queen's husband came and cut off her hand which he said had committed the first
offence, because it had picked up the flowers.
A Nayanar or devotee rubbed his elbow on the sandal stone when he could
not get any more sandal wood for the use of Lord Siva.
A devotee who was drunk the wine of divine love cannot observe the
conventional rules of propriety. He is not a slave to the conventional laws of
society and scriptures. The God-intoxicated devotee is not conscious of himself.
Stabdha bhavati: When a devotee acts, it is God who acts through him. A
devotee is inwardly quite peaceful and serene when serves the world out of love
and mercy.
Atmaramo bhavati: The devotee grows into the likeness of the Lord and
therefore shares with Him His perfection and partakes of His infinite bliss and
joy. He realised the Atman within and beholds the Atman in every creature.
When one is happy in his own Self, then alone he becomes independent. If
one depends for his happiness on perishable objects, he begins to weep when the
centre of his pleasure is withdrawn. The husband weeps when his wife or son
dies, when the bank in which he has deposited his money fails. Objects that are
conditioned in time, space and causation are Vinasi, perishable. They cannot
give, therefore, eternal happiness to human beings. So in the Gita Bhagavan Sri
Krishna says: "The delights that are contact-born, they are verily wombs of
pain, for they have beginning and ending, O Kaunteya, not in them the wise may
rejoice. Ch. V-22. That which from the union of the senses with their objects at
first is as nectar, but in the end is like venom, is Rajasic Sukha, not real
happiness. But he whose Self is unattached to external contacts and findeth joy
in the Self, having the self harmonised with the Eternal by Yoga, enjoys
happiness exempt from decay (Ch. XVIII-38 and V 21). "The man who rejoiceth in
the Self, with the Self is satisfied, and is content in the Self, for him verily
there is nothing to do." Ch. III-17. Nothing can shake a man who rejoices in the
Self (Atmarati); who is satisfied in the Self (Atma tripta); and who is
contented in the Self (Atma Santushti); and who plays in the Self (Atma Kreeda).
It is Vasana (subtle desire) that draws a man outside towards external
objects. Avidya (ignorance) has got two forces, the Avarana or veiling power,
the Sakti that screens the man from his real Satchitananda Svarupa behind and
the Vikshepa Sakti that makes the mind and senses outgoing. The restlessness of
the mind is due to desire and Vikshepa Sakti. Avidya clouds the understanding
and produces intoxication, destroys the intellect and makes the intellect
perverted, stony and barren. Therefore, man always thinks that he can get
pleasure in external objects, mistakes the body, children and wife as Atma and
takes the unreal world as real. When lust manifests, the intellect becomes blind
and the most intelligent man becomes an easy prey to passion. A worldly-minded
man vainly searches for his happiness in outside perishable objects. The idea
that he should dive deep into the chambers of his heart-by collecting all the
dispersed rays of the mind, and withdrawing the out-going senses-and meditate on
God, never strikes him. He never believes in devotion, concentration and
meditation. He cannot imagine of a pure, unalloyed happiness that is independent
of external objects, although he enjoys the bliss of the Self daily at night. He
foolishly thinks: "If I have a son, if I have a garden, I will be happy." The
tendency of the mind is such that it tries to seek happiness outside in
perishable objects. This is due to the force of Avidya.
But the devotee gets the grace of the Lord. His intellect is calm and
tranquil. All the outgoing energies become transmuted into spiritual energy. He
gets help and strength from Mantra Sakti, Sadhana Sakti and Upasana Shakti.
Sattva flows from the feet of the Lord towards his mind. All desires melt away.
The Vikshepa Sakti is destroyed. He has the firm, unshakable conviction that the
real happiness is in God. His mind is always inward. He has Antarmukh vritti.
The senses do not wander about. They get absorbed in the mind and the mind gets
absorbed in God. He is ever peaceful. He enjoys the happiness within. He
delights in the bliss of God. He, therefore, stands adamant even amidst grave
troubles and calamities. So Rishi Narada uses the expressions "Stabdho Bhavati."
The devotee becomes serene and “Atmaaramo bhavati” (happy in the bliss of the
Self).
Sri Ramakrishna Paramahamsa remained in the thick jungle for four days
without taking any food when he was under this divine intoxication. Words can
hardly describe the nature of this divine intoxication. One has to feel it
oneself. Even if there is a mild intoxication it will give immense strength to
the devotee to face the difficulties in the battle of life: Therefore Narada
says, "Matto Bhavati."
RENUNCIATION
s:a Sa: it; that (i.e., Bhakti described as Paramapremarupa in Sutra 2); n: na:
Devotion to the Lord is not certainly for one's own gain. The basis of
Bhakti is self-restraint. Renunciation is the very essence of this devotional
love. Divine love has no element of desire in it.
Devotion cannot co-exist with desire of any kind, not even the desire for
liberation. The devotee wants God and God alone and His Service. He does not
accept even when offered the five forms of Mukti.
Kamayamana: It means "of the nature of Kama." "Kama" is not only sexual
lust but desire in general. Bhakti Yoga is not practiced for any selfish purpose
whatsoever. The devotee does not want prosperity, power or even release from
pain and sufferings. The basis of devotion or divine love is self-denial.
That is the reason why Lord Krishna says in the Gita: "Enveloped is wisdom
by this constant enemy of the wise in the form of desire, which is insatiable as
a flame. The senses, the mind and the reason are said to be its seat; by these,
enveloping wisdom, it bewilders the dweller in the body. Therefore, O best of
the Bharatas, mastering first the senses do thou slay this thing of sin,
destructive of wisdom and knowledge. Thus understanding Him greater than the
Reason restraining the self by the self, slay thou, O mighty-armed, the enemy in
the form of desire, difficult to overcome. When a man abandoneth, O Partha, all
the desires of the heart, and is satisfied in the self, by the Self, then is he
called stable in mind." Chapt. III - 39, 40, 41, 43. Chapt. II - 55.
First annihilate Asakti, then the Kamana (longing) will die by itself.
Eventually preference also will be destroyed. When the attraction towards
external objects ceases, then there yet remains Trishna (thirsting for objects).
This is the most dangerous enemy of devotion. When the attraction towards
objects, external as well as internal, ceases without any veil, then it is
termed Mukta (freed) Trishna. The mere thought of longing that such and such a
thing should come to oneself is Trishna. It is this strong chain of Trishna that
you should unshackle yourself from, if you want to grow in Bhakti. Cut off the
Trishna-tantu (the thread of sense-hankering) by the sword of Vairagya. This is
"Nirodha" or control of desire.
Control of desires does not mean intense fight with desires. The more you
fight with desires, the stronger and more intense they will become. Do not add
further fuel to the fire of desire. Reduce your activities. Cultivate
dispassion. Learn to discriminate. Pray. Sing. Do Japa. The desires will
gradually lose very much of their force.
He sees nothing else but God. He speaks of nothing else but God. He does
not listen to anything. He has no craving or desire. Sometimes his voice is
choked. He sits silently. How can he work at this stage?
Nirodha: The word Nirodha is not used here in the ordinary way as
"restraint". It is used in a special sense, viz., Nyasa or „renunciation‟; or
„dedication‟.
Even the distinction of sacred and secular (worldly) duty vanishes for a
realised devotee. Every work is sacred to him. Every work is a sacred offering
unto the Lord. Every work is an expression of his love for God.
When you surrender your mind, ego, body, to the Lord you will realise your
oneness with the Lord.
A devotee realises that the Lord alone is acting through him, that the
Lord alone has given him intelligence and opportunities, etc. He does not take
any credit for himself. He attributes everything to Lord‟s grace.
A worldly man forgets all these and allows his ego assert itself at every
step.
Your real enemy is your ego. Slay this ego, the enemy of devotion and
peace. Be indifferent to its persuasions and promptings. Place it as an offering
at the-lotus feet of the Lord. This is the real flower that can be offered to
the Lord.
The child thinks of the mother and mother alone. A passionate husband
thinks of his wife and wife alone. A greedy man thinks of his money and money
alone. Even so the devotee should entertain in his heart the picture of his
Ishtam and Ishtam alone. Then he can have Darshan of God easily. Lord Krishan
says to Arjuna, "He who constantly thinketh upon Me, not thinking ever of
another, by him I am easily reached, O Partha, by this ever-harmonised Yogi."
Chapt. VIII-14.
There is supreme joy and bliss in Udaseenata. You will find in Mundaka
Upanishad, "Two birds, inseparable companions, dwell upon one and the same tree.
One of them eats the sweet fruit, the other looks on without eating. On the same
tree, the Jiva, immersed in worldliness and bewildered, grieves on account of
helplessness. But when he sees the other, the Lord, who is adored by all and His
glory, then his grief passes away." Here one bird is the Jiva, the other bird is
the Lord. The tree is this body. Udaseenata destroys all sorts of attachments
and desires. Attachment is death. Udaseenata is eternal life. Lord Krishna says,
"An Udaseen (indifferent man) is dear to me." Chapt. XII -16. Just as the
spectators of a cricket or foot-ball match enjoy the game nicely, so also an
Udaseena who is quite unconcerned with the world enjoys as a witness of this
world-dharma and passes beyond grief. In the Gita you will find: "Unattachment,
absence of self-identification with son, wife or home and constant balance of
mind in wished for and unwished for events"-This is declared to be the Wisdom.
Chapt. XIII -11.
The devotee knows no one else than his Beloved Lord. The Lord is all in
all for him. The Lord is the sole refuge for him. He lives for the Lord and Lord
alone. He works for Him alone.
The Lord is his own support, his only strength, his only hope and his only
object of faith. Just as the eyes of the Chatak bird are fixed on the cloud, so
also his eyes are fixed on his Beloved Lord alone.
The devotee does not conceive the existence of any object other than his
Beloved Lord. How then will he seek the shelter of any other person or object.
He sees nothing else besides the Lord.
All objects in this world are perishable. Nothing other than God can
protect one from the troubles of this world. Therefore, the devotee abandons
everything in this world and depends upon God and God alone, who is eternal, who
is omnipotent, and who is all merciful.
To the chaste and devoted wife, no male except her Lord exists even in
dream. Even so for a sincere devotee no object or person except his beloved Lord
exists even in dream. He is absorbed in the Lord, the object of his love and
devotion.
In the eighth aphorism we have been taught to direct all our energies of
thought and action towards God. Now we are again enjoined to respect to some
extent the dictates of religion and morality. Here seems, therefore, to arise
some confusion. This is only superficial. Only selfish activities must be given
up, in order to get rid of desires. All works which can help to cultivate
devotion must be regularly practised. There must be active co-operation with the
divine plan. This Sutra explains the indifference to obstacles of Bhakti
referred to in Sutra 9.
You must have faith in the existence of Gad when you perform sacrifices,
penances and charity. You must do all actions for His sake. Then alone it is
beneficial. Then alone it will endure.
The Gita, Bhagavatam and all sacred scriptures are guides to the conduct
of a devotee. The teacher will interpret the sacred scriptures and guide the
devotees.
A devotee does not do any action which is not pleasing to God, which does
not help in the growth of devotion, which goes against the will of his Lord.
The devotee does all actions which are pleasing to the Lord till he
attains God-realisation. He abandons activities that are prohibited by the
scriptures such as theft, adultery, taking animal food and liquor. He abandons
all selfish actions. But he does Nitya (obligatory) and Naimittika (incidental)
in strict conformity with the procedure laid down in the Vedas without any
expectation of fruits.
Lord Krishna says: "If also thou art not equal to constant practice, be
intent on My service; performing actions for My sake, thou shalt attain
perfection." Ch. XII -12. "Acts of sacrifice, gift and charity should not be
relinquished, but should be performed; sacrifice, gift and also austerity are
the purifiers of the intelligent." Ch. XVIII-5.
These rituals purify the heart and prepare the ground of Antahkarana for
the growth of devotion. These actions should be performed without attachment and
without expectation of fruit. The sacrifice which is offered by men without
desire for fruit as enjoined by the ordinances, under the firm belief that
sacrifice is a duty, is pure. The three kinds of austerities, viz., physical,
verbal and mental Tapas prescribed in the seventeenth chapter of the Gita purify
the heart rapidly. They are: -
1. Physical:
Worship given to the Gods, to the twice-born, to the teachers and to the
wise, purity, straight-forwardness, continence and harmlessness are called the
austerity of the body.
2. Verbal:
3. Mental:
This threefold austerity, performed by men with the utmost faith, without
desire for fruit, harmonised, is said to be pure.
Pradosha Vrita, Ekadasi Vrita are observances that propitiate Lord Siva
and Lord Hari respectively. They should also be observed rigidly.
teachings.
Some aspirants foolishly imagine that they have attained perfection and
that they are above the laws of scriptures. They do not observe the laws. They
break them. They are deluded souls. They will get hopeless downfall.
The devotee must be steady. He must have first intellectual conviction and
then firmness in living up to the ideal. He must practise the principles. He
must live up to the principles which he knows by conviction are essential for
his happiness, spiritual evolution and God-realisation.
Men of realisation should follow the scriptures in their actual life. They
should set an example by their own life and teachings. Only then can the
ordinary man adopt them for guidance in his life.
Lord Krishna says in the Gita, "But the ignorant, faithless, doubting self
goeth to destruction, neither this world, nor that beyond, nor happiness, is
there for the doubting self." (IV 40). "Therefore let the scriptures be thy
authority, in determining what ought to be done or what ought not to be done.
Knowing what has been declared by the ordinances of the scriptures, thou
oughtest to work in this world." (XVI-24).
The mind should not be allowed to have its own ways. He who follows the
injunctions of the Sastras will evolve quickly. He will have no uneasiness in
mind. He will be cheerful and fearless. He will have satisfaction. He will feel
that he is on the right path and progressing rapidly in spirituality. He will
feel the nearness of God. He will have peace of mind.
Scriptures are infallible. Vedas have come out from the mouth of God. They
are revelations. They are traditionally handed down from Rishis and seers to
their disciples in succession (Parampara). So long as there is world, there are
scriptures and teachers to guide the people in the path of Truth and
Righteousness. The number of teachers may be few in the iron age but they do
exist. Books are not eternal. But the ideas in the Vedas are eternal.
It does not require much wisdom and reasoning to have a firm conviction in
the existence of God. I do not know why these rationalists, socialists and
materialistic scientists are unnecessarily racking their brains, fighting and
doubting. It is really a great pity! It is their stiff egoism that makes them
deny the existence of God. Whether they accept His existence or not, He is
shining from eternity to eternity. The sun is always there whether the owls
accept the existence of the sun or not. There are gross impurities in their
minds which screen and cloud their understanding. There are sins in their
Antahkarana which make their intellects perverted. They will have to wait for
some time for grasping.
If the devotee who has made some spiritual progress is not careful, if he
is not observing the rules of the scriptures, he may easily relapse into past
habits.
"He who ignores the injunctions of the scriptures and follows the
promptings of desires can neither attain perfection, nor happiness, nor the
supreme state." Gita XVI-23.
What may have been useful in the past may not be useful in course of time,
under other circumstances and surroundings. There arises necessities for many
readjustments in the scriptures. Realised persons should test the scriptures in
the light of their own spiritual experiences. They should prune away
superfluities and excrescences and remould if necessary the rules to suit the
capacity of the people. Then alone the scriptures will be protected (Sastra
Rakshanam).
Maya is very powerful. Mysterious is the power of Moha and desire! That is
the reason why Lord. Krishna says: "O son of Kunti, the excited senses of even a
wise man, though he be striving, impetuously carry away his mind. Such of the
roving senses as the mind yieldeth to, that hurries away the understanding, just
as the gale hurries away a ship upon the waters." Chapt.II-60, 67.
You are all aware how the Rishi Visvamitra of great Tapas became a victim
to the influence of the celestial nymph. Even Lord Buddha had to face Mara. This
world is full of temptations. There is fear of fall at every moment. A beginner,
a Tyro, is unable to resist temptations. He falls a prey to its influence quite
readily. The Sadhaka must be very, very careful. He should observe the
injunctions of the Sastras. They pave a long way in keeping him from falling. He
should not test his spiritual strength at the very outset when he had made a
little progress only. Reaction may set in. The Indriyas will revolt. The mind
will become furious. He will become a victim to passion. Even at the present
moment, such instances of Yoga-bhrashtas are not lacking. When one is put to
test he fails. Jaimini was tried by his Guru, Sri Vedavyasa. He failed in his
Brahmacharya. Physical control alone will not suffice. No evil thoughts should
arise in the mind. There must not be any unholy thrill or unholy vibration in
the mind, even. This is the highest standard to purity. The Gita says, "Who
sitteth, controlling the organs of action, but dwelling in his mind on the
objects of the senses, that bewildered man is called a hypocrite." Cha. III-6.
Some foolish young Sadhakas do some Sadhana for four or five years in
Himalayan caves, see some dazzling lights during meditation, hear some anahat
sounds in the ears and think they are realised souls. They enter the world
quickly for preaching, and mix with the house-holders freely and get a hopeless
downfall rapidly. What you have gained by rigid Sadhana in twelve years will be
lost in twelve seconds if you mix promiscuously with householders and if you do
not take proper precautions. You should never come out to the plains till you
attain Brahma or Brahma-Sthiti, till you become a full-blown Yogi or Jnani.
Therefore adhere to the injunctions of the Sastras till you develop
supreme devotion. The observances will drop by themselves when you are
established in highest devotion.
la<ka Lokah: social practices, social customs and usages; Aepa Api: also;
t:av:dÏ tavad; that much, to that extent; Ova Eva: only; eknt:Ø kintu. But;
dressing, sleep, exercise); t:Ø tu: but, on the other hand; AaSarirDaarNaavaeD:
a-saria-dharanavadhi: as long as one wears this body.
Sarira Dharana: This means not mere existence but preservation of health.
One cannot serve God and humanity without good health.
The extent to which the devotee may take liberties with existing rules, as
far as necessary for saving the society (Lokarakshnam).
He will have to conform to those social rules which are essential for the
preservation of the safety of the society.
Lakshanani: marks.
No two minds are constituted exactly alike and so there is room for
difference of opinion and variety in the description of the same experiences.
Differences in description do not point to differences in the experiences
itself.
Now let us examine the experiences expressed about Bhakti by some well
known saints. In the Sivanandalahari, Sri Sankara speaks of Bhakti as the
sticking of thoughts to the feet of the Lord permanently, just as a needle
sticks to the magnet, the seed to the Ankola tree, a virtuous wife to her
husband or a creeper to a tree.
In Devi Bhagavatam, supreme love is compared to oil poured from one vessel
to another (Tailadharavat). There should not be any break in the regular
succession of thoughts about God.
Prahlada prays that the love which the worldly people have for the objects
be turned into Bhakti by being directed towards God.
Thus there are different views. These views are different on account of
the differences in which the divine love is experienced by devotees who are in
different stages of development or evolution and also in different moods or
states.
When the devotee develops attachment for worship of God, his mind will
automatically withdraw itself from the objects of the world.
Those who perform worship of God attain the Supreme eternal and blissful
abode of God.
The devotee establishes identity with the Absolute through rigorous and
constant meditation. This is the highest form of worship.
The worship is offered to the Lord within us. This is also internal
worship. Internal worship or Manasic Pooja is more powerful than the external
worship with flowers, etc. Bheema did Manasic pooja. It was more powerful than
the external worship done by Arjuna.
Poosalan Nayanar, one of the Tamil saints out of the sixty-three Tamil
Saints who are adored in all Siva temples, mentally constructed a temple for
Siva in his village, Tiruninravur. It took for him three years to construct the
temple mentally. He fixed also mentally the date on which the Kumbhabhishekam
ceremony was to be conducted. Lord Siva attended the ceremony.
Anuraga: Anuraga means `intense attachment to the Lord. The word „anuraga‟
ordinarily means only mere love but in Bhakti scriptures it means the love that
arises out of the recognition of the divinity and splendour of God after
realisation.
Prahlada says, "O Hari! May not the ceaseless flow of love and attachment
leave my heart, while I am constantly meditating upon Thee." (Vishnu Purana-
1.20.19). Devotion cometh and goeth in the beginning. When it is fully ripe, the
devotee has intense attachment to the lotus feet of the Lord. Even for the
infinitesimal part of a second his mind does not stir from the point or Lakshya.
This is Anuraga.
kT:aede\vaet: g:g:üH /17/
kT:aed\:Ø Katha-adishu: in holy talks (of Lords glory and greatness) and the
like (Anuraga : devotion) ; Eet: iti thus; g:g:ü Gargah: sage Garga (manyati-
thinks).
The stories of the incarnations of God are most elevating, inspiring and
soul-stirring. They instill devotion in the hearts of the hearers. There is a
mysterious and marvellous charm in the stories pertaining to Avataras. A sincere
devotee loses himself in the stories of Lord Rama or Lord Krishna.
Hearing the stories of the Lord removes the impurities of the mind and
leads to God-realisation ultimately.
Lord Krishna says in the Gita, "With their hearts fixed on Me and their life
absorbed in Me, constantly discoursing and conversing with one another about Me,
they are contented, and they rejoice. (Chapter X. 9).
Narada always goes about singing the glories of the Lord in ecstasy.
Gauranga immersed himself in Sankirtan.
enjoyment of bliss in the Atman; Eet: Iti: Thus; Saa¡Ndly:: Sandilya: sage
The sage Sandilya holds that it must be without being opposed to the
delight in the Atman.
Sandilya is of the opinion that "These are Bhakti insofar as they do not
clash with the contemplation of the Self."
Whatever draws the mind away from God can never be favourable to the
culture of devotion. On the contrary, everything which relates to God and holds
Him constantly before your minds eyes, strengthens and deepens the flow of
devotion.
Remember that the enjoyment of the objects is not opposed to the enjoyment
of the real bliss in the Atman and that sensual pleasure is a reflection or
infinitesimal part of the supreme bliss of Atman.
God is an embodiment of bliss. The devotee who always dwells in God must
enjoy the bliss of God. There is always divine aura and bloom in his face. The
eyes sparkle and glitter with Divine effulgence. Those who surround the devotee
experience the bliss, because he radiates joy all around (vide Sutra 6). If a
devotee is always morose and unhappy, if his countenance is cheerless, if he is
peevish, there is surely some error in his Sadhana. He is not enjoying the bliss
of the Self. Ananda is a very important sign of devotion. It is a fundamental
sign of a jivanmukta too.
n:ardst:Ø t:dep:üt:aeK:l:ac:artaa tae¾smarN< parmavy:akÙlat:ðet: /19/
n:rdH Naradah : Devarishi Narada; t:Ø Tu: however, in distinction from others;
Narada has in the above three Sutras given us the ideas of Vyasa, Garga
and Sandilya. In this Sutra he is giving his own opinion.
When the devotee lives solely for his Lord then he is a real Bhakta. The
devotee becomes extremely restless and miserable at the slightest lapse in the
remembrance of God. This is the teaching of Narada.
Narada has no quarrel with the definitions of Bhakti given by Vyasa, Garga
and Sandilya. It is certainly proper and necessary to worship God, to sing His
praises and to love God as the soul of all. Narada's definition of Bhakti covers
the definitions of Bhakti given by Vyasa, Garga and Sandilya and is complete in
every way. It is a comprehensive definition. It points out the very essence of
Bhakti.
Pooja, narrations, etc., are all inferior to that kind of devotion which
Narada describes in this Sutra. In Pooja and narrations the devotee does not
surrender his all.
In self-surrender there is the effacement of the ego. Any selfless work
performed without egoism, with the attitude of self-surrender has a real place
in devotional or spiritual life. It is a real offering to the Lord. God is
pleased immensely.
Asty:ðv:m:ðv:m:Î /20/
Sutra 20. Astyevamevam.
There are such and such instances. (Examples do
exist of such perfect expression of Bhakti. So it is. So
it is.)
Ov:ö Ov:m:Î Evam evam : such and such, thus and thus; Udaharanam : example) ;
Although there have been great devotees like Sri Suka, Uddhava, Valmiki
and others, Narada mentions the illiterate women of Vraja, as examples of the
highest devotion. They played with Sri Krishna and identified themselves with
Him in complete devotion.
They cared not for family tradition, reputation and personal comfort in
order to live in perfect devotion to Lord Krishna. They said, "Wherever we look,
we find Shyama, in the dark rain cloud, in the black pupils of our eyes, in the
dark Tamal tree leaves, in the blue waters of Jumna, in the blue sky, etc."
The Gopis were the crest jewels among the devotees of the Lord. The love
of the Gopis to the Lord cannot be adequately described in words. They dedicated
their bodies, minds, possessions, souls, and their all to the Lord. They always
sang the Lords glories with their voices choked with emotion.
Lord Krishna spoke to them, "You have cut all domestic ties for my sake. I
cannot repay the debt of yours by serving you even for the life time of a
celestial being. Please relieve Me from this liability out of your own
generosity."
The Lord says, "The Gopis have given themselves up to Me, their heart and
soul. They think that I am their life. They have abandoned all their closest
relatives for My sake. I ever support those who cast aside all worldly pleasures
for My sake." Bhagavata Chapter X-46, verse 4.
The secret of Rasaleela can only be understood by pure souls who are free
from passion. Persons with a pure heart can understand the pure divine love of
Gopis. Gopis were exalted beings. They should not be judged by human standards.
The Vaishnava saints got their inspiration from this love of the Gopis.
Nimbarka, Jayadeva, Gauranga and Vallabha founded their theology on this
Brindavana-Lila.
The Gopis surrendered all their actions at the lotus feet of Lord Krishna. They
experienced acute agony if they missed His presence even for a moment. When they
heard the sweet, melodious flute of their beloved they left their houses while
milking the cows. With minds absorbed in Krishna they rushed forth to where
their lover was without taking notice of each other. Some did not wait to see
the boiling of the milk. Some did not take down boiled wheat from the oven. Some
were serving their husbands and some were taking their own food. But they all
left their work half-finished. They gave up their household duties, with clothes
and ornaments all in disorder, they hurriedly went to Krishna. When Krishna
disappeared they asked the trees if they had seen their lover. They enquired of
the creepers, the earth and the deer.
t:*a:ep: n: m:ahatmyaw:naevasm:àty:p:va:dH /22/
The Gopis danced in the moonlight and played with Sri Krishna and yet they
were not unconscious of His divinity, His Omniscience and Omnipotence even for a
second. They recognised Him as the soul of the universe and also as their own
Atma.
The play of the Gopis is a lesson for the worldly minded persons whose
hearts are filled with passion to rise above passion by listening to the divine
and holy stories of Lord Krishna and Gopis of Brindavan. These are allegories
which contain profound spiritual truths.
The author of the stories which depict the Leelas of Lord Krishna is the
holy sage Vyasa and the narrator is his son, Sri Suka Deva, the greatest sage
and seer. Lord Krishna was a child. So there cannot be any tinge of unholiness
in the Leelas, which is attributed by some ignorant, dull-witted, passionate,
foolish, worldly-minded, sensuous, worthless persons, who are on a level with
animals in deep carnal, brutal instincts.
The Rishis of Dandaka forest wanted to embrace Lord Rama. Lord Rama said, "You
will be born as Gopis of Brindavan. You will embrace Lord Krishna who is no
other than my own Self." This is the cause for Rasaleela.
"Tatra api. Even there." Even though the Gopis had physical attachment to
Lord Krishna, the attachment was of the nature of supreme devotion. It was
perfectly taintless too.
The Gopis were absolutely unselfish. They were not jealous. All the Gopis
were united to please Lord Krishna by their service. If the love was of a
selfish type, no Gopi would have tolerated Krishna's loving another Gopi.
The Gopis did not seek a human lover but the Lord Himself.
Why does a man undergo miseries and sufferings? Because he has forgotten God
owing to the influence of Avidya or Maya. That devotee in whom there is descent
of His grace can never forget Him even for a second. Try to remember the Lord
along with every breath, inspiratory and expiratory. Keep the Gita always in
your pocket and a Japa Maala on your neck. Repeat His name always. Be in the
company of Bhaktas. Study the Bhagavata or the Ramayana or the Gita daily. Then
you cannot forget Him.
The love of Gopis was saturated with the knowledge of the Divine glory. It
was of a very pure nature. It was Shuddha Prem.
The relation of the Gopis with Sri Krishna is liable to be misunderstood
as something physical by the sensually minded. Narada warns the students of
Bhakti against mistaking the highest form of Divine Love for base passion.
The Gopis were in a drunken state. They were God intoxicated. They were
unconscious of their earthly existence. They were drowned in the ocean of Divine
Bliss. The mind and senses ceased functioning. The external objects did not
produce any impression on their minds.
Divine Love is true and pure. All love other than that for God is
unlawful. To love any creature as a creature and not as divinity embodied in it
is unlawful. Impure selfish love taints the heart of man.
They derived immense happiness from this act of service. They had no idea
of any sensual enjoyment. Sensuality is selfish passion. It seeks gratification
through others, but pure, divine love seeks to make the Beloved happy and to
derive happiness from the happiness of the latter. The desire for gratification
of one's own senses is Kama or sensuality. The object of kama is self-
gratification, while Prema or pure love has the happiness of Sri Krishna for its
object. The Gopis did not care for their own happiness. The happiness of Sri
Krishna is the purpose of all their activities. They renounced all comforts, all
worldly duties, etc., in order to worship Sri Krishna and make Him happy. There
was no trace of Kama or sensuality in the Gopis. Their love was exceedingly
pure, divine and transcendent.
They surrendered all their possessions to Sri Krishna. They offered their
body, mind, intellect, wealth, youth and life itself. They were very restless if
they forget Sri Krishna even for a second. They understood the supreme greatness
and glory of Sri Krishna. They rejoiced in the happiness of Krishna. Their
happiness depended only on His happiness. The exalted state of the Gopis is
indescribable!
In divine love the devotee sacrifices everything unto the Lord. There is a
sense of self-forgetfulness. There is no trace of selfishness. The devotee does
not at all care for his own happiness. He is willing to court suffering in order
to make his Beloved happy.
In mercenary love, there cannot be any real happiness between the two, the
lover and beloved. If the husband is in a dying condition, the wife takes the
bank pass book and walks to her mother's house quietly. If the husband loses his
job for some time, the wife shows wry faces, speaks harsh words and does not
serve him properly with any love. This is selfish love. There is no real
affection from the core of the heart. So there are always quarrels, fighting and
Asanti in the house. Husbands and wives are not really united. There is always a
tug of war. They pull on anyhow, dragging a dreary, cheerless existence.
Even our sisters of ill-fame show for some time abundant love, sweet
smile, and honeyed words towards their customers, so long as they can extract
money. Can you call this love and real happiness? Just tell me frankly. There
are cunningness, diplomacy, crookedness and hypocrisy here.
SUPREMACY OF DEVOTION
s:a t:Ø km:üwan:y:aðg:ðBy:að|py:eD:s:t:ra /25
Sutra 25. Sa tu
karmajnanayogebhyopyadhikatara.
It (supreme devotion) is again higher than action,
knowledge and Yoga.
s:a Sa: It; devotion, that Para Bhakti; t:Ø tu: again; in distinction from
Yogi is one who enters into a living communion with God and perfectly
realises His immanence and activity everywhere in the world.
Unless one is blessed with love of the Lord, unless one's heart is
purified by devotion, it is impossible to perform unselfish service.
Without real devotion one cannot know the nature of the Lord.
In the beginning you can do your duty to your own family or country. But
your heart should expand. You should consider all mankind as your family, the
whole world as your country, the whole world as your home and body.
A Karma Yogi regards work as worship. It is duty for duty's sake. Selfless
service through the renunciation of the fruits of one's acts is a means for
attaining God. There is no bondage in selfless service.
Karma Yoga is the exercise of the will; Jnana Yoga is the exercise of the
intellect and reason; Bhakti Yoga is the exercise of the emotion. Will
consecrates all activities through complete surrender to God; the intellect
realises the glory and majesty of the Lord; the emotion experiences the bliss of
divine ecstasy.
Arjuna puts a question to the Lord; "Those devotees who, ever harmonised,
worship Thee and those also who worship the indestructible, the Unmanifested, of
these who is the more learned in Yoga?" Chapter XII-1. The Lord gives the
answer: "They who with mind fixed on Me ever harmonised worship Me, with faith
supreme endowed, they in my opinion are the best in Yoga." Then again He says:
"The Yogi is greater than even the wise; the Yogi is greater than the men of
action; therefore become thou a Yogi, O Arjuna." And among all Yogis, he who,
full of faith, with the inner Self, abiding in Me, adoreth Me, he is considered
by Me to be the most completely harmonised." Chapter VI-46-47. You will find in
the eighth chapter, Sloka 22 of the Gita: unswerving devotion to Me alone within
whom all beings dwell, by whom all this is pervaded." And again in chapter XI-54
you will find "But by single-minded devotion, can I thus be perceived, O Arjuna,
and known and seen in essence and entered, O, Parantapa."
There is the keynote of devotion and surrender throughout the Gita. Bhakti
Marga is easy for the vast majority of persons. God takes a form for helping the
devotees. There are no pitfalls or snares in the path. The Lord is ever ready to
guide the devotee. He actually takes him by His hands and embraces him in His
sweet bosom of love. He showers His grace on the devotees, as soon as He finds
out that they are sincere and earnest. Success is sure in this path. Bhakti
Marga is the easiest, safest, surest and quickest way for attaining highest
bliss or God realisation. That is the reason why Narada Rishi says, "Bhakti is
greater then Karma, Jnana and Yoga.
Pl:-p:tv:at:Î /26/
Sutra 26. Phalarupatvat.
Because of its being of the nature of the result or
fruit of all these.
Kaivalya is the fruit of the practice of Raja Yoga. But Bhakti is itself
of the nature of result. In the case of Bhakti we begin with Bhakti and end with
Bhakti. Love or Bhakti has not come as a result of anything. It has not come to
a devotee as a new thing. It is always there.
Jnana, Karma and Yoga are the paths which give you the result in the form
of Bhakti or supreme devotion to the Lord.
Para Bhakti is the goal itself. It is the highest stage. It is not fruit
but it is of the nature of fruit. It is superior to other Yogas. The other Yogas
represent a lower stage in spiritual development. Para Bhakti is not the effect
of any action or effect or Sadhana done by the aspirant. If it is an effect,
then it cannot be eternal.
You should not think that God Himself is partial and subject to feeling of
love and hatred. It simply means that egoism is a great obstacle to the
realisation of God-consciousness. The more you empty your egoism the more
your heart will be filled with God. The grace of God is always there. Only the
ego prevents man from taking advantage of it.
For those who are proud of their wealth or position or learning or birth,
spiritual discipline cannot come and they cannot realise God. They are myopic or
short sighted. Wealth is more a barrier than an aid to spirituality.
Those who tread the path of Jnana and Yoga are liable to become proud of
their powers and wisdom. Bhaktas are humble. Humility is the foundation of
Bhakti Yoga.
God has no hatred or partiality for anyone. All are equal in His eyes. His
heart is full of love even for the proud. He delivers the proud and the haughty
through punishment and the humble devotees, through affectionate caresses.
The Lord does not allow pride to grow in His devotees. Pride is the root
of all sorrows. It is the cause of worldly bondage. It brings sufferings of
various kinds.
In the practice of Jnana Yoga the aspirant has to depend upon himself
alone. For a Bhakta the grace of God descends. God is Bhakta Vatsala, Dinanatha,
Dinabandhu.
God dispenses according to the merit and demerit of the individual soul.
So He is not partial and cruel.
It is not the fault of the fire if it warns a man who comes near it, but
not one who is away from it.
This is another reason. Humility is the greatest of all virtues. All other
virtues cling to the man who is endowed with humility. Gouranga Mahaprabhu was
an embodiment of meekness. He sat in the place where shoes were kept, when he
wanted to have an interview with a learned Pundit. Pride is a thorn in Bhakti
Marga. It destroys devotion and all other virtues. Pride is ignorance. One can
win the hearts of all by humility. A Bhakta should be humbler than the blade of
grass which is trodden by the feet. That man only can sing always Hari's name.
It is difficult to develop this virtue. One has to kill himself and remain like
a block of stone. The stiff egoism asserts again and again.
In the Bible you will find: "Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is
the kingdom of heaven. Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth."
Lord Jesus speaks very highly of this virtue, humility, in his sermon on the
mount.
Just as fire removes the sensation of cold only of those who approach it,
so also God removes the bondage of those who worship Him with earnestness and
approach Him through daily prayer, right conduct and meditation.
Krishna said to Radha: "There are those who think themselves separate from
Me. I rob them of their all and then when they see Me, all the ties of the world
disappears. There are those, the worldly-minded, who kill the Self in them. I am
cruel to them, but even to them I am kind for I confer happiness upon them in
their grief. All souls are my favourites; I play many games with them till they
forget all that is selfish, till they love Me for the sake of love alone, as
thou now doest, O Radha!"
t:sy: Tasyah: of that supreme Love; wan:m:Î Jnanam: Knowledge; Ov: eva: alone;
s:aD:n:m:Î Sadhanam: means; Eeta iti: thus; Okñ eke: some (teachers think).
Bhakti must be preceded by the knowledge that the object of one's devotion
and worship is the Lord, who is Omnipotent, Omniscient, All-Merciful, who
possesses infinite auspicious qualities, who is the support and substratum of
all, etc. Without this knowledge, there will be no faith in God, without faith
there will be no attachment to God, and without attachment there will be no
lasting and intense devotion.
Some say: Even in the worldly parlance, knowledge comes first. Through
knowledge of a thing, one gets love for that object. A girl gets knowledge of
her would-be husband: He can sing well, He is beautiful. He has passed his
I.C.S. Examination. He is now a district magistrate...and so on. A patient gets
knowledge of the virtuous qualities of barley. Then he loves barley and takes
with delight bread made of barley. He knows it is cooling and sattvic and so on.
So also one gets knowledge of God at first. Then he begins to love. Therefore,
"Jnanam" is the `Sadhanam" or means for devotion.
Devotion to God may be developed through mere faith and reverence. Jatayu,
Gajendra, Dhruva, Sabari realised God through mere devotion. In the love of the
child to the mother, there is no understanding. So the view that Jnana is the
Sadhana of devotion is only partially true.
Any:aðny:aÂ:y:tv:em:ty:ny:ð /29/
Sutra 29. Anyonyasrayatvamityanye.
Others are of opinion that there is mutual
dependence between knowledge and devotion.
One cannot know God without love and without exertion. It is not possible
to love truly without knowing the object of his love and without exerting to
serve his beloved. It is not also possible to exert oneself for someone without
knowing and loving him. All the faculties of the mind always co-operate with one
another.
In the Gita you find: "Sradhavan labhyate jnanam-the man who is full of
faith obtained wisdom." Ch. IV 39.
"By devotion he knoweth Me in essence, who and what I am; having thus
known Me in essence he forthwith entereth into the Supreme."-Ch. XVIII-55.
sv:y:ö Svayam: of itself; Pl:-p:taa Phalarupata (Bhakti): being its won fruit;
Eeta Iti: thus; so; b:ÒÉkÙm:arH Brahmakumarah: Son of Brahma i.e., Narada
(Manyate: thinks).
Narada holds that devotion is both the end and the means.
From what has devotion resulted? From devotion itself. Bhakti is both the
cause and the effect.
Bhakti is not the fruit or result of any practice. All practices enjoined
by the scriptures are only to remove the ego or the veil.
and dinner; t:T:a tatha: in similar manner; Ov: eva: only; edÓÄtv:at:Î drishtavat:
Narada gives here three illustrations to explain his view that the
experience of bliss by a Bhakta in the presence of the Lord is not the result of
any practice.
Once a king lost his son in a forest. The prince was found by a forester.
He grew in the forest under the care of the forester. Neither the forester nor
the child knew that the child was a prince. Later on the truth was known and the
prince has taken to his kingdom.
During the period that the prince stayed with the forester, he had not
been any other than the prince. After he came into his kingdom also; he was not
any other than the prince.
When the boy, who was ignorant of his parentage, and who considered
himself a mere forester, heard of his parentage accidentally, nothing new is
produced but he is only reminded of an existing fact. Even so, one is reminded
of one's true status when one realises the supreme Self.
Just as the boy had been the prince all along, a devotee has devotion in
him before the time when he begins his spiritual practices, during the period of
his practices and even afterwards.
A man goes on a long pilgrimage. For many days he wanders about and
endures many hardships. He experiences severe kinds of troubles. He cannot
enjoy, during his journey, the conveniences which he enjoyed in his own home.
The home continues to be his home even in his absence but the distance which
stood in the way of his enjoyment is removed when he comes back. The pleasurable
experiences, are again revived as soon as he comes back. Nothing new, is
produced by his coming back.
If the devotee goes away from the presence of the Lord as the pilgrim goes
away from his own home, he denies himself the happiness for the time being. But
if he practises devotion to the Lord he will reach his own home and commune with
the Lord and enjoy the divine bliss.
When a man is hungry, he is unhappy. The food does not produce any new
satisfaction but only removes the disturbance caused by hunger. It removes
hunger, the source of unhappiness. When the uneasiness is removed, the natural
satisfaction remains undisturbed.
n: Na: not; t:ðn: tena: by that; raj:a Raja; king: p:ert:að\: Paritosha:
The pilgrim's satisfaction is also there already. Nothing new was added to
him by his return to his home.
Mere knowledge of the food and its ingredients cannot satisfy your hunger.
You must eat the food. Then alone satisfaction will come and hunger will be
appeased. Even so mere verbal knowledge of God cannot develop devotion and give
peace.
The followers of the path of devotion oppose those who hold the view that
knowledge is means for attainment of devotion by the aid of the above
illustration. They say: "Mere knowledge of food cannot appease hunger; so also
mere knowledge cannot develop devotion."
t:sm:ats:òv: g:ÒaÊa m:Øm:Øx:ØeB:H /33/
Sutra 33. Tasmatsaiva grahya mumukshubhihi.
t:sm:at:Î Tasmat: therefore; hence; (since devotion is higher than the other
paths); saa Sa: supreme devotion, that; Ov: Eva, alone (to the exclusion of
In the foregoing 32 Sutras the nature of Para Bhakti has been described
and explained.
There are few people who are really intellectual enough to grasp the
subtleties of the metaphysics of Sri Sankara. The path of devotion alone is
possible for the vast majority of us.
The path of devotion ends at the same path as the path of Knowledge Para
Bhakti or Jnana are one.
Devotion cuts asunder the worldly bondage easily. It attracts God Himself
who becomes the object of our love and adoration.
You must become a Mumukshu. You should pine for liberation. You should not
desire anything other than the Lord. Then alone God will choose you. Then alone
the Lord stretches out His hand to lift you up from the mire of this Samsara.
With the 33rd Sutra, the part dealing with Para Bhakti comes to an end.
All the remaining Sutras of the book deal with the means for attaining Para
Bhakti and God-Realisation.
The means here described are only accessory, because Bhakti is its own
means as has been shown already.
„Acharya‟ does not merely mean teachers. It means those who are practising
what they preach. "Chara" is to move. They move along the path about which they
speak. They live the life of the highest Bhaktas of the Lord. They alone are
really fit to teach. Their teaching alone will be the most effective. Acharyas
or teachers are those who have had first hand experience of the discipline and
the consequent Realisation.
Apara Bhakti (lower Bhakti) is the direct means to obtain Para Bhakti or
supreme devotion which is Realisation itself.
The Consciousness of `I' and `mine' in everything you do and deal with is
the strongest of all attachments.
There are five Vishayas corresponding to the five sense organs. They are
sabda (sound), sparsa (touch), rupa (form), rasa (taste) and gandha (smell).
In Vishaya Tyaga you must destroy your liking for the objects by finding
the doshas or defects in the objects. Objects are unreal. Objects are
perishable. Pain is mixed with pleasure. If you keep the defects before your
mind‟s eye, the mind will not run towards objects.
Here are the nine means of cultivating Bhakti. Sri Rama says to Sabari:
"Herein, the culture of devotion is the first means, it has been taught, the
company of the good; the second, conversation about My achievements; the third,
recital of My virtues; the fourth, occupation of expounding My words; the fifth,
O gentle one, constant and sincere worship of the preceptor, thinking that I am
he; the sixth has been said to be virtuousness, self-restraint, observance,
etc., and ever living attachment to My worship; the seventh is said to be
religious service with every detail, reciting the Mantra specially applicable to
Me; greater adoration to My votaries, consciousness of Me in all beings,
indifference to external objects, together with internal peace, make up the
eighth; and, O lady, the ninth is the consideration of My essence. O auspicious
one, devotion in the form of love is produced in any and every one who employs
this means in the shape of ninefold (secondary or instrumental) devotion, no
matter whether one is woman or a man or an inferior creation. And as soon as
devotional love is produced, one feels My essence, as it were, and one who
becomes accomplished by the awareness of Me, attains Me. He attains liberation
even in this birth. Therefore, it is sure that devotion is the source of
Salvation."
"Mindful of Me, their life hidden in Me, illumining, each other, even
conversing about Me, they are content and joyful" Chap. X-9.
There are many trials on the path of devotion viz., diseases, losses,
frustrations, etc. the devotee should bear all these with great patience.
Lord Krishna says in the Gita, “O Arjuna! he who constantly thinks of me,
without any other thought, I am easily reached by that Yogi, who is thus
ceaselessly attached to me.” VIII-14
You can make a rope out of sand, you can press oil out of sand, you can
churn out butter from water but no one can cross over this formidable Samsara or
ocean of births and deaths without ceaseless Bhajan or worship of the Lord.
Pooja, seva are also Bhajan or worship. All kinds of service to the Lord
in a spirit of devotion is Bhajan, Service to humanity with Divine Bhava is also
worship or Bhajan.
To hear of Vishnu or the Lord, to sing His names and glories, to remember
Him, to do his service, to worship Him with flowers, etc., to resign to Him all
the works done, to offer the body to His service and care-all these are to be
included in Bhajan.
Take rest. But rest is only a change of work. do Kirtan. This will give
you the needed rest. This will remove fatigue. Have reverence for the ideal.
Create interest in the spiritual practices. Have variety such as Mantra writing,
Japa, Kirtan, prayer, meditation, study, service, etc. All these are Bhajan or
worship.
Worship by fits and starts will not do. it must be constant. it must be
Tailadharavat (like flow of oil). If there is break, desires will try to enter
the mind. Unholy thoughts and worldly temptations will ransack the Antahkarana.
rajas and Tamas will try to overcome you. There will be resurrection of old
desires. the devotee will have to be very vigilant and cautious. That is the
reason why Lord Krishna says: “sarveshu kaleshu mam anusmara-At all times think
of Me.” Ch.VIII-7.
in the world; Aep: api: also, even; B:g:v:t:Î g:ØNa Â:v:N: kit:ün:at:Î Bhagavadguna-
The Lord says, "I do not dwell in Vaikuntha (the abode of Vishnu, the
highest heaven), nor in the hearts of Yogins, O Narada, I dwell there where my
devotees sing."
In this world instances are found which indicate that devotion to God may
be cultivated by listening to and singing of the attributes of God.
Divine life and ordinary life should not be separated. All activities may
be turned into worship if only you do not forget the constant remembrance of the
Lord and if you keep up the divine bhava or right mental attitude during work.
The ears that do not hear the glories of the Lord are like holes in the
earth where snakes dwell. The tongue that does not sing the praises of God is as
useless as the tongue of a pig.
The Name uttered knowingly or unknowingly burns up sins just as fire burns
fuel.
He who does the Kirtan and Japa of Lords names derives the merit of all
austerities, of all sacrifices, of baths in all sacred waters, and of study of
the Vedas.
Just as the sun removes the darkness of mountain caves, just as the
powerful wind makes a heavy cloud to vanish, even so, the Kirtan and Japa of the
divine name enter the heart and bring all sorrows and miseries to an end.
Bhagavata says, "To a man tossed and distressed in the wild fire of
Samsara, there is no boat other than constant listening to and drinking of the
excellent essence of the Leelas and glories of the Lord to cross this ocean of
Samsara." -4-40.
Japa and Kirtan form the highest help to meditation, self-purification and
realisation. The aspirant reaches the highest by Japa and Kirtan. Japa is the
most excellent sacrifice. It gives the best result. He who does Japa gets the
fruit of all sacrifices.
Japa and Kirtan can be practised by all irrespective of age, sex, caste,
and stages of life, at all times and in all places.
through a slight measure of the grace of the Lord; vaa Va: or.
In the preceding three Sutras the devotees‟ exertion was emphasised, e.g.
Vishaya tyagat sangatyagat cha”: abandoning of objects and attachment;
“Avyavrita Bhajanat,‟ ceaseless worship and "Bhagavat-Guna-Sravana-Kirtanat"
hearing of the glories of the Lord and Kirtan or singing the names and glories
of the Lord.
In this Sutra and the next three, the descent of the Lords grace is
referred to.
When the great men are moved by compassion towards their mortal brothers,
the Lord works through them.
The Guru will appear only through the grace of the Lord. He transmutes his
power to the disciple through look, touch or Sankalpa. The Lord alone appears as
a Guru. The Guru acts under the guidance of the Lord.
Why all men are not saved by the Lords grace? The Lord has given through
His grace free will to everyone to choose between good and evil. He must,
therefore, wait till he of his own accord turns to the Lord. As man is endowed
with a free will, God will wait to see man's predilection for Him.
The doctrine of free will and the doctrine of grace can be satisfactorily
reconciled. Some explain that the law of Karma is an aspect of grace, as the
Lord would otherwise be interfering with the individual's freedom. The Lord does
not want to free the individual soul to do anything against its own likes and
dislikes.
Others say that grace is only aspect of Karma. Good acts such as devotion
and self-surrender produce their result, namely, grace of God under the law of
Karma.
Lord Krishna says; "This divine illusion of Mine, caused by the qualities,
is hard to pierce; they who come to Me, they cross over this illusion." Gita
Ch.VII-14. In Mundaka Upanishad and Kathopanishad you will find, "This Atman
cannot be attained by discourse, nor by intelligence nor by profound study. It
can be realised by him only whom it favours; him this Atman favours with its
manifestation." "Bhagavat Kripa lesat--" Even a drop of grace is quite
sufficient to free oneself from the trammels of this Samsara. It is through the
grace of the Lord alone that a man can stick to the spiritual path and break all
sorts of ties and attachments.
"Out of pure compassion for them, dwelling within their Self, I destroy
the ignorance-born darkness by the shining lamp of wisdom. "Gita Ch. X-II.
Grace will descend only on those aspirants who are earnestly struggling in
the path and are thirsting for realisation. Nowadays people want to lead a life
of ease and expect the grace of Mahatmas. They themselves do not want to do any
kind of Tapas or Sadhana. They want a magic pill to put them in Samadhi at once.
They want worldly comforts and realisation in one and the same cup.
Kabir, Tulasidas, Sankara and Guru Nanak have all written volumes on the
glory of Satsanga with Mahatmas. Faith in God, in scriptures, attachment and
devotion to God, slowly develop in those who are regular in Satsanga.
m:hts:ög:H Mahatsangah: company of the great; t:Ø tu: again; but, then; dÙl:üB:H
Durlabhah: difficult to obtain; Ag:my: Agamya: unapproachable; subtle and
You may not be able to recognise a really worthy spiritual preceptor even
after coming into contact with him, because great souls generally hide their
greatness. An aspirant who has earned great merits by his strenuous endeavour in
the present life or previous ones will be able to recognise the greatness of a
Mahatma and obtain his grace. The lazy and indolent have no chance of obtaining
the grace of a great soul.
You should not accept any one and everyone as Guru. Teachers of real
spiritual enlightenment are very rare.
The spiritual waves set up by a saint travel a very long distance, reach
the proper adhikari and transform them.
Good things are always rare in this world. Musk, saffron, radium,
sandalwood, learned persons, virtuous persons, heroes, philanthropists, etc.,
are rare. When such is the case, what to speak of saints, Yogins, Jnanins, and
Bhaktas! You will have to equip yourself first with the necessary qualifications
of self-restraint, celibacy, calmness of mind, keen desire for liberation,
humility, obedience, spirit of service, etc., to make yourself fit for their
company. If you get their company the question of your salvation is solved. Sri
Sankara says in his Vivekachudamani, "Three things are rare in this world. They
are 1. human birth, 2. Desire for liberation and 3. the care of a perfected
sage."
l:By:t:ð|ep:t:tkáp:y:òv: /40/
Sutra 40. Labhyateapi tat kripayaiva.
In the previous Sutra, it was stated that the company of the great is
"Durlabha" difficult, “Agamya” unapproachable, but “Amogha” infallible or
unfailing in its effects. One is apt to be discouraged by such a statement. In
this Sutra encouragement is given. It says "api" even though it is difficult,
etc., yet Labhyate'-it is obtained.
The devotee is God Himself. He who serves a devotee serves God Himself.
The devotee dwells in the heart of God and God dwells in the heart of the
devotee. In the Bhagavata the Lord says, "Devotees are My heart, and I am the
heart of the devotees. They know nobody other than Me and I know nobody else
than them."
The Gopis imitated the various sports of Lord Krishna. They entirely lost
themselves, and knew not who they were.
When the individual soul surrenders himself to the Lord, he comes entirely
under the influence and protection of the Lord. He is not affected by Maya. All
differences are wiped out.
When the impurities in the mind are removed, the devotee recognises that
there is no difference between him and the Lord. Then the divine grace descends.
The grace may appear as the Guru. The grace may come in the form of
concentration, serenity, devotion, vision of the Lord.
The Lord is not partial to anybody. His grace is available to all without
any distinction. It is Lords grace that drives a man to seek a Guru and to
attain perfection.
Just as a river loses its name and form after it has entered the ocean, so
also a devotee loses his individuality when he merges himself in the Lord. The
mind that causes distinction is annihilated by devotion.
t:t:Î Tat: that (aids to love of God referred to in Sutras 35-37); Ov: Eva: only
Strive after love of God alone, strive after love of God alone.
Work for, strive after, the grace of God. Make serious efforts to obtain
the grace of God. The object of repeating the phrase is to stress its urgency
and importance.
Therefore, cultivate this, cultivate this (contact with the lover of God,
or Mahatma).
If you wish to cultivate divine love, sincerely long for the company of
saints. Through the grace of the Lord you will obtain the company of great souls
or Mahatmas, Mahapurushas.
Eva: that alone. That alone is valuable. Other things are of no value.
Gods grace alone must be obtained. The methods have already been given-
detachment, service, Kirtan, hearing of Lords Leelas, etc.
dÙHs:ög:H Duh-sangah: evil company; s:v:üT:a Sarvatha: by all means; Ov: eva: only,
Everywhere, at all times, by all means avoid the company of the wicked.
A neophyte who keeps company with the wicked people or worldlings, loses
his devotion and develops evil qualities. He also comes to the level of a
worldly man. Mind imitates. Evil company, is the main obstacle to devotion.
Some people argue "Why should we shun evil company? Is not God there also?
Why should we see evil anywhere? Shall we not see only the good? Should we not
see only God in the evil also?
A sage alone is above good and evil. He alone sees good in the evil too.
For him there is neither good nor evil. He alone will not be affected by evil.
He sees God in evil also. Ordinary man and a raw aspirant will be easily
affected by evil company. He cannot see good in evil. Evil is a solid reality
for him.
God is everywhere. God is in pure water, and in dirty water. But you
cannot drink the dirty water. You cannot eat excreta. A young aspirant cannot
take refuge in the Upanishadic saying, "All indeed is Brahman" when he is in the
midst of temptations. Every object that stimulates lower passions must be
ruthlessly avoided.
ZFM Kama: desire, lust; ieM Krodha: anger; Moha: delusion, infatuation,
bewilderment; ciT smritibhramsa: loss of memory; TqT Buddhinasa: loss of
intellect; \4*1TqT Sarvanasa: total ruin; c c
Karanatvat: being the cause of.
Memory and intellect spoken of in this Sutra refer to meditation and pure
reason or discrimination respectively.
If the mind deviates even a little bit from its aim through lack of
dispassion and vigilance, it will fall down and down like a ball dropped on the
first step of the stairs. Therefore, be cautious, be vigilant.
An aspirant should be afraid of even faint traces of evil till they are
totally eradicated. Just as fire under the ashes may assume the form of a huge
flame by the blowing of a strong wind, so also suppressed evil may assume a huge
form through evil company.
Therefore, the aspirant should be ever vigilant and avoid evil company
ruthlessly.
In the beginning lust and anger may be checked when they are in the form
of ripples; but it is very difficult to curb them when they assume the form of a
big ocean owing to evil company.
m:ay:am:Î mayam: the world of senses; yaH Yah: he who; s:ög:ö sangam: contact;
ty:j:et: tyajati: gives up; yaH Yah: who; m:han:ØB:avaö Mahanubhavam: a great
spiritual man; s:ðv:t:ð Sevate: resorts to and serves; en:m:üm:H Nirmamah: free from
A Saint is the supreme refuge to those who are immersed in the formidable
ocean of Samsara or worldly existence.
Worldly attachments and sins are easily got rid of through service to
saints. Just as fire removes cold, fear and darkness, so also service to saints
removes cold in the form of sin, fear of rebirth and the darkness of ignorance.
Service to saints enables a man to develop devotion to God.
Maya is that illusory power of God which takes you away from reality and
attracts you to the fleeting, sensual pleasure. The working of Maya is very
subtle. It is very difficult to detect her. The aspirant must be very, very
vigilant.
Kastarati; kastarati: The question is asked twice. That shows the
difficulty of getting rid of Maya. The phrase is repeated to add conviction to
the answer.
yaH Yah: who ; ev:ev:Vt:sT:anam:Î viviktasthanam: a lonely and holy place; s:ðv:t:ð
sevate: resorts to; yaH yah: who; l:aðkb:nD:ö Likabandham: worldly desires or
the effects of the three Gunas; B:v:et: bhavati: becomes y:aðg:x:ðm:m:Î Yogakshemam:
One's own heart itself is the most secret or lonely and sacred place for
meditation.
A solitary place is one where the din and noise of the talk of sensual
desires and craving for sensual objects do not penetrate.
Loneliness is not advisable for all. Many will become lazy and unclean if
they live in seclusion. An aspirant can develop ethical virtues only if he
remains in the world. World is the best teacher. Advanced Sadhakas alone can
remain in seclusion. They alone will be benefited.
The poet who liked loneliness sang: "O solitude! Where are thy charms?"
Lord Krishna lays great stress on this solitude- “Vivikta sevi”-Gita Chapter
XVIII-52. Vaviktadesa sevitvam"-Chapter XIII-10. Solitude has immense
advantages. The mind gets one-pointedness by itself without any effort. In the
world there are many distractions on all sides and a beginner finds it
impossible to fix his mind on his Lakshya. One can reach a certain stage either
in Yoga, Bhakti or Jnana in the world. For attaining advanced stages solitude is
indispensably required. Raja Janaka and Eknath are examples of solitariness.
Further, they were all Yoga-Bhrastas, born with a lot of spiritual Samskaras
acquired through drastic Sadhana in their previous lives.
There is bondage only in the earth plane, astral plane and mental plane
(heaven). There is no bondage in Maharloka, Janoloka, Tapoloka and Satyaloka.
Lokabandham: They are the binding forces of the world. They are Rajas and
Tamas, desires, cravings, attachments, sensual pleasures.
Yoga Kshema: Yoga means applying one's needs and Kshema means the
preservation of what is already in our possession.
In the spiritual sense Yoga means union with God or God-realisation or the
practice of Yoga Sadhana or discipline through which God is realised. Kshema
means maintaining one's progress on the path of God-realisation. As a devotee
entirely depends upon God, as he is ever united with the Lord, the Lord Himself
looks after the Yoga and Kshema of the devotee.
Lord Krishna says in the Gita. "Those who are exclusively devoted to Me
and worship Me in a disinterested way, fixing their thought on Me, I Myself bear
the burden of their Yoga and Kshema, as they are ever united with Me." Chapter
IX-22.
When the aspirant develops intense Bhakti, he will be able to give up Yoga
and Kshema.
The ideas of this Sutra come in the Gita, Chapter II-45. "The Vedas deal
with the three Gunas; be thou above these three qualities, O Arjuna! Beyond the
pairs of opposites, ever steadfast in purity, careless of possession, full of
the Self."
y:H Yah: who; km:üPl:ö Karmaphalam: the fruits of actions; ty:j:et: gives up;
thereby; en:¾ün¾að Nirdvandvah: free from pairs of opposites (such as pleasure and
pain, good and bad, heat and cold); B:v:et: Bhavati: becomes.
Whatever the devotee does, he does it for the sake of the Lord. He does
not expect any reward for his actions. Further, he has no attachment to either
Karma or its fruits.
“All actions” means here selfish actions (Kamya Karmas). One should
renounce selfish actions. Life is not possible without some kind of activity.
Selfless activities must be continued.
When the devotee dedicates the fruits of all his actions and the actions
themselves to the Lord he is freed from the effects of virtuous and vicious
deeds. He is not affected in the least by pleasure and pain resulting from the
pain or loss of the result of actions. Such a devotee is beyond the effects of
the Gunas. He is ever immersed in the remembrance of God. Selfish actions have
no attraction for him.
What you call world is not this wall or stone or tree. The world is a play
kept up by these pairs of opposites which affect the mind through the two mental
currents raga-Dvesha, attraction and repulsion or likes and dislikes. He who
conquers these pairs of opposites really conquers the whole world. Heat and cold
affect the body; and pleasure and pain affect the mind. He who transcends the
Dvandvas always keeps a balanced mind. This is an important sign or linga of a
Jivanmukta.
yaH who; v:ðdn: Vedan: the sacred books, the Vedas; Aepa api: even; s:öny:sy:et:
Sannyasyati: renounces; kñv:l:m:Î Kevalam: undivided; unalloyed; Aev:¡cCÀan:Ørag:ö
Avichchinanuragam: uninterrupted flow of love; l:B:t:ð labhate: attains.
By „Veda‟ it is meant here the ritualistic portion of the Vedas. The man
of realisation does not stand in need of the rituals prescribed by the Vedas but
they may be performed in earlier stages as a means for God-realisation.
Kevalam: Love for God is not diluted with desires of any other kind such
as pleasures of earth and heaven. The love that arises at this stage is never
satisfied till God is realised. This love is the Mukhya Bhakti that directly
leads to Para Bhakti.
When the devotee advances in his devotion he gets merged in the Lord. He
is not capable of performing any Vedic rite or worldly action. The devotee has
realised the ultimate aim of all Vedas. The devotee does not deliberately
renounce the Vedas. The Vedas themselves withdraw their control over him as he
has realised the goal of his life. He is now above the injunctions and
interdiction imposed by the Vedas.
s:ÎH he; t:ret: tarati: crosses (Maya, or ocean of Samsara): saH sah: he ;
t:ret: tarati: he crosses; saH sah: he; l:aðkan:Î Lokan; all the world, mankind;
He overcomes all limitations. He goes beyond Maya and helps others also to
go beyond the sea of sufferings or the ocean of Samsara. He becomes a true
saviour of the world. He sanctifies the entire universe.
The question raised in the 46th aphorism as to who crosses Maya has been
answered in the succeeding aphorisms.
The means of attaining devotion and the marks of those who have attained
such devotion have been described in all the above aphorisms.
love.
The intrinsic nature of divine love defies precise definition or
description. Bhakti or divine love is a realisation so profound that it is not
possible to describe it adequately and exactly.
The sixteen Sutras of the fourth chapter speak about the marks of
devotion.
Nouns and pronouns, etc., are useful only for giving names to external
objects or their qualities or expressing the actions or the relations of those
qualities. Adjectives express the quality of an object. The verb expresses an
action, the adverb the mode or time, etc., in relation to such action.
m:Ükasv:adn:v:t:Î /52/
Sutra 52. Mukasvadanavat.
The dumb man will reveal his experience through smile. He may dance and
jump with joy.
Saints try to describe the experience of divine love. They say, “It tastes
like a palatable dish, a delicious fruit, sweet syrup, celestial manna, sugar-
candy, powdered sugar-candy, honey, Panchamritam, sweet jam."
t:t:Î That: love; Vv:aep: Kvapi: some; at any place and time, where
What will avail, then, on association with the saints if the devotion or
love is inexpressible in words and consequently incommunicable from person to
person? To this the answer is that the operation of devotion or love is
telepathic, and not through any, grosser medium.
Rays of divine love radiate through the eyes of a saint at every pore of
his body.
The methods to be adopted for acquiring such fitness have been explained
before namely, Vishayatyaga, sangatyaga, avyavritabhajan, bhagavat gunasravana
kirtan, etc.
The current of Prem or spiritual aura passes by itself from the teacher to
the fit disciple. There is telepathic transference or communication between the
teacher and disciple. The disciple should be a fit subject to receive the light.
The seed will sprout only in a well prepared ground. There is Saktisanchar
through Sankalpa ground. There is Shaktisanchar through Sankalpa or sight by the
teacher in the student.
g:ØN:reht:ö kam:n:areht:ö )et:x:N:v:D:üm:an:m:ev:¡cCÀm:Î
s:Üxm:t:rm:n:ØB:v:-p:m:Î /54/
Sutra 54. Gunarahitam kamanarahitam
pratikshanavardhamanamavichchinnam
sukshmataramanubhavarupam.
It (divine love) is devoid of all attributes, devoid
of all desires, expanding every moment, continuous, most
subtle and of the nature of inner experience.
The divine love grows in volume and intensity at every moment. It has a
ceaseless flow. It is of the form of subtler feeling.
Even Sattvic Bhakti is far below the true Bhakti when one loves God for
love's sake.
You can grasp with the mind and describe in language an object only
through its properties. Devotion is devoid of these and so it cannot be
described in words.
Divine love is infinite. Worldly love is often cut short. It is broken. It
decreases or wanes or declines like the waning moon. Newer interests, fresher
attractions have to be resorted to, in order to keep earthly love alone. A girl
loves her parents first. This love gets decreased when she gets married. She
loves her husband more. When she begets a son, she loves her son more then her
husband. This is mundane love. But divine love grows deeper and deeper every
moment. It expands like the waxing moon. It ascends higher and higher like the
Himalayan range.
Worldly love is divisible. A man who has six children distributes his love
among, all the six. But devotion to the Lord is not divisible.
Divine Love seeks no return, grows from more to more every moment, knows
no break, is subtler than the subtlest and is of the nature of pure, inner
experience. It is beyond the pale of the three Gunas. It is a spontaneous
outpouring of the heart.
The divine current of love begins to flow only when one goes beyond the
influence of the three Gunas.
There is God's love. The individual soul participates in this love. That
is the Anubhava. So divine love is Anubhavarupam.
Ordinary emotions depend on certain external causes and objects and are
therefore transitory. The emotion vanishes when the cause or object is removed.
One also becomes satisfied in a short time by sense enjoyments. One can never
become satiated with devotion or divine love. It can be experienced for all
times. Devotion is independent of causes. Its content is a perennial fountain of
eternal bliss. Therefore, it becomes more and more enjoyable as it deepens, as
it strengthens in course of time.
t:t:Î Tat: that, love, devotion, inner experience, object of love; )apy: Prapya:
having attained; t:t:Î Tat: that; Ov: Eva: alone; Av:l:aðkv:et: Avalokayati: sees;
t:t:Î Tat: that; Ov: Eva: alone; Â:àN:aðet: Srinoti: hears; t:t:Î Tat: that; Ov:
Eva:alone; B:a\:y:et: Bhashayati: speaks; t:t:Î Tat: that; Ov: Eva:alone; ec:nt:y:et:
Chintayati: ponders over.
Attaining this love, the devotee sees nothing but love, hears only about
love, speaks only of love and thinks of love alone.
Just as a river loses its individuality when it joins the ocean, the
devotee loses his egoism or individuality when he becomes one with the Lord.
Then he sees himself and all the rest of the world as the Lord Himself, as
inseparable part of that universal love.
A Devotee who undergoes the discipline mentioned above (Sutras 46-49) sees
the whole world as a manifestation of God. Every one of his activities, physical
and mental, will be an expression of his devotion to the Lord.
In the next Sutra, Narada speaks of devotees who are still under the
influence of Guans.
SECONDARY DEVOTION
according to the difference of the qualities, viz., Sattva, Rajas and Tamas;
Aat:aüed B:ðdat:Î Artadi bhedat: according to the distinction of the worshippers as
the afflicted, the seeker after knowledge, the self-interested; vaa Va: or.
Sattva is stainless like the crystal (Sphatikamani). Sattva lays for one
the trap of happiness and knowledge. Sattva is a golden fetter. A Sattvic man
compares himself with others and rejoices in his excellence. He is puffed up
with his knowledge. His heart is filled with pride when he thinks that he has
more comforts or more pleasant experiences. He thinks "I am happy. I am wise"
and so he is bound. This attachment to happiness is an illusion.
If you trust in God there is no need for asking anything from Him. He
gives you anything you want without asking.
Draupadi and Gajendra were arta bhaktas. They were in distress. Uddhava
was a Jijnasu bhakta. Dhruva was an artarta bhakta. He wanted dominion.
The first is better and more fruitful than the second and the second is
better and more fruitful than the third in both the divisions.
The first of these conditions produces higher spiritual good than the
second, and the second is superior to the third.
Sattva is harmony, peace, light. It is the highest state. The desire for
pleasure and power (Rajas) is better than inertia (Tamas) which is equivalent to
spiritual death. A devotee should carefully watch his mind and note which of
these conditions prevails in his mind. He should strive to increase Sattva by
Satsanga, Japa, Kirtan, meditation, worship, etc.
An arta wants God and nothing else, because no one else can give relief to
him. A jijnasu wants knowledge, not God. The artharthi does not want even
knowledge. He wants wealth. Therefore, the Arta is the best of the whole lot.
Karma, Yoga, Jnana are the three other paths. Bhakti is the direct
approach to the ideal through the heart. Love is natural to everybody.
Karma, Yoga, Jnana are the three other paths. It is only a help to
knowledge and devotion. It purifies the heart of the aspirants. Vedic rites can
be performed only by wealthy people.
Yoga is beset with difficulties and dangers. The Yogi gets powers and
misuses them and gets his downfall. It is very difficult to practise Pratyahara,
Pranayama, etc.
The pursuit of knowledge is dry for some, while that of devotion is sweet
and enjoyable. Jnana Yoga demands vast study, sharp and subtle intellect; bold
understanding and gigantic will.
Learning, austere penance, study of the Vedas, brilliant intellect are not
needed for the attainment of Bhakti or devotion. What is wanted is constant and
living remembrance of God, coupled with faith. That is the reason why the path
of Bhakti is (Saulabhyam) available for every one.
Many people think very low of Bhakti Yoga and resort to Hatha Yoga,
Kundalini Yoga, Raja Yoga without any qualification at all. They do not practise
Yama and Niyama. They practise Khechari Mudras, etc., and Pranayama because they
think they can move along the sky and perform miracles. Maya clouds their
vision.
A Bhakta gets everything. He gets Siddhis, the grace of the Lord and His
wonderful vision.
Thus Bhakti Yoga is the most accessible for all sorts of people.
The Naiyayikas recognise only the first four. The Sankhyas accept only
Pratyaksha, Anumana and Sabda.
All these other than the first i.e., Pratyaksha, are dependent upon
something other than one's own direct experience. They may be taken to be
external evidence or Pramanantaram. The Bhakti Marga does not want them. It
deals with the direct recognition of the emotion of love.
When you feel hungry, you know it at once. You have direct experience. You
do not listen to intellectual arguments about hunger to feel hungry. If some one
says, "No, you are not hungry," you say, "I am hungry. I am an authority to say
whether I am hungry or not. No one else can be the authority on this matter."
When you love your mother, wife, or child, you do not argue, you are not
in need of any external proof. You are yourself the authority for this direct
experience. That is why the Sutra says, "Svayam Pramanaraupatvatcha."
The devotee forgets everything, even himself. He truly lives only for God.
He lives in God.
Honey gives sweetness at once to anyone who tastes it. Even so devotion
bestows perfect peace and supreme bliss. This fact is self-evident. It admits of
no further proof.
Love of God is experienced as Santi (peace) and Paramananda (supreme
bliss).
The devotee should not entertain any anxious thought about social
disorganisation, as he has dedicated his self and customary and scriptural
morality to the Lord.
The devotee need not worry if his affairs go wrong, because his self,
worldly affairs and even the Vedas have been surrendered to the Lord. The
devotee should have complete trust in God, even when they go the wrong way
apparently. Really neither loss nor evil can touch him, because he is under the
care and protection of a loving and Omnipotent Lord. He must take no notice of
worldly gain or loss. He is not concerned with what he achieves in the world or
what he loses.
The devotee has surrendered himself as well as his temporal and spiritual
concerns to the Lord. Therefore, he should not worry about worldly losses. What
need has he to worry about things of the world?
When the devotee has surrendered himself as well as his all to the Lord,
the Lord removes all his anxieties. He takes away the mind of his devotee. How
can he worry about the loss in the absence of the mind?
The devotee has surrendered his Atma (intellect, mind and body),
attachment to the world and also his reverence to the Vedas (discipline, rules,
etc.) as Nivedanam to the Lord.
l:aðkvy:v:harH Lokavyavaharah: social life, social custom and usage; n: Na: not;
So long as this Bhakti is not achieved, the ordinary way of life should
not given up but renunciation of the desire for reward of actions and discipline
preparatory to it should be persistently practised. Conscious efforts must be
made steadily in the form of selfless work and discipline of the mind.
On the attainment of Bhakti, or even for the attainment of it, life in the
society should not be given up. All righteous activities must be continued. Only
the fruits of such actions must be relinquished. Sri Vasishtha, Vyasa,
Sankara, Lord Jesus, Lord Buddha and others have been the most active
benefactors of mankind.
"Loka-vyavahara" : You eat and drink. You breathe. You are doing
something. Therefore, you have no excuse to give up the duties entrusted to you.
This is the meaning of "Loka-Vyavahara."
In this and the following as well as in the 73rd, 74th, 43rd, 44th and
45th aphorisms, the obstacles to the development of devotion have been
enumerated.
Talks about women disturb the mind and excite passion. In the Narada
Parivrajak Upanishad it is said that the seeker should not look even at the
picture of a woman. Talks of wealthy persons will induce luxury in the aspirant.
The acts of atheists will destroy the conviction of God.
Egoism creates a barrier between man and man. An egoistic man separates
himself from others.
adikam: desire, anger, egoism, etc.; t:¡sm:n:Î tasmin: with reference to Him;
This refers to the process of sublimating every one of our emotions and
directing it towards God. All our actions internal and external should become a
sacred offering unto the Lord. Then alone will they be transmuted and welded
into pure devotion or Bhakti.
Just as the Lord is the object of love of his devotee even so is He the
object of the latter's desire, anger, etc. As no one else exists in the eyes of
the devotee except the Lord, who else will become the object of these last
emotions or impulses?
Emotions which stand as obstacles in the spiritual path are changed into
aids when directed towards God. Passion, anger, etc., get absorbed in the Lord.
The devotee who entirely depends on God can make Him the object of his
passion, anger and pride.
On one occasion Sri Radha got angry with Sri Krishna on account of some
mischievous pranks played by Him. She said to her companions, "Do not mention
His Name to me. I shall never meet Him again, so long as I live. Let not Sri
Krishna come in my presence. Do not allow Him to enter the gate. How can people
who indulge in hypocrisy like Him be trusted?"
Anger may be directed towards the obstacles to devotion. It will then take
the form of dispassion and renunciation. When one directs his anger against his
own evil qualities, he is only purifying himself. The evil impressions will
vanish. The Sattvic nature will fully manifest.
having broken through the three forms (vide Sutra 56) of secondary devotion
modified by the three qualities Sattva, Rajas and Tamas;
en:ty:dasy:en:ty:kant:aB:j:n:atm:k÷ Nityadasya-nityakantabhajanatmakam: consisting
Devotion or Bhakti which seeks to serve and love without any motive
whatsoever, which has risen above the triad of lover, love and the loved, should
always be the ideal of a devotee.
The highest form of divine love or devotion is the feeling of the lover,
the art of loving and the object of love merged into one.
Tirutonda Nayanar had Nitya Dasya bhava. The Gopis of Brindavan, Andal and
Mira had Nitya Knata Bhava.
devotion to the Lord for His own sake, those whose only object of love is God;
B:Vt:aH Bhakta: devotees; m:ØKy:aH Mukhyaha: are primary.
Bhaktas who are exclusively attached or devoted to the Lord are the best
of His devotees.
The body, mind, wealth and everything else become the property of God. He
lives in the world as His instrument. His mind is absorbed in God. His eyes see
the Lord everywhere and at every time.
The Lord has settled in the eyes of the devotee. No one can enter his eyes
now. Even sleep has no access there.
The fifth and the last chapter begins with this Sutra. In this chapter a
description of one who has attained this stage of devotion known as Mukhya
bhakti or primary devotion is given. The word Mukhya distinguished the devotion
of this supreme stage from the Gauna or secondary devotion mentioned in the 56
Sutra.
"Neither Yoga, nor Sankhya, nor righteous duties, nor the study of the
Vedas, nor Tapas, nor liberal gifts propitiate me so well as the well-developed
and unswerving devotion to me. I am won only through undivided Bhakti and faith.
I am the beloved Atman of the righteous. Devotion to me purifies even such
outcaste as that eat dog's flesh and saves them from births.
That is the nature of Ekanata Bhakti. Ekanta means "having only one end."
That end is to be in the presence of the Lord always and ever doing service to
Him. Such devotees have only one thought of God.
GLORY OF BHAKTAS
voice, hairs standing on end and tears (flowing from the eyes);
p:rsp:rm:Î Parasparam: with one another; amongst themselves; l:p:m:an:aH Lapamanah:
In the Gita, X-9, Lord Krishna says, "Having their minds fixed upon Me and
their life directed to Me, enlightening one another, and constantly talking
about Me, My devotees become satisfied and delighted."
The spirits of the ancestors of the devotees feel gratified and purified
by the devotion of their descendents,
The scriptures say, "Holy is the family and blessed the mother, nay, the
earth itself is fortunate through him whose mind is absorbed in the Supreme
Brahman, the ocean of infinite knowledge and bliss."
Lord Hari, said, "I do not dwell exclusively in Vaikuntha nor in the
hearts of Yogis, but, O Narada, I am verily present in my splendour, where my
devotees sing of me."
Choking voice, hairs standing on end and tears flowing from the eyes are
external marks of the internal emotion. They express intensity of feeling. This
feeling is Prem or divine love. He who has such a Prem can have direct communion
with the Lord.
The greater the Bhakti is, the greater the orbit of the spiritual
influence. The greatest of them are the light of the whole universe. Even if
they live in caves, the spiritual waves generated by their devotion will spread
over the entire universe and find an echo in all pure hearts ready to receive
them.
In Uddipana Vibhava the devotee hears the flute played by Lord Krishna.
The music generates Vibhava. Uddipana means illuminating.
After Alambana, Uddipana comes. Anubhava is the third stage. The devotee
joins the company of the celestials surrounding the Lord. He is actually in
Brindavan at that time. He takes part in dancing, singing, etc. All the
sentiments namely Rati, Hasya, Utsaha, Daya, Jugupsa, Soka and Vismaya manifest
in him. They will be shown in the form of glances, perspiration, etc.
In Anubhava there are external signs such as hairs standing on end, tears
flowing from the eyes, etc. These are called Sattvic Anubhava. Anubhava is the
primary mood, Vyabhichari Bhav is a secondary mood.
There are nine primary bhavas which are accompanied by secondary Bhavas.
Wonder (Vismaya), lifting of the eyes, opening of the lips, etc., are the
Vyabhichari Bhavas.
Purification means removal of sin and ignorance. The very presence of the
great devotees removes sorrow and suffering and ignorance, the root cause of sin
and misery. In this way they purify this earth.
Their presence adds holiness to the place where they live. Their thoughts
are dynamic. Their thoughts transform their environments infusing them with
peace and joy.
We do not know of any one who has become a saint by reading Shakespeare,
Herbert Spencer, Milton, Goldsmith or Shelly, but there are thousands who have
adopted a new divine life by studying the Gita, the Upanishads, "Wisdom of
Siva," "Mind, Its Mysteries and Control", the Bible and the Noble eightfold Path
and other such books and writings. Each, time these books are studied by a man,
he invests them with a new power capable of transforming the heart of him.
Bhagiratha replied, "O sacred Mother! Holy saints will bathe in the Ganga
and purge you of all your sins, because Lord Vishnu, the dispeller of all sins,
dwells in their heart."
Buddha Gaya, Jerusalem and Mecca have all been regarded sacred only on
account of their being respectively associated with Buddha, Jesus and Muhammad.
Brindavana and Mathura are sacred because of Lord Krishna. Ayodhya is holy
because of Lord Rama. Naimisaranya is still visited by thousands of pilgrims on
every New Moon day, because many Rishis of olden days dwelt there.
It is the Saint that constitutes the real Tirtha.
The stones on which they sat, the paths on which they have trodden, the
villages through which they have passed, the lakes in which they have taken
baths, the trees under which they have taken their food are sanctified. Their
names are even now associated with these places and objects. Guru Nanak's name
is linked with Panchasahab near Taxila. His fingers are shown in the Kund. Bodhi
Tree in Gaya is associated with Lord Buddha. Hathiaharan tank near Sitapur is
associated with Sri Rama. There are so many Hanuman Kunds, Sita Kunds and
Lakshman Kunds in various places of pilgrimage.
t:nm:y:aH /70/
Sutra 70. Tanmayah.
(For) They are full of Him.
In and around them they realised the presence of God everywhere and at all
times.
Every one of those mentioned in the last Sutra is filled with the spirit
of saints and through that with the spirit of the Lord Himself.
They have emptied themselves so completely that they entirely live in God.
The lives of God-intoxicated devotees like Prahlada bear witness to this.
Just as river, falling into the ocean becomes one with the ocean, even so
the devotee having offered his body, mind, intellect, egoism and all at the feet
of his beloved Lord becomes one with Him.
joy; Ey:m:Î Iyam: this; B:ÜH Bhu: earth; s:n:aT:aH Sanathah: possessing a saviour;
This earth is happy in their care. This earth finds in them its protectors
or guardians. The earth is blessed by them.
The earth feels the effect of our good and evil actions. It is a living,
breathing, conscious entity for a saint with a spiritual eye or the eye of
intuition. It is Bhu Devi or Mother earth full of life. It is Vishnu. It is
Virat.
All the actions of a devotee are naturally conducive to the welfare of the
world. So his advent is a happy augury for all.
The devotee puts many irreligious people on the path of devotion and
Dharma. They perform charity, Sraaddha, Tarpana, and the five sacrifices. So the
manes rejoice and the celestials dance in joy.
God gives Darshan to His devotee. The advent of a devotee is the precursor
of the manifestation of the Lord. God manifests and destroys the Asuras or
wicked men, the enemies of Gods. Therefore, Gods also dance in joy.
A devotee can help the Pitris. He can give them what they want. That is
why the pitris rejoice on the advent of a devotee.
The Asuras will not be powerful when there are devotees on this earth. The
earth will be having more men with divine qualities. The saints will convert
diabolical men into divine beings with virtuous qualities. So the Devas dance in
joy.
Saints radiate the current of love and peace. They disseminate the message
of unity, love, peace and goodwill on this earth. They stop wars. They send
their disciples to preach the gospel of love and peace. Therefore, this earth
also rejoices. She gets a Natha or saviour.
The word pitru is used in the scriptures to denote not only living parents
but also ancestors and permanent demigods known by the name Agnisvatta and
others. The living parents also rejoice because their son will be honoured by
the world after his attainment of God-realisation and will also save them from
the wheel of birth and death. A devotee satisfies the denizens of all the three
worlds.
However widely they may differ in other respects they are all alike in
their pure and one-pointed love for God.
Nisada was born in a low caste, Sabari was a rustic woman, Dhruva was an
un-educated boy, Vidura and Sudama were very poor, Vibhishana was an ugly
Rakshasa, Hanuman was a monkey, Jatayu was a bird, Gajendra was an elephant, the
Gopis of Brindavan were not initiated into Vedic rites; but all of them attained
God-realisation on account of their devotion and self-surrender.
There is no distinction based upon appearance. Ashta Vakra had eight bends
in his body. Agastya was a dwarf. Some may be clean shaven, others may have
matted hair.
Kula: It means family and also race. Saints can come out of any race. St.
Francis, Saint Catherine, and several others belong to the Western race. They
were realised souls. There have been saints among Mussalmans. Kabir is another
instance. Saintliness is not affected by distinctions between the rich and the
poor, between one profession and another.
The discipline of surrender to the Lord does not demand the special
qualifications of caste, birth, clan, sex, etc.
He who has devotion to the Lord is a Brahmin; he who has no faith in the
Lord is a Sudra. An outcaste who has devotion and who is leading the life divine
is far superior to a Brahman who is leading a vicious and abominable life.
The distinctions exist when a man is petty minded. These differences are
created by the mind on account of Avidya. They all melt away when one gets
Darshan of God, or Atman. Love is a great leveller. It develops equal vision
(sama drishti). The advanced Bhakta becomes an Ativarnashrami. He goes beyond
Varnashrama. The petty rules of society and man made laws cannot in any way bind
him. He becomes absolutely free. He acts from his own view point by resting in
God. His will and cosmic will have become one. His voice is the voice of God.
His words are infallible. God speaks and acts through him. His ways are
mysterious and incomprehensible. He takes food from anybody's hands. He lives
with a cobbler or barber sometimes. He dines with a scavenger. Narasi Mehta did
kirtan in the house of cobblers and scavengers. Orthodox Brahmins excommunicated
him. Narasi Mehta attended a feast. The other Brahmanas ill-treated him and
looked down on him with contempt. They all saw a cobbler on their sides. They
understood the glory of Narasi Mehta and from that time onwards they began to
adore him.
The reason for all saints being of equal eminence is mentioned in the next
Sutra.
y:t:st:diy:aH /73/
Sutra 73. Yatastadiyah.
Because they are all His own.
y:t:H Yatah: because, since; t:diy:aH Tadiyah: His own, belonging to Him,
his.
Devotees are equal in the sight of God because their devotion is the same
in spite of apparent physical and social differences. They all belong to one
group. To a devotee all the creatures in the world are the children of God or
God Himself. Therefore, he sees them with equal vision or Samadrishti.
It is Lord Hari that has taken all these forms. The whole world is a
manifestation of the Lord. "Lokavattu Lila Kaivalyam"-The whole world is the
Lila of the Lord. God acts the parts of a professor, thief, prostitute, king,
beggar, saint, rogue, genius, etc., in this big world-drama. He who has this
understanding will have immense peace of mind. He will entertain no pride,
ghrina, prejudice, intolerance or hatred towards anybody. One must be
wellestablished in this Bhava. This Bhava will come and go away. Address
everybody as Narayana and receive him with this Bhava. Your whole nature will be
absolutely changed. It takes some time. You will have to struggle hard.
The next Sutra shows the way of how to make the mind offer itself
completely to the Lord.
INSTRUCTIONS TO DEVOTEES
vaadað n:av:l:mby:H /74/
Sutra 74. Vado navalambyah.
No controversy ought to be entered into.
The devotee should never enter into argumentation. Vain discussion should
be not undertaken by those who aspire to devotion, regarding the existence or
attributes of God.
It has been pointed out in the Kathopanishad "How else can that be
conceived except that it exists?"
It is not proper for one to enter into a controversy about God or other
spiritual truths, or about comparative merits of different devotees.
The duty of a devotee is to love God and to realise God. Love is above
reasoning. Argumentation is a great hindrance in the path of divine love or
Bhakti. The duty of a devotee is to remember God every second. He need not know
when the world was created, how it was created, why it was created. God will
Himself reveal His truth to him whenever He wills.
b:ahÚly:av:kaS:tv:aden:y:t:tv:acc: /75/
Sutra 75. Bahulyavakasatvadaniyatatvaccha.
For there is plenty of room for diversity in views
and no one view, based upon mere reason, is conclusive in
itself.
Mere reasoning does not lead to realisation of God. Intellect is frail and
finite. It is not able to grasp the Infinite. Even none of the great problems
which affect human life has been conclusively solved by reasoning. Reasoning has
only complicated the issues. Therefore, depend not on reason but depend on
intuition which is ever infallible and correct.
Science provides many examples of exploded theories which were all once
considered as well established through reason. No one view based on mere
reasoning can be considered true once for all, because it can be proved to be
untrue by better reason.
Vain discussion will go on indefinitely for days together. Yet people will
not arrive at definite, positive conclusions. They will be fighting over words,
roots, conjunctions and other grammatical points. God is certainly not in
Vyakarana or logic or prosody. He is in the chambers of the heart. He is to be
realised by purity and meditation and not by vain discussions. That is the
reason why Lord Yama says to Nachiketas: "This Atman cannot be obtained by too
much learning, or discussions or intelligence. He who gets the grace of God, who
is chosen by the Lord as His favourite, gets the Darshan of Atman. He reveals to
him His Nature. To him alone He manifests Himself." Therefore, give up hot
discussion. Be humble. Do practical Sadhana.
performed.
This Sutra is a supplement to Sutras 12, 14, 49 and 62. Sutras 12 and 14
refer to the Bhakta's attitude to study and spiritual practices, as well as
social service, even after God-realisation. Sutras 49 and 62 refer to his
attitude towards the same before the dawn of devotion. Sutra 76 deals with the
same attitude during the stage of Mukhyabhakti. It is clear that according to
Narada a devotee does not give up his spiritual practices or social service at
any stage either before or after realisation.
A devotee should study books which place before him the ideals of
devotion, the glory, the sweetness and the Leelas of the Lord, the stories of
saints and the practices which help him to cultivate devotion. Devotion develops
by the study of such devotional scriptures.
Every act that awakens the emotion of Bhakti must be done. Keep the Puja
room clean. Decorate the room. Burn incense. Lit a lamp. Keep a clean seat.
Bathe, wear clean clothes. Apply Vibhuti or Bhasma and Kumkum on the forehead.
Wear Rudraksha or Tulasimala. All these produce a benign influence on the mind
and elevate the mind also. They generate piety. They help to create the
necessary Bhava or feeling to invoke the deity that you want to worship. The
mind will be easily concentrated.
You must not be lenient to the mind. You must rigidly follow all the rules
prescribed in the Bhakti Sastras. Then alone will you evolve quickly. You must
keep up a daily routine and programme and follow it strictly at all costs. If
you are lenient to the mind, laziness will overtake you and you will
procrastinate everything. That „tomorrow‟ will never come. Even if you are of
advanced age, think you are a college-student and follow the daily routine. The
benefits of keeping up a daily routine and spiritual diary cannot be adequately
described. This is the master-key for success in spiritual life.
pleasure, pain desire, gain, etc; kal:ð Kale: in time; )t:ix:m:aN:ð Pratikshyamane:
when expectantly waited upon; x:N:aD:üm:Î Kshanardham: half a moment; Aep: Api:
even; vy:T:üm:Î Vyartham: in vain; n: Na: not; n:ðy:m:Î Neyam: should be spent.
When one has given up pleasure, pain, desire, gain, etc., and is in a
state of high expectancy, not even half a moment should be allowed to go in
vain.
Time free from the sway of pleasure, pain, desire, profit or other worldly
consideration is what every one seeks; therefore, even half a second should not
be wasted. It should be spent in meditation on God.
If the devotee is not vigilant and alert, Rajas and Tamas will pull him
down from the height he has attained. Satan will easily find a loophole to enter
and work mischief in him. If it is not cleaned by vigorous meditation every day,
the mind will become impure like the brass vessel that is left uncleaned.
The next Sutra points out the necessity for such watchfulness, alertness
and eternal vigilance. You are ever prone to yielding to the animal in you. You
should be constantly fighting against evil tendencies such as Himsa, etc.
Aehös:as:ty:S:aòcady:a¡st:Vy:aed c:aer*y:aeN:
p:erp:al:n:iy:aen: /78/
Sutra 78. Ahimsasatyasouchadayastikyadi
charitryani paripalaniyani.
Virtues like non-violence, truth, purity, compassion,
faith in the Vedas and the existence of God, and other
excellences of character should be strictly cultivated
and protected.
Ahimsa, satyam, etc., are the Yamas (restraints). Soucha, Santosha, etc.,
are the Niyamas (observances). All these are the disciplines, without which no
spiritual progress is possible.
In the practice of truth one must speak exactly what has been seen, heard
or understood about a person or a thing. There should not be the least
exaggeration or twisting. The speech should be truthful and sweet. Truth which
leads to another's injury is not a desirable thing.
„Adi‟ etc. Narada intends to point to the other divine qualities such as
courage, charity, control of senses, austerity, straightforwardness, humility,
self-abnegation, tranquillity, freedom from wrath, tenderness of heart,
sobriety, forgiveness, fortitude, etc.
The mind is ever unsteady. How then to steady it? The next two Sutras
teach how to fix the mind on God.
s:v:üda Sarvada: always; s:v:üB:av:ðn: Sarva Bhavena: with the whole heart, through
every aspect of life; en:eÁ:nt:òH Nischintaih: by those free from all cares and
anxieties; B:g:v:an:Î Bhagawan: the Lord; Ov: Eva: alone; B:j:n:iy:H Bhajaniya:
should be worshipped.
Bhagavan: He who has all glory, all power and all wisdom, i.e., the Lord.
The Gita says: "Tameva saranam gaccha sarva bhavena Bharata! Flee unto Him
for shelter with all thy being, O Bharata!" The whole heart, mind, intellect,
Chitta and soul must be given to God without any reservation. Ch. XVIII-62. This
is "Sarvabhavena". When you meditate, you must be free from thoughts of fear,
worry or anxiety.
(them) realise.
Lord Hari came out of the pillar in the form of Narasimha when Prahlada
prayed with his full heart, "Sarva-bhavena". Prahlada said to his father: "My
Narayana is in your heart. He is in my heart. He is in this straw. He is in this
pillar also." Prahlada pointed out four places. But why did Lord Narayana come
out of the pillar? Because Prahlada had his full concentration with full
feeling, "Sarva-bhavena", in the pillar alone. He wished the Lord Hari should
come out of the pillar. This was his Satsankalpa.
In all the three periods of time, i.e., past, present and future, devotion
alone weighs heaviest (most glorious), devotion alone weighs heaviest (most
glorious).
Of the three true paths, the path of devotion is greater than anything
else; it is greater than any thing else.
The path of devotion is the highest path. Love of God is supreme. Devotion
to God is devotion to Eternal Truth.
Trisatyam: The three eternal truths are (1) Jnana, (2) Karma and (3)
Bhakti. God is love, goodness and truth. God is experienced by the devotee as
love. God is experienced by the Karma Yogin as goodness. God is experienced by
the Jnani as Truth. Narada says that the first is better than any other.
According to all the three forms of Truth practised through the body,
speech and mind, the path of devotion is the best path.
Truth as practised through the body, speech and mind called the three
forms of truth. The Holy Rishi Narada has realised the superiority of devotion
from the standpoint of all these three Truths.
In the 12th chapter of the Gita, Lord Krishna says, "The devotee is Yukta
Tama" the best and highest among those who are united to Him.
`Among all Yogis he who, full of faith, with his inner Self merged in Me,
worships me, he is deemed by Me to be the most divine." Gita VI. 47. Thus the
Bhakta is given the highest place.
Para Bhakti and Jnana are one. Para Bhakti is superior to Mukhya Bhakti
even. In Para Bhakti the devotee is one with his higher Self. The object of his
love now is not the Personal God but the Absolute. The devotee now passes beyond
time, space and causation, beyond the three Gunas, beyond the three states of
waking, dream and deep sleep, even beyond the Triputi or subject-object
relationship. He realises his oneness with the Lord.
g:ØN:m:ahatmy:as:¡Vt:- -
p:as:¡Vt:p:Üj:as:¡Vt:sm:rN:as:¡Vt:dasy:as:¡Vt:s:Ky:as:¡Vt:v:ats:ly:a -
s:¡Vt:kant:as:Vty:atm:en:v:ðdn:as:¡Vt:t:nm:y:as:¡Vt:p:rm:ev:rhas:¡Vt: -
-p:òkD:apy:ðkadS:D:a B:v:et: /82/
First of all the devotee serves the Lord as a servant serves his master.
Then he approaches Him nearer and behaves towards Him as a friend does towards a
friend. The relationship is then felt to be more closely personal. Therefore,
the devotee rises higher and manifests parental affection for the loved one, as
a father for his son. Lastly, the little remaining remoteness between them
disappears altogether. The two become one in spirit. The devotee develops all
the marks of a beloved wife's love for her beloved husband. In Atmanivedana or
complete self-surrender, there is complete self-absorption. He feels the living
presence of God anywhere and everywhere and permanently loses himself in the
Lord.
You can know you love the Lord when you feel you cannot live without Him.
The purpose of the life of a devotee is, to lose all sense of distinctive
personality and be dissolved in the Lord like camphor in the fire.
If all these forms of attachments cannot be developed together, you can select
one or two sentiments and cultivate love for God accordingly. Love is
fundamentally one. Therefore, no distinction of higher and lower should be made
among devotees, according to the difference of sentiment cultivated by them.
All these eleven types of divine love were found developed among the
Gopis.
The nine modes or stages of Bhakti are described here. The highest is
Madhurya Rasa or Kantasakti where the lover and the beloved become one. Sufis
also entertain this Bhava. The Bhakta begins with Dasya Bhava, attitude of a
servant like Hanuman. This is the lowest rung in the ladder of Bhakti. Then he
takes up a friendly attitude towards God, like Arjuna. Fear vanishes now. He
claims equality with his object of worship. Then he develops a Bhava of parental
affection towards God. He takes Lord Krishna as his son.
kÙm:arvy:as:S:ØkS:a¡NRly:g:g:üev:\N:Økaò¡NRly:S:ð\:að¹v:a,eN:b:el:hn:Üm:dÏev:B:i\:N:aedH
Kumara, Vyasa, Suka, Sandilya, Garga, Vishnu, Kaundillya, Sesha, Uddhava, Aruni,
Bali, Hanuman, Vibhishana and others; B:Vt:ac:ay:aüH Bhaktacharya: teachers of
The names given above are of the highest personalities in the realm of
devotees, who held the same view as Rishi Narada on this subject.
They are not afraid of being criticised by anyone, because they have the
inner conviction of spiritual experience.
Uddhava was the most intimate friend of Sri Krishna. Bali was the very
embodiment of the sentiment of self-surrender. Moved by his devotion, Lord Hari
had to undertake the duty of a watchman at his gate. Hanuman is the greatest
devotee. He had Dasya Bhava. Vibhishana gained the friendship of Lord Rama
through Hanuman. All these Acharyas of Bhakti have established the supremacy of
Bhakti through the examples of their lives.
Â:¹t:ð Shraddhate: practises with faith; s:H Sah: he; B:¡Vt:m:an:Î Bhaktiman:
possessed of devotion; B:v:et: Bhavati: becomes; )ðÅö Preshtam: the most beloved
Lord; l:B:t:ð Labhate: realises, obtains; s: Sa: He; )ðÅö Prestham: the most loved
This is the Phala Sruti. What is got is the most beloved Lord. Preshtam is
Lover-Husband. It is used here as a synonym for the highest goal of human life.
`Iti' thus. This word marks the end of the treatise.
Narada now describes the fruit of devotion. He says that he who believes,
respects and practises these holy teachings; originally laid down by the first
teacher of Bhakti, Lord Siva, enunciated and elaborated by Devarishi Narada,
attains God in the form of the "Beloved."