Thursday, May 14, 2009

Bhakti Yoga

WHAT IS BHAKTI ?

The term Bhakti comes from the root 'Bhaj', which means 'to be attached to God'. Bhajan, worship, Bhakti, Anurag, Prem, Priti 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'. The devotee feels, believes, conceives and imagines that his Ishtam (tutelary deity) is an Ocean of Love or Prem.

Bhakti is the slender thread of Prem or love that binds the heart of a devotee with the lotus feet of the Lord. Bhakti is intense devotion and supreme attachment to God. Bhakti is supreme love for God. It is the spontaneous out-pouring of Prem towards the Beloved. It is pure, unselfish, divine love or Suddha Prem. There is not a bit of bargaining or expectation of anything here. This higher feeling is indescribable in words. It has to be sincerely experienced by the devotee. Bhakti is a sacred, higher emotion with sublime sentiments that unites the devotees with the Lord.

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.

TYPES OF BHAKTI

Bhakti is of various kinds. One classification is Sakamya and Nishkamya Bhakti. Sakamya Bhakti is devotion with desire for material gains. A man wants wealth with this motive practices Bhakti. Another man wants freedom from diseases and therefore does Japa and offers prayers. A third one wants to become a Minister and does Upasana with this aim. This is Sakamya Bhakti. Whatever you want the Lord will certainly give you, if your Bhakti is intense and if your prayers are sincerely offered from the bottom of your heart. But you will not get supreme satisfaction, immortality and Moksha through Sakamya Bhakti.

Your Bhakti should always be Nishkamya Bhakti. God has already given you a good position, a good job, wife and children and enough wealth. Be contented with these. Aspire for Nishkamya Bhakti. Your heart will be purified and the Divine Grace will descend upon you. Be in communion with the Lord, you will become one with the Lord and you will enjoy all the Divine Aisvaryas (Divine attributes like wisdom, renunciation, power, etc.). All the Vibhutis (Special forms in which the Lord manifests) of the Lord He will give you. He will give you Darsan. He will help you to dwell in Him. At the same time He will give you all the Divine Aisvaryas also.

Another classification of Bhakti is Apara-Bhakti and Para-Bhakti. Apara-Bhakti is for beginners in Yoga. The beginner decorates an image with flowers and garlands, rings the bell, offers Naivedya (food-offerings), wave lights; he observes rituals and ceremonies. The Bhakta here regards the Lord as a Supreme Person, who is immanent in that image and who can be propitiated through that form only.

He has no expanded heart. He is a sectarian. He dislikes other kinds of Bhaktas who worship other Devatas. Gradually, from Apara-Bhakti, the devotee goes to Para-Bhakti, the highest form of Bhakti. He sees the Lord and Lord alone everywhere and feels His Power manifest as the entire universe. "Thou art all-pervading; on what Simhasana shall I seat Thee ? Thou art the Supreme Light, in whose borrowed light the sun, the moon, the stars and the fire shine; shall I wave this little Deepa or light before You ?" - thus the devotee recognizes the transcendental nature of God. Para-Bhakti and Jnana are one. But every Bhakta will have to start from Apara-Bhakti. Before you take your food, offer it to God mentally; and the food will be purified. When you pass through a garden of flowers, mentally offer all the flowers to the Lord in Archana (offering flowers in worship). When you pass through the bazaar and see a sweetmeat shop, offer all the sweetmeats as Naivedya to the Lord. Such practices will lead to Para-Bhakti.

Bhakti is also classified into Gauna-Bhakti and Mukhya-Bhakti. Gauna-Bhakti is the lower Bhakti and Mukhya-Bhakti is the higher type of Bhakti.

Go from stage to stage. Just as a flower grows in the garden, so also gradually develop love or Prem in the garden of your heart.

The enemy of devotion is egoism and desire. Where there is no Kama or desire, there alone will Rama (the Lord) manifest Himself. The enemies of peace and devotion are lust, anger and greed. Anger destroys your peace and your health also. When a man abuses you, keep peaceful. When blood begins to boil, it is impoverished. You lose vitality if you become a prey to fits of temper.

HOW TO CULTIVATE BHAKTI

It would be a gross mistake if you consider Bhakti as merely a stage of emotionalism, while it is actually a thorough discipline and training of one's will and the mind, a sure means to intuitive realization of God Almighty through intense love and affection for Him. It is a means to thorough apprehension of the true knowledge of Reality, beginning from the ordinary form of idol worship right upto the highest form of cosmic realisation of your oneness with Him. You can achieve this by following the eleven fundamental factors which Sri Ramanuja had prescribed. They are Abhyasa or practice of continuous thinking of God; Viveka or discrimination; Vimoka or freedom from everything else and longing for God; Satyam or truthfulness; Arjavam or straightforwardness; Kriya or doing good to others; Kalyana or wishing well-being to all; Daya or compassion; Ahimsa or non-injury; Dana or charity; and Anavasada or cheerfulness and optimism.

People put a question: "How can we love God whom we have not seen ?"

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 the Guru. Recite His Name. Sing His glories. Stay for one year in Ayodhya or Brindavan, Chirakut or Pandhapur, Benares or Ananda Kutir. You will develop love for God.

Every act must be done that awakens the emotion of Bhakti. Keep the Puja(worship) room clean. Decorate the room. Burn incense. Light a lamp. Keep a clean seat. Bathe. Wear clean clothes. Apply Vibhuti (sacred ash) or Bhasma, and Kumkum on the forehead. Wear Rudraksha or Tulasi Mala. All these produce a benign influence on the mind and elevate the mind. 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.

Practice of right conduct, Satsanga, Japa, Smarana, Kirtan, prayer, worship, service of saints, residence in places of pilgrimage, service of the poor and the sick with divine Bhava, observance of Varnashrama duties, offering of all actions and their fruits to the Lord, feeling the presence of the Lord in all beings, prostrations before the image and saints, renunciation of earthly enjoyments and wealth, charity, austerities and vows, practice of Ahimsa, Satyam and Brahmacharya - all these will help you to develop Bhakti.

BHAVAS IN BHAKTI

When the devotee grows in devotion there is absolute self-forgetfulness. This is called Bhava. Bhava establishes a true relationship between the devotee and the Lord. Bhava then grows into Maha-Bhava wherein the devotee lives, moves and has his being in the Lord. This is Parama-Prema, the consummation of love or Supreme Love.

There are five kinds of Bhava in Bhakti. They are Shanta, Dasya, Sakhya, Vatsalya and Madhurya Bhavas. These Bhavas or feelings are natural to human beings and so these are easy to practice. Practice whichever Bhava suits your temperament.

In Shanta Bhava, the devotee is Shanta or peaceful. He does not jump and dance. He is not highly emotional. His heart is filled with love and joy. Bhishma was a Shanta Bhakta.

Sri Hanuman was a Dasya Bhakta. He had Dasya Bhava, servant attitude. He served Lord Rama whole-heartedly. He pleased his Master in all possible ways. He found joy and bliss in the service of his Master.

In Sakhya Bhava, God is a friend of the devotee. Arjuna had this Bhava towards Lord Krishna. The devotee moves with the Lord on equal terms. Arjuna and Krishna used to sit, eat, talk and walk together as intimate friends.

In Vatsalya Bhava, the devotee looks upon God as his child. Yasoda had this Bhava with Lord Krishna. There is no fear in this Bhava, because God is your pet child. The devotee serves, feeds, and looks upon God as a mother does in the case of her child.

The last is Madhurya Bhava or Kanta Bhava. This is the highest form of Bhakti. The devotee regards the Lord as his Lover. This was the relation between Radha and Krishna. This is Atma-Samarpana. The lover and the beloved become one. The devotee and God feel one with each other and still maintain a separateness in order to enjoy the bliss of the play of love between them. This is oneness in separation and separation in oneness. Lord Gauranga, Jayadeva, Mira and Andal had this Bhava.

A Caution: Madhurya Bhava is absolutely different from conjugality of earthly experience. One should not be mistaken for the other. Earthly conjugality is purely selfish and is undertaken only because it gives pleasure to one's own self. But in love for God it is because it gives pleasure to God and not for the sake of the devotee. Divine love is not selfish. It is born of sattva. But earthly lust is born of rajas and attachment to bodies. Earthly conjugality is the outcome of egoisitc self-regarding egoistic feeling, while divine communion is the outcome of other-regarding feeling devoid of egoism. Strong selfishness is the root of worldly passion; divine love is the product of loss of egoism. This is the greatest difference between lust (kama) and divine love (prema). The two are related as darkness is related to light. No development of earthly affection, however perfect it may be, can lead one to supreme joy of divine communion. Lust lurks in the heart due to the passion that burns in the core of things. Divine love is unknown to the man of the world, however religious he may be. The secret of divine love cannot be understood, and should not be tried to be understood, so long as man is only a man and woman only a woman. The austere transformation of the human into the divine is the beginning of true love for God.

NAVA-VIDHA-BHAKTI

Devotion to God is developed in nine different ways. It is supreme attacment to God through a Bhava predominant in the devotee. Intense love is the common factor in all the nine modes. Exclusive love for God is expressed through various methods. All Bhaktas of this type are above the formalities of the world. They are untouched by the laws of human Dharma and are out and out concerned with God.

Good conduct which is in accordance with perfect moral law is an auxiliary to pure Bhakti and it follows the true Bhakta wherever he goes. One cannot develop true devotion to God if he is crooked in his heart, if he has got objects of love in this world, if he is tempted by charming worldly things, if he wishes to take care of his wife, children and relatives, if he wishes to feed his body well, if he wishes to earn a great name in the world, if he wants to establish a permanent fame on earth, if he does not like to part with the alluring contents of the world. Perfect detachment from all objects is a preliminary to real devotion. Vairagya is the product of real love for God. One who has love for the world cannot have love for God. Where there is Kama, there cannot be Rama and where there is Rama there cannot be Kama. Love for the world and love for God are diametrically opposite things. One has to be renounced for the attainment of the other. This renunciation can be acquired through the nine forms of Bhakti.

In the Srimad-Bhagavata and the Vishnu Purana it is told that the nine forms of Bhakti are

  1. Sravana (hearing of God's Lilas and stories),
  2. Kirtana (singing of His glories),
  3. Smarana (remembrance of His name and presence),
  4. Padasevana (service of His feet),
  5. Archana (worship of God),
  6. Vandana (prostration to Lord),
  7. Dasya (cultivating the Bhava of a servant with God),
  8. Sakhya (cultivation of the friend-Bhava) and
  9. Atmanivedana (complete surrender of the self).

A devotee can practice any method of Bhakti which suits him best. Through that he will attain Divine illumination.

Sravana is hearing of Lord's Lilas. Sravana includes hearing of God's virtues, glories, sports and stories connected with His divine Name and Form. The devotee gets absorbed in the hearing of Divine stories and his mind merges in the thought of divinity; it cannot think of undivine things. The mind loses, as it were, its charm for the world. The devotee remembers God only even in dream.

The devotee should sit before a learned teacher who is a great saint and hear Divine stories. He should hear them with a sincere heart devoid of the sense of criticism or fault-finding. The devotee should try his best to live in the ideals preached in the scriptures.

One cannot attain Sravana-Bhakti without the company of saints or wise men. Mere reading for oneself is not of much use. Doubts will crop up. They cannot be solved by oneself easily. An experienced man is necessary to instruct the devotee in the right path.

King Parikshit attained Liberation through Sravana. He heard the glories of God from Suka Maharishi. His heart was purified. He attained the Abode of Lord Vishnu in Vaikuntha. He became liberated and enjoyed the Supreme Bliss.

Kirtana is singing of Lord's glories. The devotee is thrilled with Divine Emotion. He loses himself in the love of God. He gets horripilation in the body due to extreme love for God. He weeps in the middle when thinking of the glory of God. His voice becomes choked, and he flies into a state of Divine Bhava. The devotee is ever engaged in Japa of the Lord's Name and in describing His glories to one and all. Wherever he goes he begins to sing and praise God. He requests all to join his Kirtana. He sings and dances in ecstasy. He makes others also dance.

Smarana is remembrance of the Lord at all times. This is unbroken memory of the Name and Form of the Lord. The mind does not think of any object of the world, but is ever engrossed in thinking of the glorious Lord alone. The mind meditates on what is heard about the glories of God and His virtues, Names, etc., and forgets even the body and contents itself in the remembrance of God, just as Dhruva or Prahlada did. Even Japa is only remembrance of God and comes under this category of Bhakti. Remembrance also includes hearing of stories pertaining to God at all times, talking of God, teaching to others what pertains to God, meditation on the attributes of God, etc. Remembrance has no particular time. God is to be remembered at all times without break, so long as one has got his consciousness intact.

Padasevana is serving the Lord's Feet. Actually this can be done only by Lakshmi or Parvati. No mortal being has got the fortune to practice this method of Bhakti, for the Lord is not visible to the physical eyes. But it is possible to serve the image of God in idols and better still, taking the whole humanity as God. This is Padasevana. Padasevana is service of the sick. Padasevana is service of the whole humanity at large. The whole universe is only Virat-Swarupa. Service of the world is service of the Lord.

Archana is worship of the Lord. Worship can be done either through an image or a picture or even a mental form. The image should be one appealing to the mind of the worshipper.

Worship can be done either with external materials or merely through an internal Bhava or strong feeling. The latter one is an advanced form of worship which only men of purified intellect can do. The purpose of worship is to please the Lord, to purify the heart through surrender of the ego and love of God.

Vandana is prayer and prostration. Humble prostration touching the earth with the eight limbs of the body (Sashtanga-Namaskara), with faith and reverence, before a form of God, or prostration to all beings knowing them to be the forms of the One God, and getting absorbed in the Divine Love of the Lord is termed prostration to God or Vandana.

The ego or Ahamkara is effaced out completely through devout prayer and prostration to God. Divine grace descends upon the devotee and man becomes God.

Dasya Bhakti is the love of God through servant-sentiment. To serve God and carry out His wishes, realizing His virtues, nature, mystery and glory, considering oneself as a slave of God, the Supreme Master, is Dasya Bhakti.

Serving and worshipping the Murtis in temples, sweeping the temple premises, meditating on God and mentally serving Him like a slave, serving the saints and the sages, serving the devotees of God, serving poor and sick people who are forms of God, is also included in Dasya-Bhakti.

To follow the words of the scriptures, to act according to the injunctions of the Vedas, considering them to be direct words of God, is Dasya Bhakti. Association with and service of love-intoxicated devotees and service of those who have knowledge of God is Dasya Bhakti. The purpose behind Dasya Bhakti is to be ever with God in order to offer service to Him and win His Divine Grace and attain thereby immortality.

Sakhya-Bhava is the cultivation of the friend-sentiment with God. The inmates of the family of Nandagopa cultivated this Bhakti. Arjuna cultivated this kind of Bhakti towards Lord Krishna.

To be always with the Lord, to treat Him as one's own dear relative or a friend belonging to one's own family, to be in His company at all times, to love Him as one's own self, is Sakhya-Bhava of Bhakti-Marga. How do friends, real friends, love in this world ? What an amount of love they possess between one another ? Such a love is developed towards God instead of towards man; physical love turned into spiritual love. There is a transformation of the mundane into the Eternal.

Atma-Nivedana is self-surrender. The devotee offers everything to God, including his body, mind and soul. He keeps nothing for himself. He loses even his own self. He has no personal and independent existence. He has given up his self for God. He has become part and parcel of God. God takes care of him and God treats him as Himself. Grief and sorrow, pleasure and pain, the devotee treats as gifts sent by God and does not attach himself to them. He considers himself as a puppet of God and an instrument in the hands of God.

This self-surrender is Absolute Love for God exclusively. There is nothing but God-consciousness in the devotee. Even against his own wishes, the devotee shall become one with God and lose his individuality. This is the law of being. The highest truth is Absoluteness and the soul rises above through different states of consciousness until it attains Absolute Perfection when it becomes identical with God. This is the culmination of all aspiration and love.

The nine modes of Bhakti are the ways in which a devotee attains the Supreme Ideal of life. A devotee can take up any of these paths and reach the highest state. The path of Bhakti is the easiest of all and is not very much against the nature of human inclinations. It slowly and gradually takes the individual to the Supreme without frustrating his human instincts. It is not direct assertion of God, but a progressive realization of Him.

FRUITS OF BHAKTI

Bhakti softens the heart and removes jealousy, hatred, lust, anger, egoism, pride and arrogance. It infuses joy, divine ecstasy, bliss, peace and knowledge. All cares, worries and anxieties, fears, mental torments and tribulations entirely vanish. The devotee is freed from the Samsaric wheel of births and deaths. He attains the immortal abode of everlasting peace, bliss and knowledge.

The fruits of Bhakti is Jnana. Jnana intensifies Bhakti. Even Jnanis like Sankara, Madhusudana and Suka Dev took to Bhakti after Realization to enjoy the sweetness of loving relationship with God.

Knowledge or wisdom will dawn by itself when you practice Bhakti Yoga. Bhakti is the pleasant, smooth, direct road to God. Bhakti is sweet in the beginning, sweet in the middle and sweet in the end. It gives the highest, undecaying bliss.

Kindle love divine in thy heart, for this is the immediate way to the Kingdom of God.

Pray to the Lord. Sing His glory. Recite His Name. Become a channel of His grace.

Seek His will. Do His will. Surrender to His will. You will become one with the cosmic will.

Surrender unto the Lord. He will become your charioteer on the field of life. He will drive your chariot well. You will reach the destination, the Abode of Immortal Bliss.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Madhvacharya

Madhvacharya was a great religious reformer and an orthodox commentator on the Brahma Sutras and the ten Upanishads. He was born in 1199 A.D. at Velali, a few miles from Udipi in the district of South Kanara in South India. He was a Tulu Brahmin by birth. He was born of Madhya Geha and Vedavati. Vedavati was a virtuous woman. Madhva is regarded as an incarnation of Vayu, the Wind-God. The father gave him the name Vasudeva.

Madhva distinguished himself in physical exercises and field games. He had a wonderful physique. He could wrestle, run, jump and swim. So people gave him the nickname Bhima. Madhva took to the study of the Vedas and the Vedangas and became well-versed in them. He took Sannyasa in his twenty-fifth year. Achyutaprakashacharya initiated him. Madhva was now known by the name Purna Prajna. Achyutaprakashacharya found that Madhva was a brilliant Sannyasin with efficient knowledge in Vedanta and other scriptures. He put Madhva as head of the Mutt in his place. Madhva received the name of Ananda Tirtha now. He went on an extensive tour in Southern and Northern India to preach his gospel of Bhakti. He made several converts. He went to Badrinarayan, and soon after his return, he wrote his commentary on the Bhagavad Gita and the Vedanta Sutras. He built several temples at Udipi, the principal centre of the Madhva sect. Most of the orthodox Madhvas try to go to Udipi at least once in their life.

Madhva had superhuman powers. He performed many miracles. He saved a boat which was caught in a storm. A boat which contained an image of Lord Krishna capsized. Madhva brought back the image from the ocean. During his tour, king Ishvara Deva in Maharashtra asked Madhva to work in building a dam. Madhva noticed that he had been unconsciously working for the king the whole day. Once he stilled the waves of the ocean when he went to take bath.

Madhvacharya is the great exponent of the Dvaita school of philosophy. His Vaishnavism is called Sad-Vaishnavism in order to distinguish it from the Sri-Vaishnavism of Ramanujacharya. According to his philosophy, the Supreme Being is Vishnu or Narayana. Every follower of the Madhva school should have a firm belief in the Pancha-bheda—five real and eternal distinctions—viz., the distinction between the Supreme Being and the individual soul, between spirit and matter, between one Jiva and another Jiva, between the Jiva and matter, between one piece of matter and another. The phenomenal world is real and eternal. The worship of Vishnu consists in (i) Ankana, marking the body with His symbols, (ii) Namakarana, giving the names of the Lord to children and (iii) Bhajana, singing His glories. Madhva laid much stress on constant practice of the remembrance of God (Smarana). He says, "Form a strong habit of remembering God. Then only it will be easy for you to remember Him at the moment of death". Madhva pointed out that when the Lord incarnated, no Prakrita Deha or material body was put on by Him. He prescribed a rigorous kind of fasting to his followers.

Renunciation, devotion and direct cognition of the Lord through meditation lead to the attainment of salvation. The aspirant should equip himself with the study of the Vedas, control of the senses, dispassion and perfect self-surrender, if he wants to have the vision of the Lord. These are some of the important teachings of Madhvacharya, the renowned exponent of the dualistic school of philosophy.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Indu Enage Govinda by Guru Raghavendra Swami

Sri Raghavendra Swami (1595-1671), lived in the 16th century. He advocated Vaishnavism and the Dvaita philosophy advocated by Madhvacharya. He is considered by his devotees to be a reincarnation of Prahlada, the devotee who was saved by Vishnu in his avatar as Narasimha. Shri Raghavendra Swami has performed many miracles during his lifetime and is believed to continue to bless his devotees to this day.

At Udupi, he sang his famous “Indu Enage Govinda” song upon seeing Udupi Sri Krishna. I will be posting all the lyrics on Sri Raghavendra Swami at this weblog.

Here are the lyrics for this wonderful song which Rayaru which he is fondly called wrote in Kannada.

ಇಂದು ಎನಗೆ ಗೋವಿಂದ ನಿನ್ನ
ಪಾದಾರವಿಂದವ ತೋರೋ ಮುಕುಂದನೇ

ಸುಂದರ ವದನನೆ ನಂದಗೋಪನ ಕಂದ
ಮಂದರೋದ್ಧಾರ ಆನಂದ ಇಂದಿರಾ ರಮಣ ||

ನೊಂದೆನಯ್ಯ ಭವಬಂಧನದೊಳು ಸಿಲುಕಿ
ಮುಂದೆ ದಾರಿ ಕಾಣದೆ ಕುಂದಿದೆ ಜಗದೊಳು
ಕಂದನು ಎಂದೆನ ಕುಂದಗಳೆನಿಸದೆ
ತಂದೆ ಕಾಯೊ ಕೃಷ್ಣ ಕಂದರ್ಪ ಜನಕನೆ |೧|


ಮೂಢತನದಿ ಬಹು ಹೇಡಿ ಜೀವ ನಾನಾಗಿ
ಧೃಡಭಕುತಿಯನು ಮಾಡಲಿಲ್ಲವೊ ಹರಿಯೆ
ನೋಡಲಿಲ್ಲವೊ ನಿನ್ನ ಪಾಡಲಿಲ್ಲವೊ ಮಹಿಮೆ
ಗಾಢಿಕಾರ ಕೃಷ್ಣ ಬೇಡಿಕೊಂಬೆನು ನಿನ್ನ |೨|


ಧಾರುಣಿಯೊಳು ಭೂಭಾರಜೀವ ನಾನಾಗಿ
ದಾರಿತಪ್ಪಿ ನಡೆದೆ ಸೇರಿದೆ ಕುಜನರ
ಆರೂ ಕಾಯುವರಿಲ್ಲ ಸೇರಿದೆ ನಿನಗಯ್ಯಾ
ಧೀರವೇಣುಗೋಪಾಲ ಪಾರುಗಾಣಿಸೊ ಹರಿಯೆ |೩|

--------------------------------------------

Translation

Indu Enage Govinda ninna padaara
Vindava tOrO mukundane

Sundara vadanane nandaGopana Kanda
mandarOdhara aananda indiara ramaNa

nondenayya naa bhavabandhanadoLu saluki
munde daari kaaNade kundide jagadoLu
kandanamtendenna kundugaLeNisade
tande kayo Krishna kandarpa janakane

mUDhatanadi balu hEDijIvananaagi
dRuDhabhakutiyanu maadalillavo hariyE
nODalillavo ninna paaDalillavo mahime
gaaDikaara Krishba bEDikombeno ninna

dhaaruNiloLu bhUbhaara jIvananaagi
daari tappi naDede sEride kujanara
aaru kaayuvavarilla sEride ninagayya
dhIra vENugOpala paarugaaNiso hariye

Listen to this song sung by Pt. Bhimsen Joshi here



Tuesday, April 7, 2009


Sri Jagannath Dasaru


Sri Jagannath Dasaru (1727 to 1809)

Born in a pious Brahmin family, he was given the name of Srinivasa. Even at a young age his brilliance was very evident and he was commended by Sri Vageesha Theertha, the then Pontiff at Mantralaya. He grew up to be a very great scholar, very well versed in all the great Dvaita works. Unfortunately, he also grew very proud and developed an intense dislike for Haridaasas, who he felt, were misrepresenting Dvaita philosophy.

He was a great sanskrit and dvaita scholar before becomming Dasa ( Srinivasa ). He had ego about his knowledge and disliked the Haridasas of that time. Foremost among the Haridasas among the time was Sri Vijaya Dasa. He disliked Haridasas of that time because he felt that they are misrepresenting the Dvaita School of thought by composing works in Kannada ( the local langauge ). He is said to have commented about Sri Vijaya Dasa that "Kannada pada heluva aa kUsi maganenu dasanaguttane". Meaning "How can that son of kUsi(name of Sri Vijaya Dasa's Mother), who sings kannada songs be a scholar". Later on he also refused to a feast in the honour of Sri Vijaya Dasa in the same city even when invited by Sri Vijaya Dasa himself. He complained that he is having some problems with stomach and thus he has already taken the food. To this Sri Vijaya Dasa replied "hage aagali" ( let it be so). Then Srinivasa developped a 'real' pain in the stomach.

From that day, Srinivasa developed intense stomach problems which grew worse by the day, finally reaching unbearable proportions. Srinivasa went to Tirupathi, Ghatikaachala and Mantralaya, performing intense Seva towards the Lord, Vaayu Devaru and Sri Raghavendra Swamigalu. None of this proved to be of any avail.

Finally, at the end of his stay in Mantralaya, he decided to commit suicide. That night, the epitome of mercy, Sri Raghavendra Swamigalu, appeared in his dream and told him that the cure for his problems lay in surrendering to Sri Vijayadaasaru and seeking his blessings. Srinivasa felt intense disgust at his own arrogance and rushed to Sri Vijayadaasaru, deeply regretting his behavior.

Sri Vijayadaasaru welcomed him without rancor, gave him a cure right away, and directed him to Sri Gopaala Daasaru who would be his swaroopa guru. Srinivasa went to Sri Gopaala Daasaru and spent some time with him. He realized the greatness of both the Daasarus and the fallacy of his own thinking.

Later, Sri Gopaala Daasaru and Srinivasa visited Tirupathi, where another miracle happened. Due to a combination of his previous ill-health and the strain of travelling to Tirupathi, Srinivasa expired on Bhadrapada Shukla Navami . Then, Sri Vijaya Daasaru appeared in an astral form before Sri Gopala Daasaru and directed him to donate 40 years of his life-span to Srinivasa and revive him. Sri Gopala Daasaru immediately complied, and by the grace of the Lord, Srinivasa came back to life again.

Deeply affected by the events in his recent past, Srinivasa decided to become a Haridaasa. Sri Gopala daasaru gave him Haridaasa Deekshe and directed him to Pandarapur for ankitha. There Srinivasa found a stone bearing the words "Jagannatha Vittala". From that day, he started composing devotional works with that ankitha. He became renowned as Jagannatha Daasaru.

He lived for 40 years after his miraculous rebirth. His life was full of incidents that reveal that he was an Aporaksha Gyani and a great Bhaktha with whom the Lord performed many leelas. There were many instances when the Lord took somebody's form and personally served Jagannatha Daasaru. When he visited Mantralaya, Rayaru personally appeared from the Brindavan and spoke to him (this wonderful incident is captured in the Devaranama "Yeddu Baruthaare Nodu...."). The jewel in his devotional crown was of course Hari Kathaamrutha Saara. It is said that in this wonderful work Sri Jagannatha Dasaru has captured the essence of his amazing grasp of Sastras, Srimad Acharya's works and works of other great Dvaita saints. It is a "must" for every Mumukshu aspiring for the grace of Hari, Vaayu, Guru.

Again, on the same Bhadrapada Shukla Navami, exactly 40 years after his rebirth, he reached the Lord's lotus feet.

  • Overview of his Compositions

    When we look into the entire Compositions of Sri Jagannatha Dasaru most of them are devotional and giving importance to bhakti. One more thing we can find in his compositions are that it is stotra oriented: vittalayya vittalayya tatitkotinibhkaya jagannathavittalayya.. it starts and yendu kambeno pan.duran.ga mArutiya yi.ndu bhaga nivAsa narana sArathiya... prays humbly. He also expresses satisfaction when he felt that he has seen the Panduranage Vittala in his songs.. ka.nde pa.ndarirAyana... and dhanyanAde vittalana ka.ndu. He felt very happy in explaining Vittala whom he met. Sri Jagannatha Dasa exponents contains Devottee humble beginning to see and percept Sri Hari, his humanatarian relationship which makes him happy and comfortable, devotion which is beyond emotional touch are some of the concepts of his works. It is assumed that a devotee can build a relationship with Sri Hari in four ways, they are:

  • Master and Servant relationship (Dasya bhava)
  • Friendliness
  • Mother and child relatonship (Tender fondness, parental relationship)
  • Husband and Wife (love) Other than the above four there is fifth one which is Devotee and Sri Hari relationship. This is very popular in Devotional group/sect. This has been carried from Sri Padaraja and Sri Jagannatha Dasa also has done this with his devotional compositions. In Jagannatha Dasa's atma para compositions his dasya bhava can be seen visibly ie master and servant relationship. dAsOHAM tava dAsOHAM is coming from his inner heart, pAhi pAhi is from his mind and he has expressed that Sri Hari has to protect him 'rakshisOsrIsha srInivsa.. He also regrets that with the relationship bad people and his mind has become culmina A devotee can build relationship with Sri Hari in four way Explanations in respect of Devotees humble beginning to see Sri Hari.

    Sri Jagannatha Dasa is a very forciable writer and known chiefly for his prodgious schloarship in Sanskrit and mastery of original sanskrit texts of the system. He has burning enthusiasm for the cause of Madhva philos

    ophy and writes a powerful style laden with technical wisdom and theological intricacies. His style is highly Sanskritised and his work teems with the details of Bhakti, Mukti, Taratamya, Aparoksa etc. His magnum opus, the Harikathamruthasara is a mind of information on Madva theology and is honored as a great authority and standard work of reference on the Estoerics of its theology, by adherents of Dasa Koota. It is written in the Bhamini Satpadi meter and is an epitome of Madhva theology, in 32 sandhis (chpaters). This Kannada work has the special honor of having a very recondite sanskrit commentary by Sankarsana Odeyaru disciple of Sri Visvapriya Tiirtha of Sode mutt.

  • Wednesday, March 25, 2009

    Glory of constant remembrance

    God has gifted us with discrimination, faculty of reason & judgement which should be made use of and waking up from that slumber of infatuation.

    There is no spiritual discipline equal in value to an uninterrupted remembrance of the Guru with form or without form, qualified or absolute. We may call him as our Friend, Master or whatever might be pleased to choose but remains after all our Guide or the Guru as he is commonly called. It can be easily accomplished if we treat all our actions and work to be a part of Divine duty entrusted to us by the Guru whom we are to serve for ever. This course of discipline leads to God Realisation - "total Bliss".

    If we are not able to realise God in this human existence it means a tremendous loss, a great disaster. One should naturally be engaged in his or her action attending to vocational duties in order to make a living but ensure never letting 'Guru' slip out of one's mind. Even if there is any deficiency or shortcoming in the discharge of worldly duties, it can be rectified by the dint of Constant Remembrance of the Guru who is the cardinal link between man & the God. For however great a sinner may be, he gets reformed and redeemed through exclusive devotion to the Guru. Therefore, this human body should be devoted to that very purpose for which it has been vouchsafed to us.

    God has gifted us with discrimination, faculty of reason & judgement which should be made use of and waking up from that slumber of infatuation. All our efforts should be made to accomplish the object of God Realisation before the human frame drops down. To devote the mind to this highest pursuit is to make the best use of it persistently depending on 'HIM' all the time. If one practices constant contemplation on the Guru while doing any activity, such actions will cause NO impressions and further Sanskaras.

    At present we enjoy all sorts of facilities in this material plane such that our mind is totally engrossed in our mundane affairs. However, it is the Guru's Grace that we are born in this Kaliyug where endowed us with intellect and senses for carrying on constant contemplation of the Divine and Meditation. At this time spiritual literature is available everywhere at a low price. If we fail to realise God even when blessed with such facilities, it will be a great peril in our existence and even thereafter.

    Through unbroken Remembrance of the Guru, it is possible to overcome all one's evil propensities, addictions and other defects to end all one's miseries and attain the highest Bliss in the form of God Realisation - "ANANDAMAYA".

    Why do we Remember God?

    How we must purposely remember God in each moment, lest we think we're independent and forget that he is our Creator and judge.

    Introduction
    • "Remember also your Creator in the days of your youth, before the evil days come and the years draw near when you will say, 'I have no delight in these days.'"
    • The word remember conveys where your focus is.
      • Illustration: We often forget about gravity, but without it we couldn't function here on Earth. We also rarely think about our car's windshield, but without it we would have bugs all over our face and our hair blown in all directions.
    • Is God like that to you—some gravitational force that keeps things going but is rarely given much thought? Or like a car windshield, do you look right past him and forget what he does?
    • God is not like a windshield or gravity, which don't care whether you acknowledge them or not.
    • When you go a while without remembering your Creator, you function independently of him. God cares about that.
    • If you don't remember your Creator, you won't have trust and confidence in God, and it will be difficult to ask him for things.
      • Illustration: When McClellan and his wife take walks and meet someone, they know the courteous thing to do is to acknowledge their presence and say hello. You don't walk up to a stranger and say, "Hey! My name is Bob. Can I borrow your lawn mower?"
    • You know intuitively that you don't ask for things until you've established a level of trust and relationship.
    • Your prayer life will be dead and boring if you don't have a relationship with God, because you know intuitively that it's not courteous to ask for things when you haven't established a relationship.
    • Does this mean you should stop asking God for things? No! It means that you first need to start remembering your Creator. But how?
    Walk through the day with your Creator.
    • You begin to remember your Creator simply by talking about your day with him.
      • Illustration: When McClellan and his wife take a walk, much of their time is spent talking about the things that surround them.
    • You can start talking to God about what's on your mind at that very moment.
    • God doesn't have to be the period at the end of your day or the capital letter of the first word of your sentence; God can be the sentence that underlines your entire day.
    • You remember your Creator when you start walking through your day with him.
    • Once you've acknowledged God's presence on a daily basis and established a level of trust with him, it will feel much more natural when you ask him for something.
    • Many people beat themselves up for having a poor prayer life, because they can't focus themselves for a half hour each morning, but you can just pray about the stuff that comes into your day, all day long.
    • Though it takes a little while to learn this skill, you will build a sense of God's presence all day long and find that you are able to ask about things that you never would have thought of in the morning.
    Remember that we are creatures.
    • It's interesting that the writer of Ecclesiastes uses the word Creator. It's the only time the word is used in the entire book.
    • Once you remember that you have a Creator, you remember that you are a creature—a created being.
      • Illustration: Imagine that you've baked a batch of gingerbread people. You have the power to make them live. You soon realize they're not all going to be good gingerbread people. You can't always tell who's with you and who's against you, so you decide to disappear. Some of them say, "We knew it! There was no baker all along. We can do whatever we want!" But others say, "How could we think, reason, speak, sing, and write poetry if we didn't have a baker? We owe everything to the baker!"
    • The minute you forget that you are created, you start down a road of independence that is the root of all evil.
    • God says: Remember that you are someone's masterpiece. Somebody made you; you are not your own.
    • In the New Testament, the story gets even better. The apostle Paul tells us that not only are we made in the image of God, but we're redeemed and purchased with his own blood.
    • Once we start thinking of ourselves as creatures, we may think, I don't like the idea that I belong to somebody. I want to be free.
    • Or we may think, I am not independent; I am dependent. And since I belong to someone else, one day I'm going to have to answer to the baker.
    • Ecclesiastes 12:6 says, "Remember him—before the silver cord is severed, or the golden bowl is broken; before the pitcher is shattered at the spring, or the wheel broken at the well."
    • That is a metaphor for your life coming to an end. The writer tells us to remember God before that happens.
    • Ecclesiastes goes on to say: "And the dust returns to the ground it came from, and the spirit returns to God who gave it."
    • The Hebrew word for spirit means "the breath of life." The author is saying that the breath of life God breathed into us goes back to the One who breathed it.
    • As the author writes in verse 8: "Vanity of vanities … all is vanity!" A good paraphrase of that verse would be: Fleeting, fleeting! Everything is fleeting!
    • If you try to hang on to something, it slips away. So remember your Creator while you still have the ability to remember.
    • This whole section of Ecclesiastes 12 talks about how our bodies decline as we grow older.
    • In this context comes that great injunction in verse 6: Remember your Creator before the end.
    • The thought that we belong to somebody and are accountable for our actions puts us in our place.
    Conclusion
    • In Ecclesiastes 12:9, the author says that the teacher taught people knowledge. He wrote down his wisdom in delightful ways, so that the people could remember it.
    • The author says, "The words of wise men are like goads." When an animal stubbornly didn't want to move or got stuck in the mud, the shepherd would use a goad to poke the animal along.
    • The Book of Ecclesiastes serves as a goad to us.
    • The author boils it all down to this: "Fear God and keep his commandments, because this applies to every person. For God will bring every act to judgment."
    • The Creator creates things and holds his creation accountable.
    • That may be distasteful to some people—whole kingdoms and philosophies have been launched to try to avoid that very simple thing—but we are accountable.
    • As the text says: "God will bring every act to judgment, everything which is hidden, whether it is good or evil."
    • We don't get the final say in things.
    • We do what we can with what God gives us. He says: Do the right thing, and let me worry about the outcomes. In the end, I'm the only one you have to answer to—and no one else.