Wednesday, 30 November 2011

Divine Messages - 71 : Glimpses of the Divine Vision by Swami Ramdas - Love

An extract from the book “Glimpses of the Divine Vision” by Swami Ramdas – Section “Love”

·         Love begets love. Love is life, love is Truth. The highest attainment is love, the loftiest goal is love.

·         The cosmic vision held out in the Gita alone can enable you to attain universal love. This vision or love grants you never- fading joy and peace. To love God is to love all, and to love all is to love God. This is the secret of Self-realization and liberation, and Ram Nam is the way.

·         Indeed every movement of your mind in thought, every movement of your tongue in words, every movement of your limbs in activity or works, is the play of Shakti. Shakti is nothing but God’s love. When we realize that all movement is the movement of that supreme love, we live continuously in a state of divine ecstasy which is simply inexpressible. Then, Prem fills us through and through, in other words, we are soaked in Prem. The quality of Prem is Anand. There is also the witness of this play of love or Shakti - the immutable, changeless, all-pervading, static aspect of your being, whose quality is ineffable peace. On this unaffected screen of eternal peace dances in flitting forms, infinite love producing sweet intoxicating music of Anand. Every particle of your body and the whole universe is thrilling with Sri Ram’s love. So, there is nothing but Anand in all movement, change and activity. There is nothing but peace in the depths of all forms-result of movement and change. So, eternal peace and bliss are the only Reality.

·         Everybody wants to eat only sweet things. The thought of bitter things is repulsive to all. Love pure and glorious love-the immortal divine love makes us drink always sweetness and joy. Therefore, to open your hearts to the inflow of this intoxicating love and remain ever in the rapture of it is the supreme blessing and purpose of life. All things pass away-your petty ambitions and unregulated aspirations are things of the moment. Your pleasures and pains, your successes and failures, your exultations and depressions, and your desires and fancies, all, all pass away. The one thing that remains unaltered, permanent and eternal is divine Love.

·         Love does not rest content with merely loving, but flows out in acts of service. Love is blissful only when it freely gives itself away. Therefore, it is truly said-“The giver and the receiver are both blessed.”

·         Love must ever be revealed in service; otherwise, love has no value, or love is no love. Love cheerfully sacrifices; love willingly suffers. Where such love is, there is real peace and joy. Such a love illumines and blesses life.

·         O Love! There is nothing greater than Thee! Love is Truth. Love is God. Love is all. The name of this love is Ram. So, to repeat this name is to realize this supreme Love-is to enjoy everlasting bliss.

Swami Ramdas Web Site - anandashram.org

Friday, 25 November 2011

Divine Messages - 70 : The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna by 'M'ahendranath Gupta - How to receive God's Grace?


Extracts from the book “The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna” by ‘M’ahendranath Gupta (conversations between Sri Ramakrishna, the Master, and his disciples / devotees)

How to receive God's grace
JAYGOPAL: "How does one receive the grace of God?"

MASTER: "Constantly you have to chant the name and glories of God and give up worldly thoughts as much as you can.  With the greatest effort you may try to bring water into your field for your crops, but it may all leak out through holes in the ridges.  Then all your efforts to bring the water by digging a canal will be futile.”

"You will feel restless for God when your heart becomes pure and your mind free from attachment to the things of the world.  Then alone will your prayer reach God.  A telegraph wire cannot carry messages if it has a break or some other defect.”

"I used to cry for God all alone, with a longing heart.  I used to weep, 'O God, where art Thou?' Weeping thus, I would lose all consciousness of the world.  My mind would merge in the Mahāvāyu.”

Renunciation of worldly attachment
"How can one attain yoga? By completely renouncing attachment to worldly things.  The mind must be pure and without blemish, like the telegraph wire that has no defect.”
 
Unselfish love of God
"One must not cherish any desire whatever.  The devotion of a man who has any desire is selfish.  But desireless devotion is love for its own sake.  You may love me or not, but I love you: this is love for its own sake.”

"The thing is that one must love God.  Through intense love one attains the vision of Him.  The attraction of the husband for the chaste wife, the attraction of the child for its mother, the attraction of worldly possessions for the worldly man-when a man can blend these three into one, and direct it all to God, then he gets the vision of God."

Purity of heart
VIJAY: "How can one see God?"

MASTER: "One cannot see God without purity of heart.  Through attachment to 'woman and gold' the mind has become stained-covered with dirt, as it were.  A magnet cannot attract a needle if the needle is covered with mud.  Wash away the mud and the magnet will draw it.  Likewise, the dirt of the mind can be washed away with the tears of our eyes.  This stain is removed if one sheds tears of repentance and says, 'O God, I shall never again do such a thing.' Thereupon God, who is like the magnet, draws to Himself the mind, which is like the needle.  Then the devotee goes into samādhi and obtains the vision of God.”
 
God's grace is the ultimate help
"You may try thousands of times, but nothing can be achieved without God's grace.  One cannot see God without His grace.  Is it an easy thing to receive the grace of God? One must altogether renounce egotism; one cannot see God as long as one feels, 'I am the doer.' Suppose, in a family, a man has taken charge of the store-room; then if someone asks the master, 'Sir, will you yourself kindly give me something from the store-room?', the master says to him: 'There is already someone in the store-room.  What can I do there?'

"God doesn't easily appear in the heart of a man who feels himself to be his own master.  But God can be seen the moment His grace descends.  He is the Sun of Knowledge.  One single ray of His has illumined the world with the light of knowledge.  That is how we are able to see one another and acquire varied knowledge.  One can see God only if He turns His light toward His own face.”

"The police sergeant goes his rounds in the dark of night with a lantern in his hand.  No one sees his face; but with the help of that light the sergeant sees everybody's face, and others, too, can see one another.  If you want to see the sergeant, however, you must pray to him: 'Sir, please turn the light on your own face.  Let me see you.' In the same way one must pray to God: 'O Lord, be gracious and turn the light of knowledge on Thyself, that I may see Thy face.'

Sri Ramakrishna Web Site – belurmath.org

Tuesday, 22 November 2011

Divine Messages - 69 : The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna by 'M'ahendranath Gupta - Seven Planes of the Mind and "I"

Extracts from the book “The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna” by ‘M’ahendranath Gupta (conversations between Sri Ramakrishna, the Master, and his disciples / devotees)

Seven planes of the mind
"It is said in the Vedas that a man experiences samādhi when his mind ascends to the seventh plane.  The ego can disappear only when one goes into samādhi.  Where does the mind of a man ordinarily dwell? In the first three planes.  These are at the organs of evacuation and generation, and at the navel.  Then the mind is immersed only in worldliness, attached to 'woman (man for woman, to be read as lust) and gold (to be read as greed)'.  A man sees the light of God when his mind dwells in the plane of the heart.  He sees the light and exclaims: 'Ah! What is this? What is this?' The next plane is at the throat.  When the mind dwells there he likes to hear and talk only of God.  When the mind ascends to the next plane, in the forehead, between the eyebrows, he sees the form of Satchidānanda and desires to touch and embrace It.  But he is unable to do so.  It is like the light in a lantern, which you can see but cannot touch.  You feel as if you were touching the light, but in reality you are not.  When the mind reaches the seventh plane, then the ego vanishes completely and the man goes into samādhi."
 
Indescribability of highest plane
VIJAY: "What does a man see when he attains the Knowledge of Brahman after reaching the seventh plane?"

MASTER: "What happens when the mind reaches the seventh plane cannot be described.”
"Once a boat enters the 'black waters' of the ocean, it does not return.  Nobody knows what happens to the boat after that.  Therefore the boat cannot give us any information about the ocean.”

"Once a salt doll went to measure the depth of the ocean.  No sooner did it enter the water than it melted.  Now who could tell how deep the ocean was? That which could have told about its depth had melted.  Reaching the seventh plane, the mind is annihilated; man goes into samādhi.  What he feels then cannot be described in words.”

The "wicked I"
"The 'I' that makes one a worldly person and attaches one to 'woman and gold' is the 'wicked I'.  The intervention of this ego creates the difference between jiva and Ātman.  Water appears to be divided into two parts if one puts a stick across it.  But in reality there is only one water.  It appears as two on account of the stick.  This 'I' is the stick.  Remove the stick and there remains only one water as before.”

"Now, what is this 'wicked I'? It is the ego that says: 'What? Don't they know me? I have so much money! Who is wealthier than I?' If a thief robs such a man of only ten rupees, first of all he wrings the money out of the thief, then he gives him a good beating.  But the matter doesn't end there: the thief is handed over to the police and is eventually sent to jail.  The 'wicked I' says: 'What? Doesn't the rogue know whom he has robbed? To steal my ten rupees! How dare he?' "

VIJAY: "If without destroying the 'I' a man cannot get rid of attachment to the world and consequently cannot experience samādhi, then it would be wise for him to follow the path of Brahmajnāna to attain samādhi.  If the 'I' persists in the path of devotion, then one should rather choose the path of knowledge."

The "servant I"
MASTER: "It is true that one or two can get rid of the 'I' through samādhi; but these cases are very rare.  You may indulge in thousands of reasonings, but still the 'I' comes back.  You may cut the peepal-tree to the very root today, but you will notice a sprout springing up tomorrow.  Therefore if the 'I' must remain, let the rascal remain as the 'servant I'.  As long as you live, you should say, 'O God, Thou art the Master and I am Thy servant.' The 'I' that feels, 'I am the servant of God, I am His devotee' does not injure one.  Sweet things cause acidity of the stomach, no doubt, but sugar candy is an exception.”

"The path of knowledge is very difficult.  One cannot obtain Knowledge unless one gets rid of the feeling that one is the body.  In the Kaliyuga the life of man is centred on food.  He cannot get rid of the feeling that he is the body and the ego.  Therefore the path of devotion is prescribed for this cycle.This is an easy path.  You will attain God if you sing His name and glories and pray to Him with a longing heart.  There is not the least doubt about it.”

"Suppose you draw a line on the surface of water with a bamboo stick.  The water appears to be divided into two parts; but the line doesn't remain for any length of time.  The 'servant I' or the 'devotee I' or the 'child I' is only a line drawn with the ego and is not real".

The "ego of a devotee"
VIJAY (to the Master): "Sir, you ask us to renounce the 'wicked I'.  Is there any harm in the 'servant I'?"


MASTER: "The 'servant I'-that is, the feeling, 'I am the servant of God, I am the devotee of God'-does not injure one.  On the contrary, it helps one to realize God."

VIJAY: "Well, sir, what becomes of the lust, anger, and other passions of one who keeps the 'servant I'?"


MASTER: "If a man truly feels like that, then he has only the semblance of lust, anger, and the like.  If, after attaining God, he looks on himself as the servant or the devotee of God, then he cannot injure anyone.  By touching the philosopher's stone a sword is turned into gold.  It keeps the appearance of a sword but cannot injure.”

"When the dry branch of a coconut palm drops to the ground, it leaves only a mark on the trunk indicating that once there was a branch at that place.  In like manner, he who has attained God keeps only an appearance of ego; there remains in him only a semblance of anger and lust.  He becomes like a child.  A child has no attachment to the three gunas-sattva, rajas, and tamas.  He becomes as quickly detached from a thing as he becomes attached to it.  You can cajole him out of a cloth worth five rupees with a doll worth an ānnā, though at first he may say with great determination: 'No, I won't give it to you.  My daddy bought it for me.' Again, all persons are the same to a child.  He has no feeling of high and low in regard to persons.  So he doesn't discriminate about caste.  If his mother tells him that a particular man should be regarded as an elder brother, the child will eat from the same plate with him, though the man may belong to the low caste of a blacksmith.  The child doesn't know hate, or what is holy or unholy.”

"Even after attaining samādhi, some retain the 'servant ego' or the 'devotee ego'.  The bhakta keeps this 'I-consciousness'.  He says, 'O God, Thou art the Master and I am Thy servant; Thou art the Lord and I am Thy devotee.' He feels that way even after the realization of God.  His 'I' is not completely effaced.  Again, by constantly practising this kind of 'I-consciousness', one ultimately attains God.  This is called bhaktiyoga.”


"One can attain the Knowledge of Brahman, too, by following the path of bhakti.  God is all-powerful.  He may give His devotee Brahmajnāna also, if He so wills.  But the devotee generally doesn't seek the Knowledge of the Absolute.  He would rather have the consciousness that God is the Master and he the servant, or that God is the Divine Mother and he the child."

Sri Ramakrishna Web Site – belurmath.org

Saturday, 19 November 2011

Divine Messages - 68 : Glimpses of the Divine Vision by Swami Ramdas - Faith

An extract from the book “Glimpses of the Divine Vision” by Swami Ramdas – Section “Faith”

·         “Faith in God means faith in your own higher Self who is your real being. The main qualities of this faith are absolute fearlessness, and freedom from worry and anxiety of every kind, through a complete surrender in all things to the Almighty will of this supreme Self. To attain to this surrender you have to keep your mind dwelling constantly in God, not permitting it to come down to harassing thoughts about your body and other matters. This highest Truth that resides in you is all compassionate and merciful. What you have to do is to trust this great Truth and give up all cares. ‘Faith can move mountains’ is a trite saying.

·         Keep to a life of strict discipline by adjusting your food and rest according to a set system. Above all, maintain strictly a life of Brahmacharya. Merely praying to God without the corresponding effort on your part cannot avail you anything. Life is granted for the achievement of a great ideal which is freedom and cheerfulness in selfless service and sacrifice. The mere dedication of life to this exalted purpose will liberate it from all distempers.

·         When you have once taken complete refuge in God, you ought to give up all doubts and worries. You have to consider that, whatever way He decides the course of events in your life, it is always for good. Worldly honour and disgrace have no bearing on His decisions. You must freely and unreservedly put yourself in His hands. He can never come to your rescue if you do not cease from worrying and restlessness. Self-surrender means a state of perfect peace and calmness, attained through complete submission to the Divine Will.

·         Fears and anxieties cannot affect you in all your undertakings, provided you are sure and firm in your faith. God is the great provider and he who trusts Him is never lost. Only you have to tune your will with His will, mingle your consciousness with His divine light and wisdom, merge your life in His eternal existence; then you are perfectly safe in all situations of life.

·         The divine power manifest and working in great Mahatmas is capable of performing wondrous miracles. By faith alone you could attain high and ambitious ideals. If you are earnestly after spiritual illumination, you must strenuously work for it by concentrating all your thoughts on the supreme goal of life, the immortal Reality that dwells within you. Merely running after Gurus, without faith and a sincere aspiration for being benefited by their contact, will be of no use.

Swami Ramdas Web Site - anandashram.org

Tuesday, 15 November 2011

Divine Messages - 67 : Quotes from Speaking Tree


Some quotes from Speaking Tree.

·         We are shaped by our thoughts; we become what we think. When the mind is pure, joy follows like a shadow that never leaves. -- Buddha
·         THE will is not free, it is a phenomenon bound by cause and effect  - but there is something behind the will which is free. - Swami Vivekananda
·         It is better to conquer yourself than to win a thousand battles. Then the victory is yours. It cannot be taken from you, not by angels or by demons, heaven or hell. - Buddha
·         A wise man, recognizing that the world is but an illusion, does not act as if it is real, so he escapes the suffering. - Buddha
·         To live a pure unselfish life, one must count nothing as one's own in the midst of abundance. - Buddha
·         Do not love leisure. Waste not a minute. Be bold. Realize the Truth, here and now! – Swami Sivananda
·         Hindu culture is essentially based upon the sacrifice implied in duty, and not upon acquisition, which is implied in rights. – Swami Chinmaya
·         He who never thinks of anything as mine does not feel the lack of anything: he is never worried by a sense of loss. - Buddha

Speaking Tree Web Site – speakingtree.in

Saturday, 12 November 2011

Divine Messages - 66 : Quotes from Speaking Tree


Some quotes from Speaking Tree.

·         Blows are what awaken us and help to break the dream. They show us the insufficiency of this world and make us long to escape, to have freedom. – Swami Vivekananda
·         Be strict and intelligently critical about yourself and your own weakness and follies. But, cushion your words and attitudes with Love. Love is the greatest persuasive power we know in life. – Swami Chinamaya
·         Endurance is one of the most difficult disciplines, but it is to the one who endures that the final victory comes. - Buddha
·         Ambition is like love, impatient both of delays and rivals. - Buddha
·         What is the appropriate behaviour for a man or a woman in the midst of this world, where each person is clinging to his piece of debris? What's the proper salutation between people as they pass each other in this flood? – Buddha
·         Come prepared to receive not so much of My Words, but of My Silence. – Meher Baba
·         Hold to the idea, “I am not the mind, I see that I am thinking, I am watching my mind act,” and each day the identification of yourself with thoughts and feelings will grow less, until at last you can entirely separate yourself from the mind and actually know it to be apart from yourself. – Swami Vivekananda
·         To say, `LORD IS' is Gyanam. But `THE LORD IS I' is Vigyanam. – Swami Chinmaya


Speaking Tree Web Site – speakingtree.in

Tuesday, 8 November 2011

Divine Messages - 65 :"I am sitting in the lap of the Mother Divine" by Dada J. P. Vaswani


"I am sitting in the lap of the Mother Divine"  - Dada J P Vaswani

On Rev. Dada J P Vaswani's 93rd birthday, he shares some pearls of spiritual wisdom with Manoj Khatri
MK: You are in your '90s and last year you went through a physical ordeal and bounced back. Tell us the secret of your resilience.
Dada: The secret is a simple one. It is the realisation that I am not alone. I feel as though I am sitting in the lap of the Mother Divine. She takes care of me. She gives me the strength and the wisdom to smile and to thank Her—whatever be the condition through which I am passing. May she continue to keep me by her side, always.
MK: If you had to name one quality that has kept you going through the tremendous physical pain and bodily suffering over the last one year or so, what would that be?
Dada: There is no quality in me. It is all due to the grace of Guru and God.
MK: Is pain necessary for growth? There are millions of people out there, suffering with all kinds of health problems. What would be your message to them about enduring pain—physical and emotional?
Dada: If you are suffering from pain—physical or emotional—hand it over to the Lord, saying: “Lord, let me suffer, so that the suffering of some may be reduced.” This will help you to grow spiritually.
MK: Your teachings [and the teachings of many saints] are so simple and easy. For example, you have talked about consulting ‘the four doctors’. Yet, people are always struggling to be healthy and happy. It’s almost as if people revel in sadness and illness… Why do we find it so difficult to adopt such simple ideas in our lives? And how do we change this tendency?
Dada: Our civilisation loves complication. We do not wish to touch simple solutions. We have grown in the belief that we will get nothing if we walk the simple way. We asked Gurudev Sadhu Vaswani once:“The Gita speaks of three margas—karma marga, gyan marga, bhakti marga. Which is your way?” He answered: “None of these. My marga is the Alpa marga, the little, the simple way.” He who walks the simple way makes God real to himself in his daily life. To most of us, God is only a word. We need to make God real. Therefore, we need to turn to God again and again.
MK: Coming to current affairs…these days, crime and corruption seems to have become the norm. How should one stay hopeful in spite of being surrounded by “bad news” everywhere and at all times?
Dada: The Chinese have a proverb which says: All around you, there may be darkness and you see the darkness growing. Instead of cursing the darkness, light a candle. Each one of us can light a small candle. When many small candles are kindled, the darkness will disappear.
MK: You see God in everyone… including those who do all kinds of harm to others. How should our readers cultivate this ability?
Dada: I cannot say that I see God in everyone. I am but trying to see God in everyone. This is a gift which the Guru and God can give. Keep praying for it, constantly.
MK: Finally, as a blessing for readers of Complete Wellbeing, please offer one spiritual advice that we may commit to our memory so that when we are faced with sudden pain or crisis in our lives, we can remember it and stay hopeful…
Dada: When I am passing through one such period, I say to myself: By God's grace, this, too, shall pass away! It gives me hope; it fills me with strength and courage.

Sadhu Vaswani Mission Web Site - sadhuvaswani.org

Friday, 4 November 2011

Divine Messages - 64 : The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna by 'M'ahendranath Gupta - Prema Bhakti


Extracts from the book “The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna” by ‘M’ahendranath Gupta (conversations between Sri Ramakrishna, the Master, and his disciples / devotees)

Prema-bhakti

"But it isn't any and every kind of bhakti that enables one to realize God.  One cannot realize God without prema-bhakti.  Another name for prema-bhakti is raga-bhakti. God cannot be realized without love and longing.  Unless one has learnt to love God, one cannot realize Him.”

"There is another kind of bhakti, known as vaidhi-bhakti, according to which one must repeat the name of God a fixed number of times, fast, make pilgrimages, worship God with prescribed offerings, make so many sacrifices, and so forth and so on.  By continuing such practices a long time one gradually acquires raga-bhakti.  God cannot be realized until one has raga-bhakti.  One must love God.  In order to realize God one must be completely free from worldliness and direct all of one's mind to Him.”

"But some acquire raga-bhakti directly.  It is innate in them.  They have it from their very childhood.  Even at an early age they weep for God.  An instance of such bhakti is to be found in Prahlada.  Vaidhi-bhakti is like moving a fan to make a breeze.  One needs the fan to make the breeze.  Similarly, one practises japa, austerity, and fasting, in order to acquire love of God.  But the fan is set aside when the southern breeze blows of itself.”

Such actions as japa and austerity drop away when one spontaneously feels love and attachment for God.  Who, indeed, will perform the ceremonies enjoined in the scriptures, when mad with love of God?
"Devotion to God may be said to be 'green' so long as it doesn't grow into love of God; but it becomes 'ripe' when it has grown into such love.”

"A man with 'green' bhakti cannot assimilate spiritual talk and instruction; but one with 'ripe' bhakti can.  The image that falls on a photographic plate covered with black film is retained.  On the other hand, thousands of images may be reflected on a bare piece of glass, but not one of them is retained.  As the object moves away, the glass becomes the same as it was before.  One cannot assimilate spiritual instruction unless one has already developed love of God."

VIJAY: "Is bhakti alone sufficient for the attainment of God, for His vision?"

MASTER: "Yes, one can see God through bhakti alone.  But it must be 'ripe' bhakti, prema-bhakti and raga-bhakti.  When one has that bhakti, one loves God even as the mother loves the child, the child the mother, or the wife the husband.”

"When one has such love and attachment for God, one doesn't feel the attraction of maya to wife, children, relatives, and friends.  One retains only compassion for them.  To such a man the world appears a strange land, a place where he has merely to perform his duties.  It is like a man's having his real home in the country, but coming to Calcutta for work; he has to rent a house in Calcutta for the sake of his duties.  When one develops love of God, one completely gets rid of one's attachment to the world and worldly wisdom.”

"One cannot see God if one has even the slightest trace of worldliness.  Match-sticks, if damp, won't strike fire though you rub a thousand of them against the match-box.  You only waste a heap of sticks.  The mind soaked in worldliness is such a damp match-stick.  Once Sri Radha said to her friends that she saw Krishna everywhere-both within and without.  The friends answered: 'Why, we don't see Him at all.  Are you delirious?' Radha said, 'Friends, paint your eyes with the collyrium of divine love, and then you will see Him.'

God's name destroys sin

NEIGHBOUR: "Sir, we are sinners.  What will happen to us?"

MASTER: "All the sins of the body flyaway if one chants the name of God and sings His glories.  The birds of sin dwell in the tree of the body.  Singing the name of God is like clapping your hands.  As, at a clap of the hands, the birds in the tree flyaway, so do our sins disappear at the chanting of God's name and glories.”

"Again, you find that the water of a reservoir dug in a meadow is evaporated by the heat of the sun.  Likewise, the water of the reservoir of sin is dried up by the singing of the name and glories of God.”

"You must practise it every day.  The other day, at the circus, I saw a horse running at top speed, with an Englishwoman standing on one foot on its back.  How much she must have practised to acquire that skill!”

"Weep at least once to see God.”

"These, then, are the two means: practice and passionate attachment to God, that is to say, restlessness of the soul to see Him."


Sri Ramakrishna Web Site – belurmath.org

Tuesday, 1 November 2011

Divine Messages - 63 : The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna by 'M'ahendranath Gupta - Bhakti / Devotion


Extracts from the book “The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna” by ‘M’ahendranath Gupta (conversations between Sri Ramakrishna, the Master, and his disciples / devotees)

Path of devotion most elective for Kaliyuga

"Karmayoga is very hard indeed.  In the Kaliyuga it is extremely difficult to perform the rites enjoined in the scriptures.  Nowadays man's life is centred on food alone.  He cannot perform many scriptural rites.  Suppose a man is laid up with fever.  If you attempt a slow cure with the old-fashioned indigenous remedies, before long his life may be snuffed out.  He can't stand much delay.  Nowadays the drastic doctor’s mixture is appropriate.  In the Kaliyuga the best way is bhaktiyoga, the path of devotion-singing the praises of the Lord, and prayer.  The path of devotion alone is the religion for this age.  (To the Brahmo devotees) Yours also is the path of devotion.  Blessed you are indeed that you chant the name of Hari and sing the Divine Mother's glories.  I like your attitude.  You don't call the world a dream like the non-dualists.  You are not Brahmajnanis like them; you are bhaktas, lovers of God.  That you speak of Him as a Person is also good.  You are devotees.  You will certainly realize Him if you call on Him with sincerity and earnestness."

Path of bhakti is easy

MASTER: "Yes, one may reach Him by following the path of discrimination too: that is called Jnanayoga.  But it is an extremely difficult path.  I have told you already of the seven planes of consciousness.  On reaching the seventh plane the mind goes into samādhi.  If a man acquires the firm knowledge that Brahman alone is real and the world illusory, then his mind merges in samādhi.  But in the Kaliyuga the life of a man depends entirely on food.  How can he have the consciousness that Brahman alone is real and the world illusory? In the Kaliyuga it is difficult to have the feeling, 'I am not the body, I am not the mind, I am not the twenty-four cosmic principles; I am beyond pleasure and pain, I am above disease and grief, old age and death.' However you may reason and argue, the feeling that the body is identical with the soul will somehow crop up from an unexpected quarter.  You may cut a peepal-tree to the ground and think it is dead to its very root, but the next morning you will find a new sprout shooting up from the dead stump.  One cannot get rid of this identification with the body; therefore the path of bhakti is best for the people of the Kaliyuga.  It is an easy path.

"And, 'I don't want to become sugar; I want to eat it.' I never feel like saying, 'I am Brahman.' I say, 'Thou art my Lord and I am Thy servant.' It is better to make the mind go up and down between the fifth and sixth planes, like a boat racing between two points.  I don't want to go beyond the sixth plane and keep my mind a long time in the seventh.  My desire is to sing the name and glories of God.  It is very good to look on God as the Master and oneself as His servant.  Further, you see, people speak of the waves as belonging to the Ganges; but no one says that the Ganges belongs to the waves.  The feeling, 'I am He', is not wholesome.  A man who entertains such an idea, while looking on his body as the Self, causes himself great harm.  He cannot go forward in spiritual life; he drags himself down.  He deceives himself as well as others.  He cannot understand his own state of mind.


Sri Ramakrishna Web Site – belurmath.org