Archive | June, 2010

‘Sathsang’ – In the company of Holy men

19 Jun

Om Sathguru Sri Seshadri Swamigal Thiruvadikkae

SATHSANG No: 34/2010 . 19th June 2010.
‘Sathsang’ – (In the company of holy men)

A short talk by
Prahlad Chandra Brahmachari
May 4, 1975

Translated 1976 by Bill Morgan

and Pradeep Mukherjea

Today is an auspicious day for us. It is Sunday, the 20th of the month of Baishakh, in the Bengali year 1382. We are sitting in the courtyard of Anandamayi, near her feet, and with us are four disciples from America: Premananda, Yogananda, Nityananda, Gyanananda. Today I shall speak a little bit about the meaning of this word “guru,” and they will translate this into English.

What is the Guru? Once long ago we had a great king, Janak. Janak Maharshi. He made a vow: “He who can give me the knowledge of Brahma in the wink of an eye, he will be my guru.” That knowledge of Brahma, which cannot be had even after doing penance for many lifetimes, to get that knowledge edge in the wink of an eye is impossible!

Sanak and other sages and rishis, sixty thousand great rishis came and sat, motionless, and whoever would give King Janak the knowledge of Brahma in the wink of an eye would be his guru. They all sat motionless and silent.

At that time there was one rishi named Ashtavakra, who was deformed. He came, stooping over, to the guru seat which King Janak had prepared. King Janak asked, “Will you be my guru?”

Ashtavakra Rishi said, “Yes, I will be your guru.”

“You will give me the knowledge of Brahma in the wink of an eye?”

“Indeed, I will give you that,” said the Rishi.

Then King Janak asked him, “So, you will give me initiation?”

Ashtavakra Rishi answered, “Yes, I will give you initiation. But first you must give me the guru-fee. Because after I have become your guru, I cannot take any fee from you. Our Vedantic religion, our Hindu Sanatan Dharma, is very strict. There is no getting a guru before giving the teacher’s fee.”

Then Ashtavakra Rishi said, “Maharaj, there are three things you must give me for the guru-fee. The first is the body, the second is the mind, the third is your wealth. You have to give me these things first.”

In the presence of those sixty-thousand rishis King Janak promptly and ungrudgingly gave these gifts. First he gave his body, meaning the physical body. Secondly he gave his mind. And thirdly, he gave all his wealth. By wealth we do not mean gold, pearls, or gems. Our real wealth is our eyes, our ears, our tongue, our nose. Within this body there are great riches. These riches King Janak gave ungrudgingly.

After taking the gifts, Ashtavakra Rishi, sitting on the guru seat said, “Tell me now, King Janak, just who will take this knowledge of Brahma? Who will receive this knowledge of God”?

Then Janak said, “What? “I!” And again he exclaimed, “I!”

Ashtavakra said, “What does ‘I’ mean? All that you gave me: your body, your mind, your riches, if this is not ‘I’ then where else is ‘I’?” King Janak became very thoughtful.

Then Ashtavakra Rishi said, “Maharaj, that knowledge of God, which you are getting in the wink of an eye, we chant everyday, like this:

Guru Brahma, Guru Vishnu,
Guru Deva Maheshvara,
Guru Sakshat, Param Brahma,
Tasmai Sri Guruve Namah.

< Prahlad Chandra Brahmachari

Guru means Brahma, guru means Bhagavan. Bhagavan is formless, and he is also with form, standing right in front of us. He gives the mantra in our ear, or he writes it on our tongue. He removes the darkness of our ignorance. And so, in our guru pranam, it goes on to say:

Mot pranam Sri Guru Pranang,
Mot Deha Shri Guru Mondira,
Purna Mosta Bohir Jeno,
Tasmai Shri Guruve Namah.

Mantra Mulong Guru Bakkyo,
Puja Mulong Guru Padho,
Dhyana Mulong Guru Murti,
Mukhya Mulong Guru Kripa.

If the guru gives his grace, of course we will attain to God! Here the need arises for complete and total faith. In this way we must have faith: a faith in which there are no faults or failings what so ever. No error at all. There is a saying, ‘Faith will get you the truth but debate takes for ever.’ What is the meaning of guru? He in whom there is no ignorance.

Agyana Timirandhasha, gyananjano sholokoya
Chokkumilitong Jeno, Tasmai Shri Guruve Namah.

Please click the link, to view this page:

THE DIVINE GURU

Then King Janak had the knowledge of Brahma in the wink of an eye. What was it? Guru God! Guru Bhagavan! You cannot get that knowledge of Brahma without the Guru’s Blessing and the Guru’s Grace.

In the same way, we cannot see our own face. We need a mirror. We see our face in a mirror. We shave the beard, we can see the face, or we put on the tilak, or we can just get a very good look at the whole face. We can see it very well. This looking-glass or mirror is the guru’s blessing. We cannot see our own face by ourselves. We can see the face of another, but we cannot see our own face. With the help of the mirror, we can see. This first story is from the “Guru Gita.”

The second story today is: you must take a guru. Why must one take a guru?

When we sit for worship in our eternal Hindu religion, and in all religions, there is this obeisance to the guru, or Guruve Namah. Who? Father. Param Guruve Namah. Who is that? Mother. Parapar Guruve Namah. Who is he? He who gives the mantra in our ear. Paramesti Guruve namah. Who? That is Brahma, Atma. These are four gurus.

One day Narada Rishi went to the assembly of the gods. Thirty-three crores of gods were sitting there. That Narada Rishi, what a devotee of God he was! Always drunk with God’s name, he traveled on foot, without beast or cart, throughout the three worlds.

When he went to the assembly of gods, he was given a small seat below everyone else. Narada Rishi sat down before them. All of the Gods were there: Indra, Vayu, Varuna, Yama, Dijopal, the Nine Planets, thirty-three crores of them sitting in splendor offering oblations of wheat into the sacred fire. Narada Rishi, with a touch of sadness stirring in his heart, questioned the Great Father Brahma. “Oh Great Father Brahma, I am your own child! Why do I have such a low seat today?”

Brahma replied, laughing, “Narada, you are God’s great devotee! You are always singing God’s name, but you have never taken a guru. For that reason your seat is so low.”

Then Narada thought to himself, “It’s true. I have no guru-mantra. In accordance with Mother’s order I practice repeating the name of God, but I have never taken a mantra from a guru.” Then Narada Rishi vowed to all the gods: “He whose face I see first at dawn, him shall I graciously accept as my guru. I will take initiation from him and return to this assembly of gods.” This was great faith and trust in God! This was the practice of spontaneous devotion.

That night Narada slept soundly.

In the early morning he opened the door and saw an old fisherman with a net on his shoulder and the pole of the net in his hand. As he was walking along on his way to catch fish, he was weaving his net.

Before he had even see the face of the fisherman, Narada ran to him. Bowing at his feet he said, “Old fisherman! You must give me initiation! You are my guru! I have vowed that he whose face I see at daybreak, him shall I graciously accept as my guru.”

The old fisherman said, “What this? Oh Thakur! You are a rishi, the greatest of them all, Narada Rishi! The Lord’s great devotee! I am only a low-caste fisherman. I catch fish, I throw the net. I will be your guru? Don’t make a mistake. Let go of my feet!”

But Narada would not let go of his feet. He said to the fisherman, “Look, please give me initiation.”

The fisherman said, “But I don’t know even a single mantra! I have never taken initiation myself! What mantra could I give you?”

“That which is in your mind, give me that.” The meaning of the word mantra is “mon-tor,” “mon-tor” (Your-mind). Whatever word the guru speaks, if there is complete faith in that word, then that word is verily the best mantra.

The fisherman thought to himself and then said, “But I don’t know anything else. I just throw the nets at the pond, swinging them around my head, singing, ‘Oh, Hari Bol, Oh Hari Bol!’ This is what we fishermen sing when we throw the nets to catch fish.”

Narada Rishi said calmly, “Okay, give me that very one,” and he leaned forward to receive the mantra.

Then the fisherman said, “Oh, Hari Bol! Oh, Hari Bol! Oh, Hari Bol!” He said it three times and then left. Narada bowed to his guru.

When he went back to the assembly of the gods, the gods were able to know that Narada had received a mantra from a guru. They put his seat very high. Then the Great Father Brahma said, “Narada, sit down on this high seat!”

Narada asked him, “Why is my seat so high today?”

“Ah! Today you have taken a guru and received initiation, haven’t you? For that reason your seat is so high. And we shall all pay homage to your guru. Please request your guru to come. We should all like to see him who is the guru of Narada Rishi!”

Narada then thought to himself, “This is distressing! A dreadful problem!” Narada knew that he had taken initiation from a mere fisherman. “I promised,” he thought, “that he whose face I would see first this morning, him I would take for my guru.”

All the thirty-three crores of gods said with one voice, “Please, you must bring your guru. We all wish to see him, and together to bow at his feet.”

What could Narada do? A difficult situation! He went running back to the old fisherman. Bowing at his feet he said, “You must go with me to the assembly of the gods! Please, climb on my back! Without beast or cart we shall travel across the three worlds!”

The guru fisherman said, “Narada! What an astonishing thing to say! Hari Baba! You are the great Rishi Narada! You are God’s devotee! You are going to carry me piggyback?”

The old fisherman was somewhat lame and didn’t want to go, but Narada would not release him. As Narada took him on his shoulders to the assembly of the gods, the ancient fisherman kept hold of his net. And the stick, with which he weaved his net, he held on to that as well. Taking these belongings he went with Narada to the kingdom of heaven.

The gods were waiting. When they saw, they were all astounded. “What is this? Narada Rishi’s guru is an old fisherman?” They all rose in amazement. They asked Narada “Is this the guru you said you had accepted?”

Narada then revealed the truth to them. “Yesterday I promised this assembly of gods that he whose face I would see when I rose this morning, him I would graciously accept as my guru. So when I opened the door and saw this fisherman walking along, I said, ‘This is no fisherman,’ and I accepted him as my guru. So you please bow down at his feet.”

Then Narada Rishi lay in a full shastanga pranam before his guru. The guru pranam is shastanga pranam:

holding the two feet of the guru in the hands, the head goes down on top of the feet, lying completely prostrate. In this shastanga position, Narada bowed to his guru.

All the thirty-three crores of gods moved to bow down to Narada Rishi’s guru. And when they came to pranam, what did they see? That old fisherman was no fisherman! This was all God’s test. All of a sudden instead of the form of the fisherman there appeared Shiva himself! He whom we call Shankar.

Triumbakam Yajamahe Sugandhim Pushtivardhanam
Urvar Ukamiva Bandhanan Mrityro Mukshiya Mamritat
Om Namah Shivaya.

Shiva! Narada Rishi’s guru was Shiva! That which was the form of the fisherman, that which was the net, this was all the casting of the net of maya’s illusion.

Samsat Jalrupen Min Rupen Manava
Janjalo Jal Rupen Kal Rupen Dhivara.

Shiva is the god of destruction. In the large pond of this world he throws the net of illusion and catches his fish. For that reason the old fisherman had a net on his shoulder. What he was weaving was not the net, it was:

Mahamaya Prabhavena Samsar Sristi Karini
Mahamaya Prabhavena Mahagotta Nipatita.

As the spider makes its own web from its own saliva, and binds it together, in the same way, in this illusion, this maya, we say “I”, “I”. This is my room, this is my son, this is my grandson, this is my wife, this is my father, this is my house, this is my country. This that is “mine”—Thakur Ramakrishna has said: “When will I be free? When ‘I’ ceases to be.” This word “I” is the weaving of the net of illusion. This second guru-story I have given to my American disciple, Premananda.

The significance of the word “guru” is inexpressible. What the guru is cannot be understood by words or explanations. Therefore in our guru pranam we say:

Akhanda Mandalakaram Vyaptam Yena Chraracharam
Tatpadam Darsitam Yena Tasmai Shri Guruve Namah.

What is the word guru? The word guru means he who in the midst of great darkness shows us light; he who removes the darkness; he who lights the lamp of wisdom in us; he who makes us see within ourselves the light of Parabrahma, Paramatma; he is the guru.

Today we have spoken of the place of the guru, the meaning of the guru. He who gives the mantra in our ear, and becomes our guru, and takes a fee, and by tradition takes his fee every year, this is not the real thing. The real thing is that “guru” means showing one, making one feel that ineffable truth. He who does that is the real guru.

There is a saying, “There are gurus by the thousands, but a real disciple is rare.” To Thakur Sri Ramakrishna, when he was calling out to our holy land of India at Dakshineswar, Naren used to come. His original name was “Naren.” But how many times Naren would slap Thakur, how much abuse and reproach he used to give. How he would ridicule Thakur. And even so, if Naren would not show up even for a single day, Thakur would fret and worry about him. That Naren, who did so much to proclaim the universal religion in America, his name was Swami Vivekananda. Only one disciple. Thakur made many disciples, but who among them was ripe? Naren. As in our ancient dice game “pasha,” if you are “it” (ripe), no one can beat you, so if the disciple is ripe, he has nothing to fear.

Today I have given this spiritual instruction to Premananda. It is in Bengali, but he will translate it into English.

The guru is indescribable. What will you give the guru? When the student first enters into discipleship, from that moment on the gift to the guru is finished. After that, what is more money, gold, silver? Maya!

Then what is the true gift to the guru, do you know? The gift to the guru is this: that truth which the guru has given, to wake up that truth, to exalt it. Repeating the mantra (and in that word mantra is the word “heart” or “mind”), elevating the mind, removing the impurities of the heart, making the heart and mind pure, keeping one’s faith in the practice which has been handed down by the guru—in all this is the gift the disciple gives. If one attains to that truth, no need for any other thing on this earth will remain. If you see that truth, there is no more desire to see any other thing. If you hear that truth in your ear, then there is no more desire to hear anything else.

That is ineffable! Parabrahma, or Satchidananda, Ananda mayi Purush. Om Shanti, Om Shanti, Om Shanti.

We are sitting here at our Ramanathpur Ananda Ashram, near the feet of the Blissful Mother. At this ghat are Premananda, Yogananda, Nityananda, Gyanananda, four boys who have come running from America for the purpose of attaining God.

But getting God will not be so easy. Yes, if day by day their eagerness and earnestness grow very great, then of course they will find God, will realize Bhagavan. But here they must have faith. Here I shall tell just one more little story.

Once there was a thief, a robber. He used to work always at his banditry. And he would drink wine. And whatever unholy and indecent acts he felt the urge to do, he would do. But one day, taking the mantra from his guru, he asked his guru, “When will I attain to God?”

“That day that you take a bath in the Ganges,” said his guru, “on that day you will get the vision of God, you will have liberation.”

The robber would daily go about his stealing. How many unholy murders he would commit, how many robberies! One day he suddenly remembered, “My guru said that if I take a bath in the Ganges, I will gain liberation, I will get the vision of God! This very day I am going for a bath in the Ganges.”

He called all his relatives and neighbors and the villagers around to watch and he went for a bath in the Ganges. He dived into the water, and coming up he said, “My guru told me that if I bathe in the Ganges I will get the vision of Bhagavan, I will have liberation.” But taking his bath in the Ganges, he did not have liberation, he didn’t get the vision of God. But this thief, this murderer, did not lose faith in his guru’s word.

He said, “What my guru said, that is certainly the truth. Therefore this river is not the Ganges! So be it.

The Lord and creator of the Ganges is Narayan. So I will go and ask Narayan.”

All of his friends and family laughed at him and clapped their hands: “How ridiculous!”

But the thief said, “No! My guru said it. My guru’s word can never be a lie! My guru said that if a take a bath in the Ganges, I will get the vision of God, I will have liberation. So look! This is not the Ganges! The creator of the Ganges is Narayan, so I am going off to ask Narayan!” And off he went, traveling without food, going without sleep.

But Narayan could not wait for him. He came on ahead. Standing before that killer, that robber, Narayan inquired, “Baba, where are you going?”

“I am going to Vaikunta. I am going to ask Narayan, ‘Is this the Ganges or not?’ My guru’s word cannot possibly be a lie.”

Then Narayan said, “Baba, you don’t have to go to Vaikunta. This is the Ganges!”

“Then why am I not liberated?”

“You are liberated, Baba!”

Then what? All of a sudden, in front of the thief, instead of an old man he saw:

Shangkha chakra, gada pane
Dvarika Nilayachito
Govinda Pundarikka
Rakkamang sharanagoto.

“Oh thief, you have kept faith in your guru’s word! Look! God with conch, wheel, mace and lotus! These four things in four hands. White color, yellow dress, flower garland around the neck!”Narayan thus gave him darshan, and immediately the thief attained liberation.

Here I have finished. Om Shanti, Om Shanti, Om Shanti. Today, near the feet of the Blissful Mother, sitting near her feet, I have given this little speech for the American disciples.

Om Sathguru Sri Seshadri Swamigal Thiruvadikkae

Thank You
Yours Guruji
Thiruvannamalai.
19th June2010.

The Divine Energy

5 Jun

Sath-sang – 30 /2010.   21st May 2010.

“THE DIVINE ENERGY”

Om Sathguru Sri Seshadri Swamigal Thiruvadikkae

From the files of “THE DIVINE ENERGY” by Saint Rajalingam

Sathguru Sri Rajalinga Swamigal – Guruji

Q.No: 19. Disciple: What exactly is a Spiritual Mantra?

Master: Mantra is the Supreme Lord Himself, the Supreme Principle.

Q.No: 20.Disciple: Is mantra a Vibration?

Master: It is energy, or Shakti (Sheathe). When we repeat a mantra for a considerable length of time, we accumulate energy (Universal energy), which in turn makes the mantra more and more powerful.

When our Guru’s mantra, “OM SATHGURU SRI SESHADRI SWAMIGAL THIRUVADIKKAE”, is transmitted to someone else (by guruji) , it usually creates an immediate effect on the person who receives it because of its accumulated power. When we dwell constantly on any thought, eventually our entire being will become permeated with that thought, and mantra is the most potent kind of thought.

Q.No: 21. Disciple: would you say that the person who repeats the mantra eventually becomes one with God?

Master (Guruji) : There is no doubt about it. The secret of mantra is very great. By the strength of mantra we can change the entire body. The body is not an ordinary object; it can be literally transformed by a sustained act of will. We can actually convert the body into the form of the mantra.

Q.No: 22. Disciple: How does one find the right mantra?

Master: The Mantra you receive from one who is fully realized is the right mantra. If you receive your mantra from one who has himself received something from it, you can also receive something from that mantra. There is a saying Sanskrit: mantra chaitanya vignata-“Receive mantra from one who has realized its full conscious power”. So if you receive a mantra from one for whom those mantras become fully alive, fully conscious, that same mantra will also bear full fruit for you.

Our Mantra, “Om Sathguru Sri Seshadri Swamigal Thiruvadikkae”. This is called a Maha-Mantra.

The mystery of mantra is profound, and from a certain viewpoint every letter is a mantra. Each word is bound to do its work, depending on what it denotes. These mantras bring results immediately. Likewise, the maha-mantra, the great mantra, directs you toward the highest goal of man. By repeating the mantra, we achieve the true goal of life. According to the scriptures and personal experience, it is the Supreme Principle, which has manifested itself as mantra.

Q.No: 23. Disciple: Could you give a bit more detail about what is achieved through the use of a spiritual mantra?

Master: First of all, a mantra removes the grossness or dullness from the intellect through which one perceives the Supreme Truth. The mantra permeates the intellect and purifies it. In fact, it removes all impurities within one’s entire being and thus purifies all the inner instruments. Furthermore, if you keep repeating the mantra, it eventually awakens the dormant power of the inner Self. When the Shakthi (Sheathe) is awakened, one begins to cross over the great barrier –the ocean of transmigration. This awakening is the starting point of Siddha Yoga.

Q.No: 24.Disciple: After a Guru has passed away, does the mantra continue to have his power?

Master: If he is a Sathguru or SathPurusha or SiddhaPurusha, a perfect Guru, the mantra will continue to work with the same force. It also depends on whether the mantra is a conscious mantra or a dead mantra. A conscious mantra is one that the Guru has practiced for a long time and whose full power he has realized. That mantra has awakened his own inner Shakthi and unfolded it fully and made him experience the goal of the mantra. If you receive that kind of mantra from a Guru, it will awaken your Shakthi because it is a living mantra.

Our mantra, Maha-mantra, “Om Sathguru Sri Seshadri Swamigal Thiruvadikkae”. Is a conscious mantra? It is a living mantra.

But a mantra that one just finds in a book or hears from someone else will be a dead mantra, and it would not work. It is also true that a real Guru never passes away; he is always alive.

Q.No: 25. Disciple: Is mantra initiation usually involves some sort of special ritual performed between the Guru and the disciple?

Master: More important than any ritual is the faith of the person who receives the mantra. One with faith can receive a Siddha’s mantra in any place, at any time, under any circumstances, and that mantra is guaranteed to bear its fruit. A Siddhapurusha’s mantra (Sri Seshadri Swamigal) is no inert- it’s fully conscious and not bound by time, space, or ritual. Through the Siddha’s grace, it bears fruit immediately. Ordinarily, there is a ritual for mantra initiation, but the main ritual is faith. Where there is no faith, ritual becomes pointless, where there is great faith, ritual becomes unnecessary.

Q.No: 26.Disciple: How does the Guru’s grace occur?

Master: By a disciple’s love for the Guru.

Q.No: 27.Disciple: Does each individual have his own meditation, or is there one meditation that is appropriate for all people?

Master: The essence of meditation is to make the mind totally still, and many different techniques have been recommended for that; but it is the stillness, which is important. Regardless of what techniques one follows, one’s mind should become purer and steadier.

There are many people who would prescribe different meditation techniques, but the true meditation is that which arises from within spontaneously.

Q.No: 28. Disciple: Do you need a teacher to awaken this spontaneous meditation?

Master: Yes that is very important. A Guru who can activate spontaneous meditation in you is a very high being; you can’t be cheated by such a Guru. Such beings are very rare, and if you can find one, it is a great blessing. Spontaneous meditation does not cause any harm. In fact, this form of meditation leads you to the state of perfection. It is the best kind of meditation. The kind of meditation that you do through techniques, through your own efforts, is very ordinary. Besides, spontaneous meditation includes all different forms of meditation and yoga, and one does not have to run around thinking that he needs to try every new course and technique.

Meditation is the very last stage of prayer. Where prayer ends, meditation begins. When the mind becomes fixed in the art of praying to God, when your mind becomes totally still, that is the state of meditation. Meditation is an essential part of every religious tradition.

Q.No: 29. Disciple: Does it matter if you repeat a mantra or can you just look at something? There are many ways to meditate. Is one better than the others?

Master: There are many so-called techniques of meditation that are mere mental exercise. There are people who try to get into meditation by gazing at a tree or a spot or by looking in a particular direction. But real meditation happens spontaneously as a result of grace; you do not have to learn it.

Meditation should happen automatically. However, a Guru in whose presence you get automatic meditation is rare. There is two kind of meditation; one is with Japa and the other is without Japa. Japa is mantra repetition. Mantra has great power and is very necessary. If you meditate with a mantra, (Om SathGuru Sri Seshadri Swamigal Thiruvadikkae) you will become absorbed very quickly. However, in pure meditation there is absolutely no thought or object in mind, not even the mantra. But you reach that only through the mantra. As you repeat a mantra more and more, the mantra begins to disappear, and you get into a state in which you are aware of neither yourself nor God.

Q.No: 30.Disciple: How did you attain the position of Guru?

Master: In our tradition, Spiritual Masters selects disciples and makes them into Gurus.

Q.No: 31.Disciple: Is it inherited?

Master: Yes, in a way it is. My Guru, ‘SRI GURU MAHADEV’ made me a Guru. Just as a professor prepares his students to become professors, so a Guru prepares his disciples to become Gurus.

Q.No: 32.Disciple: As a Spiritual Leader do you have the power to heal the sick?

Master: Siddha Gurus can awaken the inner Shakthi (Sheathe) or Divine Energy (Universal Energy or Cosmic Energy) through their touch. When the inner energy is awakened, diseases are cured automatically. If you want to enter the temple of God within your own being, you have to leave all dogmas and rituals outside.


Guru and Shishya

5 Jun

Om Sathguru Sri Seshadri Swamigal Thiruvadikkae


Sathsang : 31 /2010, 27th May 2010.

GURU

(This article has been taken from Soul Searchers

- The art of breathing.)

Guru, does not have its equivalent in English since Western world has never felt the intense pleasure of sitting with the Guru and learning from him in the Gurukula. Teacher is word that can be used for a person who teaches, Master for a person who is perfect in one form.

But what about a person whose presence itself transforms your own conscience and brings a radical change inwardly.

People who practise Martial arts have a term called Sensei. This is similar to a Guru, and it is better than the word Master/Teacher.

Gurur’ Brahma Gurur’ Vishnu Gurur’ Devo Maheshwara

Gurur’ Shakshat Parahbrahmah Tasmaye Sri Guruve Namah

Gurur’ Brahma:

Guru is like the creator of the universe Brahma. He is the one who creates the qualities of shishya (student) in me.

Gurur’ Vishnu:

Like Lord Vishnu supports and maintains the life on the universe, the same way guru shows the path of enlightenment. Like a friend guides through the path, like a mother caresses and loves, like a father scolds and guides to achieve the goal.

Gurur’ Devo Maheshwara:

Lord Shiva is the god of destruction, he destroys all the evil so that the new life can be created. In the same manner guru also destroys all my tamasic and rajasic guna to fill me with sattvic guna.

Gurur’ Shakshat Parahbrahmah  Tasmaye Sri Guruve Namah:

Guru is true incarnation of the Parahbrahmah (one who is Omnipresent and Omnipotent), I bow to him with reverence. I pray he keeps me one with him.

The above sloka aptly explains the role of guru in the life of a sadhaka. Without an able Guru and a able Shishya (disciple)  no dhyana can be successful.

The relation between the Guru and Shishya is like a child and a mother. Like mother who takes the tiny hands of the child and tells the child who his father is, as the child alone is not so strong enough to face the father. The same way the guru takes the hand of shishya and shows him the path to the Lord Shiva, a shishya alone may not be able to face the celestial bliss of the lord.

When a shishya finds such a guru he is not in control of himself but becomes only a toddler who wants to walk but cannot do so.

Vivekananda did not become Vivekananda

till he met Swami Ramakrishna Paramhamsa

and the day he was initiated

he was nothing but the image of his Guru.

In today’s city life, it is very difficult to find such a guru and also to find such a shishya. Any sadhaka who is very much interested to find the guru also should know the following :

Guru is one who knows more about the shishya

than the shishya himself knows.

Guru is one who is a mother, father, sister,

brother, friend and guide to the shishya.

Guru is one who knows all the answers

to the queries of the shishya.

Guru is one who takes the shishya

towards the total bliss.

Guru is one who initiates the shishya to ask questions. This question answer session inculcates the habit of finding the true reason of doing a particular thing and also keeps the shishya from blindly following the path without asking questions. This is important as in the Vedic tradition lot of things, which were done, had some scientific meaning and were not just done for the sake of doing. This also helps the guru to judge the development of the student. This path is not followed by the modern age gurus who tend to get influenced the western thoughts and discourage the shishya from asking questions.

Guru is one who does not exploit the shishya for personal gains but gives the shishya some of his energy for the spiritual development of the shishya.

Guru is not one who preaches austerity and lives in luxury. In today’s world lot of people are there who preach about austerity in living but travel in luxurious cars, travel by planes etc. They do the preaching and collect huge sums of money and live a life of rajasic tatva and claim to be sattvic in nature.

Guru never claims to be one to be worshipped but stays a worshipper of the lord. He who wants himself to be worshipped is nothing but a person who is full of ego and worshipping such a person will only increase the negative energy of the person and also increase the bad karma in the shishya. Guru’s who dress themselves as Goddess, Krishna, Shiva to be worshipped are nothing but people with high ego value. Following such gurus will cause destruction to the sattvic guna in the body.

A true Guru is one who is above ego, pride and sentiments, when he gives shaktipata to a shishya he only thinks of himself as a medium and this also happens only at a time when the shishya as well as the guru are ready for the ecstatic experience. He never feels pride in claiming to do shaktipata, as he knows he is nothing but a madhyam or a medium and not the source of the energy. Such a guru can be called a Sadguru.

Never consider the age of the Guru as a factor of ego for learning. Remember the idiom  “Child is the father of man”. A child can teach more things to a person than even a very learned person about the realities of the nature. When Sage Sankaracharya, Saint Gyaneshwar gave the true knowledge to the world they were very young.

Never believe in a Guru who claims to give shaktipata to a huge number of people at one time. It is not possible to do, as the main reason being that every person has different energy levels and different sustainability. If we assume that a Guru is able to give shaktipata to a number of people at the same time without taking into consideration the requirement of the shishya then he/she is endangering the life of the person. When a Guru gives shaktipata to a shishya then he/ she is transferring a part of his/her energy to the awaken the Kundalini shakti.

Shishya Dharma

(This article has been taken from Soul Searchers

- The Art of Breathing)

SHISHYA (DISCIPLE)

The parlance of Shishya cannot be found in the Western world. Though they have a word called disciple the role of the disciple is not similar to Shishya. The disciple is one who is governed by the  certain logistics of life and can work with preconceived knowledge, while a shishya is nothing but the true image of the Guru.

Yatha Guru Thatha Shishya

If you have seen the Guru, you know the Shishya

and if you have seen the Shishya you have felt the presence of Guru.

The relation between the Guru and Shishya is like a child and a mother. Like mother who takes the tiny hands of the child and tells the child who his father is, as the child alone is not so strong enough to face the father. The same way the guru takes the hand of shishya and shows him the path to the Lord Shiva, a shishya alone may not be able to face the celestial bliss of the lord.

When a shishya finds such a guru he is not in control of himself but becomes only a toddler who wants to walk but cannot do so.

Vivekananda did not become Vivekananda

till he met Swami Ramakrishna Paramhamsa

and the day he was initiated

he was nothing but the image of his Guru.

Shishya should respect the guru. It is said that if a shishya faces the guru, parents and the god, then the shishya should first give respect, to the guru then to the parents and then to the Lord. It is the guru who transforms a normal person into a sadhaka and becomes the medium for meeting the God, thus guru is the one who gives him the second life. Without the parents he wouldn’t be born.

Shishya should always be interested to ask questions and should continue the debate till he gets the satisfied answer.

Shishya should practice and remember the things taught by the guru.

Shishya should propagate the knowledge gained by him to his colleagues, friends and relatives after getting permission from the guru. This will help the shishya as he will remember the knowledge and also will try to improvise on it, to propagate the knowledge he gained.

Shishya should experiment and find new things so that he is able to gain sufficient knowledge to guide other.


Seven Reasons why a scientist Believes in God

5 Jun

Om Sathguru Sri Seshadri Swamigal Thiruvadikkae


Sathsang : 31 /2010, 27th May 2010.

SEVEN RAESONS WHY A SCIENTST BELIEVES IN GOD



A. Cressy Morrison

[Former President of the New York Academy of Sciences]

WE ARE STILL IN THE DAWN of the scientific age, and every increase of light reveals more brightly the handiwork of an intelligent Creator. We have made stupendous discoveries; with a spirit of scientific humility and of faith grounded in knowledge we are approaching ever nearer to an awareness of God.

For myself, I count seven reasons for my faith:

First: By unwavering mathematical law we can prove that our universe was designed and executed by a great engineering intelligence.

Suppose you put ten pennies, marked from one to ten, into your pocket and give them a good shuffle. Now try to take them out in sequence from one to ten, putting back the coin each time and shaking them all again. Mathematically we know that your chance of first drawing number one is one in ten; of drawing one and two in succession, one in 100; of drawing one, two and three in succession, one in 1000, and so on; your chance of drawing them all, from number one to number ten in succession, would reach the unbelievable figure of one in ten billion.

By the same reasoning, so many exacting conditions are necessary for life on the earth that they could not possibly exist in proper relationship by chance. The earth rotates on its axis 1000 miles an hour at the equator; if it turned at 100 miles an hour, our days and nights would be ten times as long as now, and the hot sun would likely burn up our vegetation each long day while in the long night any surviving sprout might well freeze.

Again the sun, source of our life, has a surface temperature of 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit, and our earth is just far enough away so that this “eternal life” warms us just enough and not too much ! If the sun gave off only one half its present radiation, we would freeze, and if it gave as much more, we would roast.

The slant of the earth, tilted at an angle of 23 degrees, gives us our seasons; if the earth had not been so tilted, vapors from the ocean would move north and south, piling up for us continents of ice. If our moon were, say, only 50,000 miles away instead of its actual distance, our tides might be so enormous that twice a day all continents would be submerged; even the mountains could soon be eroded away. If the crust of the earth had only been ten feet thicker, there would be no oxygen, without which animal life must die. Had the ocean been a few feet deeper, carbon dioxide and oxygen would have been absorbed and no vegetable life could exist.

It is apparent from these and a host of other examples that there is not one chance in billions that life on our planet is an accident.

Second: The resourcefulness of life to accomplish its purpose is a manifestation of an all-pervading Intelligence.

What life itself is, no man has fathomed. It has neither weight nor dimensions, but it does have force; a growing root will crack a rock. Life has conquered water, land and air, mastering the elements, compelling them to dissolve and reform their combinations.

Life, the sculptor, shapes all living things; an artist, it designs every leaf of every tree, and colors every flower. Life is a musician and has taught each bird to sing its love song, the insects to call one another in the music of their multitudinous sounds. Life is a sublime chemist, giving taste to fruits and spices, and perfume to the rose, changing water and carbonic acid into sugar and wood, and, in so doing, releasing oxygen that animals may have the breath of life.

Behold an almost invisible drop of protoplasm, transparent, jellylike, capable of motion, drawing energy from the sun. This single cell, this transparent mist-like droplet, holds within itself the germ of life, and has power to distribute this life to every living thing, great and small. The powers of this droplet are greater than our vegetation and animals and people, for all life came from it. Nature did not create life; fire-blistered rocks and a saltless sea could not meet the necessary requirements.

Who, then, has put it here?

Third: Animal wisdom speaks irresistibly of a good Creator who infused instinct into otherwise helpless little creatures.

The young salmon spends years at sea, then comes back to his own river, and travels up the very side of the river into which flows the tributary where he was born. What brings him back so precisely ? If you transfer him to another tributary he will know at once that he is off his course and he will fight his way down and back to the main stream and then turn up against the current to finish his destiny accurately.

Even more difficult to solve is the mystery of eels. These amazing creatures migrate at maturity from ponds and rivers everywhere-those from Europe across thousands of miles of ocean-all bound for the same abysmal deeps near Bermuda. There they breed and die. The little ones, with no apparent means of knowing anything except that they are in a wilderness of water, nevertheless start back and find their way not only to the very shore from which their parents came but thence to the selfsame rivers, lakes or little ponds. No American eel has ever been caught in Europe, no European eel in American waters. Nature has even delayed the maturity of the European eel by a year or more to make up for its longer journey. Where does the directional impulse originate question

Fourth: Man has something more than animal instinct-the power of reason.

No other animal has ever left a record of its ability to count ten, or even to understand the meaning of ten. Where instinct is like a single note of a flute, beautiful but limited, the human brain contains all the notes of all the instruments in the orchestra. No need to belabor this fourth point; thanks to human reason we can contemplate the possibility that we are what we are only because we have received a spark of Universal Intelligence.

Fifth: Provision for all living is revealed in such phenomena as the wonders of genes.

So tiny are these genes that, if all of them responsible for all living people in the world could be put in one place, there would be less than a thimbleful. Yet these genes inhabit every living cell and are the keys to all human, animal and vegetable characteristics. A thimble is a small place to hold all the individual characteristics of almost three billion human beings. However, the facts are beyond question.

Here evolution really begins-at the cell, the entity which holds and carries the genes. That the ultra-microscopic gene can absolutely rule all life on earth is an example of profound cunning and provision that could emanate only from a Creative Intelligence; no other hypothesis will serve.

Sixth: By the economy of nature, we are forced to realise that only infinite wisdom could have foreseen and prepared with such astute husbandry.

Many years ago a species of cactus was planted in Australia as a protective fence. Having no insect enemies in Australia, the cactus soon began a prodigious growth; the alarming abundance persisted until the plants covered an area as long and wide as England, crowding inhabitants out of the towns and villages, and destroying their farms. Seeking a defense, entomologists scoured the world; finally they turned up an insect which lived exclusively on cactus, and would eat nothing else. It would breed freely, too; and it had no enemies in Australia. So animal soon conquered vegetable, and today the cactus pest has retreated-and with it all but a small protective residue of the insects, enough to hold the cactus in check forever.

Such checks and balances have been universally provided. Why have not fast-breeding insects dominated the earth? Because they have no lungs such as man possesses; they breathe through tubes. But when insects grow large, their tubes do not grow in ratio to the increasing size of the body. Hence there never has been an insect of great size; this limitation on growth has held them all in check. If this physical check had not been provided, man could not exist. Imagine meeting a hornet as big as a lion !

Seventh: The fact that man can conceive the idea of God is in itself a unique proof.

The conception of God rises from a divine faculty of man, unshared with the rest of our world-the faculty we call imagination. By its power, man and man alone can find the evidence of things unseen. The vista that power opens up is unbounded; indeed, as man’s perfected imagination becomes a spiritual reality, he may discern in all the evidence of design and purpose the great truth that heaven is wherever and whatever; that God is everywhere and in everything that nowhere so close as in our hearts.

It is scientifically as well as imaginatively true, as the Psalmist said: The heavens declare the Glory of God and the firmament showeth His handiwork.


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