Guest guest Posted December 31, 1997 Report Share Posted December 31, 1997 In one of the messages i received, it said, "When one abandons prescribed karmas casually and does not care. . ." In the process of devotional service, bhakti, there is no karma because devotional service is not on any material platform, the three modes of material nature-- mode of goodness, mode of passion, and mode of ignorance. Pious activites are karmic, but a Bhakta must be sinless. The perscribed duties are there, and should be executed, but if done with pure devotion to the Lord, these activites are not karmic. Please explain to me any inconsistancies. Your servant, Anjuli Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 2, 1998 Report Share Posted January 2, 1998 At 07:20 PM 12/31/97 -0800, R Dhindhwal wrote: >In one of the messages i received, it said, "When one abandons >prescribed karmas casually and does not care. . ." > PLEASE NOTE: In visistadvaita, prescribed karmas to those of appropriate varnas, cannot be abandoned without incurring sin. If some varnas do not have prescribed karmas "normal social service type karmas" serve as prescribed karmas for them. I dont know the origin of the original message. but this is the bottom line. >In the process of devotional service, bhakti, there is no karma because >devotional service is not on any material platform, the three modes of >material nature-- mode of goodness, mode of passion, and mode of >ignorance. Pious activites are karmic, but a Bhakta must be sinless. >The perscribed duties are there, and should be executed, but if done >with pure devotion to the Lord, these activites are not karmic. > >Please explain to me any inconsistancies. > >Your servant, >Anjuli > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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