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Sai Inspires - 5th February 2006 from Prashanti Nilayam

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SAIRAM.

 

MESSAGE FROM H2H, RADIO SAI E-JOURNAL TEAM, PRASANTHI NILAYAM BEING FORWARDED....

 

SWAMI BLESS US ALL

 

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Dear Reader,

 

Loving Sairam from the Heart2Heart Team.

 

Scroll down to read our Sunday special 'The P-N Cycle In Our Lives'

 

Today Swami gives us two simple methods to cultivate love.

Have you read the Cover Story 'Behind the Glorious 80th Birthday' Go here to

read it now.

 

Sai Inspires - 5th February 2006

 

How can Prema be cultivated? It can be done through two methods: (1) Always

consider the faults of others, however big, to be insignificant and negligible.

Consider your own faults, however insignificant and negligible, as big and feel

sad and repentant. By these means, you avoid developing bigger faults and you

acquire the qualities of brotherliness and forbearance. (2) Whatever you do,

whether alone or with others, do it remembering that God is omnipresent. He

sees, hears and knows everything. Whatever you say, remember that God hears

every word.... Whatever you do, discriminate between right and wrong and do

only what is right. Endeavour, at every moment, to be aware of the omnipotence

of God.

- Prema Vahini, P. 19.

Do no evil - do what is good - Baba.

 

The 'P-N Cycle' In Our Lives

Dear Subscriber, Loving Sai Ram and greetings from Prashanti Nilayam. Almost

everyone on earth is proud of his or her achievements. The achievement may in

the field of art, literature, adventure, business, profession, science, sport,

and so on. But whatever it is, the successful person, while no doubt thanking a

few here and there, does at the end of it all feel unabashedly, “I did it!” In

sports, in tennis for example, one sees this self- glorification loudly in the

body language. Do we for a moment ever stop to think where exactly this

so-called success came from?

Every human being on earth gets several gifts from God, starting with life

itself. Some might object to this by saying, “Listen, what about those who are

born severely handicapped?” This is no doubt an important question and we shall

certainly not sweep it under the rug. We shall consider that issue on a later

occasion. But meanwhile, let us not forget that God does give us many gifts,

apart from the supreme gift of life in human form.

 

Just take a look at the fingers of the human body. Do we ever spend even a

minute to reflect on how many wonderful things these fingers can do? The list

is long and amazing. Without fingers, one would not be able to play the flute

or the piano or the violin or the drum, etc. One would not be able to sculpt

and paint, one would not be able to write and type, and so on. Just think of

sports, cricket say. Can one bowl without fingers? And what variations of spin

are possible thanks to the fingers! Or take surgery; would surgery at all be

possible if it were not for the fingers? You know something? The great Isaac

Newton once exclaimed, “The thumb alone is enough to prove that God exists!”

Yes, try opening a bottle without using your thumb and you would know what

Newton meant.

 

There is no creature on earth that can do what humans can do with their fingers.

It is not the fingers alone that have remarkable Divine powers in them. In

conjunction with the dexterity of the fingers, the hands and the arms can do

wonders. In his book on the Gita, Swami Chidbhavananda says that when one

describes Lord Subramania as having twelve hands what it really means is that

God has given man the power that is the equal of twelve hands. Yes, we may have

only two hands but supplementing them with machines, we can do wonders, like

driving and aero stunts, for example.

 

It is really not necessary to go on and on in this vein. In simple terms, God

blesses all, each in some measure, in accordance with the role that person is

supposed to play in the Cosmic Drama of His. Some may have the gift of health,

some may have the gift of wealth, some may have the gift of speech and oratory,

and some might have the gift of intellect. In the Gita, the Lord makes it

abundantly clear that whatever excellence humans might exhibit using these

various gifts, they all are manifestations of His Glory and Power. So our first

point really is that we all receive some extra gifts from God, apart from the

gift of life and the gift of the human form. The question now is what do we do

with these?

 

For most people, this question simply does not arise. They all believe that

whatever it is they have by way of talent, ability and so on is self-created

and self-acquired and that therefore they are not obliged to anybody else,

except perhaps in a marginal way. This simply is not true. However, deluded as

people usually are, they often start from this wrong premise and then step by

step systematically misuse the gifts they have.

 

Misuse means using these precious gifts of God for pandering to the desires of

the body and the mind. For example, a wealthy person may spend a lot of money

in gambling. A person with great computer skills might be busy generating

computer viruses, just for kicks as they say. You might ask, “Then what is one

supposed to do with what you call the gifts of God?” That precisely is what we

are coming to.

 

In the Indian tradition, there are two words that are used in the rituals one

performs as adoration of God. These words are: Prasaadam, and Naivedyam. The

former word we all have heard, since Prasaadam is often distributed during

functions here; the word essentially means a blessing from God. The other word

Naivedyam means an offering to God. In the ritual, food and other items are

offered to God by way of consecrating them but in our context, any loving

offering we make becomes a Naivedyam.

 

OK, all this is fine, but what exactly is the point we are trying to make? That

point is this. We all, each in our own way, receive some gifts from God. Some

of these have been mentioned earlier. These gifts are the Prasaadam of God.

Life must be so lived that one makes use of these Prasaadams and gives it back

to God as Naivedyam. For a moment, let us go back to the offerings made to God.

People offer flowers to God. They pluck the flowers and make a garland before

offering. In worldly parlance, “some value addition” is made before offering to

God – that is the key point. We must offer the talents we have in a suitable

manner before offering to God.

 

In this context, it is useful to remember that Society is God. Swami reminds us

of this often but we tend to forget. Thus, when we use our gifts for the

benefit of Society in a reverential manner, we are actually offering Naivedyam

to God. Let us say there is a scientist and he makes a great discovery of an

anti-cancer drug. These days, the scientist is most likely to patent the drug

and make tons of money on it. On the other hand, if the scientist waives his

patent and allows one and all to freely use his discovery in the service of

Society, then he is offering his knowledge, a Prasaadam of God, back to God as

Naivedyam in the shape of his discovery.

 

If you think about it, there are any number of such examples one can offer. The

point is that in each case, there is a cycle – God gives Prasaadam, and it is

offered back to God as Naivedyam; that is to say, life becomes a P-N cycle. You

might wonder whether at all people do feel this way. Sure there are such people,

and here are two examples. In December 1996, an unusual event took place here in

Prashanti Nilayam – that was the staging of a one-day international cricket

match between an India XI and an International XI, the Unity Cup Match as it

was known. Speaking during the concluding function, the famous West Indian

cricketer Clive Lloyd said, “Talent is a gift of God and it must be offered

back to God.” Similarly, a Pakistani singer of Ghazals[islamic devotional

music popular in Pakistan and India] when asked why she was not adopting modern

methods of singing replied, “I can’t do that. Ghazals are a gift of Allah and I

must offer it back to Allah in a pure form and not with modern distortions.”

 

The P-N cycle is not our invention; Krishna commends it in the Gita though He

does not quite put it the way we do. And people who have not even heard of the

Gita [likeCliveLloyd,forexample] have felt it in their bones for the simple

reason that God has spoken to them from Inside.

 

Life, as Swami says, must be lived for God because that is the easiest way of

going back to God – from God we have come and to God we must return. The P-N

cycle guarantees a safe return journey – that is what we think. What about you?

Please write and tell us what you feel. We would love to hear from you.

 

Jai Sai Ram

 

 

 

With Love and Regards,

"Heart2Heart"

RadioSai's e-Journal Team,

In Sai Service.

 

 

To see the complete schedule of today's RadioSai programmes,

Visit us at www.radiosai.org to know more about RadioSai and our e-Journal "Heart 2 Heart".

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