Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

14. The Path Of Love Is The Quickest... Summers Showers

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

The Blessed Couple... Sai conducts their spiritual remarriage in February 2005

14. The Path Of Love Is The Quickest To Reach God.

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

In areas where there is no prema, plant the seeds of prema and get the ecstasy of prema to pour out in the form of

rain in such a dry area. Get the rivers of prema to such places. “Oh! Krishna, play your murali in such a way that the rivers of prema will flow in the hearts of men.â€

Pavitratma Swarupas,

Boys and girls, so long as we have the illusion that the surroundings and the material world are realities, our troubles are not going to leave us. Today, in the context of the present situation, young people like you should develop faith in God and thus progress in life.

You cry when you are born, you cry when you die, you cry for so many things between your birth and death.

Have you at any time cried for dharma or for attaining

something good in life? Why and for what purpose did

you cry? Did you cry for the sake of crying? We should

not cry and feel sorry simply to spend our time.

All the effort that we make should be towards attaining our objective and the ideal for which we stand. This can happen only through love. From time immemorial, the love which one shows towards God has been called bhakthi by the citizens of Bharath. To enable us to earn the grace of the Lord, there are so many different paths. To reach God, to

be close to God, and to understand the Lord and his miracles, it is this kind of prema and bhakthi that will help us. Bhakthi

has also been used by man as an instrument in order to go closer to the Lord in some way or the other.

The meaning and significance of bhakthi is to get close to

the Lord by some means such as by showing love as a

father, as a mother, as a brother, as a wife, or as a son,

etc. There are other paths also for achieving the same

objective. These paths are described as the path of

jnana (wisdom) and the path of karma. However, to take the path of jnana is a difficult matter because certain qualities like perseverance, wisdom, intelligence

are required if you want to follow this path. So, the path of jnana appears somewhat more difficult in comparison to the path of bhakthi.

If we talk of the path of karma, then self-confidence is very necessary. In this path of karma, one depends on one’s own strength and capacity, and one does not depend on

 

God. To follow this path of karma, depending on our own capacity all the time, appears somewhat difficult. If we consider the path of yoga, we come to the conclusion that it requires certain discipline to go through the various types of yoga such as the Astanga Yoga (eight-fold discipline), and also you will have to have a correct type of guru.

These other paths—the paths of jnana, karma, and yoga are somewhat more difficult than the path of bhakthi. The path of love is an easy and short path. This kind of love or prema is not something which is fixed either on an individual, or on a community, or a specific object. It is a wide-spread

aspect. It is only when we can broaden this concept of

love that we will be able to understand and experience

the sacredness of love and the divinity of such love.

God is an embodiment of love. To reach God and to

understand his divinity, the only path that is available

to us is the path of love. When the moon comes up in the sky, you can see it directly. You do not require the aid of a torch light, or a petromax lamp, or any other artificial light.

The reason why you do not require another light is that it is

possible for us to look at the moon by the light of the moon. In the same manner, if we want to go near God, who is an embodiment of love, or if we want to understand God, it becomes possible to do so only by means of love which is characteristic of him. God, who is the embodiment of love, is not confined to one place or spot. He is present everywhere, in every nook and corner of the world. It is very essential for young people to love all and to regard loving all as loving God, who is present in all of them.

Since God is selfless, we also should promote our love in a manner in which it becomes selfless love. To enjoy the love of God (who is selfless) in a selfish manner and confine his love to yourself is not the right thing to do. But until we reach a certain level, we should try and experience the Lord in a limited manner. When we are in a limited position, and when our own life is not broad enough, it is not possible to experience the love in a broad

manner. Therefore, the first step for us is to practice certain methods by which our love can be broadened sufficiently.

We have a small example. Suppose we take a small incense stick. In that small incense stick, we see fire. If you are smoking a cigarette, you will find fire in that cigarette also. If there is a forest fire on a hill, we see a big fire in that as well. The fire that we see on the incense stick, that we see on a cigarette, and the fire we see in the case of the forest fire, all constitute fire. In the feeling that

all the three constitute fire, if you bring some logs of firewood and put them on the cigarette or on the incense stick the fire will be extinguished, the firewood will not catch fire. On the other hand, if we take even tender and green leaves and put them in a raging forest fire, they will catch fire and burn away. In the same manner, if the fire of love in you is not broad enough, you will not be able to sustain the great fire of love of God. If you begin to talk of the all-pervading love and

 

widespread prema of the Lord, then there is a danger of

the feeble fire of love in you getting extinguished.

Before you can experience such equal-mindedness and

before you can experience this love in everyone, the first step is to promote the love within yourself and raise it to a sufficiently high level. For this, it is necessary for you to recognise a form and the appropriate time for this. If you do not take cognisance of the situation and the time around you, then you will not be able to promote prema in yourself.

God’s love is like an infinite and endless ocean. Simply because God’s love is infinite and endless, you cannot carry all of it with you. What you can carry with you will

depend on the size of the pot that you take. So the first thing to do is to enlarge the size of your pot, and this can be done by the practice of sadhana. In this sadhana, the first step is respect for your mother. The

bhakthi or love towards the mother should be such that you recognise the great love and affection with which your mother has brought you up.

You must return gratitude to your mother in the form of

love or bhakthi. The mother will also show bhakthi in the form of vatsalya (affection of mother for

child), in return, to the love of the son. Mother will bathe, dress, and cajole the baby and put the baby to sleep. While doing all these, she will be attending to her daily duties.

In this way, the attachment and affection between the

mother and the son can be promoted. If promoted

properly, that itself can be shaped in the form of bhakthi

towards the Lord. It is in this context that this type of bhakthi, or devotion, or love between mother and son has been described as Vatsalya Bhakthi in the Bhagavatha.

The mother in Yasoda was looking after the Lord in the

form of a baby, was dressing and cajoling him. This

attachment was such that she used to put the baby on

her lap like a jackfruit. Not only this, although Krishna

cigarette, you will find fire in that cigarette also. If there is a forest fire on a hill, we see a big fire in that as well. The fire that we see on the incense stick, that we see on acigarette, and the fire we see in the case of the forest fire, all constitute fire. In the feeling that all the three constitute fire, if you bring some logs of firewood and put them on the cigarette or on the incense stick the fire will be extinguished, the firewood will not catch fire. On the other hand, if we take even tender and green leaves and put them in a raging forest fire, they will catch fire and burn away. In the same manner, if the fire of love in you is not broad enough, you will not be able to sustain the great fire of love of God. If you begin to talk of the all-pervading love and

widespread prema of the Lord, then there is a danger of

the feeble fire of love in you getting extinguished.

Before you can experience such equal-mindedness and

before you can experience this love in everyone, the first step is to promote the love within yourself and raise it to a sufficiently high level. For this, it is necessary for you to recognise a form and the appropriate time for this. If you do not take cognisance of the situation and the time around you, then you will not be able to promote prema in yourself.

God’s love is like an infinite and endless ocean. Simply because God’s love is infinite and endless, you cannot carry all of it with you. What you can carry with you will

depend on the size of the pot that you take. So the first thing to do is to enlarge the size of your pot, and this can be done by the practice of sadhana. In this sadhana, the first step is respect for your mother. The

bhakthi or love towards the mother should be such that you recognise the great love and affection with which your mother has brought you up.

You must return gratitude to your mother in the form of

love or bhakthi. The mother will also show bhakthi in

the form of vatsalya (affection of mother for child), in

return, to the love of the son. Mother will bathe, dress,

and cajole the baby and put the baby to sleep. While

doing all these, she will be attending to her daily duties.

In this way, the attachment and affection between the

mother and the son can be promoted. If promoted

properly, that itself can be shaped in the form of bhakthi

towards the Lord.

It is in this context that this type of bhakthi, or

devotion, or love between mother and son has been

described as Vatsalya Bhakthi in the Bhagavatha. The

mother in Yasoda was looking after the Lord in the form of a baby, was dressing and cajoling him. This attachment was such that she used to put the baby on her lap like a jackfruit. Not only this, although Krishna was born to Devaki, Yasoda was looking after Krishna as if he were her own son, and she was developing Vatsalya Bhakthi towards Krishna. In spite of the fact that several gopikas used to complain about Krishna,

Yasoda loved him all the more; and she never bothered

about the complaints. On one occasion when these

complaints became too many, the mother was not able to hear any more; and she asked Krishna why he did not eat what she gave him and why he had to go and steal from other houses as if they did not have enough curds or milk in their own home. She was cajoling him and asking him about this in a very endearing manner.

When Balarama and Satyaki came and complained to

Yasoda that Krishna was eating mud, she was very

confused and asked Krishna to open his mouth. When the mouth was opened, she found that the mouth was smelling of butter instead of mud. She was in confusion that she did not know what was the truth.

Although Krishna was a tiny little boy, his greatness

was being seen in his own mouth. He asked, “Am I a

child? Or am I so foolish as to eat dust?†When a small

baby asks such a question, we must see here that he is

expressing his own greatness in a remarkable manner.

The greatness in Krishna can be seen in this answer

itself. “When the whole universe is within me, is it

possible for you to feed me with some little sweet?

While I am present in every jiva, is it possible for you

to give me an appropriate name? While I am present in

all the oceans of this world, is it possible for you to

give me a bath with water?†When all the universe is

present in him, really what is the meaning of feeding

him? When his brightness is like that of a million suns,

what is the meaning of taking a lamp to see him? When

he cannot be understood and approached by the biggest

of people in this world, how can anyone understand or

comprehend his form. In spite of hearing and seeing all

this, and in spite of being told about the greatness and

the divinity of Krishna by Krishna himself, yet the mother in Yasoda was such that she always wanted to see the young boy in Krishna and in that vatsalya prema of a mother to a son, she was getting immense pleasure and emancipation.

Therefore, if you want to get realisation, then it is

not necessary for you to follow all the various types of

bhakthi that have been described. If you attach yourself

to the Lord through one chosen path like prema, it will

be possible to realise him. Yasoda was such that she

was filled with prema at all times. She never spent one

moment separated from Krishna or not thinking of Krishna. She used to ask if there were any bliss greater than being near to the tender rosy cheeks of the child, Krishna. She regarded this baby form of Krishna as the form of the Lord, she expressed prema to that form, and thus she realised God. This has been called

Vatsalya Prema (affection of a mother for a child) in our Bhagavatha.

The next is Sakhya Bhakthi (Devotion to God as

a friend) and this was demonstrated by the gopalas.

They played with Krishna and were one with him. They never thought that he was God or an incarnation or an Avatar. They thought that Krishna was one of the gopalas and that kind of intimate relationship of being one with the Lord is described as Sakhya Bhakthi. They used to play hide and seek with Krishna and regarded him as one of their playmates, and thus they became one with him. This was the manner in which they expressed their devotion to him.

During the afternoon all the cattle were kept under a tree and all the gopalas and Krishna used to sit under the shade of another tree. They would share the food between them; and in this manner, a close relationship developed between them. Not only this, the gopalas never strayed away even for a moment from Krishna, and they were always looking after the cattle. When the cattle were grazing happily, they used to come and sit with Krishna and ask him to narrate stories. Thus they spent every moment with Krishna. In their playing, singing, and living, they took Krishna as part and parcel of themselves and they were living together.

In those days, Krishna used to play on the murali very well. In fact, he used to play on it much better than any other Gopala could play. He could send everyone into ecstasy when he played on the murali. One of the gopalas would come to Krishna and say, “Sing, sing to my heart’s content and utter sweet words so that I might feel happy, take the essence of the Vedas and sing it through the golden voice of your flute and fill it to my heart’s content.†Another Gopala would come and tell Krishna, “Our cows are the Upanishads and the four feet of the cows are like the four Vedas, and out of the cows’ milk, take the Vedas and the

essence of the Vedas and the Upanishads and pour it

into your flute and sing it for us.â€

In this manner, the gopalas moved around Krishna

and they regarded him as a friend and identified

themselves with him. These gopalas used to go to the

banks of the river, Yamuna, and swim in the river. When they swam, they would try to catch the legs of the Lord, and it looked as if the big fish was going ahead with the small fish coming behind, trying to catch the legs of the big fish. Thus, in their daily lives they regarded Krishna as a common human friend, and they were enjoying the humane qualities of Krishna.

Gopalas were not worried, even if their own brothers and sisters were at a distance from them, but they used to grieve if they were separated from Krishna even for amoment. Thus, we see that the gopalas wanted to get

close to Krishna by some method or the other. They were not doing any thapas or puja. They were adopting methods of prema and love to be near Krishna.

Krishna was regarded as the ocean of love, and the gopalas regarded themselves as drops of water which have come out of this ocean of love. Their sole purpose was to take their own lives and merge them with the infinite ocean of love. So long as we hold a drop of water in the palm of our hand, it remains a drop of water; but if we take this drop of water and mix it with the ocean, then there is no more a drop of water, as it loses its individuality and merges with the ocean.

Thus, the gopalas tried to take their individual drops of

prema and merge them with the infinite ocean of prema

of the Lord. What better objective can there be beyond

wanting to merge with the Lord?

The third type of prema is called the Virodha Prema or inimical prema. In some way or the other, they also became close to the Lord. Kamsa, Dantavakra, Jarasandha, and Poundarika Vasudeva were examples of such persons.They hated Krishna so much that even during their sleep, if Krishna’s name was heard, they would jump in excitement. For people who have faith, a look at the form of God or hearing the description of the Lord, will make them joyful; but for people who are inimical, they are such that even when they are sleeping or eating, they will always be thinking of the person whom they hate.

There was an incident when Sisupala was sitting

at a place and the shadow of his leg was seen on the

wall. Looking at this shadow, he was terrified because

he thought that Krishna had come. The inimical prema

is such that, at all times, and under all circumstances,

they are afraid of the Lord, although they think of the

Lord only in an inimical way. In this way, God’s name

and form get permanently imprinted in their hearts.

By such a close relationship, they also become close to the

Lord. How does it matter how you achieve your sleep as long as you sleep? Does it matter whether you sleep in the choultry or in the veranda? Fire has the quality of burning, and it will burn you whether you touch it knowingly or unknowingly. The shining brilliance of Krishna was such that it always purified whether one came near it willingly or unwillingly. It does not matter how or why one does it, but when one thinks of the name and form continuously, he gets

liberated. The fourth one is called Gopika Bhakthi or Madhura Bhakthi. In this category, the gopikas always thought of Krishna and they completely surrendered themselves, their thoughts and ideas to Krishna. They would say that all their wealth, their body, their mind, and whatever else they had was all surrendered to Krishna. Whatever they did, or ate, or talked was all in the name of Krishna. They regarded their entire life as being dedicated to Krishna. If there was any moment of time, it had to belong to Krishna. If Krishna was not there even for a moment, they regarded themselves as lifeless. When Krishna used to go away with the cowherds, these gopikas always used to think of him and his comfort. They were always worried whether he had proper protection or not, whether he had slippers on or not, whether he had any discomfort of any kind, and so on. They would always think of Krishna and his comforts. One of the gopikas would be thinking that originally Krishna was dark-complexioned and was worried whether his visit to the forest would make him darker because of sunburn, and was thinking how nice it would be if he would take an umbrella the next day to protect his skin. In this way, all the time they were thinking of Gopala and his comforts. They were always thinking of Gopala. During

the time they were eating their food, they were wondering whether Gopala was getting the correct food or not. While they were resting, they were thinking whether Gopala had a good place to rest. Thus while they were eating, sleeping, or resting, they were always thinking of Gopala and enjoying their own life, Brahmavid Brahmaiva Bhavati. So if we

think of God and if our ideas are turned towards God,

we will become one with God. At all times, because

their thoughts were completely filled with Krishna, they were turning themselves and their bodies into being like Krishna.

Under these circumstances, there came a new

daughter-in-law to the village of Gokula. When this new daughter-in-law came, the older people described to her the beauty and greatness of Krishna. Even before she came to this village, Niraja, the new daughter-inlaw, knew about the greatness of Krishna and she was longing to get an opportunity to see Krishna. Niraja’s mother-in-law was a very harsh woman. She gave the injunction that Niraja should not stir out of the house, should not attempt to see Krishna, and should not even utter the name of Krishna. The reason for this is that there was a feeling amongst the people that by playing various games with these girls, Krishna was actually spoiling the reputation of various families.

 

Krishna, at that time, was a seven-year-old boy and

there was no room whatsoever for entertaining such

thoughts; but because of certain ill-feeling, there were

people who were spreading such irresponsible views

and stories about Krishna. Such bad people existed

even at that time. In truth, there was no basis for such

statements.

There was a custom in that village, according to

which, Nanda was regarded as a leader of the village,

and all the people used the light in Nanda’s house to

start a light in their own house. It was considered

auspicious if a light was got from the house of the leader. One day the mother-in-law of Niraja was having fever, and, therefore, Niraja was asked to go and light the lamp and bring it back. She was also told that she should not enter the house of Nanda and not attempt to look at Krishna.

Niraja felt very happy that she had this opportunity of going to Nanda’s house and at least look at the sacred house in which Krishna lived. But when Niraja went there, all her attention and all her thoughts were immersed in Krishna; and she was waiting for the She was so immersed in the thought of Krishna that she was unmindful of the fact that the wick was already lighted and that the fire had spread onto her hand. Yasoda came out and saw this, and said that Niraja was apparently new in the village, and was

surprised to see that her hand was burning, and yet she

was not mindful of the event. At these words of Yasoda,

Niraja regained her consciousness and was begging

Yasoda not to tell about this incident to her in-laws as

they would only harm her if they had known about this.

She explained that she was lost in the visions of Krishna

which she saw in the flame which she was lighting.

As she was saying these words, other gopikas quickly rushed in and saw this event. The gopikas who

surrounded Niraja were not silent, and they were quick

in reporting this incident to all the others in the village.

When the gopikas were singing like this, Niraja was

very much afraid of the consequences and was worried

what her mother-in-law would say; but she felt happy

that all this was not half as important as the darshan of

Krishna which she had had. She was prepared for the

consequences. Such love is the best with which to

approach the Lord. In this matter, the gopikas were

thinking of the form of Krishna all the time.

To all these gopikas, there was one who was like

a leader and this was Radha. It was not as if Radha

wanted to be the leader, but the other gopikas chose her

as their leader. Whenever there was any difficulty, they

would go and tell her. Radha should not convey to you

the picture of the kind you see in cinemas or dramas

today. She was the kind of person who was always in

the thought of Krishna, and her name, itself, conveys

her greatness and sacredness. If you start with “R†you

get Radha, if you start with “A†you get Adhar, if you

start with “D†you get Dhara and if you read backwards,

you get Aradh. This means that the very basis of Radha

is the Aradhana (adoration of the Lord) of Krishna.

If you really want to understand the intimate

relationship between Krishna and Radha, you will have

to note an incident which took place when Radha went

out into a bamboo thicket and was sitting in a lonely

place. Her attachment to Krishna can be understood

from her words. She was sent out of the village and in

agony she sings, “There is trouble in the village and

there is not a shade where I can take shelter! So I have

come and I am maintaining this life breath in myself

for your sake.

This life exists for your sake. Show yourself at least in my dreams. My mind cannot rest even for a moment if I cannot see you. You are like my eyeball within myself if I am to describe you; but if I have to see you, you are like a small baby who is outside me. But if I have no eyeball in me, then I who shows and you are the one whom I aspire to see.

In your gross human form, will you not show yourself

to me at least once?â€

Summer Roses on the Blue Mountains, 1976 249 250 Summer Roses on the Blue Mountains, 1976

At that time, Krishna was in Mathura, where he had gone to kill Kamsa. In that prayer of Radha, we notice that even though there was no place for her to take shelter, yet she was maintaining the life breath solely for the sake of

Krishna. While she was engaging herself in this kind of introspection, it looked to her as if her companions were playing some games. One group

of gopikas were singing and saying that Gopala had

returned to Repalle. As soon as she heard that song,

she thought that Gopala had really returned, and she

jumped out of the bamboo thicket into the hot sand and

she was running forward to meet Gopala, not minding

the heat of the sand. Radha’s bhakthi was such that she

was always on the banks of the Yamuna, both in the

heat and in the cold. In the heat, her body was getting

scorched and as the body was getting scorched she

never bothered. She always remained on the banks of

the Yamuna braving the ravages of the heat and the

cold. She was singing to the Lord, praying that he

should come to her with the jingling of the anklets

which he used to wear at the time of the killing of the

great serpent. She was singing in ecstasy and addressing

her Lord and asking him to come to her. In such

ecstasy, she dropped dead.

Gopikas had such sacred ideas and had such

selfless bhakthi and selfless prema. We are unable to

understand the sacredness of their prema, and we

misinterpret all their actions and give them wrong

meanings. Because of this selfless and sacred nature of

the bhakthi of the gopikas towards Krishna, they remain

very strongly in the minds of the people of this country,

and we talk of them even today. On the contrary, we do

not talk so much about Rama as he was insisting on

Karma or work. He was of a different kind and was

insisting on action, karma, or work. When we talk of

Krishna Bhakthi, we should not misinterpret it and give

it a wrong meaning. The Bhagavatha preaches the

sacredness of Krishna Bhakthi. There is no hatred,

jealousy, or anger in divine love; and so it can give

happiness to the entire world.

Students, boys and girls,

We should accept selfless prema as an essential

type of bhakthi and promote it in our country. We must

make it an ideal so far as our relationship with God is

concerned, and make Bharath an ideal to other countries.

If there is any unsacred or selfish prema in your heart,

throw it away and promote selfless divine love. I am

hoping that you will do this and purify your heart

----

Witj Sai Love Ram

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...