Govindaram Posted January 6, 2004 Report Share Posted January 6, 2004 <font color="red"> Correcting Others </font color> "Devotee means he is able to tolerate all kinds of discomfort and whims of the material nature, and because he is too much absorbed in serving Krsna he takes no time to become angry or take offense with others or find out some fault. No. Devotee means very liberal and kind to everyone, always gentleman under all kinds of conditions of life." (SP letter to Hansadutta 12/10/72) 1. There is a difference between criticism and correction. A devotee realizes that criticizing a Vaisnava pollutes the heart and impedes spiritual advancement. 2. To correct a devotee one must be: (a) non-envious (b) desirous to practically assist the devotee in his Krsna consciousness. © in a position spiritually or managerially which justifies and/or necessitates such intervention. OR be personally requested by the devotee to help him in his difficulty. 3. The devotee offering correction must be practicing what he preaches. 4. Methods of correction: (a) Correct by personal example and association. (b) Guide the devotee to the shelter of a more advanced devotee. © A junior devotee should not personally attempt to correct another devotee. He should reveal his heart to a senior devotee whom he feels at ease with and seek his assistance/advice to adjust the situation. 5. Harsh words and actions have no place in correcting a sincere devotee. We want to destroy the ignorance in the heart of a devotee - not the devotee himself. 6. If there is some sincere and honest criticism offered, we should be grateful, not upset. To react negatively to well-intentioned correction is to manifest false ego. 7. An advanced Vaisnava will see each and every correction offered as the mercy of Lord Caitanya Mahaprabhu. 8. Prevention is better than cure. If all devotees take up the responsibility to develop proper awareness in their devotional behaviour the need for correction will be minimized. <font color="blue"> Quotes from Srila Prabhupada </font color> SP Letter to Patita Uddharan (12/12/74) "A devotee -- one who is humble -- doesn't fault-find" "So in your letter you are not finding fault with anyone. So you are good Vaisnava. You do not find fault with anyone. This is the qualification. We should always think ourselves humble and meek. This you must know. So we all have to cooperate amongst ourselves, otherwise what will people think if we ourselves fight with one another? A devotee is always ideal in behavior." SP Letter to Brahmananda (11/15/69) "This is called Vaikuntha attitude. In the Vaikuntha factually there is no fault in anyone, but there is another type of competition. The competition is that one devotee thinks of other devotees how nicely they are serving the Lord. In the material world the attitude is that everyone likes to think that I am doing better than others. This is material conception. In the Spiritual Sky it is just the opposite: Everyone thinks that my contemporary devotees are doing better than me. We are trained to address Godbrothers as Prabhu, which means Master. This means we shall try to find out always the serving side of our Godbrothers. Sometimes there are misgivings, but we should try to overlook." Otherwise... Letter to Tamal Krsna (8/23/73) [73-8-26] "I have received one complaint from an Indian devotee at Mayapur, Prabharupa Das Brahmacary, that he is maltreated by our American devotees. Kindly inquire into this matter and do the needful. Either Indian of foreign whoever joins us they are not under any obligation, our only tie is Love of Godhead. It should be our definite policy that nobody is ill-treated that he may go away. We recruit a person to join us after spending gallons of blood. Everyone comes for reformation, you cannot expect everyone to be perfect, rather it is our duty to make everyone perfect as far as possible. So we shall be very much cautious and careful in this connection." (Devotee misbehavior) Letter to Upendra (8/18/70) "Kindly observe the regulative principles, chanting 16 rounds regularly and see that all your other assistants are doing the same. If someone is lacking, try to induce him peacefully." SP Letter to Bhavananda (10/28/70) "Regarding some misbehavior, that we have to check by training peacefully. Your attitude of tolerance and kindness is very nice, so train them in this way." SP Letter to Upendra (3/11/69) "Yes, a new man may commit blunders in the beginning, but that does not mean we may be too impatient with him. After all, training means the man does not know, so you should train him nicely. A Vaishnava is expected to be humbler than the blade of grass, so when you train some new man you should not get agitated with him. After all, we are preachers, and we do not expect our audience or candidates completely respondent to our call. If everyone is trained [already] then what is the use of our preaching?" SP Letter to Hansadutta (9/29/74) "Mend it; Don't Break it" "Try to settle up amicably and correct yourself. One man is trained up with great difficulty, especially in spiritual life. Everyone has got some weakness and deficiency. It is better to correct or mend it than to break it." SP Letter to Nara-Narayana (2/7/69) "Let The Authority Handle It" "I beg to thank you very much for your letter pointing out some of the discrepancies of many of the devotees in New York. You are correct regarding the items which you have stated, such as sleeping in front of the deities, taking of unoffered foodstuffs, drinking water from the bathroom, and non-chanting of rounds. But the thing is discipline can not be observed unless there is obedience. As you are obedient to me, you should be similarly obedient to my representative. Your statement about Brahmananda that he is a wonderful devotee is 100 percent agreed by me. He is in charge of the New York center, and therefore, if proper obedience is not given to him, it will be impossible for him to manage affairs of the temple. Under the circumstances, the discrepancies you have observed in the temple may be referred to him, and he is quite reasonable, and will handle the matter with the respective devotees." SP Letter to Madhumangala (11/18/72) "Regarding general state of affairs at Amsterdam temple, I can understand there is some disturbance among you, but that is not to be taken very seriously. Real business is preaching work. And if there is full attention on this matter only, all other businesses will be automatically successful. Fighting amongst ourselves is not at all good, but if our preaching work is neglected, or if we fall down in following the regulative principles -- such as rising before four, chanting 16 rounds, like that -- if these things are not strictly observed, then Maya will enter and spoil everything. So my best advice to you is to strictly observe these things yourself and be the example so that all others may follow. We should not criticise each other as Vaisnavas, because there is fault in everyone and we may be ourselves subject to criticism. Best thing is to be above suspicion ourselves, then if we see discrepancies and make suggestions, the others will automatically respect and take action to rectify the matters. Otherwise the whole thing is doomed if we simply go on fighting over some small thing. So try to organize things and preach together in this spirit and that will please me very very much." SP Letter to Vrndavanesvari (7/28/69) "You have mentioned about some criticism made by Jayagovinda which upset you. I do not know exactly what is the point, but if there is some honest criticism, there should be no cause of becoming upset." SP letter to Goursundar (8/26/72): THE DEFECT LIES WITHIN YOU "If there is some incident and I claim that no one is cooperating with me or no one will work with me, that is MY defect, NOT THEIRS. The Vaisnava devotee must think like this. We should not find fault with others and criticise and go away. That is not the Vaisnava way. Better we should always be willing to offer all respect to others and consider them as our superiors always." <font color="green"> From Vaisnava Etiquette by Bhakti Caru Swami.. </font color> Click to: Download Site: Here Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gHari Posted January 6, 2004 Report Share Posted January 6, 2004 Hell; ain't we elegant. Damn, that post was so perfect, I am unable to ridicule, denounce, demean, defame, tar and feather, chastise, correct, persecute or even snub you for it. I will have to go elsewhere. Dirty Hari Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gHari Posted January 6, 2004 Report Share Posted January 6, 2004 I think the author's name is Bhakti Caru Swami. A little typo in an otherwise objet d'art; simply footprints of a rabbit on the moon. Couldn't resist the humour. Love ya, Ram Ram. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
livingentity Posted January 6, 2004 Report Share Posted January 6, 2004 heh heh I couldn't resist either. LOL..... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Govindaram Posted January 6, 2004 Author Report Share Posted January 6, 2004 Hare Krishna /images/graemlins/confused.gifI think I corrected the error, can i get 1000 lakmi points please. And your blessings? /images/graemlins/cool.gif Please? /images/graemlins/grin.gif Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gHari Posted January 6, 2004 Report Share Posted January 6, 2004 Our blessings you've got always, but nada on the points. Need to ask Maharaja Prithu about that. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 8, 2004 Report Share Posted January 8, 2004 I was actually asking myself this question about correcting others. I'm wondering if someone who sees a behavior that needs to be corrected in another devotee could be considered envious of that devotee if that person doesn't act to help this devotee. Is it that people are afraid to correct others of that they just don't care enough? A person may see a devotee falling away from proper behavior but doesn't act on it, I feel this is another act of violence. (I remember reading Prabhupada's purport talking about violence... can't remember where exactly) On the other hand maybe I have a serious social problem. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Govindaram Posted January 8, 2004 Author Report Share Posted January 8, 2004 2. To correct a devotee one must be: (a) non-envious (b) <font color="red"> desirous to practically assist the devotee in his Krsna consciousness. </font color> © in a position spiritually or managerially which justifies and/or necessitates such intervention. Point No.2 looks good, what do you think Guestji? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 8, 2004 Report Share Posted January 8, 2004 2. To correct a devotee one must be: (a) non-envious (b) desirous to practically assist the devotee in his Krsna consciousness. © in a position spiritually or managerially which justifies and/or necessitates such intervention. Point No.2 looks good, what do you think Guestji? ******** I guess it is hard to explain my situation, I'm actually the same guest who wrote: "becoming a demon". The way I've been feeling is that I've made offenses, but no devotee is kind enough to tell me whatever I've done wrong. I'm always asking my superior Vaisnavas to tell me whatever I'm doing that is improper, but they always tell me nothing is wrong. I do have a feeling I'm commiting offenses because my desire to chant the holy name is diminishing, my desire to associate with devotees is almost nil. All lectures I've heard say these are symptoms of aparadhas.. but what aparadhas am I doing? nobody tells me. I'm actually afraid to go to my local temple because I don't want to offend more and never realizing it. Yes I'm just a fool, maybe even hopeless... or maybe like I wrote I have serious social problems. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Govindaram Posted January 8, 2004 Author Report Share Posted January 8, 2004 Haribol Prabhu First of all, you already have a humble attitude, with what you say in your post, 2nd. Krishna and His name are non-different, so each time you chant, imagine the humbleness coming over you, and think of the privilege, that Krishna is soo kind that He has manifested Himself in His name. How do you feel now?..also spiritual duties never end, so no matter how much you chant it is never enough, think about this.how long have you been serving Maya, you bored yet? There is no comparison to spiritual life. I hope this meets you well, hare krishna. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
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.