Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

Sai Baba Gita - Dharma is Changeless but its Practice Changes in each Age

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

Dharma is Changeless but its Practice Changes in each Age

Sometimes it has been said that righteousness has declined and that the dharma

has diminished. But that is not correct. Dharma is based on truth. Truth is

absolute; it can never undergo change or be diminished. However, in any

particular age, the practice of dharma may undergo change. God incarnated as

Krishna, not to re-establish dharma, but to re establish the practice of

dharma. Dharma never left, nor did it ever change; but it was out of use.

The seven facets of dharma have been present in all the past ages;. However,

each age has had practices most appropriate to that age. For instance, in

ancient times when spiritual awareness was very high, the appropriate spiritual

practice was meditation. In the age in which Rama incarnated, the most

appropriate practice was penance and sacrifice. In the Krishna era, the

practice was ritual and ceremonial worship. And in the past five thousand years

of this present materialistic age, in which spiritual consciousness is at a low

ebb around the world, the chanting of the holy name is the most appropriate

practice. But, just as in the earlier ages there were also many believers who

practiced the repetition of mantra, evoking the name of God, so also, in this

age there are people who take to meditation, there are people who take to doing

penance and there are people who take to ritual worship. But the principal

practices depend upon the general character and mood of the

times.

Different practices give different forms, so to speak, to dharma. But the inner

flow of dharma is always the same. Truth will never change. Truth is always

one, never two. In all the three times, past, present and future, in all the

three worlds, earth, heaven and the nether world, in all the three states,

waking, dream and deep sleep, and in all the three worldly qualities,

passivity, activity and equilibrium, truth is always one. Since truth is one

and the very basis of dharma, dharma cannot change. It never wavers or

undergoes any modifications. But duty and practice will undergo intermittent

change.

For example, take a person who is doing a job. How long will this job be his

duty? Until he retires from that particular job. Until then, he goes to the

office every day. Once he retires, his duty changes. After retirement, he might

get involved in doing business. Then he says that pursuing his business is his

duty. In doing business, he may be tempted to gain some extra profit by taking

to under-handed methods; he may try to earn money through lying and cheating.

Even though he may have now taken to lying and cheating in order to earn money,

he will still consider the work he is doing as his occupation and his duty. When

so many changes can come about in duty, how can it be described as dharma ?

These changing activities that occupy your time in the interest of providing

for your living needs, cannot automatically be described as dharma. Duty

becomes dharma when it shines with the virtues that make up the facets of

dharma.

http://www.atmapress.com/saibabagita/saigita258.html

Sai Baba Gita, Compiled and edited by Al Drucker - Published by Atma Press -

http://www.atmapress.com - ISBN: 0963844903Online Edition:

http://www.atmapress.com/saibabagita/index.html

 

 

Take Mail with you! Get it on your mobile phone.

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...