Guest guest Posted March 31, 2005 Report Share Posted March 31, 2005 Sai Ram Light and Love Swami teaches.... ( 31 March - 2 April 2005) Shining of the Cosmic Lord The whole world is a stage and every individual is an actor. The primary goal should be to carry out the duty in the part assigned to actor. In the drama of life, there is a mixture of good and bad. Modern human suffers from the sense of possession. He is obsessed with the idea of "my" and "mine". He attaches excessive importance to the body, forgetting the most precious Atmic principle that is within it which will give enduring bliss. In this context, people should constantly discriminate between "negative" and "positive" actions. People should realize, for example that what matters when they sing bhajans is not the tune or the conduct of the songs, but the genuineness of the feeling with which they sing the bhajans. When they are pure hearts and full of deep devotion, the bhajans will appeal to the hearts of the listeners. The singing must be full of feeling. The Lord is moved only by the feeling that is expressed, not by musical talent as such. Singing bhajans (the names of God), one would contemplate on underlying truths. The Naamaavali, 'Hare Raama, Hare Raama, Raama Raama Hare Hare; Hare Krishna, Hare Krishna, Krishna Krishna Hare Hare,' has sixteen words and each of the sixteen signifies a virtue which has to be cultivated along with that Bhajan. There is nothing in this world as powerful as the Lord's name to protect it. Only God's grace should protect the world. It is human's foremost duty to pray for God's grace. Prayer is of supreme importance. Together with melody and rhythm, you have to impart feeling to your singing to make the bhajan a sacred offering to the Divine. A ragam (tune) without bhaavam (feeling) is a rogam (an infliction). Swami stresses that a bhajans singer should be (1) full of devotion, (2) prepared to enjoy suffering, (3) free from the attachment to the transitory, (4) eager to serve the Lord, (5) of correct conduct, (6) charitable, (7) having an unsullied reputation, (8) with no blemish on his character, (9) fully content, (10) endowed with good qualities, (11) equipped with all the virtues, (12) equipped with the fruits of learning, (13) ripe in wisdom, (14) self-controlled, (15) adorned with commendable social traits, (16) full of humility and fully surrendered to God, then - "He is I, I am He." The same 16 points are significant at every step and in every prayer what one performs for the benefit of other human beings and oneself. An ancient times there was a great musician in Akbar's Court known as Thansen. He used to sing night and day and the music was mellifluous. One day Akbar and Thansen were going round the city. Akbar found an old man singing to himself songs in praise of God. Akbar stopped his chariot and went on listening to the song of the devotee and even without his knowing it, tears started flowing from his eyes. He went some distance and told Thansen: "You have been singing for a long time before me and I have always found your music very sweet to the ears but it has never moved my heart, but the music of this devotee has melted my heart. I wish to know the difference between your singing and the singing of this devotee!" Thansen replied: "Mahaaraaja! I have been singing to please you, but this devotee is singing to please God, that is the difference." The greater is one's love for God, the greater the bliss of experiences. The lover of God sees God everywhere. Love of God makes a human being oblivious to one's own existence. The nature of divine love can be understood only when the Divine in human form teaches as human to human the nature of this love. The Vedas declare that love is priceless, indescribably precious, transcends the mind and speech. Love can be got only through love. The different paths of devotion - santhi (peace), sakhya (friendship), vaatsalya (material love), Anuraaga (affection) and Madhura marga (sweetness) - are all based on love. For those immersed in love, everything appears vibrant, with life. The power of love isboundless. The love-impulse is manifested in different, persons in different ways. For example, the gopikas considered Sri Krishna as the very breath of their life and worshipped him. "You are everything for us," they declared. On the other hand, Yasoda's love for Krishna was that of the mother towards her child. Yasoda looked upon Krishna as an ordinary child, the darling of her heart, who was innocent of the ways of the world. The love of Radha, who was totally absorbed in the love of Krishna, was different. "Oh Krishna! Wherever you may be and whatever the form you may assume, bless me so that I may be one with you in that form." Radha yearned for this kind of union. Today there is so little awareness of the power of this love. Wrapped up in their trivial attachments, people are ignoring the power of this infinite, sacred and all-encompassing Divine Love. Anuraaga (affection) and Prema (love) are mutually dependent and inseparable. When the mind is turned towards things of the world, it is called Anuraaga (affection or attachment) and if it is turned towards God, it is called Prema (love or devotion). Love is the fruit of love. Love is comparable only with love and it cannot be described by poetry. It cannot be proved by the mind or the spoken word. Differences between persons will cease when there is a recognition of the common Divinity present in everyone. This is expressed through love what are often exists in hidden form. However, despite all the teachings, mankind is prone to go astray from time to time. Human life is beset with ups and downs, joys and sorrows. It is these difficulties which bring out the human values. Difficulties must be welcomed and must be overcome. By overcoming trouble the Divine must be experienced. Every second is an expression of the Divine. Years come and go, that which does not come and does not leave is the Atmic Principle. God neither comes nor goes. Knowledge of Supreme Reality, when once it is acquired, will never go away. The knowledge that is lost is not true knowledge. Ignorance is the thing which, once it is gone, will not return. If it returns, it is "ignorance piled on ignorance." This has been described in Vedantic parlance as Mithya in Mithya delusion within a delusion. Radha in Gita observed: When the whole Universe is the mansion of the Lord, Where is the need for a street or a door? When the Cosmic Lord is shining within, Where is the need for a door? There is no need for doors and streets in the Kingdom of God. Each one has to acquire the qualification to enter that Kingdom. All are not entitled to enter it. But every human being should aspire to achieve that right. That is the essential purpose of human birth. Human being is bound by the actions in this world. Liberation is not something to be achieved in after-life. The striving for liberation must start early in life and proceed continuously. Another term for liberation is "emancipation". That is true freedom. Freedom from bondage to the senses. This means that you must carry on all duties without attachment to the fruits thereof. Today all actions are performed with attachment to the results. Even in rendering social service, there is often an element of self-interest that vitiates the quality of your service. Life is filled with bondages of various kinds - from hunger and poverty to ignorance and disease and crisis of death. To strive for freedom from these bondages is spiritual sadhana. It means giving up those actions that bind you. It is not easy to get the answers to spiritual questions. The discharge of duties in a spirit of detachment is the basic obligation of everyone from a student to a scholar. Human's primary aim should be to recognise the unity that underlies the diversity in thephenomenal world. To break up what is one into many pieces is easy. But it is difficult to bringthem together into a meaningful unit. It is in the unifying process that the utility of things can beunderstood. The role of both diversity and unity in life has to be properly understood. Each one can become Swami by merging the separate individual jeevas (souls), in the Ocean of the Universal Atma, as in the illumination of the Divine Love. Can you escape from Karma oh man? Whatever your scholarship, Whatever your daily worship, Whatever penance you may perform Can you avoid the results of Karma? Whether you fill your vessel In a small pond or the vast ocean It will be filled only Upto its capacity. Do not confine Swami to these few acres round the Prashanti Nilayam. Wherever a person craving for Prashanti (perfect peace) lives and prays, there Prashanti Nilayam exists. (Reet's compilation from, Sathya Sai Speaks, Vol. 1. "The underlying truths," Chapter 27; Vol. 3. "Human and Divine actions," Chapter 27; Vol. 24. "No global disaster to be apprehended," Chapter 4 and "Krishna : incarnation of love," Chapter 23; Vol. 25. "Divinise Every Moment," Chapter 1; Vol. 29. "The Gospel of hard work," Chapter 35. Sathya Sai Baba. The Divine Discourse, "From Negative to Positive." 15 February 1998, Prashanti Nilayam). Namaste - Reet Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 31, 2005 Report Share Posted March 31, 2005 ======= "Jagmag hote chaand-sitaare, Jagmag hai aakash. Jagmag saari duniya jisase, Vo hai Sai prakash" ********************** ( The moon & stars are shining. The sky is shining.The whole universe is shining with whose light.It is the light of Sai.) ****************************** Bowing on feet of Baba, S.L.Gupta 1-4-2005 ======= Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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