As a bird needs two wings to fly, so a human being needs the two wings  of existence, the spiritual and the material, to lead a natural and  harmonious life.
Spirituality teaches us to balance our aspirations in these two  fields. However, in today’s world the demands of material living call  out so loudly that they often capture the lion’s share of our attention.  By contrast, the call of spirituality, sometimes referred to as ‘the  still, small voice within’, is subtle and quiet. Considering the demands  of daily living that compete for our attention, it takes a special  determination to make room for our inner life.
Here we come to  the wisdom of following a daily meditation practice. When we make time  to nurture our spiritual development, the inner Self responds with a  lightness of heart and a deeper feeling of peace and calmness. A new  understanding of our inner Self reveals a longing to return to a  condition of oneness with God, and with all life. As we invest ourselves  in our spiritual growth our understanding develops, our capacity for  growth expands, and we experience greater energy and enthusiasm for  meditation. We begin to look forward to our spiritual practice and to  anticipate its nourishing benefit. Eventually, it becomes a natural and  indispensable part of our existence.
Spirituality says that God is within us,  and that we can realize Him by the inward practice. Our communion with  the Ultimate should be an inner communion with Him. Spirituality does  not say that God does not exist outside us. What it says is, why should  you take all the trouble and expense to go to the places of worship when  He is right inside you
Saturday, October 16, 2010
What is Spirituality?
It is the remembrance of our original home, from which we have come.  We have become so focused on material life that we no longer remember  that divine home. The soul is the traveller on its way back home. The  journey is the life we adopt on the way home. It is life itself. The  vehicle is the body in which the soul travels through life. Our  spiritual goal is to achieve that original condition and the spiritual  path is the way we travel to reach that goal.
According to Babuji Maharaj, “Spirituality really begins where religion ends.” Spirituality is easily identifiable with mysticism. The mystic or spiritual journey is an inner journey of the heart. One of the great tenets or principles of all religions has been that God resides in the heart of the human being. Spirituality focuses attention on the divine effulgence created by the presence of divinity in the heart. Spirituality is the need for an inner existence.
Spirituality invokes no names, confers no attributes, demands no subservience to any artificially created gods of the human mind, and focuses our attention on the infinite, ultimate source of all beings, which is nameless, formless and attribute-less. This approach to the Ultimate can bring together people of all cultures and all religions. If widely practiced, spirituality is perhaps the most potent force for bringing about human integration
Material life may be fulfilling to a certain extent, but it often leaves us with a feeling of emptiness, an indefinable lack of something, even if we do not know what. Most of us want joy, happiness and peace. Spirituality teaches us that real joy, happiness and peace come from within. Spirituality brings lasting and meaningful change to our lives through inner transformation. As we change, the universe changes around us. With this change, there is a nurturing of the inner qualities of the heart, such as courage, hope, faith, wonder, compassion, tolerance, and most of all, love.
According to Babuji Maharaj, “Spirituality really begins where religion ends.” Spirituality is easily identifiable with mysticism. The mystic or spiritual journey is an inner journey of the heart. One of the great tenets or principles of all religions has been that God resides in the heart of the human being. Spirituality focuses attention on the divine effulgence created by the presence of divinity in the heart. Spirituality is the need for an inner existence.
Spirituality invokes no names, confers no attributes, demands no subservience to any artificially created gods of the human mind, and focuses our attention on the infinite, ultimate source of all beings, which is nameless, formless and attribute-less. This approach to the Ultimate can bring together people of all cultures and all religions. If widely practiced, spirituality is perhaps the most potent force for bringing about human integration
Material life may be fulfilling to a certain extent, but it often leaves us with a feeling of emptiness, an indefinable lack of something, even if we do not know what. Most of us want joy, happiness and peace. Spirituality teaches us that real joy, happiness and peace come from within. Spirituality brings lasting and meaningful change to our lives through inner transformation. As we change, the universe changes around us. With this change, there is a nurturing of the inner qualities of the heart, such as courage, hope, faith, wonder, compassion, tolerance, and most of all, love.
Saturday, October 2, 2010
OM/AUM
The syllable Om, also known as  Pranava, can also be spelled as         AUM. According to one interpretation,
        "A" stands for creation,
"U" stands for preservation, and
"M" indicates destruction or dissolution.
According to another interpretation, the three letters forming  AUM indicate the three lokas (planes of existence) of this universe-both  gross and         subtle-Svarga (heaven), Martya (earth) and Patala (netherworld).
         The following brief passage is one of the clearest of the  countless references to OM which can be found anywhere in the Hindu  scripture.
        The goal which all the Vedas declare, which all austerities aim at, and which men desire when they lead the life of continence, I will tell you briefly: it is OM. This syllable OM is indeed Brahman. This syllable is the Highest. Whosoever knows this syllable obtains all that he desires. This is the best support; this is the highest support. Whosoever knows this support is adored in the world of Brahma.Katha Upanishad I, ii, 15-17
Om reveals all and contains all and, like the Vedas, Om is  revelation that comes through          shruti (hearing). According to the Mandukya  Upanishad, Om is both atman and brahman: it is the past, the present and  the future, as well as all that transcends time.
        The chanting of OM is generally practiced by impersonalists and  those engaged in the mystic yoga process. By         chanting OM and controlling the breathing perfectly, which is  mostly          a mechanical way of steadying the mind, one is eventually able  to go into trance or samadhi. Through this system, one gradually changes         the tendencies of the materially absorbed mind and makes it  spiritualized.         This process may take many years to perfect.
The Gayatri Mantra
The Gayatri Mantra, also known as  the Savitri Mantra, is one of the most important mantras in the Hindu  scriptures. It is found in the Rig-Veda (Rig- Veda III/62/10).It         is perhaps the greatest Vedic mantric chant.
This mantra is chanted at sunrise, noon and sunset. At dawn it  is called         Gayatri, the youthful form of the Goddess, consort of Lord  Brahma, the creator. It is called         Savitri, the mature form, at noon, the consort of Lord Shiva. It  is called         Sarasvati, the elderly form, at sunset, the consort of Lord  Vishnu.
The Gayatri Mantra was first cognized by the Rishi         Vishwamitra. Rishi Vishwamitra is the embodiment of tapas or  ascetic force and his mantra carries that power of light, energy and  transformation. Through it one can be born again (dwija) or twice born  in truth, in the heavenly stream of Divine wisdom.
This great mantra consists of three parts. The first is the  chants to the seven worlds. The second is the mantra proper of  twenty-four syllables. The third is a summary of the mantra's energies.  The following is a brief explanation of the mantra as presented in the  Mahanarayana Upanishad.
The Head of the Gayatri
OM Bhuh!- the physical realm or earth, realm of being or food
OM Bhuvah! - the vital plane or atmosphere, realm of becoming or breath
OM Suvah! - the mental plane, space or heaven, realm of illumination
OM Mahah! - the sphere of cosmic mind, realm of Dharma
OM Janah! - the realm of creation or bliss
OM Tapah! - the realm of consciousness-force
OM Satyam! - the realm of absolute truth
OM Bhuvah! - the vital plane or atmosphere, realm of becoming or breath
OM Suvah! - the mental plane, space or heaven, realm of illumination
OM Mahah! - the sphere of cosmic mind, realm of Dharma
OM Janah! - the realm of creation or bliss
OM Tapah! - the realm of consciousness-force
OM Satyam! - the realm of absolute truth
The Body of the Mantra
OM
Tat - That
Savitur - Of Savitar, the solar Creator
Varenyam - Supreme
Bhargo - Effulgence
Devasya - Of the God
Dhimahi - We meditate
Dhiyo - Intelligences, minds
Yo - Who
Nah - Our
Prachodayat - May direct
Tat - That
Savitur - Of Savitar, the solar Creator
Varenyam - Supreme
Bhargo - Effulgence
Devasya - Of the God
Dhimahi - We meditate
Dhiyo - Intelligences, minds
Yo - Who
Nah - Our
Prachodayat - May direct
"We meditate upon the supreme effulgence of the Divine Solar  Creator that he may direct our minds."
The Tail of the Gayatri
OM
Apo - the Cosmic Waters
Jyoti - the Cosmic Light
Rasomritam - the Immortal Essence
Brahma - the Absolute
Bhur - the physical
Bhuvas - the atmospheric
Suvar - the realm of space
OM - the four higher realms
Apo - the Cosmic Waters
Jyoti - the Cosmic Light
Rasomritam - the Immortal Essence
Brahma - the Absolute
Bhur - the physical
Bhuvas - the atmospheric
Suvar - the realm of space
OM - the four higher realms
"OM, the waters, the light, the immortal essence, Brahman,  earth, atmosphere, heaven, OM."
The Supreme Self, Paramatman, or Savitar, is the conscious  being within the cosmic sun or Light of lights. The mantra is his  creative force, the Divine Word. Savitar is the master of all  transformations and the director of all higher evolution. He is the Self  of Brahman, the pure being of the Absolute.
The Gayatri Mantra releases the supreme solar power, the power  of the inner sun of Self-realization and cosmic creation. Those wishing  to bring about a new creation or new dawn for humanity of this dark age,  should chant this mantra. Those wishing to transcend this world of          Samsara can also use the mantra as a stairway to the  infinite. This mantra also grants intelligence, creative vision and  healing powers.
Used with the chants to the seven worlds it unfolds all the  secrets of the universe outwardly and inwardly.
The Gayatri mantra is central to Yoga, Vedanta, Ayurveda and  Vedic astrology.
For Yoga it sets in motion the Divine will toward transformation, stimulating the Kundalini force.
For Vedanta it grants Self-knowledge, knowledge of the solar Self.
For Ayurveda it gives the power of the cosmic prana that is born of the sun.
For Jyotish (Vedic astrology) it gives knowledge of the movements of the heavenly bodies ruled by the cosmic sun.
For Yoga it sets in motion the Divine will toward transformation, stimulating the Kundalini force.
For Vedanta it grants Self-knowledge, knowledge of the solar Self.
For Ayurveda it gives the power of the cosmic prana that is born of the sun.
For Jyotish (Vedic astrology) it gives knowledge of the movements of the heavenly bodies ruled by the cosmic sun.
Mantras And Sacred Symbols
A mantra is a thought manifest in,  or encapsulated by, a sacred utterance that possesses profound  spiritual significance. Sound holds a key place in Hindu thought. Some  writers believe that it preceded the creation of the universe, and its  vibrations are thought to bind the atoms of the world. Mantras are  sacred syllables that encapsulate particular forms of cosmic power  (shakti). 
In Hinduism, a mantra is sacred and spiritually beneficial. By  chanting a mantra repeatedly with love and devotion a person can become  spiritually illumined. He develops a pure mind which enables him to see  God.
 Each mantra has a presiding deity over it who is supposed to  be giving the results of chanting of         mantra (mantra phala) .Mantra means which has to be repeated and  understood.         Literally it means the verse which explains the prescribed  meaning:
Man- to repeat (manana) and
tra - the power of trana.
 There are different forms of mantra, such as the "seed" (bija)  mantra, which is thought to be an energy pervading both the human body  and the universe. The deities are believed to be manifestations of bija  mantras: Shiva, for example, is linked with the mantra         "hrim" and Kali is associated with the syllable         "krim".
There are mantras that accomplish many kinds of wondrous deeds  simply by correctly chanting         them. Other mantras help purify one's consciousness, give  spiritual enlightenment, and put one in touch         with the Supreme.
Hindus also believe that a mantra received from a saint or holy  man is far more effective than mantras picked from a book.
A mantra that has already helped someone to have  God-realization is believed to have great spiritual potency. Such a  mantra is called a siddha mantra.
There are two mantras that are especially recommended in the  Vedic         literature. One is  omkara or the om mantra, and the other is          Hare Krishna Maha Mantra. Hindus believe         that these two mantras can deliver one to the realm beyond  material existence.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
