Thursday, May 29, 2008

Drink the nectar of the Divine Name Rama and always sit among righteous company....

Nama Article 30th May 2008

Meerabai's Song

Drink the nectar of the Divine Name Rama, O human! Drink the nectar of the Divine Name Rama!

Leave the bad company, always sit among righteous company (Satsangh). Please Hear and listen to the mention of God.

Wash out the thoughts of Concupiscence, anger, pride, greed and attachment from your mind.

Meera's Lord is the Giridhari (Mountain-Holder), the suave lover. Soak yourself in the dye of His color.

(If we follow the first two steps the last two steps are obvious results!)

Transliteration

râma nâma rasa pîjai manuâm, râma nâma rasa pîjai
taja kusanga satsanga baiTha nita, hari carcâ suNa lîjai
kâma krodha mada lobha moha ko, bahâ citta se dîjai
mîrâ ke prabhu giradhara nâgara, tâhi ke rang bhîjai

Chant the Mahamantra Nama kirtan :

 

Hare Rama Hare Rama Rama Rama Hare Hare
Hare Krishna Hare Krishna Krishna Krishna Hare Hare

I Chant the Divine Names and worship Him who is beyond the reach of thought and speech and yet by whose grace all speech is possible

Nama Article 29th May 2008
 
Ashram Bhajnavali - Transalated by Mahathma Ghandhi
 
In the early morning I Chant the Divine Names and worship Him who is beyond the reach of thought and speech and yet by whose grace all speech is possible.
 
I worship Him whom the Vedas describe as neti neti (not this, not this).
 
Him they, the sages, have called God of gods, the unborn, the unfallen, the source of all.

 

प्रातर्भजामि मनसा वचसामगम्यं

    वाचो विभान्ति निखिला यदनुग्रहेण .

यं नेति नेति वचनैर्निगमा अवोचं

    स्तं देवदेवमजमच्युतमाहुरग्र्यम्

 

Chant the Mahamantra Nama kirtan :

 Hare Rama Hare Rama Rama Rama Hare Hare
Hare Krishna Hare Krishna Krishna Krishna Hare Hare

Monday, May 26, 2008

Modern scientific experiments have confirmed that the japa regulates the reciter's respiration

Nama Article 27th May 2008
 

Modern scientific experiments have confirmed that the japa regulates the reciter's respiration in a way similar to that offered by some of the exercises of pranayamas. It reduces the breathing rate to half its normal average.

 

That means, on an average, one hour's disciplined practice of the japa yoga would augment the life of the sadhaka by about five hundred breaths at least! Japa therefore could also be advised as an important health-exercise.

 

As mentioned earlier, the effects of japa awaken one's inherent virtues that naturally result in an overall improvement in his personality, and amelioration of his physical and mental potentials. These positive effects can be used for noble success in terms of worldly progress as well.

 

It is the willpower and the vision, aroused by the japa that 'transform' the difficult circumstances and obstacles into minor ones in a miraculous manner.

 

Chant the Mahamantra Nama kirtan :

 

Hare Rama Hare Rama Rama Rama Hare Hare
Hare Krishna Hare Krishna Krishna Krishna Hare Hare

A person says, ‘I am full of faults; yet, my Guru showers me with affection! I know not the reason!’

Nama Article 26th May 2008
 

The one who has earned the affection of the Guru attains to Vaikuntam (Eternal bliss) that is rare even for the Yogis!

 

A person says, 'I am full of faults; yet, my Guru showers me with affection! I know not the reason!' Such a person, indeed, attains to Vaikuntam.

 

- His Holiness Sri Sri Muralidhara Swamiji

 

Chant the Mahamantra Nama kirtan :

 

Hare Rama Hare Rama Rama Rama Hare Hare
Hare Krishna Hare Krishna Krishna Krishna Hare Hare

Saturday, May 24, 2008

If saints are omnipotent, why do they have to collect money for their expenses?

Nama Article 25th May 2008
 

Devotee: If saints are omnipotent, why do they have to collect money for their expenses?

 

Swami Papa Ramdas: As far as Ramdas is concerned, he lives upon what you all give him. Whether in the Ashram or outside, he is always living on Bhiksha, which you all offer him out of love.

 

One of the three vows taken by Ramdas when he first assumed Sanyas was to live on Bhiksha alone. By Ram's will, he has not to go now from door to door, but is invited by friends. These friends are none but Ram.


There would be no joy in minting money by any miracle. The pleasure you all get in giving and the joy Ramdas gets in receiving, would not then be there.

 

God always keeps the Ashram in want, so that Mataji and Ramdas may be made to leave the Ashram occasionally, visit different places and thereby spread His Name. If Ramdas had tons of money, he may have never thought of leaving the Ashram. Ram knows this and therefore He so arranges that money is always scarce in the Ashram.

 

Chant the Mahamantra Nama kirtan :

 

Hare Rama Hare Rama Rama Rama Hare Hare
Hare Krishna Hare Krishna Krishna Krishna Hare Hare

By constantly remembering the true purpose of our lives, we will remain resolute in our Sadhana

Nama Article 23rd May 2008
 

Just as we take stock of our gains and losses, our own pluses and minuses would be measured at the end of the lives. By constantly remembering this, we will ensure that everything that we think, say or do will be a befitting offering to the Lord.

 

There is an incident in Eknathji's life. When somebody asked him as to how it was possible for him to be so pure, calm and kind, he told the person to think about himself because he was but a few days away from death.

 

A few days later, when Eknathji met the man and asked him how many sins he had committed in these few days, the man remarked, 'Sir, where was the time for that? Death was always before my eyes.'

 

Eknathji replied then, 'Now you know why the lives of people like me are sinless. How can the mind entertain such evil thoughts when we know that each day we are heading towards death?'

 

By constantly remembering the true purpose of our lives, we will remain resolute in our Sadhana and become conscious of our Real gains in life in each passing day.

 

To tune our mind towards constantly to remember the true purpose……….

 

Chant the Mahamantra Nama kirtan :

 

Hare Rama Hare Rama Rama Rama Hare Hare
Hare Krishna Hare Krishna Krishna Krishna Hare Hare

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Japa - Recalling thou name in silence, through the mind and the inner self

Nama Article 22nd May 2008
 

The word japa in the Sanskrit language is defined as - 'Japa Vyaktaayaam Vaaci' and 'Japa Maanase Ca';

 

Meaning: Enunciate the mantra clearly and also say it mentally.

 

Repeated rhythmic enunciation of a mantra with unperturbed mental concentration is defined as the japa of that mantra.

 

The Agni Puraana explains this as below -

 

Jakaaro Janma Vicchedaha Pakaarah Paapa Naasakah |

Tasyaajjapa Iti Prokto Janma Paapa Vinaasakah ||

 

Meaning: 'Ja' implies the transition of birth (life) and 'pa' means - calling for thee through the inner heart. Thus 'japa' is equivalent to be the spiritual endeavor that destroys all sins and the bonds of birth and death.

 

Swami Ramakrishna Paramhansa explains it more perspicuously as - "japa means recalling thou name in silence, through the mind and the inner self ".

 

Japa is described by some scholars as the procedure for the realization of the Almighty and is therefore also defined as - 'consistent illumination of the deepest inner self'.

 

Chant the Mahamantra Nama kirtan :

 

Hare Rama Hare Rama Rama Rama Hare Hare
Hare Krishna Hare Krishna Krishna Krishna Hare Hare

Nama Kirtan is that spiritual diet that can be taken by anyone and everyone in this Kali Yuga

Nama Article 21st May 2008
 

Source: http://namadwaar.org/home.html

 

A hungry man comes home. He has so many diseases in his body that only a very few foods are non-allergic to him, given the amount of medication he is taking. In addition he has his own likes and dislikes in the matter of food. One has to feed him to satisfy his hunger, and at the same time, give him that food that tastes well to his taste buds, does no harm to his health and does not affect any medication that he is taking.

 

Nama Kirtan is that spiritual diet that can be taken by anyone and everyone in this Kali Yuga. 

 

- His Holiness Sri Sri Muralidhara Swamiji

 

Chant the Mahamantra Nama kirtan :

 

Hare Rama Hare Rama Rama Rama Hare Hare
Hare Krishna Hare Krishna Krishna Krishna Hare Hare

Monday, May 19, 2008

The mind gradually gives up all agitation.........by the cultivation of devotion to the feet of Hari

Nama Article 20th May 2008

 

Prabodhasudhakara - Sri Adi Sankaracharya

 

Just as a tiger confined to a place surrounded by high walls makes repeated efforts to jump over the walls and, becoming exhausted, lies down panting, the mind, failing in its efforts to go out on account of the sense organs being restrained, becomes calm. Then it gives up all effort. 

 

The mind gradually gives up all agitation if the breath is controlled through pranayama, if the company of sages is resorted to, if the vasanas are given up, and by the cultivation of devotion to the feet of Hari.  The mind and the breath are like two sides of the same coin and so when one is controlled the other also becomes calm.

 

Restraint of the mind

 

If the mind is not allowed to go out towards external objects, but is fixed on the Self, it will become identified with the Self. When the mind is thinking of sense objects it becomes tainted and tamoguna predominates. When the mind withdraws itself from sense objects and attains dispassion towards them, sattvaguna will begin to manifest. (Prakriti, which is the material cause of the whole world is said to be composed of three gunas or modes, namely, sattva, rajas and tamas. The mind is also constituted of the same three gunas.

 

The proportion of these gunas varies from person to person. In the same person the proportion varies from time to time, depending on the activities of the mind, and one guna or other predominates. When sattvaguna predominates, the mind is calm, receptive to knowledge and pure. When rajoguna predominates, the person is actuated by greed and is inclined to engage in action for the fulfilment of his desires, heedless of the consequences. When tamoguna predominates, the person becomes lazy and goes into a torpor). The mind of the ordinary person constantly seeks pleasure through the sense organs. If the desired object is not attained the person thinks that he has lost something very valuable and is very unhappy.

 

Every one has to experience the consequences of his actions in this life or in past lives. This is the inexorable law. The only way to prevent the mind from running out in search of sense pleasures is by the cultivation of dispassion.

The happiness experienced in deep sleep is not born of any sense object because at that time there is no contact of the mind with external objects through the sense organs.

 

The mind gradually gives up all agitation if the breath is controlled through pranayama, if the company of sages is resorted to, if the vasanas are given up, and by the cultivation of devotion to the feet of Hari.  The mind and the breath are like two sides of the same coin and so when one is controlled the other also becomes calm.

 

Chant the Mahamantra Nama kirtan :

 

Hare Rama Hare Rama Rama Rama Hare Hare
Hare Krishna Hare Krishna Krishna Krishna Hare Hare

Though this is so, He can be attained through the scriptures and by contemplation on, and singing the praises of, Hari

Nama Article 19th May 2008
 
Prabodhasudhakara - Sri Adi Sankaracharya
 

The work commences with a salutation to Krishna, described as the Supreme Lord of the Yadava race, who is none other than the Unborn, Self-effulgent, Supreme Being, who is Pure Existence, Consciousness and Eternal Bliss. Thus the identity of the Personal God with Nirguna Brahman is established at the very outset.

 

The next verse points out that Brahman whom even the Vedas are unable to describe, is certainly not accessible to the words of human beings.

 

Though this is so, He can be attained through the scriptures and by contemplation on, and singing the praises of, Hari

 

Chant the Mahamantra Nama kirtan  :

 

Hare Rama Hare Rama Rama Rama Hare Hare
Hare Krishna Hare Krishna Krishna Krishna Hare Hare

Saturday, May 17, 2008

A mantra is that which protects us when we chant it.........we cannot, by analysis, discover the essence

Nama Article 18th May 2008
 

Excerpts from The Recitation of Mantra - by Swami Krishnananda direct disciple of His Holiness Swami Sivananda

 

System of the combination of particular words with other words of the requisite character is followed in the composition of a mantra, which literally means, 'that which protects a person who thinks of it'. Mananat trayate iti mantrah - a mantra is that which protects us when we chant it. It protects us like armour, like a shield that we wear in a war, by generating in us a resisting power against any kind of influence which is extraneous in nature, and which is unwanted for the purpose on hand. Chandas is the peculiar chemical combination of the letters, we may say. Particular chemical substances produce special results or effects when they are combined with certain types of other chemical components. But when they are mixed together, they may create a third force altogether.

 

A mixture that is chemically produced, like hydrogen and oxygen for instance, is not merely an arithmetical combination of two elements, because when the two are combined, some peculiar effect is produced which is not apparently present in either of the components. For instance, water is produced by a combination of hydrogen and oxygen, but we will not find the character of water either in hydrogen or in oxygen. The water that is the effect of the combination of hydrogen and oxygen in a certain proportion is a new effect altogether, and we cannot, by analysis, discover the essence of water in its original causes. Likewise, the words of a mantra, the components of a mantra, have special forces present or inherent in them, and when the words are combined in the requisite proportion and in the manner mentioned in the chandas shastra, they produce a third kind of effect which is the purpose or intention of the mantra, and that effect is called the devata. We may say that water is the devata of hydrogen and oxygen - it is the deity.

 

That is the intention. That is the purpose. That is what we require. That is what we are aiming at and want.

 

Chant the Mahamantra Nama kirtan :

 

Hare Rama Hare Rama Rama Rama Hare Hare
Hare Krishna Hare Krishna Krishna Krishna Hare Hare

The yoga sutras of Patanjali recommends Chanting the Divine Name

Nama Article 17th May 2008
 

The yoga sutras of Patanjali - Samadhi pada

 

तज्जपस्तदर्थभावनमः २८॥

 

tajjapastadarthabhāvanam .. 28..

 

Excerpts from The Recitation of Mantra - by Swami Krishnananda direct disciple of His Holiness Swami Sivananda

 

God is not any particular thing. He is the most general of all beings, satta samanya, as He is called, the universal substratum or the greatest common factor present in every conceivable thing, anywhere. Therefore, the designation of God should be possessed of similar characteristics - namely, it should be very comprehensive. That is, when the name of God is chanted, it is not that any particular finite idea is generated in the mind, but a vaster and more comprehensive notion is generated, which works in such a way that it removes the finitude of consciousness in our mind. Tajjapa tadarthabhāvanam (I.28) - 'japa' is the word used here in this sutra. Japa is a holy recitation, a constant hammering into the mind of a particular formula, an idea, or a name, in order that the same idea may be allowed to originate in the mind, and nothing else is allowed. The mind is made in such a way that it cannot think one and the same thing continuously and, therefore, it is necessary to repeat the designation or formula of a particular given object again and again, without any remission or gap, so that the mind reconstitutes itself into the form of that object, and there is a new type of vyapti or pervasion taking place in the mind, which is our intention in the recitation of the mantra.

 

Chant the Mahamantra Nama kirtan :

 

Hare Rama Hare Rama Rama Rama Hare Hare
Hare Krishna Hare Krishna Krishna Krishna Hare Hare

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Do not move away from a Sadhu or your Guru because he did not/does not speak to you

Nama Article 16th May 2008
 

Excerpts from a discourse by our Sri Sri Muralidhara Swamiji

 

Do not move away from a Sadhu or your Guru because he did not/does not speak to you.

 

Kabirdas explains, "We move with our neighbours, friends and relatives. If some misunderstanding arises with them feel happy and blessed. Just drop that relationship because if they are affectionate towards you, you will not come out of it. If any misunderstanding arises with Sadhus/your Guru, do not give it up as a blessing but somehow try to earn back their association. Do everything to earn their Grace back. Kabirdas gives a wonderful example for this - 'we go to the market and buy a 'măla' (chain) made of ordinary beads worth some 5 or 10 rupees for our child. When this breaks we throw it away as it is not of much worth. However, when the diamond or gold necklace bought for the child gets cut, we repair it and keep it safe. Relationship with other people is akin to the chain made of ordinary beads while association with Mahans is akin to diamond or gold necklace. Do not feel happy and blessed if their association gets cut. Go repeatedly to their Presence and somehow manage to bring about reconciliation.' He speaks on the glory of Satsangh and Sadhus. The reason for this is that he yearned very deeply for a Guru and attained Him with lots of difficulties.

 

Kabirdas, in spite of belonging to Islam religion, was attracted to Rama Năma. He desired to receive upadesa of this Mantra from Ramananda, a great Mahatama in Kăsi.

 

Kabirdas dressed up only as befitting his religion. Everyday he would go to the gates of Ramananda's ashram and await him. He would plead with everyone who walked out of this gate, "I desire to receive upadesa of Rama Năma from the Guru. Please recommend my case to him." But, none seemed to help him. Instead they advised him to chant the Mantra of his religion. He would plead, "No! My heart desires only Rama Mantra. Please speak about me to the Guru." Not at all discouraged by the words of others, he would stand at the gates of the ashram all through the day, everyday, without fail. He never once felt that he should not return here as none seemed to help him. For months he stood at the gates of the ashram, awaiting the Grace of the Guru. Mahans have no sleep. The 'Atma', remaining as a 'Săkshi', watches the body taking rest. This is a kind of 'nishtai'. Humans are caught in the three states of 'jagrat' (waking), 'swapna' (dream) and 'sushupti' (dreamless sleep). But, Mahans are in the fourth state of 'turiya'. Therefore, there is no sleep for them. When Ramananda was in this state, he heard the conversation between his 'puja murtis' Rama and Lakshmana. Rama told Lakshmana, "Oh! Lakshmana! Let us leave this ashram!"

 

Lakshmana asked the brother, "Brother! Why do you wish to leave this ashram?"

 

Rama explained, "There is a person coming to the gates of this ashram every day desiring to receive upadesa. But, none seem to help him. Why then should we remain here?"

 

Immediately, Ramanada pleaded with Rama, "Oh! Lord! I was not aware of this till now. I will find out and give upadesa to this person. You should not leave this ashram. You must remain here, please."

 

Early the next morning Ramananda took his 'kamandalu' and japa măla and wearing the 'Păduka' (Holy sandals) walked to Hanuman ghat on the banks of the Ganges for his bath. Kabirdas was lying on the steps leading to the river, weeping, "Today, too, I have not received upadesa of Rama Năma. I have not been able to receive the Grace of the Guru!" He lifted his head when suddenly the Păduka worn by Ramananda hit his head! Mahans always have the Lord's name on their tongue. Since, his foot hit against something in the dark, Ramananda uttered, 'Rama! Rama! Rama!' The Sun had not yet risen but Kabirdas looked at this Sun that was Ramananda! Ramananda stood there lustrous like the Sun! Kabirdas's heart leaped with joy as he heard Rama Năma uttered from the lips of the Guru. He thought, "I desired upadesa of Rama Mantra from the Guru. But, how blessed am I that I have received it at the banks of the Ganga with the blessings of the Guru's Păduka touching my head!" From that moment onwards Kabirdas began incessant japa of the 'Tăraka Mantra'. Due to his deep bhakti he attained the highest state.

 

Chant the Mahamantra Nama kirtan :

 

Hare Rama Hare Rama Rama Rama Hare Hare
Hare Krishna Hare Krishna Krishna Krishna Hare Hare