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| Maha Shivrathri |
Discourse: SHARANAAGATHI [The goal of this soul being born then when the Lord spoke thus.] Discourse of Sathya Sai Baba, Mahaashivaraathri, Prashanthi Nilayam,
1955
The Lord is a mountain of Prema (love); any number of ants carrying away particles of sweetness cannot exhaust His plenty. He is an ocean of mercy without a limiting shore. Bhakthi (devotion) is the easiest way to win His grace and also to realize that He pervades everything; in fact, is everything! Sharanaagathi (total surrender), leaving everything to His will, is the highest form of Bhakthi (devotion). Once a Brahmin was crossing a riverbed near which some men were washing clothes. Finding a nice new silk shawl on his shoulder, they fell upon him in a group, shouting that it belonged to the palace and had been given to them to be washed, but had been stolen and had not been traced. The poor Brahmin yelled ‘Naaraayana, Naaraayana,’ when the blows rained on him and so, Naaraayana rose from His Seat in Vaikunththa and proceeded forward; but in a moment, He walked back and resumed His seat much to the surprise of His consort who asked Him the reason for the strange behavior. Naaraayana said, "I wanted to help that poor Brahmin who has fallen into a den of scoundrels, but he has started beating them, blow for blow; My help is no longer needed." Conquest of Ego needed When Bhakthi is just emerging as a sapling, a fence is needed to protect the tender plant; that fence is Sanaathana Dharma (eternal religion) and its rules, regulations and restrictions, directions and commands. When the fruit is green, it will not fall even when the gale is furious; but when is fully ripe, it drops to the ground even in the silence of the night. A small fire will go out in smoke even if a little green is placed on it, but the forest fire will reduce to ashes even the greenest tree, which impedes its fierce march! What is needed is the conquest of the ego. The bullock shouts ‘ham hai’, ‘ham hai’ (I am, I am), in its egoistic pride. And so, when it is just a few days old, you tie it to a post, apart from its mother; you work it to skin and bones; but yet, the animal does not learn the lesson of humility. Even its skin when drawn tightly across a drum resounds egoistically, Ham, Ham, Ham. And so, the skin has to be cut into slender strings and then when the strings are pulled, the bullock reveals that it has benefited by all the punishment it has undergone; it murmurs Thum, Thum, Thum, (you, you, you), and its ego is gone. The Haridhaasa (mendicant) goes along the streets, singing the glories of the Lord. He has the sounding cymbals, two of them, the eternal duet of good-bad, joy-grief, pain-pleasure in his right hand and he twangs the Thambura (stringed musical instrument of Samsaara with his left. Samsaara (worldly life) is the tune to which his songs have to be adjusted; it is the Shruthi (musical note). But both the Shruthi and Thaala (marking of time) are for the purpose of heightening the effect of the song, which issues from his mouth, the song of the glory of God. Three Types of Devotion I remember telling a questioner in Maharaashtra, while in the previous body, that there are three types of devotion: the Vihanga method, where like a bird swooping down upon the ripe fruit on the tree, the devotee is too impatient and by the very impatience he exhibits, he loses the fruit, which falls from his hold; the Markata method where like a monkey which pulls towards it one fruit after another and by sheer unsteadiness is not able to decide which fruit it wants, the Bhaktha too hesitates and changes his aim much too often and thus loses all chance of success; and the Pipeelika method, where like the ant which slowly but steadily proceeds towards the sweetness, the devotee also moves direct, with undivided attention towards the Lord and wins His grace! Bhakthi and Shraddha (devotion and faith) are the two oars with which you can take the boat across the sea of Samsaara. A child told its mother when it went to bed at night, "Mother! Wake me up when I get hungry." The mother answered, "There is no need, your hunger will itself wake you." So too, when the hunger for God comes, it will itself activise you and make you seek the food you need. God has endowed you with hunger and He supplies the food; He has endowed you with illness and He grows the specifics you need. Your duty is to see that you get the proper hunger and the right illness and use the appropriate food or drug! Man must be yoked to Samsaara and broken; that is the training, which
will teach that the world is unreal; no amount of lectures will make
you believe it is a snake unless you actually experience it. Touch fire
and get the sensation of burning; there is nothing like it to teach
you that fire is to be avoided. Unless you touch it, you will be aware
only of its light. It is light and heat both; just as this world is
both true and false, that is to say, unreal. |
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Habit of judging others as Atheists or Theists There is a widely prevalent habit now of judging others and labeling them as theists or atheists. What do you know, what can you know of the inner working of another's mind? There was once a queen who was a great devotee of Raama; she felt so sad that her husband, the Raaja, never even uttered the name of Raama and had no Bhakthi. She had vowed that the first occasion, on which she got evidence of his Bhakthi or at least respect for Raamanaama, she would conduct Puja (ritualistic worship) in all the temples and feed the poor on a lavish scale. Then, one night, while fast asleep, the Raaja uttered the name of Raama thrice plaintively and prayerfully. She heard the Naamasmarana and was happy at the discovery of her husband's devotion to Raama; she ordered general rejoicing throughout the kingdom and the feeding of the poor. The Raaja did not know the reason for the celebration for he was only told that it was an order of the Raani, which the officer carried out. Similarly, a husband may not be aware of the excellence of a wife's spiritual attainments. There is the case of a couple who was proceeding through a thick jungle on pilgrimage to an inaccessible shrine. The husband saw on the footpath a precious stone, shining brilliantly when the sun's rays fell upon it from between the leaves. He hastily threw some sand over it with a movement of his foot so that his wife may not be tempted to pick it up and become a slave to the tinsel. The wife saw the gesture and chided the husband for still retaining in his mind a distinction between sand and diamond. For her, both were same. Keep the Name as constant as breathing The Raaja who spoke in his sleep the sacred name of Raama felt very sorry, according to the story, that he let Raamanaama out of his mouth, for he believed that no one should know of his ‘love’ for Raama. There are many who will not shout about their Guru or their favorite name and form, but whether you declare them to others or not, keep them ever in your consciousness. Raamanaama or any other name must be as constant as breathing. For this, practice is essential. A person once told Dr. Johnson, the famous English thinker,
that he could seldom get time to recite the name of God, what with the
hundreds of things he had to do from morning till nightfall and even
far into the night. Dr. Johnson replied with another question. He asked
how millions of people found space to live upon the face of the earth,
which is two-thirds water and the rest is too full of mountains, deserts,
forests, icy regions, river beds, marshes and similar impossible areas.
The questioner said that man somehow struggled to find living space.
So too, said Dr, Johnson, man must somehow find a few minutes a day
for prayer to the Lord. |