Guru Bhakti Yoga Sivananda
Guru Bhakti Yoga Sivananda
Guru Bhakti Yoga Sivananda
By
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Contents
• PUBLISHERS’ NOTE
• GLORY OF GURU-BHAKTI YOGA
• EPISTLES ON GURU-BHAKTI
• INTRODUCTION
• GURU GITA
• WISDOM NECTAR
• 1. GURU-BHAKTI YOGA
o The Limbs of Guru-Bhakti Yoga
o The Aim of Guru-Bhakti Yoga
o Principles of Guru-Bhakti Yoga
o Guru-Bhakti Yoga As a Science
o Fruits of Guru-Bhakti Yoga
o Sadhana of Guru-Bhakti Yoga
o Importance of Guru-Bhakti Yoga
o Stumbling Blocks on the Path
o Fundamentals of Guru-Bhakti Yoga
o Cardinal Notes in Guru-Bhakti Yoga
o Pathway to Immortal Bliss
o Greatness of Guru-Bhakti Yoga
o Instructions to the Student
• 2. GURU AND DISCIPLE
o Greatness of Guru
o Devotion to Guru
o Service to Guru
o Qualifications of a Disciple
o Principles of Discipleship
o Meditation on Guru
o Conquest of Happiness
o Need for Guru’s Grace
o Way to Peace and Strength
o Preliminaries for Meditation
• 3. THE DEVELOPMENT OF GURU-BHAKTI
o Purity: A Pre-requisite
o The Yogic Sadhana
o Touch of the Guru
o Methods of Mind-Control
o Progress on the Path
o The Transformation
o Spiritual Attitude to Guru
o The Obstinate Disciple
o The Need for Guru
o Benefits of Discipleship
o Guru-Bhakti and Guru-Seva
o Value of Obedience
o Offerings to the Guru
• 4. CULTIVATION OF GURU-BHAKTI
o Articles of worship
o The Yoga of Guru-Seva
o The Grace of the Guru
o Meditation on Guru
o Guru as the Great Guide
o The Way of the Great
o Our Relation to Guru
o Indispensability of Guru’s Grace
o Felicity From Guru’s Grace
o Need for Preliminary Practice
• 5. GREATNESS OF GURU
o Guru As Sole Refuge
o Sacrifice for the Guru
o Fitness for Guru Worship
o Abide by the Light of Guru
o Knowledge of Brahman Through Guru
o Guru As God
• 6. PRACTICE OF GURU-BHAKTI
o The Principle of Adaptability
o Essentials of Discipleship
o Self-giving to Guru
o The Ingredient of Discrimination
o Complete Surrender
o Enthronement of Guru
o Humility Above Erudition
o Meaning of Faith
o Nature of Obedience
o The Spiritual Etiquette
o The Binding Force
o Service of Guru
• 7. TRUE GUIDE OF THE SEEKER
o Fundamentals of Discipleship
o Dharma in Relation to Guru
o The Three Modes of Nature
o Total Avoidance of Sex
o Guru—The Incarnate Divinity
o God-Realisation through the Grace of Guru
o Praise of Guru in Scriptures
o On Finding the Guru
o Great Love of Guru
o In Tune with the Guru
o Guidance for the Disciple
o The Secret of Realisation
• 8. CARDINAL NOTES ON GURU-BHAKTI
o The Content of Spiritual Teaching
o Guru-Disciple Relationship
o Source of Higher Knowledge
o Principles of Action
o Search for the Right Guru
o In the Foot-Steps of the Guru
o At the Feet of the Guru
o The Worship of the Teacher
o Impartment of Mystic Teaching
o Weapon for Self-conquest
• 9. BASES OF GURU-BHAKTI
o The Role of Faith
o Aspects of Devotion
o The Function of Grace
o Spiritual Path and Life
o The Spirit of Discipleship
o The Easiest Path to God-Realisation
o The Development of Universal Love
o In Tune with Guru
o The Bestower of All Boons
o Need For Spiritual Preoccupation
o Elevating Presence of Guru
o Guru—The Benefactor of the World
o The Need for Moral Perfection
• 10. THE STRUCTURE OF GURU-BHAKTI
o Essentials of Right Conduct
o Above Life’s Turmoil
o Classes Of Disciples
o Approach to Guru
o Benefits Of Guru-Bhakti
o Source Of True Happiness
o The Meaning Of Devotion
• APPENDIX
o GURU PURNIMA MESSAGES
Know Thy Self And Be Free!
The Wheel Of Divine Life
o GURU AND DIKSHA (INITIATION)
o LIMBS OF GURU-BHAKTI
o POEMS ON GURU
Guru Is The Boat
Blessed Guru’s Feet
Guru’s Grace
Guru’s Grace
The Frog And Faithless Disciple
Guru
o REFLECTIONS ON GURU-BHAKTI
o GURU-BHAKTI IN THE BHAGAVAD GITA
o GURU TATTVA
o FOUR CLASSES OF MEN
o THE PRECEPTOR AND THE DISCIPLE
o HOW TO OBTAIN GURU-KRIPA
o WORSHIP OF THE DIVINE
o INVITATION
o ALL ABOUT GURU
o MANTRAS FOR JAPA OR MEDITATION
PUBLISHERS’ NOTE
His Holiness Sri Swami Sivanandaji Maharaj did not write text books as such. The books
he wrote were the outpourings of wisdom from his own direct realisation of the Truth.
From his books you will derive not only the benefit of his wisdom and knowledge of both
practical and esoteric matters pertaining to Yoga, but also the power of his spiritual
force.
Sri Swami Sivanandaji had a unique style—simple, direct and compelling. His books are
not dull treatises on Yoga and philosophy, rather his enthusiasm and eagerness to help all
is evident in every page, lifting the reader to new heights of understanding.
Sri Gurudev’s great utterances about the need for a Guru to lead the aspirant along the
path to God-realisation, and of the devotion that the aspirant should have towards his
Guru, are scattered over a number of his works. That great disciple of Sri Gurudev, Sri
Swami Satchidanandaji (Private Secretary to H.H. Sri Swami Sivanandaji Maharaj) felt
the urge to compile Sri Swamiji’s “sayings” on Guru and Guru Bhakti Yoga into a single
volume. Guru Bhakti Yoga is the result.
May Sri Gurudev’s Grace lead you to the Highest Realms of Immortality, Eternal Bliss
and Supreme Peace.
—THE DIVINE LIFE SOCIETY
1st November, 1942
Dear Vivek,
Wisdom or Knowledge of the Self (Brahma-Jnana) never dawns upon the mind which
is filled with greed, anger, lust and jealousy, which is under the control of desires and
expectations and which is devoid of contentment.
Sivananda
The qualification for taking to this Yoga is the simple trio of sincerity, faith and
obedience. Be sincere in your aspirations for Perfection. Be not vague or half-hearted.
Then have perfect faith in the one you have accepted as your Guru. Do not allow even so
much as a shadow of doubt to approach you. When once you have reposed absolute faith
in him, then know that what he instructs you is indeed for your highest good. Therefore,
obey his word implicitly. Follow his teachings to the letter. Be earnest in doing thus, and
take my word: you will attain Perfection; I assure you emphatically.
—Sivananda
EPISTLES ON GURU-BHAKTI
1
Blessed aspirants,
Do not argue. You will not gain anything. Sit before your spiritual preceptor or any
Mahatma quietly and meditate. Let the soul speak to the soul. All your doubts will be
cleared by themselves. You will have good spiritual experiences. You will experience
ineffable Peace and a thrill of joy in your heart. This is the real way for attaining the goal
of life.
Sivananda
************
Maharani Swarnalata,
From a doctor you get a prescription. From two doctors you get consultation. From three
doctors you get your own cremation.
Even so, if you have many Gurus you will be bewildered. You will be at a loss to know
what to do. One Guru will tell you: “Do Soham Japa”. Another will tell you “Do Japa of
Sri Ram.” A third Guru will tell you “Hear Anahata Sounds”. You will be puzzled. Stick
to one Guru and follow his instructions.
Sivananda
************
Lord Buddha, Lord Jesus, Rama Tirtha have all done Sadhana. Lord Krishna asks Arjuna
to develop Vairagya and do Abhyasa. He did not say to him “I will give you Mukti
now”.
Therefore abandon the wrong notion that your Guru will give you Samadhi and Mukti.
Strive, purify, meditate and realise.
Sivananda
INTRODUCTION
Knowledge is subject-object relation. It is a process, and not being. All processes are
movements brought about by an interaction of external stimuli and internal condition.
The rise of knowledge in an individual is a mysterious process effected through such an
interaction. No doubt, knowledge in its essential nature is universal and does not admit of
any process. But by the rise of knowledge what is meant is not the existence of this
transcendent awareness, but the process of the manifestation of it in the relative
individual the highest knowledge is called Swaroopa-Jnana, knowledge of being as such.
But the rise of knowledge in the Jiva is a relative act of the expression of this Swaroopa-
Jnana through the Vritti of the Manas. Hence during the process of the rise knowledge
takes the form of what is termed Vritti Jnana. Ana Vritti-Jnana is definitely a spatio-
temporal condition of consciousness.
That knowledge can rise of its own accord from within by self-analysis and that an
external Guru is not necessary at all is not a universally acceptable tenet. History has
shown that the educational process is in great need of the intense activity of teachers in
any branch of learning. If knowledge can naturally rise in everyone without any aid
whatsoever there would be no need for schools, colleges and universities in the world.
Even those who try to propound this misleading theory of the self-competency of the
individual who can act independent of teachers are persons who have been trained by
teachers. Yes; the effort on the part of the disciple or student is not, in any way, a small
factor in the revelation of knowledge; it is as important as the need for instruction by a
teacher. In this universe the subject and the object stand on the same level of reality,
which fact is proved by the possibility of a mutual interaction of the two. There is no
reaction between forces of different planes of consciousness, though in the case of the
action of the Guru it is possible that he may focus his higher consciousness through the
medium of a lesser plane in which the disciple is placed, in order to bring about the
required transformation in the mind of the latter. This process of the action of the Guru’s
consciousness is called Shakti-Sanchara or the descent of movement of the power of the
Guru in the disciple. There are cases where Gurus have even done Sadhana for the
evolution of the disciples by bringing about the purification of the mind of the disciples
through direct intervention of a higher consciousness.
There are people who carp and say: “We can find out good and evil, right and wrong,
truth and falsehood, by consulting our conscience. There is no need for an external
Guru.” It should be remembered that the conscience will not help a person in attaining to
correct understanding unless he has reached the height of purity and desirelessness. The
impure conscience cannot give right suggestion. The animal conscience cannot direct a
person to spiritual knowledge. One’s reason and intellectual convictions are
tremendously influenced by one’s subconscious and unconscious mind. The intellect, in
most cases, acts as a mere tool in the hands of buried instincts and desires. The
conscience of the individual speaks in accordance with his tendencies, proclivities,
inclinations, education, habits, passions and the society in which he is placed. The
conscience of a savage speaks a language entirely different from that of a civilised
European. The Conscience of an African Negro speaks in a manner quite different from
the one in which the conscience of an ethically developed Yogi of India does. The sense
of duty ingrained in a clerk, a car-driver, a scavenger, a collector and a king is not the
same. There are ten different consciences in ten different persons brought up in ten
different conditions. Virochana thought for himself, took guidance from his conscience,
enquired for himself and came to the conclusion that body is the ultimate self.
Those who teach the theory that a Guru is not necessary and that each one should follow
one’s own reason and conscience forget the ostensible fact that they themselves take on
themselves the role of the Gurus to those whom they teach the doctrine. They begin to
command respect, adoration and worship as great teachers, though they teach that there is
no need for a teacher. We know how the Buddha, for example, asked his disciples to
think for themselves rationally and convince themselves for themselves in regard to the
validity of the doctrine which he preached and not to accept anything by mere authority
of his word. He did not propound the worship of any god, too. However, the result has
been that he is being worshipped as a Great Guru and even a God. The teaching in regard
to thinking for oneself and the denial of the need for a Guru naturally implies the
acceptance, on the part of the taught, of the person who teaches as a Guru. It is found that
the need for a Guru cannot be overcome in any walk of life. It is the nature of human
experience to get effected by a process of subject-object interaction.
There is a feeling among some people in the West that the ‘dependence’ of the disciple
on the Guru is a psychological bondage which according to the theory of psycho-analysis
has to be got over. In this connection it has to be noted however that the relation of the
disciple to the Guru is not the psychological dependence which psycho-analysis is
familiar with but the surrender of personality to the care of a higher consciousness which
includes and transcends the limited individualistic consciousness of the disciple. Further,
the disciple’s dependence on the Guru takes the form of a personal relationship only in
the beginning, but in the end it becomes a veritable surrender of the individual to the
universal. The Guru becomes a symbol of the Eternal. The patient’s dependence on the
psycho analyst will not doubt a relationship from which the patient has to break himself
away, for this dependence is brought about temporarily for the sake of bringing about a
relief of tension in the mind of the patient. When the task is done, the dependence is
broken and overcome and the patient becomes free and independent as before. But
neither in the beginning nor in the end the relationship of the disciple to the Guru takes
the shape of an undesirable dependence. It is dependence on the universal through and
through. The Guru is taken not as a body or even as a personality but as a representation
of the highest spiritual reality. Thus the dependence of the disciple on the Guru is a
gradual process of self-purification on the part of the disciple and of his final attainment
of the supreme Godhead.
There are some who often cite the instance of Yajnavalkya’s dissociation of
himself from his Guru Vaishampayana as an indication even in ancient times of the
possibility of one’s leading an independent spiritual life unrelated to any Guru other than
oneself. It is true that Yajnavalkya disconnected himself from Vaishampayana, but this
was not because he was not loyal to his Guru but because the Guru was enraged at him
and asked him to quit his Ashrama after returning to him whatever knowledge he had
imparted. This, of course, created in Yajnavalkya a distrust towards all human Gurus, but
he did not give up his search for a Guru. Instead of feeling that there is no need for
having a Guru and that one can proceed for oneself independently along the spiritual
path, he resorted to a superior Guru, the Sun-God Himself. There is no argument
whatsoever in the behaviour of Yajnavalkya which can establish or demonstrate the
undesirability of dedicating oneself to a Guru. And when Yajnavalkya acquired a fresh
knowledge from the Sun-God, he was ready to impart it to the other disciples of his
previous Guru at the request of the latter who is said to have been highly pleased later on
at the tremendous strength and aspiration and courage which Yajnavalkya revealed in
propitiating the Sun-God.
The highest Guru is God Himself Who reveals Himself in manifold forms through
Nature. The universe in which we live is a great teacher of the lessons of life. Every event
that occurs before our eyes presents itself before us as a deep lesson with deep
significance in it, if only we would be alive to the manner in which Nature works. The
universe is the body of God, and it operates in a very mysterious way embracing within
its processes the whole gamut of experience, internal as well as external, subjective as
well as objective. All that we sense, feel or understand is meant to bring about in us the
necessary transformation required in our evolution towards the Supreme Being.
When the process of universal evolution is cut off from our individual consciousness, it
goes by the name of mechanistic evolution which seems to drag all individuals with it by
force and over which no individual seems to have any control. But when this evolution
becomes a part and parcel of one’s consciousness and is assimilated into one’s
consciousness it is called the process of Yoga. Yoga is really the cosmic evolution
envisaged by the human consciousness in its own Self and with which it has identified its
own being. It may also be said to be a compression as it were of the whole scheme of a
cosmic process in the human consciousness. When this is done, the surrender of the
individual to the Will of God or the Law of the Supreme becomes so complete that all
apparent conflict that is seen to exist between the operations of Nature and the ambitions
of man vanishes altogether, and human aspiration becomes inseparable from Divine Will
and the processes of the universe. This is the highest concept of the Guru, to which every
aspirant has to rise, ultimately. The acceptance of a personal Guru is a preparation for and
is one of the steps leading to the final absorption of the individual in the Universal. There
are various stages in the development of the concept of the Guru and in the manner in
which one surrenders oneself to the Guru. But in no stage of spiritual Sadhana can the
need for the Guru be overlooked, for the Guru is a name applied to the different degrees
in which the Absolute manifests Itself in relation to the aspirant endeavouring to realise it
in his Self.
GURU GITA
Salutations, adorations, prostrations to Guru,
Guru is Brahma, Guru is Siva, Guru is Vishnu,
Guru is father, Guru is mother, Guru is real friend.
Serve him with all Bhava, wet with Bhakti.
He will teach you Brahma Vidya, show the divine path.
Service of Guru is a great purifier.
WISDOM NECTAR
1. Remember God at all times.
3. Make friendship with any one after studying him very carefully.
15. Good and bad, friend and enemy, pleasure and pain, virtue and sin are in the mind
only.
16. Mind when purified by the removal of six passions becomes your Guru.
17. Patience, perseverance and vital will are indispensable for reaching the goal.
—Swami Sivananda.
Chapter I
GURU-BHAKTI YOGA
The Limbs of Guru-Bhakti Yoga
3. The important eight limbs of the Guru-Bhakti Yoga are, (a) the real lasting aspiration
to practise Guru-Bhakti Yoga; (b) absolute faith in the thoughts, words and actions of
Satguru; (c) doing Sashtanga Namaskara with humility and repeating Guru’s name; (d)
perfect obedience in carrying out Guru’s commands; (e) doing personal service to
Satguru without expectation of fruits; (f) daily worshipping of the Lotus-Feet of Satguru
with Bhav and devotion; (g) self-surrender or dedication of Tana, Mana and Dhana in the
cause of divine mission of Satguru; (h) meditation on the holy feet of Satguru for
obtaining his benign grace, and hearing his holy Upadesh and sincerely practising it.
5. It is not possible for an aspirant to enter the spiritual path that leads to the union with
God unless he practises Guru-Bhakti Yoga.
6. He who understands the system of Guru-Bhakti Yoga Philosophy can only surrender to
his Guru unconditionally.
7. The highest object of life, i.e., Self-realisation is achieved through the practice of
Guru-Bhakti Yoga.
8. Yoga of Guru-Bhakti is the real safe Yoga which can be practised without any fear.
9. The essence of Guru-Bhakti Yoga lies in utter obedience in carrying out the Guru’s
orders and translating his teachings in life.
11. He who practises the Yoga of Guru-Bhakti can annihilate the egoism without any
difficulty and he can very easily cross the quagmire of Samsara.
12. Guru-Bhakti Yoga bestows immortality and eternal bliss on one who practises it
sincerely and regularly.
14. Guru-Bhakti Yoga is the master-key to open the realm of elysian bliss.
15. The goal of life is to obtain the benign grace of Satguru by practising Guru-Bhakti
Yoga.
16. With humility approach the adorable feet of Satguru. Do prostrations to the life-
saving feet of Satguru. Take shelter under the Lotus-Feet of Satguru. Worship the sacred
feet of Satguru. Meditate on the holy feet of Satguru. Offer the valuable gifts on the
sanctifying feet of Satguru. Dedicate your life to the service of glorious feet of Satguru.
Become the dust of the divine feet of Satguru. This is the secret of Guru-Bhakti Yoga.
17. Self-surrender to the sacred feet of Satguru is the very foundation of Guru-Bhakti
Yoga.
18. All that is wanted of you is sincere and earnest effort in the path of Guru-Bhakti
Yoga.
19. Devotion to Guru is the greatest factor in the practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga.
20. Faith in the Guru is the first rung in the ladder of Guru-Bhakti Yoga.
21. The cream of the Guru-Bhakti Yoga is absolute (blind) faith in the thoughts, words
and actions of the Brahma Nishtha Guru who is well-versed in the sacred scriptures.
22. The highest and the easiest Yoga to practice in this age is Yoga of Guru-Bhakti.
23. The greatest point in the philosophy of Guru-Bhakti Yoga is to identify the Guru with
the Absolute.
24. The practical aspects of philosophy of Guru-Bhakti Yoga is to realise the oneness of
Guru with his Ishta Devata.
25. Guru-Bhakti Yoga is not a system which can be taught by lectures or correspondence
courses. The student should live under a preceptor for many years and lead a rigorous life
of austerity, discipline, celibacy and practice of deep meditation.
27. Guru-Bhakti Yoga confers immortality, eternal bliss, freedom, perfection, perennial
joy and everlasting peace.
28. The practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga induces non-attachment and dispassion for worldly
objects and bestows Kaivalya Moksha.
29. The practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga will help the disciple to control the emotions and
passions and will give him power to resist temptations and to remove the disturbing
elements from the mind and make him fit to receive Guru’s Grace which takes him to the
other shore of darkness.
30. Practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga bestows immortality, supreme peace and perennial
joy.
31. The practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga will enable you to get rid of fear, ignorance,
pessimism, confusion of mind, disease, despair, worry, etc.
32. Guru-Bhakti Yoga is the transformation of the ego sense which consists in
transmutation of individual feeling, willing, understanding, determining into infinite
Consciousness.
33. The Sadhanas laid down in the Guru-Bhakti Yoga are very simple and sure ways to
take to the other shore of fearlessness.
34. Guru-Bhakti Yoga is a method of strict discipline achieved through the grace of
Guru.
35. Service of Guru without expectation of fruits and ever increasing devotion to the
Lotus-Feet of Guru is the integral Sadhana according to the Guru-Bhakti Yoga system of
philosophy.
36. He who practises Guru-Bhakti Yoga without ethical perfection, devotion to Guru,
etc., cannot obtain the grace of Guru.
Importance of Guru-Bhakti Yoga
37. Guru-Bhakti Yoga is the foundation of all other Yogas, viz., Karma Yoga, Bhakti
Yoga, Raja Yoga, Hatha Yoga, etc.
38. He who has turned his face from the path of Guru-Bhakti Yoga goes from death to
death, from darkness to darkness and ignorance to ignorance.
39. Practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga offers a clear definite path for the realisation of the
highest end of life.
40. Practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga is open to one and all. All great souls, all master-minds
have done great work through the practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga.
41. Guru-Bhakti Yoga includes all other Yogas. Without taking recourse to Guru-Bhakti
Yoga nobody can practise other Yogas which are hard to tread.
42. Guru-Bhakti Yoga school of thought gives great importance to obtaining Guru Kripa
through Acharyopasana.
44. Guru-Bhakti Yoga teaches the way to wipe out all pains and sorrows in life.
45. Guru-Bhakti Yoga is the only unfailing remedy for the ills of life.
46. The path of Guru-Bhakti Yoga brings fruits quickly only for a worthy disciple.
47. Guru-Bhakti Yoga ends in the annihilation of ego and attainment of bliss immortal.
49. Shyness to do Sashtanga prostration to the sacred feet of Guru is a great hindrance in
the practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga.
51. Annihilate the fluctuating potency of the mind through ceaseless practice of Guru-
Bhakti Yoga.
52. When the dissipated rays of the mind are collected by the practice of Guru-Bhakti
Yoga you can work wonders.
53. Guru-Bhakti Yoga cult greatly stresses upon the service of Guru for attaining the
purity of heart, to meditate and realise.
55. First understand the philosophy of Guru-Bhakti Yoga, then put it into practice. You
will succeed.
56. A very effective way of rooting out all evil qualities is to put into practice sincerely
the Yoga of Guru-Bhakti.
57. Absolute faith in the preceptor is the root of Guru-Bhakti Yoga tree.
58. Ever increasing devotion, humility, obedience, etc., are the branches of the tree.
Service is the flower. Self-surrender to him is the immortal fruit.
59. You are bound to succeed in the practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga if you have a firm
faith and devotion to the life saving feet of Satguru.
60. True and sincere surrender unto the Guru is the essence of Guru-Bhakti Yoga.
61. Practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga means an intense pure love for Guru.
63. Live in a quiet place with higher spiritual vibrations under a Guru who is a great Yogi
or adept. Then practise under him the Yoga of Guru-Bhakti. Only then you can attain
success in the Guru-Bhakti Yoga.
64. The ringing note of the Guru-Bhakti Yoga is unconditioned self surrender to the
Lotus-Feet of Brahma Nishtha Guru.
65. According to the Guru-Bhakti Yoga school of thought Guru and God are one; hence
total self-surrender to Guru is very essential.
66. Self-surrender to Guru is indeed the highest rung in the ladder of Guru-Bhakti Yoga.
70. Evil company is an enemy of a disciple who wants to practise Guru-Bhakti Yoga.
71. Give up sensual life if you want to practice the Yoga of Guru-Bhakti.
72. Everyone who longs to transcend misery and obtain joy and happiness in life should
sincerely practise Guru-Bhakti Yoga.
73. True lasting happiness can be had by taking recourse to Guru Seva Yoga. But not in
external perishable objects.
74. Is there no escape from the unceasing cycle of births and deaths, pleasure and pain,
joy and misery? Listen, O disciple, there is one sure way; turn away your mind from the
sensual objects which are perishable and take recourse to Guru Seva Yoga which takes
you beyond dualities.
75. Real life begins when a man takes recourse to Yoga of Guru-Bhakti which bestows
on the practitioner the everlasting happiness here and hereafter.
76. Practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga gives you immeasurable and immense joy.
77. Guru-Bhakti Yoga bestows on the practitioner longevity and bliss eternal.
78. The mind is at the root of Samsara or world process. The mind is the cause for
bondage and freedom; pleasure and pain. This mind can be controlled only by practice of
Guru-Bhakti Yoga.
79. Guru-Bhakti Yoga confers immortality, eternal bliss, freedom, perfection, perennial
joy and everlasting peace.
80. The avenue to the supreme peace begins from the practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga.
82. Guru-Bhakti Yoga is an exact science that teaches the method of overcoming the
lower nature and attaining the supreme bliss.
83. Some people think that Guru Seva Yoga is inferior type of Yoga. They have
thoroughly misunderstood the secret of spirituality.
84. Guru-Bhakti Yoga, Guru Seva Yoga, Guru Sharana Yoga, etc., are synonymous
terms. They are one and the same.
86. Guru-Bhakti Yoga is the easiest, surest, quickest, cheapest, safest way for God-
consciousness. May you all attain God-consciousness in this very birth through the
practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga.
87. Take recourse to Guru-Bhakti Yoga and regain your lost divinity.
88. Practise Guru-Bhakti Yoga and go beyond all that causes duality and sorrow.
89. The practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga bestows on the disciple supreme peace, joy and
immortality.
90. It is very easy to tame a wild tiger, lion or elephant. It is very easy to walk over the
fire or water. But it is very difficult to surrender to the Lotus-Feet of Satguru unless a
person has real aspiration to practise Guru-Bhakti Yoga.
91. Guru-Bhakti Yoga is control of mind and its modifications through the service of
Guru.
92. Perfect unconditioned self-surrender to Guru is the sure way to attain Guru-Bhakti.
94. If you really want God, turn away from worldly enjoyments and take recourse to
practice of Yoga of Guru-Bhakti.
96. Practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga alone can make one fearless and ever happy in all
walks of life.
97. Seek the immortal blissful Atman within through the practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga.
98. Make the Yoga of Guru-Bhakti the only purpose, aim and real interest in life. You
will reach supreme happiness.
100. The chief aim of Guru-Bhakti Yoga is to control the unruly senses and the
wandering mind.
101. Guru-Bhakti Yoga is one of the ancient systems of Hindu Culture which lead man to
eternal happiness and blissful union with God.
103. Guru-Bhakti Yoga seeks to release man from the clutches of matter and restore him
to his original state of divine glory and immortal bliss.
104. The practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga makes the body and the mind free from defects
and diseases.
105. Yoga of Guru-Bhakti bestows on the practitioner physical and mental efficiency.
106. Guru-Bhakti Yoga makes a man free from suffering, pain and old age and confers
longevity and everlasting bliss.
107. Guru-Bhakti Yoga includes every discipline, physical, mental, moral and spiritual
which leads to Self-mastery and Self-realisation.
108. Yoga of Guru-Bhakti is the science and art of mastering the forces of mind.
Chapter II
GURU AND DISCIPLE
Greatness of Guru
l. The eye that sees not the beauty of the Guru’s Lotus-Feet is really blind.
2. The ear that hears not the glory of the Guru’s Leela is really deaf.
5. There is no safe boat like Satsanga of Guru to cross the ocean of Samsara.
10. Satsanga with the Guru is the first pillar in the temple of Self-realisation.
13. Blind is the man who has not seen the divine Master.
14. There is but one religion, the religion of devotion and love to Guru.
15. Devotion to Holy preceptor arises when you have no worldly hope.
Service to Guru
24. Disciple considers the actions; Guru weighs the intentions and motives.
26. Never try to appear before your Guru what you are not.
29. Be sincere and earnest when you serve your Divine Preceptor.
30. To love Guru is to serve Guru.
34. Adapt, adjust, accommodate with your Guru under all circumstances.
Qualifications of a Disciple
38. Disciple must be free from envy, jealousy, pride, without attachment, firmly devoted
to Guru, free from impatience and intent upon knowing the truth.
39. Disciple should not find fault with his own Guru.
40. Disciple should not indulge in unnecessary or idle talks before his Guru.
41. The preceptor should be regarded as the main or lower piece of the two pieces of
wood (Arani) used for kindling the sacred fire, and the pupil the upper one; instruction is
the piece (middle portion) that connects them and knowledge is the union that brings
happiness.
42. The pure wisdom which is thus acquired from the Guru removes the Maya or
delusion.
43. He, who through the favour of the Guru knows that the one Lord has become many
through Maya, knows the truth and understands Vedas.
44. With the axe of knowledge sharpened by the one-pointed devotion acquired by the
service and worship of the Guru do thou calmly and steadily cut asunder the tree of
Samsara.
45. The preceptor is at the helm of life-boat and God is the favourable wind that drives
that.
46. When a man becomes disgusted with the world and is endowed with dispassion, when
he is able to reflect what his preceptor has taught him, his mind abandons its evil
disposition by virtue of the repeated exercises in meditation.
47. The purity of the Mantra arises, properly knowing it from the preceptor.
Principles of Discipleship
48. As man is under the beginningless ignorance; he cannot have Self-realisation without
the preceptor. He who knows Brahman only can import the knowledge of Brahman.
49. A wise man should worship only with undying devotion knowing the Guru to be one
with the Lord and Atman.
50. Disciple should have sincere devotion to his Guru and to the Lord.
51. The disciple should serve his Guru obediently, attentively and sincerely and learn the
Bhagavata Dharma or duties of the devotees of a Lord from him.
52. Disciple should serve the Guru as his God, which is a sure way of pleasing the Lord
of Universe and becoming fit for His grace.
53. Disciple should practise non-attachment and keep company with his Divine Master.
54. Disciple should first obtain the Grace of his preceptor and follow the path pointed out
by him.
55. A disciple should dwell in the house of the preceptor with control over the senses and
study the scriptures.
56. The disciple should eat the food, rich or poor, good or bad, more or little, which
comes from the Guru’s holy hand.
Meditation on Guru
57. Meditation of the Guru’s Lotus-Feet is the only way for attaining immortality and
eternal bliss.
58. Those who do not concentrate on the Lotus-Feet of Guru are slayers of Atman. They
are in fact living corpses and miserable wretches. They are very poor people.
59. The wise cut asunder the knot of egoism by that sharp sword of constant meditation
on the Lotus-Feet of Guru.
60. Meditation on the Lotus-Feet of Guru is the master-key for opening the realms of
eternal bliss.
61. Meditation on Guru is the only real royal road to the ultimate reality.
65. Meditation on Guru is a balloon that helps the disciple to soar high into the realm of
eternal bliss, everlasting peace and perennial joy.
67. Meditation on Guru is the Grand Trunk Road which takes the disciple direct to the
destination of divine consciousness.
68. Meditation on Guru is the mystic ladder which takes the disciple from earth to
heaven.
70. Regular meditation on preceptor opens the avenues of intuitional knowledge, makes
the mind calm and steady and awakens the inner consciousness.
Conquest of Happiness
71. All doubts are cleared by themselves when the disciple meditates on the Lotus-Feet of
his Guru.
72. Nothing can disturb the disciple’s mind when he is under the protection of his Guru.
73. If you withdraw the mind and objects and fix it on the Lotus-Feet of your preceptor
through constant meditation, all pains will come to an end.
74. Meditation on Guru is the only way which can destroy all human miseries. There is
no other way.
75. The disciple who cannot fix his mind on the Lotus-Feet of his Guru, cannot have the
knowledge of the Self.
76. He who does not practise any meditation, on Guru, cannot possess peace of mind.
77. If you want to get rid of the troubles and afflictions of this Samsara you must practise
meditation on the Lotus-Feet of your Guru.
78. Meditation on Guru is the pathway to Divinity. It is the royal road to Kingdom of
Brahman.
80. Without the Grace of Guru one cannot grow into the Divine State.
81. Without Guru’s Grace the disciple cannot lead the Divine Life.
82. Without Guru’s Grace you cannot liberate yourself from the trammels of mind and
attain Immortality.
83. It you do not practise meditation on the form of your Guru, the supreme splendour
and fadeless glory of Atman will remain hidden from you.
84. Tear the veils that cover the soul by practising regular, systematic meditation on the
form of your Guru.
85. Meditation on the form of Guru is a powerful tonic for all diseases.
86. Meditation on Guru opens the door of the mind to intuitive knowledge and many
powers.
88. Real peace and Ananda manifest only when you meditate on the form of your
preceptor.
89. Meditation on the spiritual teacher gives lot of spiritual strength, peace, new vigour
and vitality.
90. Meditation on the Holy Teacher develops strong and pure thoughts.
91. The mind-wandering will gradually cease through regular contemplation on the form
of Guru.
92. Meditation on the preceptor will remove all obstacles in the spiritual path.
93. Meditation on Guru will remove irritability and will also augment the peace of mind
considerably.
94. Brahma Muhurta is the most favourable time for meditation on the Lotus-Feet of the
Divine Master.
95. As soon as you get up from the bed do Japa of Guru Mantra. This is very, very
important.
96. Solitude and intense contemplation on the Lotus-Feet of Guru are the two important
requisites for Self-realisation.
97. For the purpose of meditation on Guru everything is to be rendered Sattvic. The
place, the food, the clothes, the company, the books, etc., must be Sattvic.
99. Leading a virtuous life is not by itself sufficient for God-realisation. Constant deep
meditation on Guru is absolutely necessary.
100. If you want to get rid of pains and afflictions of Samsara, you must practise deep
meditation on the form of your Guru.
101. Meditation on Guru prepares for the integral experience or direct intuitive
knowledge.
102. The disciple need not bother about his bodily wants, food, cloth, shelter, etc.
Everything is provided for him by the Grace of Guru.
104. God will guide the aspirants through the form of Guru.
105. One has to serve the Guru, and do all the things that the Guru commands him to do
without grudging, without using his own intellect.
106. When the Guru orders a certain thing to be done the disciple should obey implicitly.
107. Such an obedience to Guru is necessary. This is the spirit of Nishkama Karma,
(Karma done not for the pleasure of the person doing it) but because it is the holy
command of the preceptor. Then only the impurities of the mind—Kama, Krodha, Lobha
—are destroyed.
108. The disciple who is equipped with the fourfold means is fit to sit before the Brahma-
Nishtha Guru who is no other than God, to hear the Maha Vakyas from him.
Chapter III
THE DEVELOPMENT OF GURU-BHAKTI
Purity: A Pre-requisite
1. If only a disciple whose mind is cleansed of all its impurities, is initiated into the
sacred mysteries by a Guru, then his mind will get complete quiescence. He will enter
into the Nirvikalpa Samadhi state.
4. You will have to purify your sensuous mind through concentration, reflection on the
word of your spiritual preceptor and Upanishadic sentences or meditation, Japa or silent
repetition of the name of the Lord.
6. Stick to one place, one spiritual preceptor, one method, one system of Yoga. That is
the way to positive success.
7. Practice of Pranayama must be done under the guidance of a Guru who is a developed
Yogi.
9. Withdraw the mind from the objects and act according to your Guru’s instructions.
10. If an aspirant in Kashmir meditates upon his Guru or spiritual guide at Uttarakashi,
Himalayas, a definite connection is established between him and the teacher. The Guru
radiates power, peace, joy and bliss to the student in response to his thoughts. He is
bathed in the powerful current of magnetism. The stream of spiritual electricity flows
steadily from the preceptor to his disciple, just as oil flows from one vessel to another.
The student can imbibe or draw from his teacher in proportion to his degree of faith.
Wherever the student sincerely meditates upon his teacher, the teacher also actually feels
that a current of prayer or sublime thought proceeds from his student and it touches his
heart. He who has the inner astral sight can clearly visualise a thin bright light between
the disciple and the teacher, which is caused by the movement of the vibrations of Sattvic
thoughts, in the ocean of Chitta.
11. In Hindu philosophy you will always find an esoteric and an esoteric meaning. This is
the reason why you need the help of a teacher.
12. Keep a photo of the Lord Krishna, Siva, Rama, Devi, Gayatri, Guru, Lord Jesus or
Lord Buddha. Place your seat in front of the picture.
Touch of the Guru
13. A spiritual teacher actually transmits his spiritual power to his disciple. A certain
spiritual vibration of the Satguru is actually transferred to the mind of the disciple. Sri
Ramakrishna Paramahamsa actually transmitted his spiritual power to Swami
Vivekananda. Lord Jesus did the same to his disciple. This is Master’s spiritual touch. A
disciple of Samarth Ramdas transmitted his power to that dancing girl’s daughter who
was very passionate towards him. The disciple gazed at her and gave her Samadhi. Her
passion vanished. She became very religious and spiritual. Mukand Bai, a Maharashtra
Saint, put the Badshah in Samadhi.
14. Repeat some divine Stotras or hymns or Guru Stotras or chant Om twelve times, or do
Kirtan for five minutes, before you start your Japa and meditation.
15. Sit on the Asana in front of the deity. Sing devotional hymns or repeat Guru Stotras.
16. The wandering habit of the mind must be controlled, by making it stick to one place,
one method of Sadhana, one Guru and one form of Yoga.
17. In Yoga Vasishtha Sri Vasishtha says, “O Rama! give one fourth of mind for
meditation in the beginning, one fourth for recreation, one-fourth for study, and one
fourth for the service of Guru.”
18. Nobody can give Moksha. You will have to tread the spiritual path step by step.
Books and Guru can show you the path and guide you.
19. Lord has given you all sorts of comforts, good health, and a Guru to guide you. What
more do you want? Grow. Evolve. Realise the Truth and proclaim it everywhere.
20. Guru and Sastras can show you the path and remove your doubts. Anubhava of
Aparoksha kind (direct, intuitive knowledge) is left for your own experience. A hungry
man will have to eat for himself. He who has a severe itching will have to scratch for
himself.
Methods of Mind-Control
21. Never wrestle with the mind. Don’t use any violent efforts in concentration. Relax all
the muscles and the nerves. Relax the brain. Gently think of your Ishtam. Slowly repeat
your Guru Mantra with Bhav and meaning. Still the bubbling mind. Silence the thoughts.
22. If the mind is divested of all the Sankalpas of ‘I’, then through meditation of Atman
after being initiated by a Guru, and having known the real significance of the Vedas, the
mind can be turned back from various pains and made to rest on the subjective blissful
Atman.
23. Don’t shake the body. Keep it as firm as a rock. Breathe slowly. Don’t scratch the
body every now and then. Have the right mental attitude as taught by your Guru.
24. Be under the direct guidance and in close contact with your Guru for some years. You
will have steady and continuous progress.
25. A wavering mind jumps from one Sadhana to another Sadhana, from one Guru to
another Guru, from Bhakti Yoga to Vedanta, from Rishikesh to Brindavan. This is
extremely deleterious for Sadhana. Stick to one Guru and one place.
26. You will have to find out yourself the kind of meditation that is suitable for you. If
you are not able to do this, you will have to consult a teacher or preceptor who has
attained Self-realisation. He will be able to know the nature of your mind and the correct
method of meditation for you.
27. Company of spiritual teacher and good environments play a tremendous part in the
elevation of the mind. In the absence of positive good company, have negative good
company of books written by realised persons e.g. Sri Sankaracharya’s works, Yoga
Vasishtha and Sri Dattatreya’s Avadhuta Gita etc.
28. Saguna meditation is meditation on a form. Select any Murthy you like best, either
Siva, Vishnu, Rama, or Krishna according to your inclination or taste or follow the
directions of your Guru. He will select for you the Ishta Devata or tutelary deity.
29. Lay bare to your Guru the secrets of your heart. The more you do so, the greater the
sympathy, which means an accession of strength to you in the struggle against sin and
temptation.
30. Be careful in the selection of your companions. Undesirable persons easily shake
your faith and belief. Have full faith in your spiritual teacher and the Sadhana which you
are pursuing. Never allow your own convictions to be changed. Continue your Sadhana
with zeal and enthusiasm. You will have quick spiritual progress and you will ascend the
spiritual ladder step by step and reach the goal ultimately.
31. Like birds, fish and tortoise, the transmitting of spiritual powers can be done by the
Guru, through touch, or sight, or willing and thinking. The Guru sometimes enters the
astral body of the disciple and elevates his mind through his power.
32. Sometimes a religious teacher has to express a little anger outwardly to correct his
disciple. This is not bad.
33. Some do meditation for some years independently. Later on they actually feel the
necessity of a Guru. They come across some obstacles in the way. They do not know how
to obviate these impediments or stumbling blocks. Then they begin to search for a master.
A stranger in a big city finds it difficult to go back to his residence in a small avenue even
in broad daylight, even though he has walked half a dozen times. When difficulty arises
even in the case of finding out the way in streets and roads, what to speak of the
difficulties in the razor-path of spirituality when one walks alone with closed eyes!
The Transformation
34. The lower nature of mind must be thoroughly regenerated. The aspirant says to his
preceptor, “I want to practise Yoga. I want to enter into Nirvikalpa Samadhi. I want to sit
at your feet. I have surrendered myself to you.” But he does not want to change his lower
nature and habits, old character, behaviour and conduct.
35. This change of the lower nature is not easy. The force of habit is ever strong and
inveterate. It demands great strength of will. The aspirant often feels helpless against the
force of old habits. He will have to develop his Sattva and will to a considerable degree
by regular Japa, Kirtan, meditation, untiring selfless service, Satsanga. He must introspect
and find out his own defects and weaknesses. He must live under the guidance of his
Guru. The Guru finds out his defects and points out suitable ways to eradicate them.
36. You must equip yourself with the four means of salvation and then approach a
Brahma-Srotri, Brahmanishtha Guru. You must clear your doubts. You should tread the
spiritual path through the aid of the spiritual illumination imparted by your Guru. You
should live with him till you are moulded properly. Personal contact with a realised soul
is highly elevating. If you are sincere and earnest, if you have burning desire for
liberation, if you strictly follow the instructions of your preceptor, if you do constant and
intense meditation, then there is no doubt that the highest goal can be reached within six
months. Take my word for it. It will really happen.
37. The world is full of temptations. Therefore neophytes should guard themselves very
carefully. They should sit at the Lotus-Feet of their Gurus till they are completely
moulded, till they get established in deep meditation. Happy-go-lucky aspirants who are
independent from the beginning, who do not pay attention to the words of their
preceptors are hopeless specimens. They lead an aimless life and are drifted here and
there like the plank in a river.
38. The aspirant who is endowed with the four means of Salvation, hears the Srutis and
the significance of “Tat Tvam Asi” Mahavakya at the feet of Guru, and then reflects
deeply on what he has heard.
39. Fix the mind on the form of Lord Hari or Lord Siva or Lord Krishna or your Guru or
any saint like Lord Buddha or Lord Jesus. Again and again try to call this mental image
of the picture. All thoughts will die. This is another method, the method of Bhaktas. The
merciful loving Guru always addresses his disciples “Hey Saumya.”
41. The disciple relates his own inner experiences to his Guru in this Mantra. The disciple
prostrated at the Lotus-Feet of his Guru, showered on him the choicest flowers and
eulogised him, “O venerable, holy master! I have realised myself. I have attained
supreme bliss through Thy grace. I have liberated myself from the wheel of births and
deaths through the Brahmanishtha. I am enjoying the unalloyed bliss of Nirvikalpa
Samadhi. I shall roam freely in any part of the world. I have equal vision over all. I have
abandoned the lower mind. I have destroyed all Sankalpas, likes and dislikes. I enjoy now
unruffled peace I am not able to describe my exalted state. O worshipful Acharya! I am
dumbfounded. Again and again I prostrate before thee. You have helped me in crossing
this formidable ocean of Samsara.
42. “Up to this time I had full belief in my body only. I took countless births in various
Yonis. I do not know what virtuous actions led me to the attainment of the Supreme
fearless state. This is a rare fortune indeed. This is a great Adrishta. I dance now in joy. I
have obtained now Duhkha-abhava, Sarva Kamapti, Krita Krityatva and Prapta Prapyatva
(all pains have vanished; all my desires are gratified; I have fulfilled all actions; I have
obtained all objects of desire).
43. “Thou art my real father and mother. How can I describe my present state to another
man? I see everywhere endless ocean of bliss and knowledge. Thanks to the Mahavakya
“Tat Tvam Asi” which opened my real eye of intuition. Thanks to the Upanishads,
Vedanta Sutras and Vedantic Sastras. Prostrations unto Sri Vyasa, Sri Sankara and the
Brahma-Vidya Gurus and the Seers and Rishis of the Upanishads and Lord Siva and Lord
Narayana who have assumed the form of Brahmanishtha Guru and the forms of the
Mahavakyas of the Upanishads. Even if a drop of the Charanamrita of the Guru is
sprinkled over the head of a worldly man all his miseries will come to an end. If one
Brahmanishtha is clothed and fed, the whole world is clothed and fed, because “He is the
All”. He is the All in all. Om Om Om.
44. O merciful Master! I bow to Thee. I have fallen into the dreadful ocean of births and
deaths. I am afflicted with the three kinds of Taapas. Save me. O Lord! Teach me, how I
should cross this ocean of Samsara.
45. Fear not! My child! In reality there is no death for thee. There is a means for crossing
this ocean of relative existence and attaining immortality or the Supreme Bliss. I shall
teach thee now Brahma-Vidya. Hear with rapt attention.
46. Salutations unto Thee, O Venerable Guru! Thou hast saved me from the wheel of
births and deaths. Through Thy grace I have attained Immortality and Eternal Bliss. All
my doubts, delusion and ignorance have vanished. Crores of prostrations unto Thee, O
merciful Lord.
The Obstinate Disciple
47. The obstinate disciple clings to his old habits. He will not surrender to the Lord or
personal Guru.
48. If the disciple really desires to improve himself, he must be frank with himself and
straightforward to his Guru.
49. He who is disobedient, who breaks the discipline, who is not straightforward to his
Guru, who cannot open his heart to his preceptor or spiritual guide, cannot be benefited
by the help of Guru. He remains stuck in his own self-created mire or mud and cannot
progress in the divine path. What a great pity! His lot is highly lamentable indeed.
50. The disciple must make total, unreserved, ungrudging self-surrender to the Lord or
Guru.
51. All that the teacher can do is to tell his disciple the method of knowing the Truth or
the Path, that leads to the unfoldment of intuitional faculty.
53. It is only a Guru who will be able to unveil the mystery and meaning of real life and
show the way to God-realisation.
54. It is only a preceptor who can teach the disciple the secret about Sadhana.
58. He has knowledge of all the scriptures and is simple, kind and truthful.
59. Guru will be able to awaken the hidden divine power in the innermost core of
disciple’s heart.
60. If a disciple has done good Karma in his previous births, if he is doing them now, and
if he is sincere and longing for God, he will be sure to meet the real Guru.
61. To derive the full benefit from the Guru, disciple must have implicit faith in him and
true devotion for him.
62. The disciple will achieve results in proportion to his faith in his Guru.
63. It is the spiritual teacher who will show the way and finally lead one to God.
Benefits of Discipleship
66. Sometimes the methods prescribed by the Guru may not be to the disciple’s
immediate liking, but he must have the firm faith that it is for his own benefit and good.
67. The benefits and mental peace experienced by having a Guru are immeasurable.
68. You know how Lord Krishna, though he was fully conscious of His Supreme
Divinity, served His Guru Sandeepani and studied under him.
69. The disciple who has faith in his Guru attains wisdom.
73. The disciple must go on serving his Guru; the Guru will reveal the Truth to him when
his self-surrender is complete.
74. Some deluded disciples serve their Guru for some years and then give it up foolishly
imagining that they have attained Chitta-Suddhi. They do not gain the Supreme
Knowledge; they do not reach their Goal.
75. They, no doubt, gain some merit (Punya), but Self-realisation is not attained; this is
indeed a great loss, a great blunder.
76. Guru-Bhakti and Guru-Seva are like the two oars of the boat of Sadhana that takes the
disciple across the torrential stream of Samsara.
77. One who has surrendered himself to his Guru, one who serves the Guru whole-
heartedly, one who has marvellous Guru-Bhakti, knows no grief, no sorrow, no fear, no
pain no misery, no ignorance and he instantly attains God-realisation.
80. If the disciple gets the shelter of the Lotus-Feet of a Guru, one who has known what
has to be known, one who has attained what has to be attained and who is in a position to
show the way, he must think that he is really thrice-blessed.
81. To get rid of selfishness is most difficult. Only if a disciple makes a firm, fiery
determination to uproot selfishness and follows this determination by constant grinding,
then alone selfishness will go by the Grace of the Guru.
82. Obey the orders of your Guru and be very persevering in it.
84. Then only the prescription of the Guru for attaining Moksha will be fruitful.
85. If the disciple tries to fulfil the dictates of the Guru in the fullest possible practical
manner with perseverance and determination, he will realise God.
86. Of all the virtues which a disciple must have the greatest virtue is obedience to his
Guru.
Value of Obedience
87. Obedience is precious virtue, because if you try to develop the virtue of obedience,
the ego, the arch-enemy on the path of Self-realisation, slowly gets rooted out.
88. To have complete obedience to Guru is a difficult task, but by trying with sincerity it
becomes easy.
89. Even ordinary action requires great pain, so in the spiritual path, one must be
prepared to subject oneself to some sort of discipline and try to cultivate obedience to the
Teacher.
90. Far more than worship, garlanding, and other outward manifestations of one’s inner
Bhava of adorations and worshipfulness, obedience to Guru is greater.
92. Obedience means trying to act in the way in which the Guru would like one to act.
93. Supposing one finds that Guru will not like a certain thing, then one must not do it. It
is also obedience.
94. Even if one possesses all the things that are greatly valued upon earth, one possesses
nothing if his mind is not fixed upon the Lotus-Feet of his Guru.
95. The Truth is Unity no doubt, but through the vast stretch of dual experiences one has
ultimately to reach the pinnacle of Unity, consciousness and in this process of attaining it,
devotion to the Lotus-Feet of the Guru is the greatest desideratum and it is one of the
greatest of Sadhanas.
96. Again and again to establish oneself in Guru-Bhakti he should try to employ various
methods.
97. Each Guru administers his medicine (instructions) in the form in which it can be
assimilated by the disciple.
98. ‘Cling on to the Lotus-Feet of Guru.’ Here underlies the secret of Sadhana.
99. Mantra-initiation is done by the Guru after the Sadhaka is well-fitted with all the
virtues of Sadhana-Chatushtaya. Otherwise the initiation will not be of much use.
100. In ancient days disciple should approach preceptor with the Samit in his hands.
Samit is the symbol of self-dedication and surrender to the Lotus-Feet of Guru.
101. “Here is the bundle of my Karmas. You burn it.” This is implied in the Sishya’s
approaching the Guru with Samits in hands. The outward meaning is that Rishis used to
perform Agnihotra and this symbolises service of the Guru in the form bringing fire-
wood for sacrifice.
103. You will find in the Manu Smriti: “Let the students ever engage in the study of
Vedas and during services to the preceptor with full faith and devotion. Let the student
refrain from wines, meats, perfumes, scents, women, tasty dishes, and from injury to
sentient creatures and lust, anger, greed, dancing, singing and playing on musical
instruments, dyes, playing, gossiping, slander, too much sleeping and untruth.”
104. In ancient days the life of discipleship starts with Upanayana ceremony.
105. A disciple should mould his character properly under the guidance of the Guru who
is the abode of virtues and Knowledge.
Chapter IV
CULTIVATION OF GURU-BHAKTI
Articles of worship
1. Worship of the Guru with purity of heart and without desiring fruit is the cause of
release.
2. Approach the Lotus-Feet of the preceptor which bestows security from fear and
immunity from sorrow.
4. Apply your hands to the cleansing and adoring the house of your Guru.
9. O Man! take to the service of the Lotus-Feet of the Guru. Give up lust, attachment,
pride, etc., which are the main obstacles to serve the Guru.
10. Worship the Guru with devotion, desiring nothing; you will get his grace.
11. Dedicate your property, your good deeds, your Tapas, etc., to your holy Master and
then only your heart will become pure to receive his grace.
12. Purify yourself with the dust of the feet of Guru and saints. Then alone your heart will
be purified; then alone will you cultivate Bhakti.
13. Serve the saints and your Guru with love and reverence. Regard them as God
personified. Then alone will you develop Bhakti.
14. Guru-Seva Yoga is the Yoga of selfless service rendered to the Guru.
16. Guru-Seva removes the impurity of the mind. It is a potent purifier of the heart.
Therefore serve the Guru with Bhava and feeling.
17. Service of the Guru prepares the mind for the reception of Divine Light, knowledge
and grace.
18. Service of the Guru expands the heart, breaks all barriers. Service of the Guru is
effective Sadhana for purity of heart.
19. Service of the Guru keeps the mind ever dynamic and alert.
20. Service of Guru helps one to develop divine virtues such as mercy, humility,
obedience, love, faith, devotion, patience and self-sacrifice etc.
22. He who serves his Guru, will overcome “I”-ness and “Mine-ness”.
23. The disciple who serves his Guru really serves himself.
24. There is indescribable joy and peace in the practice of Guru-Seva Yoga.
26. Get up at 4 a.m. This period is favourable for meditation on the form of Guru.
27. The disciple must lead a contented life when he lives in the house of the Guru. He
must have perfect self-restraint.
28. Disciple must speak gently, sweetly and truthfully before his Guru and he must not
use vulgar or harsh words.
31. He who lives to eat is a sinner but he who eats to serve his Guru is a true disciple.
33. You can control your mind through the Guru’s grace and grace alone.
34. You can be established in Samadhi or Superconscious state only by Guru’s grace.
37. Disciple’s mind turns away from the sensual pleasures when he lives under the
guidance of the preceptor.
38. Sattva increases through the association of the Gurus, saints, study of religious books,
Sattvic food, repetition of Lord’s Name, etc.
39. A Rajasic man cannot serve his Guru with his whole heart and soul.
41. Study the scriptures under a Guru who is Brahma-Srotriya and Brahma Nishtha. Then
only you will get Moksha.
Meditation on Guru
43. Meditate in the early morning between 4 and 6 a.m. on the form of your Guru; then
only you will get his grace.
44. Place a picture of your Guru in front of you. Sit in a meditative posture, concentrate
gently on the picture, rotate the mind on his Lotus-Feet, legs, hands, chest, neck, head,
face, eyes, etc., then close the eyes and try to visualise the picture in the same manner.
Repeat the process again; then you will have good meditation.
45. During meditation on the form of the Guru, you will get rapture, ecstasy, thrill, peace
and joy.
46. Company of worldly people, overeating, self-asserting Rajasic nature, sleep, lust,
anger and greed, are all obstacles for meditation on the Guru.
47. The chief obstacles in the meditation on the form of the Guru are sleep, tossing of
mind, raising up of latent desires, building castle in the air, laziness, disease and spiritual
pride.
51. Devotion to Guru is the only means to win the grace of the Lord.
Guru as the Great Guide
52. He who teaches the way of Knowledge is a veritable Divinity on earth. Who else but
a Guru can teach the way?
53. Guru shows the way to God and makes the disciple happy for ever.
55. In Sanskrit the term ‘GU’ means darkness or ignorance, ‘RU’ means dispeller of this
darkness or ignorance. By removing the darkness or the veil of ignorance in man, he
becomes the Guru.
56. The spiritual teacher by his constant instructions trains the aspirant.
57. The Guru is a divine gift from the Almighty to the true disciple.
59. Even the divine incarnation like Sri Rama accepted as His Guru Sri Vasishtha and
obeyed his commands.
60. The disciple, however great he may be from the standpoint of the world, cannot taste
the Nirvanic bliss without the help of a preceptor.
61. Knowledge cannot be attained by means of austerities, charity or the study of the
Vedas, except by being bathed in the dust of the Lotus-Feet of the Guru.
62. The disciple must always worship the form of his Guru and repeat his holy name.
63. The aspirant should not think or speak ill of his Guru or any of the saints.
64. A Sadhaka should not cut jokes before his Guru however great he (Sadhaka) may be.
66. The Guru does not require any service or help from the disciple, but he gives a chance
to the disciple to evolve by serving him.
67. All the sages, saints, prophets, world teachers, incarnations, great men have had their
own Gurus, however great they might have been.
70. By unshakable faith in and firm devotion to Guru a disciple can attain material
prosperity and success in all undertakings.
71. The Guru is the life-boat to the disciple who is sinking in the ocean of worldliness.
72. If you want to learn any art you must approach a teacher who knows the art well.
73. When such is the case with the ordinary secular knowledge, how much more should
be the necessity for a teacher in the spiritual path.
74. Those who attempt to control the mind without Guru’s help are like merchants who
have not secured a good pilot for their vessel.
75. The spiritual path is thorny and precipitous; temptations will assail you. There may be
downfall, so approach the teacher who has tread the path.
76. Close your eyes and meditate on the form of your Guru, and recite his holy name.
77. Meditation on Guru gives bliss, inner strength, peace of mind and joy.
81. Mantra-chaitanya, the power hidden in the Mantra is awakened by taking initiation
from Guru.
82. Make it a point to serve the Guru with full devotion from today.
83. No spiritual progress is possible without the aid of Guru who is mine of spirituality.
84. Guru removes the veil of aspirants and obstacles and throws light on their path.
85. Miss not an opportunity to have Satsanga with Guru, Mahatmas and Saints of all
castes and creeds.
87. Let your mother be your God, let your father be your God, let your teacher be your
God, let your guest be your God.
88. Study of sacred scriptures without service to Guru is only a waste of time.
89. Study of holy scriptures from Guru without giving Guru-Dakshina to him is only a
waste of time.
90. The mere reading of Vedantic texts, Upanishads and Brahma-sutras without fulfilling
the Guru’s wishes will neither bring good nor knowledge.
91. After serving a long time, a pure and calm mind becomes your Guru.
92. Study philosophical books as much as you like, deliver lectures throughout your
global-tour, remain in Himalayan caves for thousands of years, practise Pranayama for
years, do Sirshasana for the whole life, you cannot attain emancipation without the grace
of Guru.
93. The Grace of the Guru will itself in a mysterious manner enable the disciple to
perceive directly the Brahmic principle within, though it is impossible for the spiritual
preceptor to point to Brahman as this or that or for the disciple to understand how it is
prior to his direct perception.
96. Every one should cognise it within himself through his own Jnana with the aid of a
Guru and an understanding of the true significance of the Vedanta texts.
97. Even though one has a Guru or spiritual preceptor it is only through his own efforts
he should destroy all desires, Vasanas, egoism and attain Self-realisation.
98. The happiness of the three worlds will not be equal to the supreme bliss experienced
by disciple by taking shelter under the Lotus-Feet of the Guru.
101. Association with the Guru and wise ones is the rare opportunity to be availed of in
human life.
102. The acquirement of any kind of knowledge and more especially the precious
Knowledge of Atman has to be received from the Guru.
103. The acquirements of spiritual knowledge through the traditional method of Guru-
sishya Parampara is highly conducive to the correct unfoldment of intellectual faculties
for the preservation of Truth.
104. More than the imparting of knowledge, it is blessing of Guru who is worshipped as
God Himself according to Hindu tradition that is the greatest significance to the pupil.
105. The benevolent grace of the Guru means everything to the Sishya. It is this grace
that opens the portals of Self-knowledge.
108. Lord Krishna sat at the feet of his Guru Sandeepani. He served His Guru. He carried
fuel for his Guru. Lord Rama had Guru Vasishtha who gave Him Upadesha. Even Devas
have Brihaspati as their Guru. Even greatest among the divine beings sat at the feet of
Guru Dakshinamoorthy.
109. The secret path of Sadhana can only be known through Guru’s Grace.
110. If you sincerely and earnestly pray to God, God will come to you in the form of
Guru.
111. You may get knowledge of first-aid by merely discussing these topics but if you
want to call yourself an M.B.B.S. and work as a physician or surgeon you must go
through the regular 6-year course. Even so you may please the deity and obtain favours
through Upasana, prayers, etc., but for direct spiritual realisation you should have Guru
Seva, Guru-Bhakti and Guru-Kripa.
113. Surrender draws down Guru’s Grace and grace of Guru makes the surrender
complete.
114. By expounding the Knowledge of Self (Brahma Vidya), preceptor renders the most
invaluable good to the Chela to cross the ocean of earthly existence. This no one else but
the Guru can do.
115. Blessed is the Chela who has the Grace of the Guru on himself permanently.
116. The Puranas and other holy scriptures of the Hindus are replete with hundreds of
instances which portray the greatness of Guru-Bhakti.
117. Nothing will be unattainable for a Sishya who has found the true Guru.
118. It is through the Guru’s Grace you can meet your Ishta Devata face to face.
119. Guru is the medium through which Grace of the God flows to the devotee.
120. A more loving, benign, gracious beloved person can hardly be found in this world
than the true preceptor.
122. Really there is nothing so elevating as Satsanga with the Guru. All the saints and
sages of the yore had the same opinion with regard to the need of a Guru.
123. To say that without a Guru an aspirant can reach the goal is as good as to say that a
passenger can cross the turbulent river without a boat.
124. Satsanga is association with the Guru. Without Satsanga the mind cannot turn
towards God.
125. A moment’s Satsanga with the Guru is far superior to Tapas for millions of years.
126. O Aspirants! Never practise Manmukhi Sadhana. Follow the Guru-mukhi Sadhana
with full faith and devotion.
129. Praise be to the Guru, Glory to the Guru who is the Source of Joy, Peace, Bliss and
Immortality and guiding star to the devoted disciple.
130. Salute your Guru or Yoga teacher first before he salutes you.
131. The Yogic student must have faith and devotion to Guru and the Lord.
132. He must have faith in the teaching of his Guru and in the holy scriptures.
Chapter V
GREATNESS OF GURU
Guru As Sole Refuge
1. To learn cooking, you need a teacher; to learn science you need a professor; to learn
any art you need a master. Is not Guru necessary to learn Atma-Vidya?
2. Guru indeed is the sole refuge to take you across the Samsaric deluge.
3. On the thorny path of Truth to guide you there is none but Guru.
5. In all your struggle of daily life, Guru will guide and protect you.
7. Guru, Isvara, Brahman, preceptor, teacher, Divine Master, etc., are synonymous terms.
8. Salute your Guru first before you salute God, because he takes you to God.
9. Take Mantra Diksha from your Guru. This will inspire and elevate you.
10. Guru will not do Sadhana for you. You will have to do it yourself.
12. Guru can select the right Yoga for the disciple.
13. By Guru’s grace, the disciple can overcome obstacles and doubts on the path.
14. Guru will lift the disciple from the pitfalls and snares.
15. Sacrifice your body and life to serve your Guru. Then he will take care of your soul.
16. Don’t expect a miracle from your Guru to lift you up into Samadhi. Do rigorous
Sadhana yourself. A hungry man will have to eat himself.
17. If you cannot get a Satguru you cannot progress in the spiritual path.
18. Be patient and wise in selecting your Guru, because you cannot divorce your Guru
afterwards. It is the greatest sin.
19. Relation between Guru and Chela is sacred and lifelong. Understand this point very
well.
21. Thursday or Guruvara is the sacred day for a disciple to worship his Guru.
22. He who has knowledge of the Self, he who is well-versed in the scriptures, he who is
endowed with all noble virtues is a Satguru.
23. He who gets a Guru who is a realised one is thrice blessed indeed.
24. Don’t look into the defects of your Guru. Look to your own defects and pray to the
Lord to overcome it.
25. To test a Guru is difficult. A Jesus can only know another. Superimpose on your Guru
the attributes of the Lord. Then only you will be benefited.
26. If you are elevated in one’s presence, if you are inspired by his speeches, if he is able
to clear your doubts, if he is free from lust, greed and anger, if he is selfless, loving and I-
less take him to be your Guru.
27. To approach a Guru you must be a proper Adhikari. You should possess Vairagya,
Viveka, serenity, self-restraint and Yama.
28. If you say, ‘There is no good Guru’, Guru also says, ‘there is no good disciple’. Equip
yourself with the qualification of a disciple. You will get a Satguru.
29. Guru is your redeemer and saviour. Adore him and worship him always.
31. Prostrate daily before your Guru who is Existence, Knowledge, Bliss Absolute.
32. Disciple should always remember the form of Guru, always repeat Guru’s holy name,
carry out his orders and should think of nothing else than him. Here underlies the secret
of Sadhana.
33. One should adore his Guru as there is no other greater than Guru.
34. The Guru’s Charanamrita dries up the ocean of Samsara and enables one to acquire
essential wealth of Self.
37. Hear the wise words of great souls and follow them.
38. Do those actions that are pronounced to be right by Sastras and Guru.
40. Vahe Guru is the Guru Mantra for the followers of Guru Nanak. Read Grantha Sahib.
You will come to know the greatness of Guru.
41. Ever remember Guru by worshipping him; thou shalt find happiness.
42. Sraddha is faith in the scriptures, in the words of Guru, in Isvara and in one’s own
self.
43. The highest Sadhana is to serve Guru without expectation of any fruit.
44. Sravana is hearing of the Srutis by sitting at the Lotus-Feet of Sat Guru.
47. Have devotion to Guru as much as you have to the Lord. Then only Truth will be
revealed to you.
49. Isvara is Adi-Guru who is not conditioned by space and time. From Eternity to
Eternity He is the Guru of mankind.
50. Guru is absolutely necessary to awaken the Kundalini Sakti from its dormant state.
51. Crores of prostrations unto the Lotus-Feet of the Satguru who is dispeller of
ignorance and the bestower of wisdom.
52. Miss not an opportunity to have Satsanga of Mahatmas, saints and Guru.
53. Do not act according to the dictates of your lower mind. Act according to the words
of your Guru.
54. Mere remembrance of high souls, Guru, destroys atheistic tendencies of materialistic
people, inspires and goads them to strive for the final emancipation. What to say of the
glory of Guru Seva!
55. Just as a man who runs after two rabbits will not catch either of them, so also a
disciple who runs after two Gurus will not get success in his spiritual path.
60. The royal road to discipleship is regular meditation on the form of Gurudev.
62. Mumukshutva is burning longing for, to meet, the Guru and serving him.
63. Worship of Gods, the twice-born, the spiritual teachers and the wise, purity,
straightforwardness, celibacy and non-injury are called the austerity of the body.
64. Prostrations to Brahmins, holy preceptors and the wise, celibacy, non-injury,
constitute physical Tapas.
65. Service of parents and preceptor, the poor and sick, is also bodily austerity.
66. The knowledge about the Brahman is very subtle and very terse. Doubts occur and to
clear them and pave the way, a spiritual teacher who knows the Brahman is necessary.
67. The Guru plays an important role in helping the true seeker of truth.
68. Spiritual preceptor takes a Sadhaka under an intelligent and loving care and gradually
carries him through the various spiritual evolution.
69. Real Gurus are always engaged in removing the ignorance of the disciple and
imparting him the knowledge of the Upanishads.
70. Even Vedas will fail to sing the glory of Guru who is the torch-bearer of wisdom.
71. However intelligent the seeker may be, it is not possible for him to grasp the depth of
Vedanta and to practise it without the aid of the Guru or spiritual preceptor.
72. A Guru awakens the divine potentialities of the disciple.
73. First find your Guru or spiritual preceptor who can tune you into the infinite, or the
perennial life-stream.
74. An aspirant can receive his instructions to tread the path safely and securely only
through his Guru.
Guru As God
80. Guru makes his disciple like himself and so the Guru is greater than the philosopher’s
stone.
81. There is no safe boat like Guru to cross the ocean of Samsara.
82. O Ram! Sacrifice thy body, mind and wealth at the feet of your Satguru who has
shown you the way to the final beatitude or emancipation.
83. Admit your faults daily before your preceptor or teacher. Then alone you will find the
strength to rise above any worldly weakness.
84. The Guru can transform the disciple by a look, a touch or a thought or a word.
85. God and Guru are in truth one and the same.
87. Guru is your electric lift. He lifts you to the peak of perfection.
88. Every act of unselfish, devoted service to the Guru is an act of worship, devotion,
prayer and meditation.
89. O Ram! That which quickens Self-realisation, that which bestows awareness, is
initiation from Guru.
90. If you cannot see God in Guru, in whom else will you see God?
91. I can help you only when you open your heart freely to me.
92. Be sincere, and loyal to your friends and ideals and Guru or spiritual preceptor.
Chapter VI
PRACTICE OF GURU-BHAKTI
The Principle of Adaptability
l. Adaptability is a rare virtue or noble quality, by which the disciple adapts or fits
himself with his Guru, whatever his nature may be.
2. Nowadays the vast majority of aspirants do not know how to adjust and accommodate
themselves with Guru-Bhais.
3. The disciple must know how to adapt and adjust with his Guru.
5. When the disciple does not know how to adapt himself with his co-disciples who are
living under the same Guru, friction comes and he will displease his Guru.
6. The captain of a ship is ever alert. A fisherman is ever alert. A surgeon in the
operation-theatre is ever alert. Even so a thirsting hungry disciple should be ever alert in
the service of his Guru.
Essentials of Discipleship
7. A drowsy, dull, heavy, inactive, sluggish, stupid-minded disciple cannot serve his Guru
to his satisfaction.
8. A disciple who is endowed with the virtue of application gets success in the service of
his Guru. Prosperity and immortality are his attendants.
10. Devotion to Guru is the one true aim of all right human aspirations.
11. Disciple should have an attentive ear when he studies under a Guru and he should
have an attentive eye when he serves him.
12. Disciple should behave well with his Guru, parents, elders, saints and sages of all
claims.
13. To behave well means to conduct well oneself with his Guru.
14. Guru can know the nature of the disciple and the nature of his mind from his
behaviour.
15. Good behaviour with his holy master is a passport to the abode of bliss.
17. Behaviour is expression of practical knowledge which is derived from the service of
one’s Guru.
18. Divine virtues and noble qualities cannot be purchased from the shops. These can be
acquired through faith, devotion and service to Guru for a long time.
Self-giving to Guru
19. Give Guru-Dakshina cheerfully, quickly without hesitation, and in plenty to your
Guru after acquiring knowledge.
26. Disciple must offer with love whatever he has to his Guru.
27. Disciple must be contented with whatever food, clothes and shelter he gets from his
Guru and apply himself in the service of Guru with whole heart and soul.
28. It is contentment that alone gives strength and joy to an aspirant while serving his
Guru under all circumstances.
29. Be always contented with what happens. Know that what Guru, the exalted one,
chooses is better than what you choose.
30. Guru’s Grace can descend only on worthy disciple who is endowed with
contentment.
31. Disciple must use his commonsense while serving his Guru.
32. Discrimination dawns in the heart of a disciple through the grace of Guru, the exalted
one.
33. He who is endowed with discrimination surely will have Guru’s Grace.
35. Duty of a disciple is to carry out promptly and faithfully the orders of his Guru.
36. Be exact in doing even your little duties towards your Guru. You will derive much
joy and peace.
40. Performance of one’s own duty towards Guru is the practice of true religion.
41. Duty performed towards one’s Guru is a moral tonic. It fills the heart with divine
virtues. It strengthens the mind and heart.
Complete Surrender
42. An earnest and sincere disciple gives his whole heart and soul to the service of his
preceptor.
43. An earnest disciple finds means to serve his Guru, under all circumstances.
44. He who endures all the difficulties while serving his Guru conquers his lower nature.
45. Disciple must be ever grateful to his Guru who has shown the path to peace.
46. An ungrateful disciple is a miserable wretch on this earth. His lot is pitiable,
lamentable and deplorable indeed.
Enthronement of Guru
48. I bow down to the great Guru, the First and Perfect Being, the Revealer of the sacred
Vedas, who like a bee extracts the essence of the Vedas, comprising Jnana, Vijnana, and
gives it to his devotees.
49. The true disciple should enthrone in the recesses of his heart the Lotus-Feet of his
revered Guru.
50. The first and foremost duty of a disciple when he meets his Guru is to salute him with
all humility.
51. In the Bhagavata, the story is told of an Avadhutha who had twenty-four Upagurus,
viz., the five elements, the Sun, the Moon, the sea, animals, etc., which though
insignificant, taught him each in its own way the Supreme Knowledge.
52. He is the best of disciples, who, with one-pointed mind, without thinking of aught
else, worships his Guru alone.
53. When Sattva increases in an aspirant, he becomes righteous and develops true
devotion to his Guru.
54. The Guru is but the embodiment of equal vision and therefore looks upon all his
disciples alike.
55. Krishna says to Uddhava: “I am Vasishtha among Priests; and Brihaspati among
Preceptors; I am Narayana among Sages and Sanatkumara among celibates.”
56. When disciple is serving under his Guru, he should never make others serve him. This
is a great obstacle for him to grow in spirituality.
57. Bring glory to your Guru by making them Guru Bhais. This is the royal way to
develop Guru-Bhakti.
58. Even if you are a man of great erudition and rich, you must be very humble before
Guru, and great souls.
59. A disciple, who is not learned but who is an embodiment of humility, is very much
loved by his Guru.
60. If you want to drink water at the tap, you will have to bend yourself. Even so if you
want to drink the spiritual nectar of immortality which flows from Holy lips of Guru you
will have to be an embodiment of humility and meekness.
61. Guru’s grace descends upon those who feel utterly humble and faithful to him.
62. There is no better flower than humility to worship the Lotus-Feet of the Master.
Meaning of Faith
64. Faith is belief in statements, utterances, actions, writings and teachings of one’s holy
preceptor and great souls.
65. Faith is firm conviction of the truth of what is declared by preceptor by way either of
testimony, or authority without any other evidence or proof.
66. Have perfect faith in Guru and surrender your entire being unto Him. He will take
care of you. All fear, obstacles and tribulations will vanish in toto.
67. Firm faith in Sat-Guru elevates the soul, purifies the heart and leads to Self-
realisation.
Nature of Obedience
70. Only the disciple who obeys his Guru can have command over his lower self.
71. From obedience to Guru springs all other divine virtues, such as humility, devotion,
egolessness, etc.
74. True obedience to Guru is the performance of what is commanded by him and
abstaining from what is prohibited.
75. A hypocritical disciple obeys his Guru from fear. The true disciple obeys his Guru
with pure love, for love’s sake.
77. Goodness is a river that flows from the Lotus-Feet of the Lord by the path of
obedience to Guru.
78. If the heart of the disciple is not satisfied, it shows that obedience to Guru is not fully
observed by the disciple.
79. Your offerings please Guru according to your zeal and Bhava and not according to
their nature.
80. The disciple should serve his master with great zeal and care.
81. Give yourself to the service of Acharya. Offer the body, the mind and soul, with great
enthusiasm.
82. The dynamic aspect of faith to Guru means absolute self-surrender to his Lotus-Feet.
85. The sign of humility is to respect the preceptor and saints of all climes.
86. Do not talk in a loud voice in the presence of Acharya and venerable persons.
87. Faith in the words of Guru is the master-key to unlock the gate of Immortality.
88. When you are a disciple of a great Guru, never try to make others your disciples and
to become a self-styled Guru. Treat them as your Guru Bhais.
89. Better not to have a Guru and to wander in the desert of life, than to have a Guru and
deceive and desert him.
90. Man who is a slave of lust cannot serve and surrender to his Guru and save himself
from the quagmire of Samsara.
92. The binding force between Guru and disciple must be pure love.
93. Grace of Guru plus disciple’s effort brings forth the child of Immortality.
94. Guru should not accept Guru-Dakshina from his disciple unless he imparts
knowledge to him.
95. Disciple should hoist the flag of the Guru’s glory throughout his life.
96. Dedication to the Lotus-Feet of Guru must be the ideal of the disciple
97. Guru is great. Do not be afraid of adversities, march on, O Heroic disciple!
99. Adversities which fall on the shoulders of disciple are blessings of Guru in disguise.
100. Dedication to the Lotus-Feet of Guru must be the watch word of true disciple.
Service of Guru
101. If you are lucky enough to serve your Guru who is all love and bliss, the service
becomes supreme bliss and there is infinite joy.
103. If you surrender to the Lotus-Feet of Guru, who is God on earth, he will guard you
from pitfalls, goad you in your Sadhana and guide you to the goal ultimate.
106. You have to attain that beyond which there is nothing to attain, viz., faith in the
Guru.
107. This faith in the Guru will lead you to the ultimate good in twinkling of an eye.
108. Have faith, faith, faith in the words and actions of Guru. This is the way to develop
Guru-Bhakti.
Chapter VII
TRUE GUIDE OF THE SEEKER
Fundamentals of Discipleship
l. If an aspirant will not serve his Guru with faith and devotion all his vows and
austerities will certainly leak out as water from an unburnt pot.
3. The seeker after Truth should dwell in the house of his preceptor with control over his
senses and mind, and should study the scriptures under him with great faith and
reverence.
4. He should observe strict Brahmacharya, and should offer worship to the preceptor.
5. A disciple should regard the preceptor as God Himself and should not look upon him
as a man.
6. He should not find out defects in the preceptor because Guru represents all the gods.
7. Disciple should bring alms to the preceptor and must feed him with great faith and
devotion.
8. Disciple should shun all comforts as poison and should surrender his body in the
service of his Guru.
9. Disciple should offer Dakshina to his preceptor after studying scriptures and with his
permission one should return to his home.
11. The main duty of a Brahmachari is wholehearted selfless service to his preceptor.
12. Tapas, pilgrimage, charitable gifts, are not so helpful to attain Guru’s grace as
personal service and utter obedience to him.
13. The Vedas, direct perception, sayings of Guru, and inference are the four proofs of
knowledge.
14. All works bear the seed of sorrow but not service rendered to Guru.
16. He who surrenders his Thana, Mana and Dhana at the feet of master develops Guru-
Bhakti.
19. Titiksha is the bearing of grief or affliction while carrying out Guru’s Command.
21. One who does not serve and obey his Guru is really a fool.
22. Lord Krishna says to Uddhava, “The human body, so hard to secure is a strong boat.
The preceptor is at the helm of the boat. I am the favourable wind that drives it.” The man
who does not strive to cross the ocean of births with such a boat and such a means is truly
killing himself.
23. As man is under the influence of beginningless ignorance he cannot have Self-
realisation without the help of Preceptor.
24. Can there be anything wrong in what the Guru says? There is some reason for it. The
human intellect cannot reach there.
26. The disciple can control his mind by doing personal service to Guru.
27. Anger, greed, untruthfulness, cruelty, begging, hypocrisy, quarrel, grief, delusion,
dejection, distress, sleep, fear and indolence are the attributes of Tamas which cannot be
overcome by taking many births. But personal service rendered to the Guru with faith and
devotion will remove all these impurities.
29. That food which is left by Guru after his meal is the most Sattvic food.
30. Bliss that which arises from personal service to Guru is Sattvic.
31. The wise disciple should worship his Master with control over his senses and mind.
32. Of what worth is Tapas, charity, renunciation, cramming the scriptures, oration,
solitude and silence to one whose heart is not surrendered at the feet of Master.
34. Sadhana is of no avail if the disciple does not obey his Acharya.
35. The wise aspirant should avoid all sorts of bad company and should associate with the
Guru and saints. Their company would make him unattached and purge his mind of all
desires.
36. Just as cold, fear, darkness, leave a man who resorts to the fire, so also ignorance, fear
of death, and all evils run away from a man who lives with his Guru.
37. The wise Guru is the supreme resort for those who are tossed about in this ocean of
Samsara.
38. The sun bestows only one external eye, but the Guru bestows many eyes in many
ways of attaining knowledge.
39. Guru is the veritable God on earth and he is the true friend and reliable relative.
40. Disciple should prostrate before his Guru, saying to him “O Lord! O Lord! Have
mercy on me who has taken shelter in thee. Protect me from the ocean of birth and
death.”
41. He who worships the Feet of Guru who is divine, with disinterested devotion, directly
attains His Grace.
42. The disciple cuts off, by means of meditation and the sword of knowledge obtained
from the Preceptor and sharpened by service to him, this baseless Ahamkara, which is
imbedded in the mind, speech, Pranas, body and wanders in this world, freed of all
attachments.
43. Contact with the objects should be avoided till attachment, which taints the mind, is
completely cut off by the powerful weapon of intense devotion to Guru.
44. He who practises Yoga, by taking refuge in Guru, is not overcome by various
obstacles.
45. The true disciple should, unhesitatingly and without shyness, prostrate on the ground
‘Sashtanga’ as a token of his complete surrender, at the Holy Feet of his Guru.
46. Whosoever devotes himself to the worship and service of Guru without expectation of
reward will never go wrong, nor will he ever lose the benefit of such worship and
service.
47. He is verily purified and attains salvation who daily studies the sacred Guru Gita,
containing the light of wisdom.
48. He who delights in the Glory of His Guru and in narrating his Guru’s glory to others,
shall truly attain Guru’s Grace.
49. In the ignorance-dispelling Presence of Guru, who verily is God, the Absolute,—in
His Presence shall all thy doubt’s be dispelled, like snow before the rising Sun.
50. “O Great and Most Revered Guru, I bow to Thee in reverence. Pray, instruct me how
I may attain unfailing devotion to Thy Lotus-Feet and how my mind may always rest in
devotion at thy Merciful Feet”—thus in all humility and self-surrender should the true
disciple (prostrate) and plead before his Guru.
51. Glory to the most exalted Guru who is God-visible! Glory to the Sacred Scriptures
that have sung the praises of the Guru! Glory to the true disciple that has found his sole
refuge in such a Guru.
53. Even a drop of Guru’s grace is quite sufficient to free oneself from the trammels of
this Samsara.
54. It is through the grace of Guru alone that an aspirant can stick to the spiritual path and
can break all kinds of ties and attachments.
55. The disciple who is full of egoism and who will not listen to the words of the Guru
will be destroyed ultimately.
56. There is no difference between God and Guru who is a realised one. Both are
identical.
57. There is no hope of overhauling the old vicious Samskaras of a neophyte without the
help of a Satsanga with the Guru.
58. Association with the Guru is a safe boat to take the aspirant to the other shore of
fearlessness and shore which is beyond darkness.
60. Books which are written by Guru who is a realised one, constitute negative Satsanga.
When you study them with full of faith and devotion you are wholly in communion with
your holy Guru.
61. Guru’s grace will descend on deserving disciple only who is earnestly struggling on
the path and who is thirsting for God-realisation.
62. Nowadays disciples want to lead a life of ease and comfort and expect the grace of
Guru, without obeying him.
63. Guru Nanak, Tulasidas, Sankaracharya, Vyasa and Valmiki have all written volumes
on the Glory of association with the Guru and great souls.
64. Purandara Das, Mira Bai, etc., sang the glory of Guru Kripa.
65. Faith in God, in scriptures, love and devotion to Guru and God slowly develop in
those who do regular Satsanga.
66. The company of Guru is a question of supply and demand. If there is sincere demand
the supply will come at once; this is the inexorable law of nature.
67. If you are really thirsty for God-realisation you will find your spiritual teacher at your
very threshold.
68. The company of the great realised Guru is difficult of attainment, unapproachable and
beneficial. If you pray sincerely with devotion they themselves will come to you.
69. Good things are always rare in this world. Musk, saffron, radium, sandal-wood,
learned persons, virtuous persons, and philanthropists are rare. When such is the case
what to speak of saints, Bhaktas, and Yogins, sages, seers, and Guru who is a realised
one.
70. If you do service of the Guru who is a realised one, the question of your salvation is
solved.
71. If you say that there are no good Mahatmas and preceptors, preceptors will also say
that there is no good disciple.
72. The company of the great souls is obtained by the Grace of God alone.
73. Evil company should be certainly avoided by aspirants who want to serve the Guru
and have his blessings.
74. Who crosses this Maya? Only he who abandons evil company, who serves the large-
hearted Guru, who is free from “I”-ness, and “mine-ness.”
75. By keeping company with the Guru, who is free from likes and dislikes, one becomes
dispassionate. He gets Vairagya.
77. He who serves his Guru with devotion attains the summum bonum of life.
78. Aspirant’s mind gets one-pointed by itself without any effort by serving the Guru.
79. Guru-Grantha-Sahib says that without Guru the path to God cannot be found. The
Guru being God himself, can lead the aspirant on the path and guide him along the path,
and he alone can make the Chela realise that he is himself God.
78. A great secret of developing divine virtues and qualities lies in Guru-Bhakti.
80. Guru himself will impart all the Divine virtues to the disciple who completely
surrenders at his Lotus-Feet.
81. Those who cannot control their minds and practise meditation,—the only remedy for
them is to develop Guru-Bhakti and service to Guru.
82. Guru knows the difficulties and obstacles of the disciple because he is a Trikala Jnani.
So pray to him silently. He will remove your obstacles.
83. Darshan of Guru removes all darkness and gives immense joy.
84. May Lord bless you all to develop rare divine virtue of Guru-Bhakti.
85. Lord Himself appears as Acharya either directly in human form or indirectly through
a great Jnani, a Man of spiritual experience who is in direct communion with the Lord.
86. From birth to death the only purpose in life is to serve the great Master.
87. Man as an individual, as an intellectual person has no power. He has not got the real
knowledge. But real knowledge, real power, real happiness, manifest themselves in a
person only when he has got into the touch with Guru who is in tune with the Supreme
Being.
88. Disciple must be humbler than the blade of grass. Then only Guru’s grace will
descend upon him.
89. When a disciple cannot meditate, when he does not know the secret path of spiritual
life, the only way is to serve the Guru and get his blessings.
90. When the mind is calm and serene you can meditate. If it is disturbed; do Japa, study
books and serve the Guru with devotion and faith. Then only you can evolve quickly.
91. The whole life from birth to death is a period of studentship. Then only the student
can acquire spiritual knowledge which leads to salvation.
92. Disciples who reside at Gurukula should try their level best day and night not to have
desire for anything of this world, which, is transitory.
93. It is to the disciple who has got a Guru that the doors of Immortality are opened.
94. Aspirants must know that mere study of books, cramming the phrases will not bestow
Immortality. On the other hand it makes them proud. The real knowledge which solves
the life’s problem can be obtained through Guru’s Grace.
95. The very company, the very association with the Guru who has seen God, has got its
own supreme effect on disciple. It is greater than all studies.
96. Satsanga with Guru is the prime factor which regenerates a disciple, which
illuminates him, which opens the door to heaven.
97. Association of Guru alone can help an aspirant to mould his character, to direct his
consciousness and to know what really he is.
98. The most important thing is service of Guru, abiding by the orders of the Guru,
worship of the Guru and meditation on Guru. That is the best thing which a disciple has
to do.
99. Disciple has to pray again and again to Devi Saraswati, the Guru who has extended
his blessings on him and God who is supreme father.
100. Disciple must be grateful to his preceptor throughout his life, even though he has
discontinued his studies from him.
101. The grace of Guru is always there. The only thing is that the disciple must have faith
in Guru’s words and obey his commands.
102. Svadhyaya or study is necessary to keep the intellect bright so that it may not be
misdirected, misused. And, then, more important than that is Satsanga, company of a
Sage, or a Mahatma. That is, we must have a Guru so that we may be constantly guided,
we may be pointed out the pitfalls that are on the path. Then he will be able to move
properly with the help of the wisdom which is given to him by the Guru.
103. The secret of contacting the Reality which is the summum bonum of life is Guru-
Bhakti.
106. He is really a Guru who has seen God and shows Him to the worthy disciple.
107. Beware of pseudo-Gurus who can cram the whole Sastras and quote to the disciples,
but they themselves cannot practise what they preach.
109. Disciple who is of Rajasic temperament cannot understand the actions of Guru who
does Lokasangraha.
Chapter VIII
CARDINAL NOTES ON GURU-BHAKTI
The Content of Spiritual Teaching
1. Service of the Guru who is a liberated one, the study of the books which are written by
him, and meditation on his holy form is the golden medium to develop Guru-Bhakti.
2. The disciple who runs after name, fame, power wealth and sex cannot cultivate true
devotion to the Lotus-Feet of Satguru.
3. The field of education is very, very wide and scope of acquiring knowledge is infinite,
that the need for a Guru is inevitable.
4. The Taittireeya Upanishad says, “Now about the knowledge. The preceptor is the first
form. The disciple is the last form. Knowledge is the link between the two, and
instruction is the medium, effecting such a union or link. This is the field of knowledge.”
5. Kathopanishad says, “that Self which is being taught over in various ways, is not easily
known when taught by a man of inferior intellect, but when taught by one who is
established in Brahman, there is no doubt at all. The Self, being subtler than the subtle, is
not to be obtained by mere intellectual gymnastics. Guru-Kripa alone can bestow
knowledge.
Guru-Disciple Relationship
6. Disciple should remain in the house of preceptor, maintaining full Brahmacharya for
twelve years and do rigorous Tapas. And he should also serve him and study the sacred
scriptures under him.
7. He alone can be a Guru who is fit to teach the disciple, who can himself practise
whatever he teaches.
8. One ought not accept anyone and everyone as his Guru. Once after accepting him as a
Guru one should not divorce him on any account.
10. Really advanced spiritual persons will not undertake the duty of being a Guru unless
they have got Command from the Almighty.
11. When a deserving aspirant goes in quest of Guru to initiate him to the spiritual path,
God appears before him as a Guru and initiates him.
12. Guru, who is a liberated one, lives in a different plane of consciousness which is
termed as Tureeya Avastha. The disciple who wants to become one with Guru must equip
himself with the virtue of absolute detachment from the worldly transitory things.
13. The higher knowledge which comes from Chit, comes not in the form of ideas or
thoughts but as power. It has to be directly transmitted by the Guru (who is one with
Chit-Shakti) to the disciple.
14. God-realisation cannot be attained through mere self-effort. The Guru’s grace is
absolutely necessary.
15. When the disciple is fit for higher initiation, the Guru will himself initiate him in the
mysteries of Yoga.
16. Faith in Guru can move mountains. Guru’s Grace can work wonders. Doubt not.
March on. O Hero!
17. He who serves a great spiritual man who is one with the absolute can cross the
quagmire of Samsara.
18. If you serve worldly-minded people you get qualities of worldly people. On the other
hand if you serve the Lotus-Feet of Guru who is always immersed in bliss, who is abode
of virtues, who is love personified, you get the qualities of him. So serve, serve, serve.
19. Disciple should not feel shy or below dignity to serve his Guru (in front of others).
Principles of Action
20. Never take your food before Guru takes his food.
21. He who eats Guru’s Jhuta Prasad (the remnant from the plate of Guru) will feel unity
with him. He will become one with Guru through his grace.
22. Do not disturb or wake up the Guru when he takes rest or sleeps even in unavoidable
circumstances.
23. Don’t cut jokes with Guru. If you cut jokes with him (gradually) you lose the
reverence for him and you will feel equality with him.
24. Be careful about pseudo-Gurus who have ruined themselves, and ruin you also.
26. To have a Guru is good, to serve him with intense faith is still better.
28. To have many Gurus is bad. To deceive and disobey Guru is very, very bad.
31. He only knows the secret of Sadhana who has got Guru’s grace.
32. To have a Guru is good; to obey his commands is better and to get his blessings is the
best.
33. He only knows the technique of contacting the Reality who serves his Guru.
35. He who desires to occupy the ‘Gaddi’ of the Guru Maharaj while he is living, will get
direct passport to hell. Even Lord of death is afraid of him because he may desire to
occupy his throne also.
36. He who does Padapuja on the Guru Poornima day to his Guru will get success in all
undertakings throughout the year.
41. To have a blind faith in anything is not good. To have blind faith in the words of
Guru who is communing with God, is the royal road to Moksha.
42. You can become a high scholar in no time but not a true disciple very easily.
43. Nowadays there are many pseudo-Gurus and disciples. Be careful, when you choose
your Guru.
44. Duty of a disciple is to obey the orders which come from the holy lips of the Guru.
45. Keep neat and clean the surroundings of the Guru’s house.
46. The relation between preceptor and disciple is like that of beloved and lover.
47. Sometimes Guru may test his disciple or even tempt him also but disciple should
overcome by firm faith in him.
48. Disciple should not hide anything from Guru. He must be frank and straightforward.
49. It is a rare privilege to become the dust of the Lotus-Feet of Guru who is free from
Raga-Dvesha.
50. Dust of the holy feet of the preceptor who is one with the Supreme Being is the divine
ornament for the disciple.
51. Never miss a day in the service of Guru. Do not give any lame excuses.
52. He is that blessed man who feels always as a dust of the Guru’s feet.
53. Grace of the Guru descends on the disciple, who is humble, simple, obedient and
devoted to the Lotus-Feet of the Guru.
55. When Guru points out your mistakes, do not justify your actions. Simply obey him.
56. Learn Asana, Pranayama and meditation under the guidance of Guru who is well-
versed in them.
57. He who eats too much, and sleeps too much cannot serve according to Guru’s taste.
58. Those who talk too much and want to decorate their bodies, cannot serve their Guru
as Guru wishes to do them.
59. Daily worship the Lotus-Feet of your Guru with Bhav and devotion.
60. Never mix with women or worldly-minded people if you want to serve your Guru
with Divine Bhav.
62. Where there is Guru there is God. Remember always this point well.
63. He who seeks Guru seeks God. He who seeks God meets the Guru.
65. Disciple must regard and honour his Guru’s wife as his own mother.
66. Do not beg at the door of your Guru for earthly comforts which are transitory. Ask for
Immortality.
69. He who serves his Guru untiringly day and night with Bhav will never be troubled by
lust, anger and greed.
At the Feet of the Guru
70. He who takes refuge at the feet of Divine Master will overcome all the obstacles on
the spiritual path by his Grace.
72. Seclusion will not be seclusion if Guru is not dwelling with his disciple. Seclusion
becomes the abode of lust and Tamas.
73. Service of Guru from beginning to end becomes the sweet honey to the disciple who
has real devotion to his Guru.
74. He is the blessed soul who drinks the nectar which flows from the holy lips of his
Guru.
75. He will have no thoughts of the world who serves his Guru untiringly with full of
Bhav. He is the most blessed soul on earth.
76. Serve, Serve, Serve your Guru. This is the royal way to cultivate Guru-Bhakti.
78. There is no service so beneficial and so soul-elevating as that of the blessed Acharya.
79. No real rest can be had except in the service of Divine Master.
81. Service of the holy Acharya without any selfish motives gives a shape to the life.
82. It is a great blunder on the part of seeker after the truth to say “Na Guru na sishya”
after studying some Vedantic Texts independently.
83. Some time Guru suffers physically on account of taking disciple’s sins. In fact Guru
never suffers from any physical diseases or ailments; but it is only a rare chance given to
the disciple to purify his heart by serving him with great (devotion) and earnestness.
84. The sublime thought of the blessed Acharya will help the disciple to rise above body-
consciousness or glamour of a sensual life.
85. ‘Upa’ means near, ‘ni’ means down, ‘sat’ means to sit. So Upanishad means sitting
down near the Acharya. Groups of pupil sit near the preceptor to learn from him the
secret of doctrine of Brahman.
Impartment of Mystic Teaching
86. Mystic significance of the holy scriptures, and esoteric meaning of the ancient
doctrines cannot be understood by reading books, or hearing scholarly lectures. Those
blessed pupils who serve and live under the spiritual teacher, for life-long time with great
reverence and devotion can understand and realise the Upanishads’ statements such as
“Thou art That,” “I am Brahman,” “All indeed is Brahman,” etc.
87. Grace of the Guru gives the inner vision (of Atman).
88. Satguru communicates the secret knowledge of the Upanishads to his trusted disciples
only after repeated entreaty and severe testing.
89. According to the Upanishadic tradition the secret knowledge of Brahman may be
imparted by a preceptor to his worthy son or to a trusted Sishya but not to another,
whoever he may be, even if the latter should give him the whole earth surrounded by the
water and filled with the treasures.
90. After doing prostration to the blessed Guru, disciple should not turn his back to him
and go away.
91. Even a child can be taught Vedanta provided the teacher knows very well what
Vedanta truly means and how can it be applied to the different stages of life.
92. “Arthaturanam na Guror na bandhum.” That means a person who hankers after
wealth, will not mind even to swindle Guru’s property.
94. The blessed Guru who is a liberated one is ever peaceful and blissful. He has an equal
vision and balanced mind. He is equal in honour and dishonour, censure and praise,
pleasure and pain. He is free from egoism, pride, anger, lust and greed. He has no likes
and dislikes, he has no attachment to anything. He is full of wisdom; he is childlike, he
clears the doubts of the disciple merely by his presence or through his gracious look.
95. To serve the poor and the sick, to serve the Guru and parents, to do charitable and
noble acts, to possess knowledge of the Self by the grace of the Guru, is indeed a
supreme blessing.
101. Practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga gives you immeasurable and immense joy.
103. Guru-Bhakti Yoga bestows on the practitioner, longevity and bliss eternal.
104. Practice of Vedanta without Guru-Seva makes one a lip-Vedantin. Therefore serve,
serve, serve your blessed Acharya.
105. Pray to the blessed Guru every minute for your guidance in your daily life.
106. That prayer which comes from the sincere pure heart of a disciple is at once
answered by the Guru.
107. Approach the saints and sages who are blessed Gurus, the doctors of divinity with
faith, devotion and humility. Take a dose of medicine called Jnana. The pathyam is
perfect obedience. Then the disease of Ajnana will be eradicated completely. You will
enjoy Supreme Bliss.
Chapter IX
BASES OF GURU-BHAKTI
The Role of Faith
2. Faith in Guru inspires hope in the disciple to attain the divine grace.
3. Have perfect trust in Guru, abandon all fears, cares, worries and be at perfect ease.
4. Faith in the words of Guru is power, strength and abundant energy. Doubt not. March
on heroic disciple.
5. Strengthen your faith in the Guru through association with the wise and study of sacred
ancient scriptures.
6. Have intense faith in the teachings of Guru. Understand clearly the nature and glory of
the Satguru. By serving Guru, lead the divine life. Only then you will be able to do total
self-surrender to the holy feet of Satguru who is a living image of God.
8. Devotion to Guru subdues all lower propensities and impulses and removes all
obstacles.
Aspects of Devotion
11. True devotion to Guru is constant remembrance of Guru’s glory and spreading his
divine message to one and all.
12. Devotion to the holy feet of preceptor is the flower, and his blessing is the immortal
fruit.
13. The aim of life is to avoid bad company which gives misery at the end and to serve
the Lotus-Feet of holy Acharya who bestows immortality.
14. Real life begins when a man takes recourse to Yoga of Guru-Bhakti which bestows
on the practitioner the everlasting happiness here and hereafter.
15. Is there no escape from the unceasing cycle of birth and death, pleasure and pain, joy
and misery? Listen, O disciple, there is one sure way, turn away your mind from the
sensual objects which are perishable and take recourse to Guru Seva Yoga, which takes
you beyond dualities.
16. True lasting happiness can be had by taking recourse to Guru Sarana Yoga, but not in
external perishable objects.
17. Guru-Bhakti Yoga, Guru-Seva Yoga and Guru-Sarana Yoga, etc., are all synonymous
terms of Guru-Bhakti Yoga. They are one and the same.
18. Some people think that Guru-Seva Yoga is inferior type of Yoga. They have
thoroughly misunderstood the secret of spirituality.
19. Practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga means an intense pure love for Guru.
20. Devotion to the Lotus-Feet of blessed Acharya must be gradually cultivated. There is
no short-cut.
21. Guru-Bhakti Yoga is the science of all sciences.
22. The Lotus-Feet of the blessed Acharya are the chief object of meditation, for a true
disciple.
24. When the dissipated rays of the mind are collected by the practice of Guru-Bhakti
Yoga can work wonders.
25. All great souls, all master-minds have done great work through the practice of Guru-
Bhakti Yoga.
26. According to the ‘Guru-Bhakti Yoga’ school of thought Guru and God are one, hence
total self-surrender to Guru is very essential.
27. Guru-Bhakti Yoga includes all other Yogas. Without taking recourse to Guru-Bhakti
Yoga nobody can practise other Yogas, which are hard to tread.
28. Guru-Bhakti Yoga school of thought gives a great instance in obtaining “Guru Kripa”
through “Acharyopasana.”
30. Guru-Bhakti Yoga cult, greatly stresses upon the service of Guru for attaining the
purity of heart, to meditate and realise.
31. He who is devoted to the well-being of his glory, Guru is a blessed being.
34. To adore the blessed feet of Acharya and to abide by his divine law is to live truly.
35. Annihilate the fluctuating potency of the mind through ceaseless practices of Guru-
Bhakti Yoga.
36. The chief purpose and the goal of your life here is to obtain Guru’s Grace which
bestows immortality.
37. Remember the triplet “Faith, Obedience and Self-surrender” while serving Guru.
38. Let the ideal of Guru Seva penetrate into your heart.
39. Detach your mind from the evil company and attach to the sacred feet of Acharya,
who is a pattern of perfection, knower of truth, a centre of universal love, a humble
servant of humanity.
40. Have unremitting spiritual practice with the help of wise Guru.
42. Cultivate devotion to Preceptor to a maximum degree; then only can you enjoy his
choicest blessings.
43. True aspirant’s joy knows no bounds when he comes across sacred feet of Blessed
Acharya.
44. Never waste a single moment; life is short; time is fleeting; death is uncertain; arise,
awake; apply yourself diligently in the service of Acharya.
46. Arm yourself with faith in Guru, and in his words of wisdom.
47. Spiritual path is sharp-edged razor path. A Guru is absolutely necessary, who has
tread the path.
48. Renounce all your egoism and surrender yourself unto the Lotus-Feet of the Master.
49. The Guru will guide you, and inspire you only. You should yourself tread the path.
50. Life is short. Time is fleeting. Arise, awake, approach the holy feet of Acharya.
51. Life is short. Time of death is uncertain. Apply yourself seriously to the service of
Guru.
52. Maintain daily the spiritual diary and record correctly your progress and failure and
send it to your Guru at the end of the month.
53. Don’t complain to your Guru that there is no time for Sadhana due to overwork to
him. Reduce sleep and tall talk. Eat a little. Then you will have plenty of time for
Sadhana. The highest Sadhana is service of Acharya.
54. Let the service and thought of the Guru keep away the thought of the world.
55. Do not boast or make sure of your ability with your spiritual Teacher. Be simple and
humble. You will grow spiritually in leaps and bounds.
56. Give up back-biting, criticising and fault-finding about preceptor’s actions. Beware of
reaction.
58. Admit your faults plainly before the Guru who is the embodiment of compassion and
love.
59. Serve your Guru more than what he is expecting from you.
60. Have intense connection with none but Preceptor. Mix little with others.
61. The love and compassionate looks of Guru can transform the disciple’s lower nature.
62. Recognise and realise the greatness of Guru. And spread his message of love to the
humanity. By this, Guru’s grace will descend upon you.
64. Valuable gifts must be given to Guru with faith, in plenty, with modesty and
devotion.
65. Give the preceptor the fee he desires. Give the preceptor the best gifts.
66. Disciple should not take back the gifts given to Guru even by carelessness.
67. Scrutinise your inner motives while doing service to Guru. Service must be done to
Guru without expectation of name, fame, power, wealth, etc.
68. When you deal with your teacher, be honest and sincere.
70. Through the hope of Guru’s grace and grace alone a disciple can march forward on
the spiritual path, just as the Chataka Bird lives on the hope of Swati rain drops.
71. The highest Yajna or a sacrifice is the hospitality shown to Guru. Even Asvamedha
and other great Yajnas are nothing before this Guru Seva Yajna.
74. Guru-Bhakti Yoga is the easiest, purest, quickest, safest way for God-consciousness.
May you all attain God-consciousness in this very birth through the practice of Guru-
Bhakti Yoga.
75. Take refuge in the name of the Guru. Sing and chant his name always. In Kali Yuga
singing the glory of the Guru and meditation on his Lotus-Feet is the best and easiest way
for God-realisation.
76. Devotion to Guru is the Master-key to open the door of Moksha or eternal bliss.
77. Life is a sweet flower of which the devotion to Guru is the sweet honey.
79. Practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga bestows immortality, supreme peace and perennial
joy.
81. If you wish to get his blessings you must also become an embodiment of love and
compassion.
82. In his devotion to Guru there should not be a tinge of selfishness in the heart of the
disciple.
84. Whole-hearted willingness to serve the Guru is the very essence of devotion.
85. Love of body or skin is passion; love of Guru is devotion. It is love for love’s sake.
87. Cultivate pure devotion to Guru in the garden of your heart through Japa, Kirtan,
Prayer, meditation, service of saints, study and company of saints.
88. Service of thy Guru must be the sole concern and aim of thy life.
91. Develop universal love gradually through selfless service to Guru, Satsanga with
great souls, prayer and recitation of Guru-Mantra.
92. What others have achieved with great effort the same you can attain through the
Guru’s grace.
93. Blessed are the meek because they will soon attain the Guru’s grace. Blessed are the
pure who have sought refuge in Guru for they shall verily attain the bliss.
94. Meekness is the only Royal Road to lead you to the grace of Guru.
95. Guru is the “Open Seasum” with which you can unlock the mystery of life and
salvation.
96. The first Test of spiritual teacher or a truly great man is his meekness. It is his
fundamental virtue.
97. It is easier for a camel to enter the eye of a needle; but, lo, it is far more difficult for
one without the Grace of Guru to enter the Kingdom of God.
98. Just as water, when added to milk, loses its own identity, becoming one with the milk,
so too should the true disciple utterly surrender himself unto the Guru and be one with
him
99. Just as small streams and rivers by joining the great and sacred Ganga come to be
regarded as sacred and worshipped, too, and finally reach the goal—the ocean, so shall
the true disciple by seeking refuge at the Feet of Guru and by becoming one with him
come to attain the Bliss Everlasting.
100. Does the child learn to speak or to walk in a single day? Does it not need long
association with the parents and proper attention and the interest, which alone can teach
the child to speak or to walk? So, too, the true and sincere disciple should remain and
stay with the Guru for sufficiently long time, rendering him all service, by Than, and
Man, all the while evincing true and genuine attention and interest to learn the Supreme
Vidya. Thus alone will he attain the great Knowledge..... not otherwise.
101. Verily like Kalpaka Vriksha, like Kamadhenu, like Chintamani, verily as these grant
the boon that is desired by its seeker, so too does the Guru grant the seeker whatever he
desires... Therefore shall the true disciple seek but the Great Knowledge of the
Upanishads to attain Moksha.
102. Just as the baby, when it totters around, tries to walk all by its own, now falling
down and again getting up, needs and calls for the help of its mother, the disciple also in
the earlier stages of his Sadhana needs and should seek the guidance of the Merciful
Guru.
103. Like the child too, the true disciple should have intense desire for liberation
(Mumukshutva) and express this in all possible manner, only that he may be helped by
his Guru in the realisation of this desire. This desire may well be called the effort and the
Guru’s Merciful Help is the grace like the kindness of the helping mother.
104. Two things are necessary for a beautifully-finished Idol or an Image... one is a
perfect, faultless good piece of marble; the second is the expert Sculptor. The piece of
marble should but unconditionally remain in the hands of the Sculptor in order to be
carved and chiselled into the fine Image... So too, the disciple has but to cleanse himself,
purify himself, and make himself a perfectly faultless piece of marble and placing himself
under the expert guidance of his Master, allow to be carved out and chiselled into the
Image of God.
105. Just as with the rising of the Sun the entire darkness is at once dispelled, so does the
Avidya and Avarana in the mind of the disciple get dispelled immediately with the
descent of his Guru’s Grace.
106. Just as one who is burnt by the scorching rays of the sun finds immense relief and
happiness in the cool shades of trees and just is after a hot day, one finds immense
happiness in the cool moonlight, so does one burnt by the scorching rays of Samsara and
all athirst for peace find the desired peace and happiness at the Feet of a Brahma-Nishtha
Guru.
107. Just as the ‘Chataka’ bird, after waiting for long, quenches its thirst only by drop of
rain-water, so should the true disciple serve his Guru and await the ‘Word of Upadesha’
that shall quench all his agonies and free him for ever.
108. The Grace of Brahmanishtha Guru will, verily burn all the sins of the one that seeks
such a Merciful Guru whatever may be the worth of this one even as the fire, by its very
nature, burns away whatever that comes within its fold and within its aura.
109. Everyone who longs to transcend misery and obtain joy and happiness in life should
sincerely practise Guru-Bhakti Yoga.
110. A very effective method of eradicating all evil qualities is to put into practice the
Yoga of Guru-Bhakti.
111. Devotion to the holy feet of Guru is the cardinal virtue, which, if assiduously
cultivated, transports a disciple from the morass of misery and ignorance to the paradise
of perennial joy and bliss supreme.
112. Sexual propensities though they at first are like ripples acquired the proportions of a
sea on account of bad company. Therefore shun evil company and approach the life-
saving feet of Acharya.
113. Service of Guru is a sine qua non in the practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga.
114. You can overcome worries if you keep yourself always very busy in the service of
Guru. This is the surest antidote for all worries.
115. A noble disciple should not suspect or disregard, his Guru on any account.
116. Shyness to do ‘Sashtanga’ prostration to the sacred feet of revered Guru, is a great
hindrance in the practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga.
118. Guru-Bhakti Yoga is the foundation of all other Yogas viz., Karma Yoga, Bhakti
Yoga, Raja Yoga, Hatha Yoga, Jnana Yoga etc. The disciple who thinks that he knows
everything will not learn anything from his Guru, due to self-conceit.
119. A very dangerous habit for a disciple is to justify himself before the Guru.
120. Be gentle, be sweet, be soft and polite when you serve your Guru. You will win the
heart of Guru. Never show rudeness in speech or action with your Guru.
121. Pig-headed student cannot have any definite progress in the practice of Guru-Bhakti
Yoga.
122. Disciple should look on the bright side of life of the revered preceptor.
124. All that is wanted of you is sincere and earnest effort in the path of Guru-Bhakti
Yoga.
125. Write down your Guru Mantra or Guru’s holy name daily in a clean note book for an
hour.
126. Repeat always your Guru Mantra even while walking, eating and working in the
office.
Elevating Presence of Guru
127. Words cannot adequately express the deep debt of gratitude for the wonderful
transformation brought in the disciple by the miraculous spiritual power latent in the
great Guru.
128. Truly it is said that the Satguru is God Incarnate. His greatness is indescribable.
129. Guru’s presence elevates and inspires the disciple with tremendous spiritual
vibrations. The greatness of Guru rests in transforming the lower nature of the disciple.
130. To take refuge in the adorable feet of Satguru is the way of life.
132. None can enjoy eternal bliss unless he is having an unwavering faith in his Guru.
134. Unswerving and unflinching faith in the teachings of Guru is the root of real Guru-
Bhakti.
136. Kabir says, “Guru and Govinda, both of them, stand before me. To whom shall I
bow? Blessed is the Guru who showed me the Govinda.”
137. Only a Guru can show divine light to his worthy Chela.
138. Guru takes his disciples from the unreal to the real, from the mortality to
immortality, from darkness to light, from the materialism to spirituality.
140. Satguru is a prophet and a messenger of God, is a cosmic friend and benefactor of
the world. He is a guiding star to the suffering mankind.
141. By serving the true Guru the noose of time is destroyed, the sacred words of wisdom
of Guru enter the heart of disciple. There is no release without Guru’s Grace.
142. He who has turned his face from the path of Guru-Bhakti Yoga goes from death to
death, from darkness to darkness, and from ignorance to ignorance.
143. It is only the word of the great teacher that like thrashing sunbeam, lights up,
through the darkness of the illusions of the world, the path of humanity which men and
women try to follow according to their inherited capacity.
144. The Guru’s Grace itself will enable one to understand true purpose of life and to
have a burning desire to realise the Self.
145. Guru Kripa is the most vital internal antiseptic, universal antibiotic against the
bacteria of all the vices in the heart of the disciple.
146. Grace of the Guru will flow as easily as water flows from the one pot to another if
one establishes continuous unbroken contact with his Guru.
147. Guru Kripa or Kataksha cannot be attained by mere mechanical prostration to Guru.
It can be obtained only when one translates Guru’s teachings, in life.
148. Before retiring to bed, disciple should introspect as to how far he has obeyed in
carrying out Guru’s orders.
149. Every day the disciple before he starts his service to his Guru, should resolve that he
would serve the Guru with more devotion and obedience than the previous days.
150. Even the little faith in Guru and scriptures will vanish in no time by bad company.
151. Those who want to cultivate true devotion to the sacred feet of Master should
overcome all sorts of evil habits viz., smoking, betel-chewing, snuffing, drinking,
gambling, film-going, novel and newspaper-reading, fashion, jilli-jallying, meat-eating,
pilfering habit, sleeping in day time, dilly-dallying, using slang terms, back-biting,
criticising, etc.
152. Those who want to practise Yoga of Guru-Bhakti should develop all divine virtues
viz., truthfulness, justice, non-violence, will-power, toleration, sympathy, self-reliance,
self-confidence, self-restraint, self-denial, self-analysis, perseverance, patience, mercy,
kindness, generosity, forgiveness, forbearance, endurance, equanimity, determination,
discrimination, dispassion, renunciation, courage, cheerfulness and moderation in
everything.
153. Why do you search in vain for pleasures outside. Approach the feet of Satguru and
enjoy the bliss eternal.
154. Faith and devotion to the feet of Satguru are the two wings which enable the disciple
to ascend the peak of perfection.
Chapter X
THE STRUCTURE OF GURU-BHAKTI
Essentials of Right Conduct
5. Sacred dust of the Holy feet of Guru is a real boon to the disciple.
6. It is the greatest fortune to apply on the forehead the sacred dust of the Holy feet of
Preceptor.
7. The greatest and rare privilege in life is to touch the Lotus-Feet of Master.
8. Guru’s grace and women’s face (lust) belong to opposite poles. If you want one
renounce the other.
9. The very sacred dust of the Guru’s holy feet brings prosperity to the disciple.
10. The sacred dust which comes from the life-saving feet of Satguru is fit to be
worshipped.
11. The greatest wealth of the disciple is the sacred dust of his Sat-Guru’s Lotus-Feet.
12. He who wears the holy dust of the Lotus-Feet of the master on his forehead gets
purity of heart in no time.
14. Life on this earth plane is an opportunity afforded to us to do the service of Satguru
and obeying him to the best of our ability and with ever-increasing devotion to him, in
the core of our heart.
16. Disciple will find that he is more united with Guru during personally serving him than
when he meditates in the solitary cave of Himalayas.
17. Perfect unconditioned self-surrender to Guru is the sure way to attain Guru-Bhakti.
18. When you are in difficulties and trials, beg for Guru’s grace. Pray fervently from the
bottom of your heart. Everything will become easy.
19. Think of Guru as soon as you wake up and just before you go to sleep. Completely
surrender yourself to him.
20. Think of the mistakes you have committed while serving the Guru during the course
of day, just before retiring to bed, viz., disobedience, insincerity, etc.
21. Reduce your wants. Save the money, and offer it to the Lotus-Feet of the Guru.
Where there is a will there is a way. This is a test of your Guru-Bhakti.
22. Neither art nor science nor erudition is necessary to approach the Lotus-Feet of
Brahma-Nishtha Guru. What is wanted is pure heart with full love and devotion to Guru,
a heart resolutely determined to apply itself to Him alone, for His sake alone and to love
him alone, without expectation of anything.
24. The test of true devotion to Guru is inward peace and a willingness to obey his
commands.
25. Through the service of Guru, grow in wisdom and attain freedom.
26. Blessed are those who are endowed with Viveka and Vairagya by the Grace of Guru.
They will enjoy supreme peace and everlasting bliss.
27. The knowledge which is imparted by Guru will not bear fruit unless the disciple gives
proper Guru Dakshina to his Guru.
28. Guru-Bhakti Yoga is control of mind and its modifications through the service of
Guru.
Classes Of Disciples
29. The best disciple is like petrol or aviation spirit. Even from a great distance he will
instantly react to the spark of the Guru’s Upadesa.
30. The second class disciple is like camphor, a touch awakens his inner spirit and
kindles the fire of spirituality in him.
31. The third class of disciple is like coal; the Guru has to take great pains in order to
awaken the spirit in him.
32. The fourth class of disciple is like a plantain stem, no efforts will be of any avail over
him. Whatever the Guru may do, he remains cold and inert.
33. Listen! O disciple, be not like plantain stem-like disciple; try to be petrol-like
disciple, or at least the camphor-like disciple.
34. When you surrender to the sacred feet of your Guru, beg not of him worldly needs
nor aught else. But beg for His Grace, only that you may have true devotion and lasting
faith in him.
35. Guru is the way, the life and the goal ultimate. No one shall attain to the supreme
beatitude except through the Guru.
37. Die to live. Die at the Lotus-Feet of thy Guru, give up thy ego and die, only that you
may live again the True Divine life. Life is no life if not enlivened and made Divine by
the transforming Grace of Guru.
38. The true relationship between Guru and Chela cannot be described or written or made
understood. The true seeker of truth have to approach a Brahma-Nishtha Guru who is an
embodiment of compassion with faith and devotion, and must serve and live with him for
a long period.
40. Disciples have to be patient when the Guru presents them for the sake of testing.
41. Disciple should not give up service of Guru when he comes across some difficulties
and troubles.
42. Self-sacrifice in the cause of service of Guru is the best medium to develop devotion
to the sacred feet of Guru.
43. Peace of mind comes from prayer, Japa, Kirtan, meditation, service of Guru, good
and sublime thoughts and understanding.
Approach to Guru
44. Approach the adorable feet of Satguru. Take shelter under the Lotus-Feet of Satguru.
Worship the sacred feet of Satguru. Meditate with humility on the holy feet of Satguru.
Offer the valuable gifts on the sanctifying feet of Satguru. Dedicate your life in the
service of glorious feet of Satguru. This is the secret of Guru-Bhakti Yoga.
45. Disciple must be very punctual while serving the Guru.
46. Disciple must be very pure in thought, word and deed in the cause of Guru’s divine
mission.
47. Cultivate in the garden of your heart the flowers of sincerity, simplicity, serenity,
sympathy, self-control and self-sacrifice and offer it to the Satguru.
48. Disciple should take care of the properties of the Guru. He must ever keep his eye
upon the same.
49. There is nothing in the three worlds that cannot be attained by the grace of Brahma-
Nishtha Guru.
50. It is not possible for an aspirant to enter in the spiritual path that leads to the union
with God unless he practises Guru-Bhakti Yoga.
51. Guru-Bhakti Yoga is the master key to open the realm of elysian bliss.
52. The avenue to the supreme Peace begins from the practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga.
53. Self-surrender to the sacred Feet of Satguru is the very foundation of Guru-Bhakti
Yoga.
54. You are bound to succeed in the practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga if you have a firm
faith and devotion to the life-saving feet of Satguru.
55. Mere human effort alone will not suffice to practise Yoga, the grace of Guru is
absolutely needed.
56. It is very easy to tame a wild tiger, lion or an elephant. It is very easy to walk over
fire or water. But it is very difficult to surrender to the Lotus-Feet of Guru unless a person
has real aspiration to practise Guru-Bhakti Yoga.
57. The practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga bestows on the disciple the supreme peace, joy and
immortality.
58. The goal of life is to obtain the benign grace of Satguru by practising Guru-Bhakti
Yoga.
59. Practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga bestows liberation from the wheel of births and deaths.
60. Guru-Bhakti Yoga confers immortality, eternal bliss, freedom, perfection, perennial
joy and everlasting peace.
63. Nine terms of Guru-Bhakti Yoga are viz., (1) The real lasting aspiration to practise
Guru-Bhakti Yoga. (2) Absolute faith in the thoughts, words and actions of Satguru. (3)
Perfect obedience in carrying out Guru’s commands. (4) Doing Namaskar with humility
and repeating his name. (5) Doing personal service to Satguru without expectation of
fruits. (6) Daily worshipping the Lotus-Feet of Satguru with Bhava and devotion. (7)
Self-surrendering or dedication of Thana, Mana and Dhana in the cause of divine
mission of Satguru. (8) Meditation on the holy feet of Satguru for obtaining his benign
grace and mercy. (9) Hearing his holy Upadesa and sincerely practising it.
65. Whether the owl believes or not in the existence of the light of sun, the sun always
shines. Even so, whether the ignorant and fickle-minded disciple believes or not, the
benign grace of Guru works wonders.
66. The Satguru is one who is released from bondage. He shines with knowledge of his
self. He is ever blissful. He radiates joy and peace with one and all.
67. Approach the adorable feet of Satguru. Serve him without crookedness. Love him
without any expectation of fruits. Get initiation. This is the secret of Sadhana or ‘be’ and
‘end’ of all spiritual practices.
68. Trust your Guru as God. Take shelter under him. Be initiated into knowledge.
69. Guru is pleased with pure devotion and devotion alone. Practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga
gives peace and steadiness of mind.
70. Death flies away from that disciple who has taken shelter in the sacred feet of
Satguru.
71. The practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga induces non-attachment and dispassion for worldly
objects and bestows immortality.
72. Devotion to the life-saving feet of Satguru saves even the greatest sinner.
73. Nothing is unattainable to that noble hearted disciple who has taken refuge in the
sacred feet of Satguru.
76. Pray to the Guru from the bottom of your heart, for obtaining his benign blessings.
Such prayers can work miracles.
77. Evil company is an enemy of a disciple who wants to practise Guru-Bhakti Yoga.
78. Serve your Guru. Be devoted to your Guru, obey him, have implicit faith in his
teachings, you will grow in spirituality. You will attain Self-realisation in this birth.
79. He who practises Guru-Bhakti Yoga without ethical perfection, devotion to Guru etc.,
cannot obtain the grace of Guru.
Benefits Of Guru-Bhakti
80. Unshakable faith in Guru gives mysterious power to the disciple to overcome any
difficulty.
81. Unflinching faith in Guru puts the aspirant in tune with the infinite.
82. The disciple who has faith in the Guru argues not, thinks not, reasons not, and
cogitates not. He simply obeys, obeys and obeys.
83. Disciple’s life becomes dreary waste when he loses faith in his Guru. Life loses its
effulgence when an aspirant loses faith in his Guru.
85. Know that everything is lost when faith is lost in the words of holy preceptor. Have
perfect faith in the Guru.
86. Prayer to the Lotus-Feet of the preceptor lightens the heart of the disciple and fills his
mind with strength, peace and purity.
87. Wash the sacred feet of preceptor with Bhava and sprinkle the water on your head.
This is the great purifier.
88. It is a rare privilege in life to become the dust of the sacred feet of divine master.
89. Prayer to the sacred feet of spiritual teacher is the key of morning and the bolt of
evening.
90. A life destitute of faith and devotion to the feet of Satguru is like a sapless tree in a
desert.
91. Prayer to the sacred feet of the master should spring from the core of the disciple’s
heart. It should not be a lip-homage.
92. Fervent prayer that comes from the sincere, pure heart of disciple, is at once heard by
the Brahma-Nishtha Guru.
93. Pray to master sincerely, fervently and whole-heartedly from the bottom of your
heart. Then alone will master listen to your prayer.
94. Pray not to holy preceptor for relief from suffering, but for strength and endurance to
bear it.
95. Pray to the Lotus-Feet of Satguru for strength to overcome all the defects.
96. Everybody wants to serve Guru in his own way but nobody wants to serve the Guru
as Guru wants him to do.
97. Disciple wants to serve his Guru but does not want to under go any difficulty.
99. Disciple can rise above the body-consciousness through the service of Guru.
100. Have true, perfect, living and unswerving faith in your Guru, in his grace and the
power of his name.
102. Unless you have an absolute faith in Guru you cannot expect the Guru’s Grace dawn
upon you.
103. Disciple should not attach much importance to the relative actions of the Guru, who
is a liberated one.
104. A true knowledge of God, man and universe is to be obtained from the Guru.
105. The Guru is the hull of the boat of Sadhana but the aspirant will have to do the
rowing himself.
110. Guru-Bhakti is sweet in the beginning, in the middle and in the end. It gives the
highest and undecaying bliss to the disciple.
112. Love for the Guru cannot co-exist with the love for the world.
117. Devotion to Satguru’s Feet alone will enable you to obtain God’s grace.
119. True and sincere surrender unto the Guru is the essence of Guru-Bhakti Yoga.
121. Surrender completely unto the Guru. He will become your charioteer on the field of
life. He will drive your chariot well. You will reach the destination, the abode of eternal
bliss without fear.
123. The only remedy for the cure of aspirant’s evil nature is the service of Guru.
125. Self-surrender to Guru is indeed the highest rung in the ladder of Guru-Bhakti
Yoga.
127. Guru demands nothing less than complete ungrudging, unreserved self-surrender.
Self-surrender should not be verbal profession as generally disciples do nowadays.
128. The more the surrender to the master, the more the grace of the master.
129. The degree of decent of Guru’s grace depends upon the degree of surrender.
133. Practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga offers a clear, definite path for the realisation of the
highest end of life.
134. Where grace of Guru is, there is righteousness, and where righteousness is, there is
prosperity and immortality.
135. Worship your father, mother, the school teacher, guests, and your Guru as the
veritable gods by without regarding them as mere human beings. Pray to them with due
reverence. Serve them with great respect and devotion.
136. Name of the Guru is a potent, unfailing antidote, for those who are bitten by the
serpent of worldliness.
138. The spirit of Guru-Seva must deeply enter into your very bones, cells, tissues and
nerves, etc. Be fiery in the spirit of Guru-Seva. The reward is invaluable.
139. Serve the Guru without any sort of selfish motives, and feel the effect—purity and
inner strength. What an expanded heart you will have by serving the Guru! It is
indescribable. Practise! Practise! Practise! You will enjoy supreme eternal bliss.
144. Some disciples keep a show as great Chelas of a Guru but they have no faith in his
words, or actions.
145. Surrender completely to the Almighty Guru who is the one without a second.
146. Guru-Bhakti Yoga takes you to God steadily, unshakably, firmly and surely in this
very birth.
147. Guru-Bhakti Yoga starts and ends in the annihilation of ego and attainment of bliss
immortal.
148. Guru-Bhakti Yoga teaches the way to wipe out all pains and sorrows in life.
149. The practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga will enable you to get rid of fear, ignorance,
pessimism, confusion of mind, disease, despair, worry, etc.
150. Guru-Bhakti Yoga is the only unfailing remedy for the ills of the life.
151. The path of Guru-Bhakti Yoga brings fruits quickly only for a worthy disciple.
152. First understand the philosophy of Guru-Bhakti Yoga, then put into practice, you
will succeed.
153. Seek the immortal, all-blissful Atman within, through practice of Guru-Bhakti
Yoga.
154. Practise Guru-Bhakti Yoga, and go beyond all that causes duality and sin.
155. Take recourse to Guru-Bhakti Yoga and regain your lost divinity.
156. A blind man cannot lead another blind man, a prisoner cannot liberate another
prisoner, even so, one who has sunk in the mire of worldliness, cannot liberate another.
Therefore Guru is absolutely necessary to practise Guru-Bhakti Yoga.
157. Make the Yoga of Guru-Bhakti the only purpose, aim and real interest in life. You
will reach supreme happiness.
160. Practice of Guru-Bhakti Yoga alone can make one fearless and ever happy in all
walks of life.
161. Give up sensual life if you want to practise the Yoga of Guru-Bhakti.
162. If you really want God turn away from worldly enjoyments and take recourse to
practice of Yoga of Guru-Bhakti.
164. Dispassion and discrimination dawn in the heart of disciple by the grace of Guru.
165. Disciple should pray to Satguru in the hours of meditation to grant him an
unswerving faith and ever-increasing true devotion to his Lotus-Feet.
166. He who repeats Guru’s name gets not only Moksha but worldly prosperity, health
and long life and divine Aisvarya also.
167. On the birthday of Guru, disciple should fast and meditate on the Lotus-Feet of the
Satguru, to grant him real devotion to his Lotus-Feet.
168. Disciple should observe the birthday of his Guru on a grand scale.
Appendix
GURU PURNIMA MESSAGES
1956
“People seldom improve when they have no model but themselves to copy,” said Oliver
Goldsmith. “He that hath ears, let him hear; he that hath eyes, let him see,” said Jesus
Christ.
Through ages gone by, the torch of truth, of supernal beauty and immortality, of the
enduring values of life, of the secrets of spiritual illumination, has been passed on
through a succession of great and glorious souls, the teachers of humanity, the custodians
of all that is worth living for.
In the vast, sprawling school of life, studded with myriads of beckoning entities and
experiences, Nature Herself, the stupendous Teacher par excellence, holds out the means
to the solution of all vexing problems, mysteries and anomalies.
“He that hath eyes, let him see.” The message is there always, the listeners, too, are there.
But those who deliberately shut their eyes and ears, would slumber on in their self-
wrought gloom of nescience; for no awakening can be truly effective unless there is a
reciprocal willingness to wake up.
Sincerity and earnestness, faith and willingness to learn, are therefore the first essential
requisite that every seeker must possess. Then he must have the gift of rational
discrimination to sift out the genuine from the false, the desirable from the undesirable,
the conducive from the incompatible, and thereafter, a firm determination to hold on to
what he has chosen with unreserved faith and consistency, and pursue his ideal with
relentless perseverance.
The relationship between the Guru and the disciple can hardly be enduring when pivoted
on a relative understanding, on a mundane sense of reciprocation. How best could one
serve one’s preceptor? In the very best way that pleases him most, through implicit
obedience spurred by a clear-cut and unbiased understanding. The most fruitful service
that one can render to the preceptor is to be a pellucid example of his precept.
Seekers of Truth! On the holy occasion of the Guru Purnima, dedicate yourselves afresh
to the service of the teachers of humanity, to the ideals lived by them, to the teachings
bestowed by them. Hearken their message of peace and goodwill, of unselfish love
towards all beings, of willing service to the suffering and the forlorn, of purification and
refinement of your nature, of cultivation of all that are positive and desirable, and
effacement of all that are crude, coarse, mean and impure.
Forget not the goal. Forget not that truth is real untruth a dereliction; success is real,
failure an impetus; virtue is real, vice its enunciation; love is real, hate a misguided
impulse; happiness is real, sorrow a self-delusion life is real, death a changing phase of
life itself, always directed towards the better.
Meditate, and usher in the dawn of peace and inner illumination. Introspect, and cleanse
the dross of mundane desires. Reflect, and sift the real from the unreal. Amidst this
earthly panorama of colour and pageant, of candour and deceit, of ardour and disdain, of
panegyrics and calumny, through the waxing and waning of life,—find grace and poise
and beauty and happiness in the solitude of your heart, in the sanctum of your essential
spiritual nature. Be a witness! Know thyself, and be free!
May the blessings of the Brahmavidya Gurus, of the past and the present, be ever upon
you all!
1957
Salutations to the Supreme Guru, the Immortal Spirit, the common unifying entity present
in all. Salutations to the torch-bearers of knowledge divine. Salutations, to all seekers of
truth who live the life divine Adorations for all holy aspirations. Benedictions for the
fruition of every noble endeavour.
The eternal mysteries of the human spirit, the ever-restless and dissatisfied emotional
being of man, the inadequacies of the temporal existence, the failure of the intellect to
solve the problems of life satisfactorily. The baffling gulf that separates great ideals from
rude realities—all tend to turn one’s mind towards God. Divine life is the process through
which one progresses towards the realisation of God, and achieves the remedy of all the
ills that life is heir to.
Guru is the guide who leads the aspirant on the way, and the aspirant is the pilgrim who
toils on the ascent of divine life.
A progressive refinement of the mental and moral make up of man is the primary
objective of divine life. It begins with dedication to some fundamental principles such as
truth, purity, and non-injury, the practice of which automatically entails the voluntary
enforcement of self-discipline, and ensuing of the process of purification.
The implementation of these three fundamental principles in the daily life of the
individual, in an impeccable manner, itself constitutes the vital part of divine life.
Human nature has two sides, the negative and the positive, one trying to preponderate
over the other. There are invariably the “Dr. Jekyll” and “Mr. Hyde” elements in every
man. When the “Hyde” element dominates, one becomes a social derelict, bringing upon
oneself and others all the evil consequences of the boundless passions and destructive
sadism of the instinctive part of one’s being. Yet, there are people who have in them a
remarkable measure of the “Jekyll” element, which distinguishes them as great
benefactors of society, and who are by far in a better position to be in peace with
themselves and with others, too.
The positive, ultimately overcomes the negative, though, in common experience, the
negative forces hold an irrepressible sway over frequent phases in the lives of the most of
the people. But, not so with those who have made a beginning in walking the way of
reason, of discretion, prudence, divine life. In them the discriminative mind tries to rule
over the instinctive part of their being. Viveka guides their actions, Vairagya sanctifies
their motives, and Mumukshutva inspires their endeavours—each of the three deriving its
strength and light from the spiritual part of their being.
To follow the path of truth, purity and non-injury is implicative of the highest form of
self-discipline, amounting to neutralising every negative propensity emanating from the
lower nature. Truth necessarily indicates, apart from the chastity of speech, the right
sense of values, the courage to implement into action what one knows to be true, though
it may not be entirely conducive, or may be even detrimental, to one’s material good.
Truth also means the strength of will to abide by all positive principles, a sense of justice
an unbiased mind, and recognition of the pervasiveness of its subtle essence in all life.
Purity is the touchstone of divine life which should have the power of transmuting all that
is negative into the positive. The practice of purity covers the entire range of the culturing
of emotions, and whatever is implied by self-restraint. It means the practice of the “Shat-
sampat” namely, control of mind, and the senses, tranquillity, forbearance, faith and
concentration. Purity is physical and mental, since both are interrelated. Purity of thought
naturally leads to purity of action as well as the sublimation of the sex-urge. Purity of
motive, of life in general, is preliminary to the practice of truth.
If you are able to cultivate and practise these three basic tenets of divine life, which, in
reality, traverse the entire gamut of practical spirituality, then you are on the road to Self-
realisation, the ultimate goal of human aspiration. Even a rudimentary success in this path
is greatly conducive to one’s peace and happiness, to the worthiness of existence, to the
betterment of human nature, to the good of society and the world at large. A collective
awareness of the great importance of divine life, with all its pragmatic values, can surely
contribute, in a large measure, to the promotion of world-peace, solidarity and
fellowship.
Brahmavidya is, in other words, the knowledge of divine life, the central ideal of all
spiritual aspirants. In this alone lies the salvation of mankind. May the blessings of the
Divine Guru be upon all.
The Guru is none other than the Supreme Divine Mother Herself, descended into the
world in order to elevate the aspirant. Deify the Guru. Then only you will be really
benefited. Serve him untiringly. He will, of his own accord, bestow the supreme blessing
of Diksha upon you.
Diksha is the giving of the Mantra by the Guru. Initiation gives spiritual knowledge and
destroys sin. As one lamp is lit at the flame of another, so the divine Sakti consisting of
Mantra is communicated from Guru to the disciple. The disciple fasts, observes
Brahmacharya and gets the Mantra from the Guru.
Initiation tears the veil of mystery and enables the disciple to grasp the hidden truth
behind scriptural truths. These are generally veiled in mystic language. You cannot
understand them by self-study. Self-study will only lead you to greater ignorance. The
Guru only will give you, by Diksha, the right perspective in which to study the scriptures.
He will flash his torch of Self-realisation on the truth which you will grasp immediately.
LIMBS OF GURU-BHAKTI
Guru-Bhakti is service of the Guru or love for the Guru. It is of four kinds: Aaptam,
Angam, Daanam, Sadbhaavam.
Aaptam means strong faith in the words of Guru and loving obedience of his commands.
Angam means pleasing, personal services, for e.g. protection of the body of the Guru,
washing his clothes, bathing the Guru, etc.
Daanam means surrender (dedication) of all possessions, such as, house and other
property, wealth, etc., and taking shelter at him.
If one serves the Guru with the Bhava that Guru is God, then that disciple is blessed with
Drishtam and Adrishtam.
Drishtam means the Jnana, Bliss which a disciple gets by the Upadesha of the
Mahavakya by Guru’s Grace.
Thus it is clear that by service of Guru with proper Bhava, one gets two fruits (Drishtam
and Adrishtam); whereas by service of God one gets Adrishtam alone.
Therefore, the best thing is to serve the Guru with correct Bhava (that Guru is God).
POEMS ON GURU
Guru Is The Boat
Guru’s Grace
Guru’s Grace
Guru
To approach a Guru,
You must be a proper Adhikari,
You should possess Vairagya,
Serenity, self-restraint and Yama.
If Guru says,
‘I will show you Krishna
Within fifteen days’
He is a false Guru.
Don’t believe him,
Beware of pseudo-Gurus.
REFLECTIONS ON GURU-BHAKTI
The transformation of consciousness of the disciple through being influenced by the Guru
is both a subjective and an objective process. Mind is an objectified stress in universal
consciousness and is like a ripple therein. The Guru as well as the disciple are such
consciousness-stresses differing only in the degree of the subtlety and the expansiveness
of their condition. Each higher, subtler and more expansive condition is more potent and
inclusive than the lower. The Guru is a Brahmanishtha one rooted in the Infinite Truth.
The mind of the Guru, being nearest to the absolute condition of changeless Existence,
possesses limitless powers beyond imagination. The initiation of the disciple by the Guru
is a process of the infusion by the Guru of this supernormal force of spiritual
consciousness into the grosser state of the disciple’s mind which results in the dispelling
of the darkness and the enlightening of the mind of the latter. The length of time taken by
the process of the disciple’s spiritual illumination is directly proportional to the receptive
capacity of the disciple and the Consciousness-Force of the Guru. No action or event is
completely subjective or completely objective.
The truth is midway between the two. Effort and grace are the subjective and the
objective forces simultaneously working and each depending on the other. The external
and the internal are the two complementary faces of the one whole being. There is no
purpose served when there is only the eye or when there is only the external luminous
object. The contact of both effects the perception of the light. If entire subjectivity were
the truth, the whole world would have vanished when the first person attained Self-
realisation. If entire objectivity were the truth, no person could have attained Liberation,
until the entire universe was exalted to the consciousness of the unconditioned absolute.
But none of these is the complete truth. The subject and the object have equal shares in
the transformation of an individual. The one is a copy of the other. The world is the
materialisation of the collective totality of the thoughts of all the beings constituting it,
and, hence, the dissolution of the mind of one being among them requires a reshuffling in
the thoughts of the others; for the sustenance of the world thenceforth is the work of only
the remaining ones. Thus the occurring of an event is through blending together of both
the internal and the external, the subjective and the objective powers of the Pure Being.
The Guru’s unlimited consciousness invades the dark corner of the disciple who is able to
bear it through the strength of truth and purity and who receives it to the extent his mind
is purged of Rajas and Tamas. The Guru is identical with the Existence Itself and, hence,
the help which is derived from him cannot be estimated by the faculty of thinking.
It is a decided and established conclusion that Guru is absolutely essential for spiritual
progress. Even secular science, arts and all worldly undertakings need the help of a
teacher. More so, is the need for guidance in the spiritual path. A seeker after truth should
be blessed with the company of his Satguru so that the former may get rid of his defects
and develop virtues and attain Godhead.
The company of great men is very rare to be got. The attainment of a Satguru is the result
of the full grace of God. A true spiritual Guru is God Himself.
A disciple should not act against the wishes of his Guru. He should not speak displeasing
words to his Guru. He should view everyone with Guru-Bhava. This is the culmination of
Guru-Bhakti.
A disciple without devotion to his Guru is like a flower without fragrance, a well without
water, a cow without milk or a body without life.
If you want to be a true disciple, you should follow the instructions of your Guru to their
very letter and spirit. If you make a promise to your Guru you should fulfil it even at the
cost of your life.
The treasure of Guru-Bhakti is not acquired in a day. The disciple has to cultivate it
gradually and painstakingly. He must increase it day by day. It develops through constant
earnest prayers in the secret chamber of your heart. You must make yourself perfectly
blind to the human aspects of your Guru. Then you will develop true Guru-Bhakti.
Deification of the Guru is a mysterious powerful method of having his grace. When you
deify him, you see only the storehouse of perfection in him. Even if you cannot
understand his actions, do not misunderstand them. Be humble and silent. Wait patiently.
You will be rewarded with light, later on.
Guru-Bhakti is the magic-wand in the hands of the disciple to cross the ocean of Samsara.
Guru-Bhakti will make possible for you, all that is impossible. The unattainable can be
attained by Guru-Bhakti.
The true disciple is concerned only with the Divine Nature of the Guru. The Guru’s
actions as man, is not the disciple’s concern. He is totally oblivious of it. To him the Guru
is Guru, even if he acts unconventionally. Always remember that the nature of a saint is
unfathomable. Judge him not. Measure not his divine nature with the inadequate
yardstick of your ignorance.
A sincere disciple, who is living with his Guru, should not foolishly sit idle, waiting for
verbal instruction from the Guru every day. The day-to-day conduct of the Guru is in
itself a living ideal to him, who is observant. He must eagerly deserve and learn precious
lessons of life from the personality and actions of the Guru. The life of Guru is a living
sermon to the sincere disciple. The Guru teaches through personal example. The disciple
learns through devout observation.
We know how Lord Krishna, though He was fully conscious of His Supreme Divinity,
served His Guru and studied under him. What He said was what He did; and what He did
was only a commentary on what He said. Let us, therefore, turn to the Bhagavad Gita, the
Immortal Words of Sri Krishna, to see what He says about one’s attitude to the spiritual
preceptor.
“Na hi jnaanena sadrisham pavitramiha vidyate,” said Lord Krishna; there is nothing
here so grand, ennobling and purifying as Knowledge. How can we attain that
Knowledge?
There are two statements that answer this great question. “Shraddhaavaan labhate
jnaanam”—” a person who has Shraddha attains Jnana”. This word Shraddha is indeed
very difficult to define; it is a perfect blending of love, faith, devotion, total egolessness
and absolute surrender. The other statement is “Tadviddhi pranipaatena pari-prasnena
sevayaa; Upadekshyanti te jnaanam jnaaninah tattvadarsinah”; “Know that by
prostrating yourself to, by questioning and by serving those Great Ones who have had a
direct perception of the Self; they will impart that Knowledge to you.” This Knowledge is
impossible for one to acquire by one’s own unaided self-effort.
This truth is clearly brought out in the Visvarupa-Darshana Yoga. After revealing
Himself to Arjuna and after once again assuming the lovely human form of Krishna, the
Lord declares: “The Wondrous Form that you beheld just now, even the gods are ever
desirous of witnessing.” The Lord had already said: “The Devas and the Maharshis know
Me not; for I am their very Source.” “But, by Ananya-Bhakti I am capable of being
known,” says the Lord. When a person has Ananya Bhakti the Lord reveals Himself to
the devotee, even as He revealed Himself to Arjuna. This is a point worth remembering;
even then it is He who reveals Himself. It is only after the Lord gave Arjuna the Divya-
Chakshu or the Divine Eye was Arjuna able to behold Him. Similarly, “Dadaami
buddhi-yogam tam yena maamupayaantite”, when the aspirant is ripe for Wisdom, “I
give the Buddhi-Yoga to him and he attains Me.” Even in the crowning declaration of the
Gita: “Sarvadharmaan parityajya maamekam sharanam vraja”, the Lord has made it
abundantly clear “Aham tvaa sarva paapebhyo mokshayishyaami maa shuchah.”
“Surrender yourself wholeheartedly, unreservedly and totally to Me; that is all that you
can do; I will free you from sins. You cannot do this yourself. But I will do it, fear not.”
“You can only develop Shraddha; I will give you Jnana. You can only surrender yourself;
I will give you Liberation.” That is the final declaration of the Lord.
A beautiful truth emerges from these passages in the Gita. At one place the Lord says: “I
give the aspirant Buddhi-Yoga and he reaches Me.” At another place he says: “Go to the
Great Ones; (they are your spiritual preceptors); prostrate to them; serve them; and ask of
them; they will impart the Knowledge to you.” Reading the two together we get a
glimpse of the grand truth that Guru is God-incarnate upon earth. You can get at the
Truth, you can attain Self-realisation either by cultivating Ananya-Bhakti to the Lord in
His Transcendental Formless aspect or in His Immanent aspect as your own Guru with a
Name you can repeat, a Form on which you can meditate, a distinct personality which
you can see, touch and hear, and which can guide you, inspire you, and lead you to the
realisation of your Immortal Self.
Thus has the Lord established His complete identification with the Spiritual Preceptor,
the Guru. And the aspirant can direct his Shraddha and Bhakti either to Him in His
Formless aspect or to His Immanent Form upon earth, the Guru, and the latter is certainly
more practicable for the vast majority of the aspirants.
Guru-Bhakti and Guru-Seva terminate (if it can at all be called a termination) in Self-
realisation. You will have to go on serving the Guru. The Guru will reveal the Truth to
you when your self-surrender is complete, when the time is ripe. But that is not your
concern. Even as Arjuna prayed for the Visvarupa-Darshana and waited for the Lord to
bestow the Divya-Chakshu on him, you will have to serve, serve, and serve, and the Guru
will bestow the Knowledge on you when you are ripe for It. Some deluded aspirants
serve their Guru for some years and then give it up foolishly imagining that they have
attained Chitta-Shuddhi. They do not gain the Supreme Knowledge; they do not reach
their Goal. They, no doubt, gain some merit (Punya), but Self-realisation is not attained:
this is indeed a great loss, a great blunder.
Guru-Bhakti and Guru-Seva are like the two oars to the boat of Sadhana that takes you
across the torrential stream of Samsara. You cannot do without them until you reach the
other shore, until you attain Immortality and Eternal Bliss, until you become a
Jivanmukta. Then Guru-Bhakti itself manifests in you as Self-realisation; and Guru-Seva
becomes Lokasangraha in which you automatically engage yourself.
One who has such a Guru-Bhakti, one who has totally surrendered himself to the Guru,
one who serves the Guru wholeheartedly, knows no grief, no sorrow, no fear, no pain, no
misery, no ignorance and he instantly attains Godrealisation: for, Guru and God are one.
He attains instantaneous Knowledge and Self-Illumination. Therefore have the
Upanishads also declared: “Yasya deve para bhaktiryathaa deve tathaa gurau; Tasyaite
kathitaahyarthaah prakaashante mahaatmanah.” “One who has Supreme Devotion to
God and equal devotion to his Guru, to such a great Mahatma will the truths of the
Upanishads be clear as crystal.”
May you all shine as the embodiments of Guru-Bhakti! May you all roam about freely as
Jivanmuktas in this very birth! May God bless you all with health, long life, peace
prosperity and Kaivalya Moksha!
GURU TATTVA
Just as service done to the father or grandfather pleases the son or grandson, so also
service done to Guru pleases Mantra. Make no distinction between Guru, Mantra and
Devata. Guru is God. He should not be regarded as a mere man. The place where Guru
dwells in is Kailasa. The house in which he lives is Kashi or Banaras. The water of his
feet is Ganga herself. The Mantra uttered by his fair Mouth is the saviour Brahman
Himself.
The form of Guru is the root of Dhyana, the Lotus-Feet of Guru is the root of Pooja, the
word of Guru is the root of salvation.
Guru is the place of pilgrimage. Guru is fire. Guru is Surya. Guru is the whole world. All
places of pilgrimage in the entire universe reside in the sole of Guru’s Lotus-Feet.
Brahma, Vishnu, Siva, Parvati, Indra, all Devas, all sacred rivers are eternally seated in
the Guru’s body. Siva alone is Guru.
There is no difference between Guru and Ishta Devata. He who teaches the various forms
of Sadhana and Yoga is Shiksha Guru or the teaching Guru. Of these two he is the
supreme Guru from whom the great Mantra of Ishta Devata has been heard and learnt and
by him alone Siddhi can be attained.
If Guru is pleased, the Lord Himself is pleased; if Guru is displeased, the Lord is
displeased. Guru is grandfather to the Ishta Devata.
He who is pure in thought, word and deed, who has mastery over the senses, who has
knowledge of scriptures, who is truthful, serene and who has God-realisation is a Guru.
A man of bad character cannot be a Guru. Competent disciples are never in want of
competent Gurus. The disciple achieves results in proportion to his faith on his Guru.
It is the height of impertinence and foolishness on his part, blinded by the vanity of
worldly knowledge, to test the spiritual knowledge of the Guru.
Now the curd will not so readily mix with the water. If water is poured over it, it will sink
at the bottom. Only if the curd is beaten up vigorously, will it mix with water. Similarly,
the wise man when he gets into wicked company, does not so readily mix with the
vicious people; but if the influence is very deep, he, too, might be lost. Then, if this curd
is well churned, in Brahmamuhurta (before sunrise), you obtain butter from it. Similarly
if the wise man meditates deeply on God, during the Brahmamuhurta he gets the butter of
Self-knowledge: he becomes the butter of a Self-realised sage.
This butter can be easily thrown into water. It will not get mixed with water. And, it will
float. If the Self-realised sage comes into contact with worldly people, he will not get
lost; on the contrary, he will float happily unpolluted by worldliness. If this butter is
melted and made into ghee, and then if it is put in water, then it will impart the ghee-
flavour to the entire water; similarly, if this sage is melted by the fire of cosmic love, he
will become the ghee of a divine being whose contact purifies all and who elevates all by
his contact, and infuses his wisdom, his glory and his divinity into everyone who comes
into contact with him.
However intelligent the seeker may be, it is not possible, except in the very rare cases of
the perfected unworldly beings, for him to grasp the exact technique of meditation on the
Ideal of Attainment. Spiritual knowledge is imparted with the best result, not so much
through the precision of reason and logic, as image, art and beauty. It is the change of the
feelings of the heart and not merely of the understandings of the intellect that touches the
being of the inner man. Adhyatma Vidya is the science of the innermost essence of the
universe, and it does not come under the intellectual categories of objective discernment.
The teachings of the sages have all had the conspicuous characteristic of appealing to the
whole nature of a person, not merely to an aspect of him. The highest teachings are
accomplished in the language of the heart of man. The troubles of life are not alleviated
through flowery expressions and subtle hair splitting. The cause of sorrow is rooted in the
very make-up of the individual and not only in his superficial coatings. The inner disease
is not cured by washing simply the outer shirt. The root of illness has to be dug out.
The best performance always becomes possible when both the subject and the object
effect a conscious interaction not so much when the effort is exercised by the subject
alone. Mind is objectified universal consciousness. The conscious subject and the
conscious object are both consciousness stresses differing only in the degree of the
subtlety and the expansiveness of their condition. Each higher, subtler and more
expansive state is more potent and inclusive than the lower. No action or event is
completely subjective or completely objective in the lower limited sense of their
individuality. The truth is midway between the two. Action and reaction are the
subjective and the objective forces simultaneously working, each being intimately
connected with the other. The external and the internal are the two complementary phases
of the one whole being. There is no purpose served when there is eye to see but no light,
or, when there is light but no eye to see. The contact of both effects perceptions.
If entire individual subjectively were the truth, the individual would have been the
absolute Lord of the universe and, if the entire objectivity were the truth, no individual
could attain liberation, and freedom would be a chimera. The subject and the object have,
therefore, equal shares in determining the effect of their interaction. The internal and the
external forms of the one power of being blend together to produce an effect.
This fact well explains the wonderful process of the teacher’s imparting of knowledge to
the disciple. The transformation of the consciousness of the disciple is the joint action of
the receptive capacity and the conscious exertion of the disciple and the consciousness-
force of the teacher sending it forth. The teacher should be “a Shrotriya and a
Brahmanistha”—Mund. Up. I-2-12. The more potent spiritual energy of the teacher is
infused into the less purified mental state of the disciple which results in the dispelling of
the darkness and the enlightening of the mind of the latter. The consciousness of the
teacher enters the dark corner in the disciple who bears it with the strength of truth and
purity and receives it to the extent his mind is purged of Rajas and Tamas.
“realising that the Not-Done can never be reached through what is done, getting disgust
for the action-bound world,”
went humbly and reverentially to the Preceptor for receiving from him that knowledge
which reveals the Imperishable. And to them the glorious Teacher speaks the Knowledge
of Brahman. The disciples were “those high-souled ones who had the highest devotion to
the Supreme Being, and for their preceptor as much as for the Supreme Being.” To them
alone, it is declared, the truth becomes illumined. Uddalaka, illustrating his proposition
that only “he who has got a preceptor can know the Truth,” compares the one who is
without a spiritual guide to a blindfolded man who may miss his way and reach some
other undesirable destination due to his lack of sight. The Mundaka Upanishad says that
he who is desirous of real prosperity should worship the knower of the Self. No sophistry
of intellect is allowed to hamper the growth of the divine relation that exists between the
Guru and the Sishya.
“Even the gods had doubt as to this, for truly, it is not easy to be known; very subtle is
this matter.” Katha Up. I.21. “He is not easy to be known when told by an inferior person,
though (He may be) expounded about manifoldly; unless declared by another (who is
supremely wise), there is no way (of attaining Him); for He is inconceivably subtler than
what is very subtle, and unarguable.” (Katha Up. II. 8.) Even the proud Indra and the
great Narada become humble before their teachers; this speaks of the majestic
transcendentness of the Absolute, not knowable through easy means. How innocent and
simple was that Satyakama who said to his teacher, when asked about his parentage.
“Sire, I do not know this, of what family I am; I asked my mother. She told me in reply:
‘I begot you in my youth when I was wandering much as a servant-maid, and I, being
such, do not know this, of what family you are’”
Then, the teacher inferred that Satyakama must be a Brahmana, telling him that “a non-
Brahmana will not be able to speak thus (the truth)” and accepted him as disciple. Narada
bows down and says, “O Lord, I am in sorrow; may the Lord take me across sorrow.”
The initiation is only a matriculation of the pupil in the spiritual current but the actual
effort to soar high into the Absolute is to be exercised by him with the grace of the
preceptor through protracted “meditation which is the firm restraining of the senses, with
vigilance and non-pride for the meditative condition comes and goes.” Katha Up. VI. 11.
There is no greater error than spiritual pride. Even the state of high meditation is
transitory, it passes away quickly. Let there be no pride, no conceit, even if one may feel
that he is about to be finally liberated. The light of discrimination should always be kept
bright.
When the process of practice is perfect, there quickly comes the highest experience of the
Reality.
I shall just put before you all a few worship words, especially as today is most auspicious
to the divinity manifest as the Guru. Therefore I shall speak on Guru and Guru Kripa.
Here in this Ashram we are looking at Guru and Guru-Kripa topsy-turvy. Guru serves the
disciple; and the disciple gives instruction to the Guru and he has to obey. If this is true,
then I think we have to try to once again set right this topsy-turvy attitude.
We have been told by our scriptures that Guru-Kripa is a wonderful, mysterious factor,
that will enable the aspirants to seek and to attain the summum bonum of life, Self-
realisation, Darshan of God, Moksha or whatever it is; whether the disciple does Sadhana
or not, whether he is deserving or undeserving, the Guru-Kripa sets aside all normal laws
that operate in the spiritual self and takes one to the transcendental bliss. If we are to
believe the scriptures, we should say that besides Guru-Kripa there is nothing needed for
us to attain perfection in life.
Side by side, if this factor also is true that Guru is an Infinite Ocean of Mercy, that His
Kripa ever showers upon all seekers whether they are worthy or unworthy, whether they
are qualified or not, then by this time we must all have been already Apta-Kamas full of
Bliss. Is that so? No. We find very much to our vexation that we are caught up: ignorance
is there; illusion is there; we are deceived at every turn by our own lower self.
Wherein lies the defect? Which is the untruth? If both the above statements are true and
yet disciples are still very much earth-earthy, something else must be wrong somewhere
else. What is that something else? We don’t have the temerity to say that the scriptures
are untrue. At the same time, we do not also assert that the Guru is not compassionate, the
Guru does not shower his Kripa upon us.
If we reflect upon this some factors come up before us which are worthy of serious
consideration. Guru Kripa is undeniably a divine force that can turn even a stone into the
Infinite Satchidananda, leave alone a conscious being. There is absolutely not the least bit
of exaggeration in the statement and the fact that the Guru is always gracious. But, then,
Guru-Kripa has not only to be bestowed, not only to be given; but it has also to be
received. In receiving it, we immortalise ourselves; divinise ourselves.
Unlimited charity may be bestowed by a generous-hearted donor who calls upon all who
are in need to come and take. But not all the wealth of the world will be of any avail to an
indigent one if he will not avail himself of this great opportunity and become a receiver.
And therefore it is that the great Lord Jesus said: “Seek and it shall be found; knock and it
shall open unto you; ask and it shall be given.” It was not as there was any dearth of the
divine munificence, divine grace or Guru-Kripa. Light was not lacking; but then there
was a Law that we have to ask, we have to seek and we have to knock and having done it
we must be ready to receive it. If this is present, then Guru-Kripa is all the wonders; it
will flow into us and raise us to the highest realm of immortality, eternal light and infinite
bliss.
But, then, how can we receive it? How should we conduct ourselves if we are to be ready
to receive this Grace? By discipleship. For, the question of Guru and Guru-Kripa arises
only for the disciple. For such as are not of the category named disciple, it is not denied
that mercy, compassion, grace and Ashirvad will not be given; but not Guru-Kripa. When
I say Guru-Kripa, it is something special, something mysterious, something that bestows
not anything merely of this earth, but gives the Highest Thing for which human life is
there for. For a devotee may get the Ashirvad of a saint, the Kripa of a saint. He may also
be blessed. He may also partake of the power of his compassion. But, for the attainment
of the gift of Guru-Kripa, we have first to be disciples. Then alone have we taken the first
step to qualify to become a proper recipient.
How is it that one may be a disciple? It is not the Guru that accepts the disciple; but the
disciple has to first accept the Guru. If the disciple has first of all to render himself the
Sishya, it is immaterial whether the Guru says “Yes, you are my Sishya” or does not; he
becomes deserving of and a rightful claimant to Guru-Kripa.
We have to understand what the sacred thing disciple, constitutes. In asmuchas Guru-
Kripa takes us to the Highest State, discipleship is qualifying ourselves to receive that
highest state or the realisation of ourselves as Satchidananda. Therefore, first of all, we
have to feel that our present state is something which is not part of our real nature, which
is something undesirable, something which we have to get rid of, and that then alone we
shall have peace, happiness. Let us reflect and analyse: how many of us have got this
feeling. When I say our present state, I mean our present state as the Jiva, Spirit
enmeshed in a very agonising cage of flesh and bone. How many of us feel that we are in
a cage stifled, not able to breathe freely, and sincerely wish to break out of this cage? If
we have this feeling, then we are trying to grow into discipleship. Then we can approach
the Freed One; for the Guru is the Freed One and One capable of freeing us also. If we
feel this pain and this agony of Jivatva, then we approach this Freed One and pray to him:
“Oh, free us from this body.” This prayer may not be expressed or articulated; but this
prayer must ever be recited from the innermost core of our being, every moment of our
life. Then alone can we expect Guru-Kripa. If this pain and agony are not there, it is
worthwhile trying to generate them. But, such is the covering wall of dark Maya that we
are perfectly satisfied with our position! To feel the necessity of Mukti, Freedom, Divine
Consciousness of the Higher Spiritual Life, we should resort to Satsanga, to study of
scriptures, and we should paint vividly before our mental eye, the wretchedness of human
life on earth. These things will generate Mumukshutva. Mumukshutva is the first step if
we have even to think of Guru-Kripa. If we do not have this fiery Mumukshutva, let us
not think of Guru-Kripa. Let us not talk about Guru-Kripa. We are unworthy.
First of all acquire this Mumukshutva. Then we have to serve the Guru. Service is that
mysterious something which pulls down the barrier that stands between us and the
influence of Guru Kripa. For, if we have to be the proper receivers, it is service that
removes the obstacles to this Bhava of the receiver. Ego is the greatest barrier. Our old
set of self-conceit, preconceived notions, these form another formidable second barrier.
For all this service is the effective barrier-breaker.
What is service of the Guru? Service of the Guru is to try our level best to carry out his
Upadesh. Carry out the teachings of the Guru. Upon his sublime instructions we have to
mould our life. We should also try to mould ourselves into that pattern which he himself
is a visible ideal of. What is the secret of carrying out the instructions of the Guru to our
humble best; it is a willing obedience of spirit. That is the most important thing.
Readiness to bow completely down to earth. Accept him as the leader and obey him. This
obedience should be assiduously cultivated: for, every aspect of our old nature, of our
lower nature, our mental part, our Indriya, Antahkarana, try to see that we are prevented
from developing this spirit of obedience because every time we move towards this
attitude of obedience, the prompting will come from our old habit from our preconceived
notions, “Let us go the way to which we have been accustomed.” This instinct of ages has
to be overcome and broken down. There must be joy in obedience to the Guru and there
should be a real craving in the spirit that “ I should obey.” To be a disciple, you should
obey even in dream; the idea of doing anything which is contrary to the spirit of the
Guru’s Upadesh should never arise in our consciousness. Day and night our Sadhana
should be to cultivate this attitude to perfection. If this is done, we are sufficiently on the
way to qualify ourselves to receive Guru-Kripa. This is the external part of the Sadhana.
Inwardly we have also to break down the old set of ideas which somehow or other has
crept into us regarding the Guru, His Grace and its functions; what is GuruKripa and its
function. It is a hard task. But this task has to be done. Because, to the disciple, the nature
of the Guru is not human. We should be blind completely to the human side of the Guru
and we should be conscious only of the divinity that he is. Then alone will we be able to
partake of this Kripa which will transform us from the lower human into the
transcendental divine. Our relationship with the Guru is purely divine, purely spiritual;
and as long as we have not completely rubbed out the least vestige of human relationship
with the Guru, we shall not be able to enter into the divine spiritual relation with the
Guru. For being our Guru, we expect that he should relieve us of small troubles, bodily
ills, financial difficulties, domestic problems, little paltry matters of this earthly life. We
will get all that if we pray to the Guru. But that is all that you will get; nothing beyond
that! No, that mysterious lofty thing called Guru Kripa—that will not flow into us.
Therefore, first of all we shall try to efface all human relationships with the Guru. For
that, subjectively, we have to work out an inner transformation; until that is done, his
divine nature will not become fully revealed to us. As long as we consider ourselves to be
human beings, earthly beings with all the wants, limitations and weaknesses of earthly
beings, we cannot fully enter into the awareness of the Guru in his absolute, divine
essence. Therefore, our Sadhana should be to generate the divine consciousness and shed
off first our human consciousness. If we begin to live here as divine beings with a divine
destiny, then gradually the Guru-Kripa and the divine aspect of the Guru will begin to
manifest, and we shall begin to partake of the Guru-Kripa.
We have to make the start. Even in this prayer to the Guru will make our task easy. From
the very beginning to the very climax, all have to be got from the divine source. Until we
make ourselves fit and generate the divine consciousness that we are not the human
beings, but we are souls in bondage who only need a little transforming touch of Guru-
Kripa, we will not be able to fully make use of the Guru as the divine being.
To illustrate this point: A prince who has lost his heritage does not know that he is a
prince, happens in his wanderings to stand before his father’s palace, being cowed down
in the consciousness of a beggar. What is the maximum he will ask? He will ask: Give
me shelter for night, give me food for the day. And, that is what he will get. Supposing
this very prince is made to realise: ‘You are the heir to the kingdom’; then he will
demand the whole kingdom. He will not demand food and shelter. He will go up to the
king and say: O father! Make me king. Give me my heritage.
Similarly, we have first of all to develop in us the consciousness that we are immortal
beings, we are in essence Satchidananda. Then we can demand that Satchidananda-
consciousness from Guru and Guru will be able to give.
Ultimately, we have to take consideration of one more factor. Even if someone were to
tell the prince that he is a prince and he is to go to his father and demand the heritage,
perhaps, if he is a minor, the king may say: All right, give him a palace, and he will
become entitled to his heritage, the kingdom, when he attains majority. Even so, there
may be certain inner qualifications which are necessary for the full and effective
reception of divine grace; until that is attained by the disciple, he will have to wait.
Therefore, even after having seemingly attained all the qualifications of the ideal disciple,
we have to wait in humility and in patience. We cannot arrogate to ourselves a perfection
which is only visible to the discerning vision of a divine light. Patience and humility in
the spiritual realm may have to extend over a period of a decade. We have to wait as a
dog at the doorstep of the Guru for a whole lifetime, if need be. There is no loss here. For
the goal is immortal life, freedom.
If we have become willing servants and willing obedient disciples, then it is the natural
law that Guru Kripa will flow into us unasked. But, let us not commit the mistake of
dictating to the Guru how his Kripa should flow into us. For, we have within ourselves
desires, our own old traits and ambitions, our own ideas of what is good and bad, what is
pleasant and unpleasant, desirable and undesirable; and we want Guru Kripa to
conveniently adjust and adapt itself to our needs and fancies. Guru-Kripa may come in an
unpleasant form. It may come in the form of a series of disappointments. We may think
that Guru has not bestowed his Kripa upon us; but, that disappointment itself will be his
Kripa! Many things may be seemingly good and pleasant; but it may be heartful to our
own spirit; and that the Guru alone can perceive and judge. As a fond careful mother, he
may deny us that desire, by subjecting us to seeming cruel disappointments. But it will be
the greatest manifestation of Guru-Kripa, meant to remove all the obstacles and dangers
that are on our path, and to take us nearer and nearer to the consciousness of
Satchidananda. We are not fit to judge whether we are ready to receive Guru-Kripa or not
and what form it would take.
The best thing is to humbly leave everything to the Guru. “I do not know whether I am
even a disciple or not. Therefore O Ocean of Mercy and Compassion, pray, make me a
proper disciple. Generate in me that Mumukshutva which makes me a disciple and give
me the spirit of willing obedience. Help me in trying to follow thy instructions. Help me
in trying to mould myself upon the pattern set up by thee”—this must be our constant
prayer. And, by this alone shall we be able to draw the Kripa of our Guru and make our
life fruitful. And the perfect way of praying is trying out best to be real disciples.
WORSHIP OF THE DIVINE
Swami Chidanandaji’s Guru-Purnima speech
We are indeed thrice blessed today. Already we are extremely blessed in that in this life
itself we have had the unique and indescribable good fortune of having attained to the
Lotus-Feet of our divine master Sadgurudev Sri Swami Sivanandaji,—a blessing whose
magnitude is hardly realised even by us. Whether we know it or not, we have been so
fortunate in having come to be his disciples that I feel that it is a great fortune that even
the gods envy.
In this blessed life of ours at his feet, trying to follow in his footsteps today we are even
more blessed because we have had a special chance of offering our adorations and
worship to him in an intimate and personal way and receiving his blessings upon this
most auspicious day of the Guru Purnima.
To be near him, living under his benign guidance, is such a great blessing that it is given
only to one in a million among mortals, out of great merit done in countless past lives.
Therefore, it is a great responsibility placed upon us to strive to realise the full meaning
of this Vara Daana that has been bestowed upon us by the Lord and strive our sincere
best to prove ourselves worthy of this divine Grace.
As a part of the Puja and the adoring worship which we offer to his divine feet this day, a
few words upon this subject of worship of the Divine are being spoken.
This is a day of Puja. It is called Vyasa Puja or Guru Puja. As it happens to fall on a
Purnima day, it is also called Guru Purnima or Vyasa Purnima. It is a day of very solemn,
significant and exalted worship.
At a later time, man created fanciful objects and endowed them with some qualities and a
glorified personality with his own imagination and tried to worship these objects—
anything beautiful, even smooth stones.
There are still others who conceive of this deity, not as an objectified physical material
form; but they regard it as being enshrined in their own hearts, with form, perhaps, but
yet as seated in the heart-lotus. They sit in silence and try to do Manasic Puja.
There are yet others who, with their mystic sense opened up, dispense with the elaborate
ritual even in their Manasic Puja. Their worship, consists of the mere repetition of the
Divine Name. That itself, they feel, is a sufficient and a comprehensive, integral worship.
They conceive it to be an even higher form than elaborate worship with different Angas.
Japa is a much simpler and more direct form of worship.
The worship of others takes a still higher form where even the Japa is eliminated and they
concentrate upon Divinity alone—to think of It continuously in an unbroken stream of
remembrance. They find delight in this sort of worship alone.
Still higher up in the ladder of evolution, the sages declare that the best form of worship
is direct perception of the Divinity, in Samadhi, to rise beyond the mind (and, therefore,
concentration and meditation which are after all mental processes), to go into the supra
mental state of intuition, and to be intensely conscious of the Deity while in direct
communion with It.
Thus we have numerous conceptions of the selfsame processes of offering our adoration,
love, reverence and worship to the Supreme Being from the most externalised one to the
highest subtle purely subjective type, culminating in the transcendental worship of direct
perception or Samadhi. What is the type of worship that we, as disciples at the feet of a
Sat-Guru, should try to offer unto him? How is our worship of the Guru classified? What
is the peculiarity of the worship offered by the individual soul to the enlightened soul, so
that through this worship the bound individual soul may draw the strength of the
enlightened soul, draw the Grace of the Supreme Satchidananda and attain release from
birth and death?
I shall remind you of two statements: (1) Devo Bhutwaa Devam Aaaraadhayet—having
become God one should worship the Deity, having become divine one should worship
divinity: (2) Brahmavid Brahmaiva Bhavati—One who realises the Supreme Being
himself becomes That. If we are to offer our adoration and worship to the Sat-Guru in the
most effective and worthy manner, then we have to consciously, earnestly and
determinately strive to the best of our ability to make ourselves into the same nature as he
is. It is the great duty of every disciple to do all that he can to try his utmost to develop
within himself those divine qualities which shine in all their resplendence through the
spiritual personality of the divine master. This is the highest form of Sadhana—the one
important and most effective form of Sadhana, which the great monk Thomas A. Kempis
of Europe has referred to when he speaks about the imitation of Christ. He was a follower
of Jesus the Christ and he has given a memorable work of worshipping and following the
teachings of Jesus in the form of the Imitation of Christ.
It is this endeavour to grow into the likeness of the idealistic personality of the Sat-Guru
in all its beautiful aspects which is the first and foremost duty of the disciple-Sadhana. To
the extent to which we succeed through our sincerity, humility, constant unbroken
endeavour in thus gradually transforming ourselves into the master’s divine personality,
to that extent will we be worthy of worshipping the master. Sat-Guru Puja can best be
done by our trying to image within ourselves the Sat-Guru Swaroopa. All the Divya-
Sadgunas that emanate as the fragrance of the Guru’s personality must become a part and
parcel of our struggling personality. Then alone will we approach that state when we will
be fit to offer our adorations to the Sat-Guru.
This is done because of the law that he whom we worship and through such worship
realise, that we ourselves become. Even so, one who worships and realises the true glory
of an illumined and emancipated personality such as the divine Sat-Guru is, himself in
turn becomes illumined and emancipated. We know that the very aim of our discipleship,
the very purpose of spiritual life is to attain illumination and attain eternal emancipation
from birth and death. Therefore, we must strive our sincere best to live this law. Through
making ourselves by devout emulation and imitation fit to worship the divine master, we
must worship him. And thus, through that worship we should realise him. And, realising
him we shall for ever be free and attain to the glorious state of Jivanmukti which is
exemplified in the living personality of the divine master.
This Guru Puja, this worship of the Divine Master, is on a par with the Supreme type of
worship with direct perception in Samadhi already referred to. For the Guru is actually
God himself in visible manifest form. The Sat-Guru is not merely like God, but HE IS
God. “Guruh saakshaat Para Brahma” is the great and deeply significant Truth. The
correct grasp of this truth is the key to real discipleship. This correct grasp and
understanding comes to the seeker mainly through Guru-Kripa or the Grace of the
Divinity that is the Satguru. To draw down this indispensable grace is the central purpose
and aim of adoration and worship of the Master. Guru Puja is for Guru-Kripa by which
alone it becomes possible for you to realise the Guru as Supreme Akhanda Ekarasa
Satchidananda. Guru Puja is, therefore, Para Puja. It is the Highest Worship of the
Supreme Being direct and face to face. Such worship is the surest means to Illumination.
This is the Truth.
We pray to the great Adi Gurus and the divine feet of Sat-Gurudev that they may give us
the necessary strength, the illumination and the inspiration to day by day grow more and
more into his divine likeness. We pray that he may bless us to thus make ourselves fit for
his worship and through his worship, to attain illumination. May the blessings of Sat
Guru be upon you all. And, let us hope that in this very life, we may fulfil the supreme
purpose of this rare and precious human birth, and attain Self-realisation. May we make
the best use of this unique blessed opportunity that has been given to us in the form of
discipleship to Sat Guru Bhagavan Sri Swami Sivanandaji Maharaj and thus may our life
soon flower into bliss, illumination and blessedness.
INVITATION
11. Jagad-Guru: World preceptor (one whose teachings can be followed universally).
12. Sat-Guru: Real, not false or pseudo, preceptor; or one knowing the Truth.
15. Ananta-Guru: Infinite preceptor—one who is beyond all limitations, being the very
embodiment of Brahman.
30. Guru-Mantra Japa: The repetition of the mystic formula given by or pertaining to
the preceptor.
32. Guru-Prasada: Anything (sweets, etc.) tangible through which the grace of Guru is
transmitted to the disciples.
40. Guru-sishya Samadhana: The sacred relation between the disciple (s) and
preceptor.
44. Guru-ucchishta: The leaving of a preceptor, which are believed to be purifying the
mind of the eater.
55. Guru-gita: A song (short or long) depicting the nature and deeds of a preceptor.
56. Guru-dwara: A temple of the Sikhs (Lit. The gateway leading to the preceptor or
Reality).
57. Guru mukhi Sadhana: Spiritual practices carried on under the guidance of a
preceptor.
58. Guru-poornima: The sacred full-moon day dedicated to the worship all the
preceptors.
66. Guru padarenu: The sand particle (s) sticking to or under the feet of the preceptor.
67. Guru-charanadasa: A servant of the feet of the preceptor—greatly devoted.
70. Guru-charana raja: Dust or tiny particles under the feet of Guru.
79. Guru ashtottara sata namavali: A list of 108 epithets of the preceptor.
83. Guru-Bhakti Yoga: The unification or identification of the finite soul with the
infinite Spirit achieved through devotion to the preceptor.
84. Guru-Seva Yoga: The unification or identification of the finite soul with the infinite
Spirit achieved through service to the preceptor.
86. Gurunatha: Lord Guru—Preceptor who is the support or the lord to his followers.
87. Guru-dakshina: Offering of anything (as, fruits, cloths, etc.) to the Guru as a token
of one’s gratitude & love.
88. Guru-upasana: Meditation on or the worship of the preceptor.
94. Guru-Bhakti prabhava: The mighty power manifesting itself (in the disciple) as a
result of devotion to preceptor.
98. Guru-seva vrata dhari: One who has endowed or pledged himself to the service of
the preceptor.
103. Guru seva agra ganya: The foremost among the attendants of the Guru.
104. Guru-aajnaanukari: One who carries out the behests of the preceptor.
109. Brahma-Vidya Guru: Preceptor who imparts the knowledge of the highest Truth.
112. Gurvakaara-Vritti: A mental modification which has taken the form of the
preceptor.
118. Guru-Tattva: The characteristic nature of the Guru; or the Entity or the essential
Principle in Guru.
122. Guru-seva-dhurandhara: An adept who bears the brunt of the service to the Guru.
123. Guru-Sishya Samvada: The dialogue between the disciple and his Guru.
OM Sahanaavavatu
Saha nau bhunaktu
Saha veeryam karavaavahai
Tejasvinaavadheetamastu
Maa vidvishaavahai
OM Shantih Shantih Shantih!
Kaarpanyadoshopahatasvabhaavah
Pricchaami tvaam dharmasammudhachetaah;
Yacchreyah syaannischitam broohi tanme
Sishyaste’ham saadhi maam tvaam prapannam.