The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna
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  • The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna
  • FOREWORD
  • PREFACE
  • THE RECORDER OF THE GOSPEL
  • INTRODUCTION
    • BOYHOOD
    • COMING TO CALCUTTA
    • BREAD-WINNING EDUCATION
    • KALI TEMPLE AT DAKSHINESWAR
    • SIVA
    • RADHAKANTA
    • KALI
    • SRI RAMAKRISHNA AS A PRIEST
    • THE FIRST VISION OF KALI
    • GOD-INTOXICATED STATE
    • HALADHARI
    • MARRIAGE AND AFTER
    • THE BRAHMANI
    • TANTRA
    • VAISHNAVA DISCIPLINES
    • RAMLALA
    • IN COMMUNION WITH THE DIVINE BELOVED
    • VEDANTA
    • TOTAPURI
    • KALI AND MAYA
    • TOTAPURI'S LESSON
    • COMPANY OF HOLY MEN AND DEVOTEES
    • ISLAM
    • CHRISTIANITY
    • ATTITUDE TOWARD DIFFERENT RELIGIONS
    • PILGRIMAGE
    • RELATION WITH HIS WIFE
    • THE "EGO" OF THE MASTER
    • SUMMARY OF THE MASTER'S SPIRITUAL EXPERIENCES
    • BRAHMO SAMAJ
    • ARYA SAMAJ
    • KESHAB CHANDRA SEN
    • OTHER BRAHMO LEADERS
    • THE MASTER'S YEARNING FOR HIS OWN DEVOTEES
    • THE MASTER'S METHOD OF TEACHING
    • HOUSEHOLDER DEVOTEES
    • FUTURE MONKS
    • RAM AND MANOMOHAN
    • SURENDRA
    • KEDAR
    • HARISH
    • BHAVANATH
    • BALARAM BOSE
    • MAHENDRA OR M.
    • NAG MAHASHAY
    • GIRISH GHOSH
    • PURNA
    • MAHIMACHARAN AND PRATAP HAZRA
    • SOME NOTED MEN
    • KRISTODAS PAL
    • WOMAN DEVOTEES
      • GOPAL MA
    • MONASTIC DISCIPLES
      • LATU
      • RAKHAL
      • THE ELDER GOPAL
      • NARENDRA
      • TARAK
      • BABURAM
      • NIRANJAN
      • JOGINDRA
      • SASHI AND SARAT
      • HARINATH
      • GANGADHAR
      • HARIPRASANNA
      • KALI
      • SUBODH
      • SARADA AND TULASI
    • THE MARCH OF EVENTS
    • INJURY TO THE MASTER'S ARM
    • BEGINNING OF HIS ILLNESS
    • SYAMPUKUR
    • LAST DAYS AT COSSIPORE
    • MAHASAMADHI
  • MASTER AND DISCIPLE
  • IN THE COMPANY OF DEVOTEES
  • VISIT TO VIDYASAGAR
  • ADVICE TO HOUSEHOLDERS
  • THE MASTER AND KESHAB
  • THE MASTER WITH THE BRAHMO DEVOTEES (I)
  • THE MASTER AND VIJAY GOSWAMI
  • THE MASTER'S BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION AT DAKSHINESWAR
  • ADVICE TO THE BRAHMOS
  • THE MASTER WITH THE BRAHMO DEVOTEES (II)
  • WITH THE DEVOTEES AT DAKSHINESWAR (I)
  • THE FESTIVAL AT PANIHATI
  • THE MASTER AND M.
  • INSTRUCTION TO VAISHNAVAS AND BRAHMOS
  • LAST VISIT TO KESHAB
  • WITH THE DEVOTEES AT DAKSHINESWAR (II)
  • M. AT DAKSHINESWAR (I)
  • M. AT DAKSHINESWAR (II)
  • THE MASTER AND HIS INJURED ARM
  • RULES FOR HOUSEHOLDERS AND MONKS
  • A DAY AT DAKSHINESWAR
  • ADVICE TO AN ACTOR
  • FESTIVAL AT SURENDRA'S HOUSE
  • PUNDIT SHASHADHAR
  • ADVICE TO PUNDIT SHASHADHAR
  • FESTIVAL AT ADHAR'S HOUSE
  • AT DAKSHINESWAR
  • AT THE STAR THEATRE (I)
  • THE DURGA PUJA FESTIVAL
  • THE MASTER IN VARIOUS MOODS
  • ADVICE TO ISHAN
  • VISIT TO THE SINTHI BRAHMO SAMAJ
  • WITH VARIOUS DEVOTEES
  • BANKIM CHANDRA
  • AT THE STAR THEATRE (II)
  • THE MASTER'S BIRTHDAY
  • THE MASTER AND NARENDRA
  • WITH THE DEVOTEES IN CALCUTTA
  • THE MASTER'S REMINISCENCES
  • THE MASTER AT THE HOUSES OF BALARAM AND GIRISH
  • AT RAM'S HOUSE
  • CAR FESTIVAL AT BALARAM'S HOUSE
  • VISIT TO NANDA BOSE'S HOUSE
  • THE MASTER ON HIMSELF AND HIS EXPERIENCES
  • SRI RAMAKRISHNA AT SYAMPUKUR
  • THE MASTER AND DR. SARKAR
  • THE MASTER'S TRAINING OF HIS DISCIPLES
  • IN THE COMPANY OF DEVOTEES AT SYAMPUKUR
  • THE MASTER AT COSSIPORE
  • THE MASTER AND BUDDHA
  • THE MASTER'S LOVE FOR HIS DEVOTEES
  • AFTER THE PASSING AWAY
  • WITH KESHAB AT DAKSHINESWAR
  • Appendix B - A LETTER
  • A CHRONOLOGY OF SRI RAMAKRISHNA'S LIFE
  • GLOSSARY
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  1. INTRODUCTION

VAISHNAVA DISCIPLINES

After completing the Tantrik sadhana Sri Ramakrishna followed the Brahmani in the disciplines of Vaishnavism. The Vaishnavas are worshippers of Vishnu, the "All-pervading", the Supreme God, who is also known as Hari and Narayana. Of Vishnu's various Incarnations the two with the largest number of followers are Rama and Krishna.

Vaishnavism is exclusively a religion of bhakti. Bhakti is intense love of God, attachment to Him alone; it is of the nature of bliss and bestows upon the lover immortality and liberation. God, according to Vaishnavism, cannot be realized through logic or reason; and, without bhakti, all penances, austerities and rites are futile. Man cannot realize God by self-exertion alone. For the vision of God His grace is absolutely necessary, and this grace is felt by the pure of heart. The mind is to be purified through bhakti. The pure mind then remains for ever immersed in the ecstasy of God-vision. It is the cultivation of this divine love that is the chief concern of the Vaishnava religion.

There are three kinds of formal devotion: tamasic, rajasic, and sattvic. If a person, while showing devotion, to God, is actuated by malevolence, arrogance, jealousy, or anger, then his devotion is tamasic, since it is influenced by tamas, the quality of inertia. If he worships God from a desire for fame or wealth, or from any other worldly ambition, then his devotion is rajasic, since it is influenced by rajas, the quality of activity. But if a person loves God without any thought of material gain, if he performs his duties to please God alone and maintains toward all created beings the attitude of friendship, then his devotion is called sattvic, since it is influenced by sattva, the quality of harmony. But the highest devotion transcends the three gunas, or qualities, being a spontaneous, uninterrupted inclination of the mind toward God, the Inner Soul of all beings; and it wells up in the heart of a true devotee as soon as he hears the name of God or mention of God's attributes. A devotee possessed of this love would not accept the happiness of heaven if it were offered him. His one desire is to love God under all conditions — in pleasure and pain, life and death, honour and dishonour, prosperity and adversity.

There are two stages of bhakti. The first is known as vaidhi-bhakti, or love of God qualified by scriptural injunctions. For the devotees of this stage are prescribed regular and methodical worship, hymns, prayers, the repetition of God's name, and the chanting of His glories. This lower bhakti in course of time matures into para-bhakti, or supreme devotion, known also as prema, the most intense form of divine love. Divine love is an end in itself. It exists potentially in all human hearts, but in the case of bound creatures it is misdirected to earthly objects.

To develop the devotee's love for God, Vaishnavism humanizes God. God is to be regarded as the devotee's Parent, Master, Friend, Child, Husband, or Sweetheart, each succeeding relationship representing an intensification of love. These bhavas, or attitudes toward God, are known as santa, dasya, sakhya, vatsalya, and madhur. The rishis of the Vedas, Hanuman, the cow-herd boys of Vrindavan, Rama's mother Kausalya, and Radhika, Krishna's sweetheart, exhibited, respectively, the most perfect examples of these forms. In the ascending scale the-glories of God are gradually forgotten and the devotee realizes more and more the intimacy of divine communion. Finally he regards himself as the mistress of his Beloved, and no artificial barrier remains to separate him from his Ideal. No social or moral obligation can bind to the earth his soaring spirit. He experiences perfect union with the Godhead. Unlike the Vedantist, who strives to transcend all varieties of the subject-object relationship, a devotee of the Vaishnava path wishes to retain both his own individuality and the personality of God. To him God is not an intangible Absolute, but the Purushottama, the Supreme Person.

While practising the discipline of the madhur bhava, the male devotee often regards himself as a woman, in order to develop the most intense form of love for Sri Krishna, the only purusha, or man, in the universe. This assumption of the attitude of the opposite sex has a deep psychological significance. It is a matter of common experience that an idea may be cultivated to such an intense degree that every idea alien to it is driven from the mind. This peculiarity of the mind may be utilized for the subjugation of the lower desires and the development of the spiritual nature. Now, the idea which is the basis of all desires and passions in a man is the conviction of his indissoluble association with a male body. If he can inoculate himself thoroughly with the idea that he is a woman, he can get rid of the desires peculiar to his male body. Again, the idea that he is a woman may in turn be made to give way to another higher idea, namely, that he is neither man nor woman, but the Impersonal Spirit. The Impersonal Spirit alone can enjoy real communion with the Impersonal God. Hence the highest est realization of the Vaishnava draws close to the transcendental experience of the Vedantist.

A beautiful expression of the Vaishnava worship of God through love is to be found in the Vrindavan episode of the Bhagavata. The gopis, or milk-maids, of Vrindavan regarded the six-year-old Krishna as their Beloved. They sought no personal gain or happiness from this love. They surrendered to Krishna their bodies, minds, and souls. Of all the gopis, Radhika, or Radha, because of her intense love for Him, was the closest to Krishna. She manifested mahabhava and was united with her Beloved. This union represents, through sensuous language, a supersensuous experience.

Sri Chaitanya, also known as Gauranga, Gora, or Nimai, born in Bengal in 1485 and regarded as an Incarnation of God, is a great prophet of the Vaishnava religion. Chaitanya declared the chanting of God's name to be the most efficacious spiritual discipline for the Kaliyuga.

Sri Ramakrishna, as the monkey Hanuman, had already worshipped God as his Master. Through his devotion to Kali he had worshipped God as his Mother. He was now to take up the other relationships prescribed by the Vaishnava scriptures.

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