Bhakti Yoga
Vivekananda described Bhakti Yoga as the path of divine love, where the devotee cultivates an intense, personal relationship with God that transcends all ritual and dogma. He taught that true devotion is not born of fear or desire for reward, but springs from the soul's innate longing to reunite with its source, culminating in Para Bhakti — supreme love that sees the Divine in all beings. Drawing on the Narada Bhakti Sutras and the lives of great mystics, he showed that Bhakti is both the easiest and the most natural of the four yogas.
Citas clave sobre Bhakti Yoga
“The idea of a Personal God has obtained in almost every religion, except a very few”
— Volume 2, Bhakti or Devotion
“Weakness has got to go before a man dares to become a Vedantist, and we know how difficult that is”
— Volume 3, Bhakti
“CHAPTER X CONCLUSION When this highest ideal of love is reached, philosophy is thrown away; who will then care for it”
— Volume 3, Conclusion
Obras sobre Bhakti Yoga
Bhakti or Devotion
Bhakti or Devotion
5,795 palabras
23 min de lectura
Bhakti
Lectures from Colombo to Almora
2,795 palabras
11 min de lectura
Conclusion
Para-Bhakti or Supreme Devotion
560 palabras
2 min de lectura
Definition of Bhakti
Bhakti-Yoga
1,895 palabras
8 min de lectura
Human Representations of the Divine Ideal of Love
Para-Bhakti or Supreme Devotion
2,316 palabras
9 min de lectura
Incarnate Teachers and Incarnation
Bhakti-Yoga
1,076 palabras
4 min de lectura
Qualifications of the Aspirant and the Teacher
Bhakti-Yoga
1,796 palabras
7 min de lectura
Spiritual Realisation, the aim of Bhakti-Yoga
Bhakti-Yoga
782 palabras
3 min de lectura
The Bhakta's Renunciation Results from Love
Para-Bhakti or Supreme Devotion
1,358 palabras
5 min de lectura
The Chosen Ideal
Bhakti-Yoga
914 palabras
4 min de lectura
The Forms of Love — Manifestation
Para-Bhakti or Supreme Devotion
658 palabras
3 min de lectura
The God of Love is His Own Proof
Para-Bhakti or Supreme Devotion
744 palabras
3 min de lectura
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