NAVA-VIDHA-BHAKTI
Devotion to God is developed in nine different ways. It is
supreme attacment to God through a Bhava predominant in the
devotee. Intense love is the common factor in all the nine modes.
Exclusive love for God is expressed through various methods. All
Bhaktas of this type are above the formalities of the world. They
are untouched by the laws of human Dharma and are out and out
concerned with God.
Good conduct which is in accordance with perfect moral law is an
auxiliary to pure Bhakti and it follows the true Bhakta wherever he
goes. One cannot develop true devotion to God if he is crooked in
his heart, if he has got objects of love in this world, if he is
tempted by charming worldly things, if he wishes to take care of
his wife, children and relatives, if he wishes to feed his body
well, if he wishes to earn a great name in the world, if he wants
to establish a permanent fame on earth, if he does not like to part
with the alluring contents of the world. Perfect detachment from
all objects is a preliminary to real devotion. Vairagya is the
product of real love for God. One who has love for the world cannot
have love for God. Where there is Kama, there cannot be Rama and
where there is Rama there cannot be Kama. Love for the world and
love for God are diametrically opposite things. One has to be
renounced for the attainment of the other. This renunciation can be
acquired through the nine forms of Bhakti.
In the Srimad-Bhagavata and the Vishnu Purana it is told that
the nine forms of Bhakti are
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Sravana (hearing of God's Lilas and stories),
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Kirtana (singing of His glories),
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Smarana (remembrance of His name and presence),
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Padasevana (service of His feet),
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Archana (worship of God),
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Vandana (prostration to Lord),
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Dasya (cultivating the Bhava of a servant with
God),
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Sakhya (cultivation of the friend-Bhava) and
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Atmanivedana (complete surrender of the self).
A devotee can practice any method of Bhakti which suits him
best. Through that he will attain Divine illumination.
Sravana is hearing of Lord's Lilas. Sravana includes
hearing of God's virtues, glories, sports and stories connected
with His divine Name and Form. The devotee gets absorbed in the
hearing of Divine stories and his mind merges in the thought of
divinity; it cannot think of undivine things. The mind loses, as it
were, its charm for the world. The devotee remembers God only even
in dream.
The devotee should sit before a learned teacher who is a great
saint and hear Divine stories. He should hear them with a sincere
heart devoid of the sense of criticism or fault-finding. The
devotee should try his best to live in the ideals preached in the
scriptures.
One cannot attain Sravana-Bhakti without the company of saints
or wise men. Mere reading for oneself is not of much use. Doubts
will crop up. They cannot be solved by oneself easily. An
experienced man is necessary to instruct the devotee in the right
path.
King Parikshit attained Liberation through Sravana. He heard the
glories of God from Suka Maharishi. His heart was purified. He
attained the Abode of Lord Vishnu in Vaikuntha. He became liberated
and enjoyed the Supreme Bliss.
Kirtana is singing of Lord's glories. The devotee is
thrilled with Divine Emotion. He loses himself in the love of God.
He gets horripilation in the body due to extreme love for God. He
weeps in the middle when thinking of the glory of God. His voice
becomes choked, and he flies into a state of Divine Bhava. The
devotee is ever engaged in Japa of the Lord's Name and in
describing His glories to one and all. Wherever he goes he begins
to sing and praise God. He requests all to join his Kirtana. He
sings and dances in ecstasy. He makes others also dance.
Smarana is remembrance of the Lord at all times. This is
unbroken memory of the Name and Form of the Lord. The mind does not
think of any object of the world, but is ever engrossed in thinking
of the glorious Lord alone. The mind meditates on what is heard
about the glories of God and His virtues, Names, etc., and forgets
even the body and contents itself in the remembrance of God, just
as Dhruva or Prahlada did. Even Japa is only remembrance of God and
comes under this category of Bhakti. Remembrance also includes
hearing of stories pertaining to God at all times, talking of God,
teaching to others what pertains to God, meditation on the
attributes of God, etc. Remembrance has no particular time. God is
to be remembered at all times without break, so long as one has got
his consciousness intact.
Padasevana is serving the Lord's Feet. Actually this can
be done only by Lakshmi or Parvati. No mortal being has got the
fortune to practice this method of Bhakti, for the Lord is not
visible to the physical eyes. But it is possible to serve the image
of God in idols and better still, taking the whole humanity as God.
This is Padasevana. Padasevana is service of the sick. Padasevana
is service of the whole humanity at large. The whole universe is
only Virat-Swarupa. Service of the world is service of the
Lord.
Archana is worship of the Lord. Worship can be done
either through an image or a picture or even a mental form. The
image should be one appealing to the mind of the worshipper.
Worship can be done either with external materials or merely
through an internal Bhava or strong feeling. The latter one is an
advanced form of worship which only men of purified intellect can
do. The purpose of worship is to please the Lord, to purify the
heart through surrender of the ego and love of God.
Vandana is prayer and prostration. Humble prostration
touching the earth with the eight limbs of the body
(Sashtanga-Namaskara), with faith and reverence, before a form of
God, or prostration to all beings knowing them to be the forms of
the One God, and getting absorbed in the Divine Love of the Lord is
termed prostration to God or Vandana.
The ego or Ahamkara is effaced out completely through devout
prayer and prostration to God. Divine grace descends upon the
devotee and man becomes God.
Dasya Bhakti is the love of God through
servant-sentiment. To serve God and carry out His wishes, realizing
His virtues, nature, mystery and glory, considering oneself as a
slave of God, the Supreme Master, is Dasya Bhakti.
Serving and worshipping the Murtis in temples, sweeping the
temple premises, meditating on God and mentally serving Him like a
slave, serving the saints and the sages, serving the devotees of
God, serving poor and sick people who are forms of God, is also
included in Dasya-Bhakti.
To follow the words of the scriptures, to act according to the
injunctions of the Vedas, considering them to be direct words of
God, is Dasya Bhakti. Association with and service of
love-intoxicated devotees and service of those who have knowledge
of God is Dasya Bhakti. The purpose behind Dasya Bhakti is to be
ever with God in order to offer service to Him and win His Divine
Grace and attain thereby immortality.
Sakhya-Bhava is the cultivation of the friend-sentiment
with God. The inmates of the family of Nandagopa cultivated this
Bhakti. Arjuna cultivated this kind of Bhakti towards Lord
Krishna.
To be always with the Lord, to treat Him as one's own dear
relative or a friend belonging to one's own family, to be in His
company at all times, to love Him as one's own self, is
Sakhya-Bhava of Bhakti-Marga. How do friends, real friends, love in
this world ? What an amount of love they possess between one
another ? Such a love is developed towards God instead of towards
man; physical love turned into spiritual love. There is a
transformation of the mundane into the Eternal.
Atma-Nivedana is self-surrender. The devotee offers
everything to God, including his body, mind and soul. He keeps
nothing for himself. He loses even his own self. He has no personal
and independent existence. He has given up his self for God. He has
become part and parcel of God. God takes care of him and God treats
him as Himself. Grief and sorrow, pleasure and pain, the devotee
treats as gifts sent by God and does not attach himself to them. He
considers himself as a puppet of God and an instrument in the hands
of God.
This self-surrender is Absolute Love for God exclusively. There
is nothing but God-consciousness in the devotee. Even against his
own wishes, the devotee shall become one with God and lose his
individuality. This is the law of being. The highest truth is
Absoluteness and the soul rises above through different states of
consciousness until it attains Absolute Perfection when it becomes
identical with God. This is the culmination of all aspiration and
love.
The nine modes of Bhakti are the ways in which a devotee attains
the Supreme Ideal of life. A devotee can take up any of these paths
and reach the highest state. The path of Bhakti is the easiest of
all and is not very much against the nature of human inclinations.
It slowly and gradually takes the individual to the Supreme without
frustrating his human instincts. It is not direct assertion of God,
but a progressive realization of Him.