Tự Do - Vui Vẻ - Tôn Trọng - Bình Đẳng

Upload Hình Ảnh Chữ Trang Trí My Album My Music Tạo Index


Tự Do Tôn Giáo
Thời Sự Chính Trị
Góc Bếp Ngũ Vị
Nhạc Việt Nam
Show Ca Nhạc - Hài

>>Suy Ngẫm: “ * Những luyến tiếc về tình yêu vẫn còn tạo nên hạnh phúc.
Lermontov
Trang 1 / 2 12 Cuối Cuối
Results 1 to 10 of 12

Chủ Đề: The OCEAN of LOVE

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Bài Viết
    581
    Thanks
    0
    Được Cám Ơn 0 Lần
    Trong 0 Bài Viết

    09 Love1 The OCEAN of LOVE





    The Ocean of Love


    The Anurlig Sagar of Kabir


    Translated and Edited
    under the direction of
    Sant Ajaib Singh Ji
    Sant Bani Ashram
    Sanbornton, New Hampshire

    _________


    Kabir and Dharam Das
    by Sant Ajaib Singh Ji



    EVER SINCE the Almighty Lord started coming into this world
    in the form of the Saints, it has always happened that during
    a Saint's lifetime only a few people care to know about his life:
    where the Saint was born, how he used to live, what qualities he
    had, and why he came into this world. They don't care about all
    these things while the Saint is alive; but when the Saints leave this
    world, their incredible power and their teachings which change
    the lives of many people impress the people of the world, and
    only then-when the Saint is gone-do the people of the world
    start thinking about them and devoting themselves to them. So
    that is why, according to the understanding of the people, stories
    are told about the Saints. It is very difficult to find out much
    about the Mahatmas of the past-their birth, their place of birth,
    their parents, their early life, etc. Whatever people have written
    about the Great Masters has been written many years after their
    departure from this world. That is why Kabir's life sketch has
    different versions. According to most of the traditions, Kabir
    Sahib was born in 1398 in Benares and he died in 15 18, living for
    120 years.
    There are many different stories of Kabir and of his effect on
    others, some of which are told in the Introduction to this book.
    Dharam Das was Kabir's gurumukh disciple and successor, who
    was a very wealthy person and an idol-worshiper. It is said that
    once when he was doing his worship, Kabir appeared to him and
    asked, "What are these little idols? If this big idol is God, what
    are these small ones?" and then disappeared, leaving Dharam
    Das to think about what had happened. At that time, of course,
    vii
    ...

    Vlll THE OCEAN OF LOVE

    he didn't know that it was Kabir Sahib who had appeared to him.
    Second time Kabir appeared to Dharam Das was in the form of
    a sadhu. Dharam Das and his wife were sitting by the fire, and
    Kabir Sahib said to Dharam Das, "You are a sinner." Dharam
    Das's wife could not bear this criticism so she said, "How can
    you say that he is a sinner? You are a sinner!" Then Kabir Sahib
    replied, "Dharam Das, look in the wood that you are burningand
    you will see what you are really doing." When they looked,
    they saw many insects in the wood, and Kabir said, "You are
    burning so many insects alive! What is this? Are you not
    sinning?" After saying this he again disappeared, and Dharam
    Das realized the truth of it: "I am a great sinner."
    Because he was a good soul devoted to God and he wanted the
    knowledge of God, he remembered that he had met someone
    before who had asked him about idols, and he realized both of them
    were the same person. Now Dharam Das repented very much, and
    he thought that if his wife had not got upset at Kabir Sahib, he
    might have been able to get the knowledge of God. When he told
    that to his wife, she said, "Well, flies come to the sugar. You have
    so much money; if you perform some kind of yajna and announce
    that you are going to donate things to the sadhus, many sadhus will
    come. It is possible that this sadhu will also come, and you can talk
    to him and get some knowledge of God from him." So Dharam
    Das performed many yajnas in the town of Benares, but Kabir
    Sahib never came there. Then Dharam Das went to other places and
    there also he performed many yajnas, but Kabir Sahib never came.
    In that way he just went on spending his money, and even after he
    performed his last yajna after selling every single thing, Kabir Sahib
    still didn't come.
    So when Dharam Das had lost all his money and still didn't get to
    see the Sadhu, he thought, "Why should I go back home when I
    have lost everything? It is better to commit suicide." So he went to
    the bank of the river and was about to jump in when Kabir appeared
    there. And then Dharam Das touched Kabir Sahib's feet
    and said, "0 Lord, If I had met You before, 1 would have given
    You all the wealth which 1 had, instead of wasting it performing
    the yujnus." Kabir Sahib replied, "This was the right time for
    you to come to me. If you had come to me earlier, when you
    had all that wealth, it is possible that you would not become
    what you will become now."

    KABIR AND DHARAM DAS ix

    So Kabir Sahib gave him initiation and, after Kabir Sahib left
    the body, Dharam Das continued the work of giving initiation into
    Shabd Naam. And the book Anurag Sagar is in the form of questions
    from Dharam Das and Kabir Sahib's replies to those questions.


    Table of Contents
    Introduction I i


    I. The Life of Kabir . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . i
    11. Anurag Sagar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xv
    I. Prologue 1 3
    Invocation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
    Manglacharan: Hymn of God's Grace . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
    The Signs of a Lover . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
    Who is Mritak? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
    11. The Story of Creation 1 18
    1. IN THE BEGINNING


    Question About the Creation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
    What Was in the Beginning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19

    2. THE FALL OF KAL

    The Devotion of Niranjan and His Acquisition
    of Mansarovar and the Void . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
    How Niranjan Got What He Needed to Create
    His Universe . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
    In Mansarovar: The Swallowing of Adhya by Niranjan
    After Being Attracted to Her: The Curse of Sat Purush . . 32

    3. THE CREATION OF THE LOWER WORLDS . . . . . . . 36


    The Churning of the Ocean: The Creation
    of Fourteen Jewels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
    Adhya Orders Her Three Sons to Create The Universe . . . 44
    The Four Kinds of Created Beings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
    Special Account of the World's Creation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62


    4 . THE FOUR KINDS OF LIFE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

    62
    How the Eighty-four Lakhs Are Distributed . . . . . . . . . . . 63
    Recognition of the Souls from Four Kinds of Creation . . . 66
    5 . KAL TRAPS THE JIVAS
    Kal Creates a Snare . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74
    111 . The Coming of Kabir / 85

    1 . BEFORE THE INCARNATIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85


    By the Orders of Sat Purush Kabir Sahib Comes to
    Awaken the Souls; on the Way He Meets Niranjan . . . . . . 85
    2 . IN THE SAT YUGA: The Incarnation as Sat Sukrit . . . . . 95
    The Story of King Dhondal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96
    The Story of Khemsari . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96
    3 . IN THE TRETA YUGA: The Incarnation as Maninder . . 101
    The Story of Vichitra Bhat in Lanka . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102
    The Story of Mandodari . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103
    The Story of Madhukar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107
    4 . IN THE DWAPAR YUGA: The Incarnation as Karunarnai 109
    The Coming of Karunamai in the Third Age . . . . . . . . . . . 109
    The Story of Queen Indra Mati . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112
    Indra Mati's Amazement. After Reaching Sat Lok. to Find
    Karunamai and Sat Purush as the Same Form . . . . . . . . . . 124
    Indra Mati's Request to Bring Her Husband.
    King Chandra Vijay. to Sat Lok . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 126
    The Story of Supach Sudarshan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 129

    5 . IN THE KALI YUGA: The Incarnation as Kabir . . . . . . . 133


    The Story of the Establishment of Jagannath Temple . . . . 137
    The Story of Establishing Four Gurus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 140
    The Story of Dharam Das's Previous Births . . . . . . . . . . . . 141
    The Description of Performing Arti . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 150
    Description of the Twelve Paths . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 159
    Dharam Das Sahib Has the Darshan of
    the NOTM Essence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 165
    The Manifestation of Chudamani . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 167
    The Establishment of the Kingdom
    of Forty-two Incarnations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 168
    IV . The Story of the Future / 172
    The Beginning of the Story of the Future . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 172
    Niranjan's Orders to His Four Messengers . . . . . . . . . . . . . 173
    Description of Four Messengers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 176
    The Ways of Remaining Safe from These Messengers . . . . 184
    Speech About the Future-Different Subjects . . . . . . . . . . 184
    The Praise of the Incarnation of Nad . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 188
    The Importance of the Guru . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 189
    The Ways of Living of the Guru and the Disciple . . . . . . . . 197

    V . Epilogue / 201
    The Knowledge of the Lotus



    Body . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 202
    Sins and Virtues of the Mind . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 206
    The Character of Niranjan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 207
    The Signs of the Path Which Gives Liberation . . . . . . . . . . 208
    The Ways of the Path . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 09
    The Qualities of the Detached Renunciates . . . . . . . . . . . . 209
    The Qualities of the Householders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 211
    The Importance of Arti . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 212
    The Consequences of Carelessness . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 213
    Precaution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 214
    Description of Parmarth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 216

    Index I 220
    List of Illustrations
    Kal Did the Devotion on One Foot . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . v



    Kabir and Dharam Das . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . vi
    Sat Purush Creating Kurma . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
    Yogjit Expels Kal from Mansarovar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
    Kal Falls Through the Void . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
    Adhya's Sons Churn the Ocean . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
    Kal Torments the Souls; Kabir Approaches . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76
    KaI Meets Kabir Coming to Rescue the Souls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
    Ravana Attacks Kabir . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 04
    Indra Mati Meets Sat Purush . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 22
    Dharam Das Pulls Narayan to Meet Kabir . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154
    KaI and the Four Doots . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 180
    The Disciple as Moonbird . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20

    ( to be continued - 16 )


    :innocent: :innocent: :innocent:


    Như ong đến với hoa, không hại sắc với hương của hoa; cho nên người trí huệ đi khắp thế giới.
    ~ Đức Phật, Kinh Pháp Cú: Phẩm hoa đoạn 49

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Bài Viết
    581
    Thanks
    0
    Được Cám Ơn 0 Lần
    Trong 0 Bài Viết

    25 Giveflower











    Introduction

    I. The Life of Kabir


    As Sant Ajaib Singh points out in his Foreword, the life of Kabir is lost
    in the mists of legend and it is very difficult, from this point so far
    removed in time from Kabir's life, to know many hard facts about it.
    Still, there are certain elements of that life about which the traditions
    seem to agree and about those we can be reasonably sure.

    TIME AND PLACE

    As Sant Ji said, it has been generally agreed for centuries that Kabir
    lived from 1398 to 1518. There are variations on those dates: one alternative
    that is proposed is 1380 to 1440, and another from 1440 to 15 18.
    Neither alternative is based on tradition, however; they are speculative
    reconstructions by modern scholars who apparently have difficulty
    with the abnormally long life span. But while the span is long, even for
    spiritual Masters, it is not unprecedented: a minority of Indian holy
    men have always been long-lived. The celebrated Trailanga Swami,
    who apparently lived for three hundred years in Benares in relatively
    modern times in the full glare of the British Raj, is a case in point; one
    of his disciples, a woman, Shankari Mai Jiew, born in 1826, was still
    alive in 1946-precisely Kabir's life span.'
    It was my own good fortune to meet the Maharishi Raghuvacharya,
    a well-known yogi of Rishikesh who became, in his nineties, a disciple
    of Sant Kirpal Singh Ji. I met Raghuvacharya on two occasions-in
    1965 and 1969-when he was well over 100 years old. He died in 1970,
    aged 115, in full control of his powers; when I had met him the year


    I . See Paramhansa Yogananda, Autobiography of a Yogi, pp. 291-295, for an interesting
    account of Trailanga Swami; but his remarkable age is attested to by many
    witnesses. As this book was going to press, the Boston Globe (February 9, 1982) carried
    the obituary of Ike Ward, born into slavery in 1862, dead from old age (without having
    been through a period of ill health) at 120.
    xvii

    before he had given every impression of being a vigorous 65. Yet his
    long life and birth date was known to hundreds of people, as he had
    lived in Rishikesh all of his life.
    So while it is unusual for Kabir to have lived such a long life, it is by
    no means impossible; and since tradition has fixed on those dates from
    early times, and nothing else about Kabir's life is any less unusual, it
    seems reasonable to accept them.
    It is also reasonably certain that he was born in Benares (then called
    Kashi) and lived there most of his life, dying in the nearby town of
    ~ a ~ a h a r .

    SOCIAL AND RELIGIOUS CIRCUMSTANCES


    It is as certain as anything can be about Kabir that he was a Muslim by
    birth and belonged to the julaha caste. Strictly speaking, Muslims are
    not supposed to have any caste; but in India this idea has tended to
    erode under the pressure of mass conversions of lower-caste Hindus,
    who, in attempting to escape the difficulties of inferior caste, only succeeded
    in bringing them with them into Islam. This would appear to be
    the case with the julahas, apparently a Sudra caste that converted en
    masse between the twelfth and fourteenth centuries. The word julaha
    means "weaver" in Persian, and the members of the caste are usually
    either weavers or farmers. Their social status was and is very low, and
    their conversion did not raise it, either in the eyes of Hindus or of
    Muslims.
    From the very beginning, Kabir has been identified as a julaha. Indeed,
    he identifies himself that way. Although his songs and poetry are
    not rich in autobiographical information (Anurag Sagar is particularly
    disappointing in this respect) what information they do contain is
    especially valuable; and the fact is that Kabir happily, perhaps gleefully,
    lets the world know that he is a julaha:

    I am of low community, my caste is julaha;
    I have only one advantage and that is of Naam.


    Since the julahas were by definition Muslims, and since Kabir is an
    Islamic name (it is actually Arabic and is found in the Koran), his Islamic
    faith would appear to be beyond dispute. It has been disputed, though,
    on the grounds that his teaching appears to be given entirely within a
    Hindu frame of reference. Anurag Sagar is a case in point: while much
    of the poem is dedicated to exploding Hindu theology, it is done from
    within: the ideas are stood on their head, as it were, by someone who
    knows them inside out and who refutes them by showing the truth that
    2. See note on page 15 below ["Kashi"].
    3. Songs :sf the Macters, p. 16. This song IS from the Granth Sahib. Gujar~2


    INTRODUCTION X ~ X


    they are supposed to reflect. There is very little Islam in Anurag Sagar,
    or in Kabir's poetry in general (although many of the songs contain brief
    references to Islamic ideas).
    There are various explanations for this, one of them being the obvious
    one that Kabir was concerned with the here and now: most of the people
    in the area of his mission were Hindus, and he wanted to reach them via
    their own religious language. Another is that the concerns of the Anurag
    Sugar are in areas where Hindu mythology is very rich, and the
    characters and events of that mythology lent itself to Kabir's poetic
    genius in ways that the comparatively barren Islamic tradition could not.
    And then there is the fact that the amount of Islamic education julahas
    received was very small: the caste as a whole was and is illiterate, and
    does not rank high on the priority list of Muslim educators. Kabir's
    guru, as we will see, was a Hindu, and Kabir is generally considered a
    Hindu saint by modern Hindus: in fact, he has become a Hindu god, and
    idols of him are found in Hindu temples-ironic fate for a Saint who denounced
    idolatry as strongly as any Hebrew prophet. His Hindu admirers
    do not deny his Muslim origins, but they either ignore or explain
    them away. Nevertheless, that a Saint who was not only a Muslim but an
    illiterate, low-caste Muslim should so win the hearts of Hindus and rise
    to such a position of eminence among them is totally without parallel in
    all history and testifies eloquently to the "incredible power" Sant Ji
    mentions in his Foreword.
    His parents, who figure in the Anurag Sagar, were Nima (his mother)
    and Niru (his father). They were not, according to Kabir himself, his actual
    physical parents, as his birth was miraculous; but he chose them, for
    reasons explained in the poem, was brought up by them as their son, accepted
    the limitations of their low caste, and learned the weaver's trade
    from his father. There is evidence in his writings that his mother had a
    very difficult time dealing with his Sainthood and all that it implied, and
    also with his use of Hindu concepts in his teaching:
    Kabir's mother weeps bitterly, worrying:

    "How is this child going to live, 0 God?". . .
    Kabir says, "Listen, mother,
    God is the only giver for all of us."


    [Kabir's mother asks:]

    "Who in our family has ever invoked Ram?"

    When he grew up, he married Loi, who was also his disciple, had two
    children-a son Kamal and a daughter Kamali-and earned his living as
    4. Ibid.
    5. Granth Sahib, Bilaval4

    a weaver. Loi and Kamali are not mentioned in Anurag Sagar, but
    Kamal is, in a context that makes it clear that he was Kabir's physical
    son. Thus it is very unlikely that he was not married, as some of his Hindu
    followers (who find the concept of a married holy man difficult to accept)
    maintain. In the Sant Mat tradition it is not unusual for a Master to
    be married, and as Kabir was the founder of that tradition there is no
    reason why he should not have been. Those who object to this maintain
    that Loi and the children were all disciples only; but as the traditions
    clearly depict all three in an intimate relationship with Kabir on a daily
    domestic basis, it is extremely unlikely that they were not his physical
    family.

    KABIR AND RAMANANDA


    The Anurag Sagar maintains, and Sant Mat tradition affirms, that Kabir
    is the proto-Master or original Saint, who has descended directly from
    God four different times, once in each yuga or time-cycle, founding a
    line of Masters each time, and that his incarnation in the present timecycle
    or Kali Yuga-that is, the life of the historical Kabir-is thus only
    a fraction of his totality. In the Anurag Sagar Kabir goes into greater or
    lesser detail on each of these four incarnations, as well as his preincarnate
    activity, and his account is accepted by the Masters of Sant
    Mat as a straightforward accurate approximation of actions and events
    which are ultimately too tremendous to fit easily into our verbal and conceptual
    framework. His description of his various incarnations, like
    many other parts of the poem, is as true as it can be, given the limits of
    the medium it is conveyed in, and forms a basic and important part of
    the body of ideas and stories that constitute the verbal tradition of Sant
    Mat; and the Masters who have come after him have accepted Kabir as
    the founder of the various lines of Masters.
    Nevertheless, tradition affirms, and Kabir's writings bear it out, that
    Kabir took initiation from a Guru, and the Guru was Ramananda. This
    may seem contradictory; but it is a basic pillar of Sant Mat that everyone
    needs to sit at the feet of a Master. As Jesus said to John the Baptist,
    when the latter in amazement asked him why he had come to him
    , "Thus
    it becometh us to fulfill all righteousness."6]
    The situation is exactly
    analogous; and just as John's question implies that he should be coming
    to Jesus, rather than the other way around, so the tradition affirms that
    ultimately Kabir liberated Ramananda. But still Kabir outwardly sat at
    Ramananda's feet and humbled himself before him in the eyes of the
    world. Sant Kirpal Singh Ji has written:


    All born Saints, though very few, come into the world with esoteric knowledge right from their birth but have for form's sake to adopt
    a Master. ["Thus it becometh us to fulfill all righteousness."]
    Kabir Sahib, for instance, had to accept Shri Ramananda as his
    Master


    ___

    _ 6. Matthew

    ( 19)

    http://www.SupremeMasterTV.com/BMD

    "All know that the drop merges into the ocean, but few know that the ocean merges into the drop."

    — Kabir

    :bees:

    Như ong đến với hoa, không hại sắc với hương của hoa; cho nên người trí huệ đi khắp thế giới.
    ~ Đức Phật, Kinh Pháp Cú: Phẩm hoa đoạn 49

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Bài Viết
    581
    Thanks
    0
    Được Cám Ơn 0 Lần
    Trong 0 Bài Viết




    Sant Ajaib Singh Ji has commented on the relationship of Kabir and
    Ramananda in detail as follows:
    Kabir Sahib was all-powerful and even if he had not taken anyone
    as Guru, still it would not matter much. But still he didn't break the
    limits and traditions and that's why he took Ramananda as his
    Master. But the fact was that Ramananda was liberated by Kabir
    Sahib. Ramananda was an idol worshiper and didn't have any
    knowledge of spirituality. But the Hindu people were taking him as
    a very great holy man, and they were also criticizing Kabir Sahib
    because he didn't have any Master or guru, saying that to take initiation
    or to take a mantra from him is a sin. Kabir Sahib was a very
    clever Mahatma, and he thought that if he took any small Mahatma
    as his Master, then these people would not believe. So he should
    take somebody who is well-known among all these people as his
    Master. But since Ramananda was not happy in even seeing any
    Muslim, and because Kabir was born in a Muslim family, there was
    no question of taking initiation from Ramananda. It was impossible
    for him.
    Ramananda used to go, every morning, to the River Ganges. So,
    because Kabir Sahib wanted to take him as his Master, Kabir
    changed his form into a small child. He lay down on the steps on
    which Ramananda was coming back. It was very dark, and accidentally
    Ramananda stepped on that child. And Kabir, who was
    that child, started weeping. Who knows whether Ramananda really
    stepped on Kabir Sahib or not? But still Kabir wanted some excuse
    to weep, so he started weeping. Ramananda was very much afraid
    and he said, "0 man of God, repeat 'God.' 0 man of God, repeat
    'God' "--like that. But Kabir Sahib went on weeping. And he
    again said this thing, "0 man of God, repeat 'God.' " And
    Ramananda came back home and Kabir disappeared from that
    place.
    After that Kabir Sahib started saying to people, "Ramananda is
    my Master. I have got initiation from Him." So the Hindu people
    were very upset with Ramananda, and they came to him, saying,
    "You have got thousands of Hindu disciples but you are still
    hungry for more. Why did you make this Muslim your disciple?"
    In those days, people were believing very much in caste. So Rama-

    7. Kirpal Singh, Godman, p. 62.
    nanda said, "Who said he is my disciple? I do not know any Kabir
    and I have not given initiation to any Kabir." So all the Hindu people
    came to Kabir Sahib and told him, "You come with us to Ramananda.
    You are saying that he is your Master but he doesn't believe
    that. You come with us." So Kabir went to Ramananda's home.
    And at that time Ramananda was worshiping an idol of Lord
    Vishnu. Because he was never happy to see the faces of Muslim people,
    he had a curtain and Kabir Sahib was sitting on the other side of
    the curtain. Ramananda was playing with the idol and at the end he
    put the crown on the head of the idol, but he forgot to put the chain
    on the neck. So he was very confused at what to do then, because if
    he removed the crown from the head that meant disrespect and
    there was no other way to put the chain on the neck. So Kabir
    Sahib, who was all-conscious, said, "Master, Guru Ji, why are you
    so confused? Just unhook the chain and then again hook it and
    then you will be able to put the chain around the neck." When he
    saw Kabir Sahib was sitting there on the other side of the curtain
    and couldn't even see him, he thought, "How did he know I had
    this problem? And he has solved my problem!" He was very surprised.
    So he talked with him and said, "When did I initiate you?"
    Kabir Sahib reminded him of the incident and he told him, "You
    stepped on me and you told me to repeat this thing, so I am
    repeating that, and you are my Master."
    So Ramananda said, "That was a child; but you are Kabir." He
    said, "If you want me to become a child, I can show you. Now also
    I can change myself into a child and I can show you that I am the
    same thing." So when Ramananda came to know all this he said,
    "If you are all-conscious, then why is there this curtain between you
    and me? Remove that curtain." So after that Kabir Sahib liberated
    Ramananda.
    Even though Ramananda had received a lot from Kabir, still he
    was involved in all the practices he was doing, rites and rituals and
    idol-worshiping. Once Ramananda was performing the ceremony
    in which they make many good foods and they give it to the people,
    saying, "This is going to our fathers and forefathers, those who
    have died and who are residing in the heavens." For that ceremony
    Ramananda sent all his disciples including Kabir Sahib into the
    village to get some milk to make rice pudding and other things. So
    Kabir also went and there he saw that there was one dead cow, and
    by force he started putting some food in the mouth of that dead
    cow. Because she was dead, she couldn't eat by herself. But by
    using a stick, he was forcing the food in her mouth. He started
    milking her. But she was dead; how could she give milk? So the
    INTRODUCTION xxiii
    other disciples, when they saw Kabir doing this thing, they came to
    Ramananda and reported it. Ramananda called Kabir and rebuked
    him and said, "Oh man, the dead cow cannot eat food and she cannot
    give milk." So Kabir Sahib said, "Guru Ji, are you sure that the
    dead cow cannot eat anything or give any fruit?'' So he said, "Yes,
    that is definitely true." So he said, "Well, how are you sure that the
    food that you are giving to other people, saying, 'This is going to go
    to your fathers, those who are residing in the heavens?' will really
    give you fruit?" Ramananda didn't have any reply to that. And
    Kabir Sahib only did this to teach him a lesson because Kabir Sahib
    had made up his mind to liberate Ramananda.:Angel2:
    23




    http://www.suprememastertv.com/au/bb...w=bmd&flag=1#v

    “Teacher, which is the most important commandment in the law of Moses?”

    Jesus replied, “‘You must love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your soul, and all your mind.’ This is the first and greatest commandment. A second is equally important: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ The entire law and all the demands of the prophets are based on these two commandments.” – (Matthew 22:36-40)




    Như ong đến với hoa, không hại sắc với hương của hoa; cho nên người trí huệ đi khắp thế giới.
    ~ Đức Phật, Kinh Pháp Cú: Phẩm hoa đoạn 49

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Bài Viết
    581
    Thanks
    0
    Được Cám Ơn 0 Lần
    Trong 0 Bài Viết

    25 Giveflower


    KABIR AND HIS CONTEMPORARIES


    Kabir's impact on his contemporaries was profound. Many stories are
    told which illustrate his power, insight, and various aspects of his extraordinary
    personality-including his honesty, unforced humility, total
    dependence on God, compassion and bluntness. Baba Sawan Singh,
    after being praised by many for having performed a miracle, told this
    story which emphasizes the human-ness of this most transcendent of
    Saints without diminishing his glory:
    The people attribute this incident to my miraculous powers. It is just
    as it once happened with Kabir Sahib. The pundits, the pseudo-
    Saints and the well-read people were jealous of Kabir Sahib.
    Accordingly they proclaimed throughout the town that on a certain
    day there would be a Bhandara (a religious gathering and feast) at
    Kabir Sahib's place. Kabir Sahib came to know about this trick the
    evening before. How could He feed thousands of men? [He was of
    course very poor.] He left the place in the evening and hid Himself
    in the jungle, remaining there until the next day. From His place of
    hiding He could see the people returning from His home the next
    day, and all of them were remarking, "Well done, Kabir! What
    delicious food you provided for the Sadhus!"
    Kabir Sahib did not know what this meant.. . . He returned home
    and His family told Him, "Well, you were here all the time and you
    yourself fed all the people." Kabir Sahib at once understood that it
    was all the mercy and blessing of the Supreme Father. [He is
    reported to have exclaimed: "Kabir did not do it, could not do it,
    would not do it; it is God Who has done it, and the credit has gone
    to Kabir! "1 The same is the case in this incident. The Saints always
    remain within the Will of God
    8. Ajaib Singh, Streams in the Desert, p. 381.
    9. Quoted by Rai Sahib Munshi Ram, With the Three Masters, Vol. 2, pp. 184-85.
    Sant Kirpal Singh used to tell a marvelous story which demonstrates
    Kabir's power as well as his humor and wisdom:
    At the time of Kabir Sahib there was a certain pundit or religious
    teacher. His story is written in the scriptures, and it tells of how he
    studied the holy and other books extensively and became the most
    learned man for many miles around, so he called himself Sarbajeet,
    meaning one who has won above all others. On completion of his
    studies, he returned to his mother's house. She was a follower of
    Kabir Sahib, and he said to her, "Mother, I have become Sarbarjeet;
    you should call me that from now on." She replied, "I
    will, if you can beat Kabir Sahib in knowledge." Worldly
    knowledge often encourages pride, and carelessly picking up his
    books he said, "Oh, that is nothing," and went off to Kabir Sahib's
    humble dwelling.
    Kabir Sahib said to the young man, "Well, Punditji, what has
    brought you here?" The proud pundit replied, "I am Sarbajeet,
    and I have come to beat you in knowledge." Kabir Sahib smiled at
    him and saad, "I do not want to argue over this, so you just write
    down that Sarbajeet has won and Kabir has lost; and I will sign it."
    The pundit was very pleased that Kabir had given in so easily; he
    quickly wrote the words and got Kabir to sign it. He went home,
    and flourishing the paper at his mother, he said, "Now you will
    have to call me Sarbajeet, for Kabir Sahib has acknowledged it."
    She took the paper and read aloud, "Sarbajeet has lost and Kabir
    has won." Unbelieving, he read it for himself, and said, "How is
    this possible? There must be some mistake-1 will go back to Kabir
    Sahib." On arriving at the Saint's house, he blurted out, "Maharaj,
    I made a slight mistake, so I want to rewrite the paper." Kabir
    Sahib amiably agreed, and signed the new declaration. When the
    pundit reached home, his mother read the paper and said, "But it is
    still written, 'Sarbajeet has lost and Kabir has won."' In frustration
    he shouted, "I will go again to Kabir!" and hurried off. It is a rule
    with all great Masters that they never belittle a person, but with love
    they make the people understand. If one does not listen even then,
    they will go to the extent of operating, like a doctor who will do his
    very best to cure a tumor, even if it means resorting to surgery. So,
    with great kindness, Kabir Sahib pointed out to the pundit, "How
    can your mind and mine become one? I say what I have seen, and
    you say what you have read from printed matter.'"'
    Sant Ajaib Singh tells a brief story which is very revealing:
    10. Kirpal Singh, "The Jewel of Infinite Value," SatSandesh, Vol. 3, No. 10, pp. 4-5.


    24


    http://www.SupremeMasterTV.com




    :bees:

    Như ong đến với hoa, không hại sắc với hương của hoa; cho nên người trí huệ đi khắp thế giới.
    ~ Đức Phật, Kinh Pháp Cú: Phẩm hoa đoạn 49

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Bài Viết
    581
    Thanks
    0
    Được Cám Ơn 0 Lần
    Trong 0 Bài Viết



    In the time of Kabir Sahib, once on the banks of the River Ganga a
    person of low caste was bathing and a pundit was passing by. And it
    happened that one drop of water from the body of that low-caste
    man touched the body of the pundit, and he became very upset
    because he considered himself polluted; but Kabir Sahib told him
    very lovingly, "Oh Brahmin, you were also born of a woman; how
    can you be called brahmin when we shudras came into the world
    from the same place and we were born in the same manner? How
    can you say that we and you are different? You have blood and we
    also have the same blood!" So Kabir Sahib lovingly explained to
    him that all men are the same.' '
    Revolutionary sentiments like this have endeared Kabir to such modern
    Indian visionaries as Mahatma Gandhi and Rabindranath Tagore, but
    had the opposite effect in his own time. A caste-conscious Hindu society
    and an orthodox Muslim establishment both viewed the presumptuous
    julaha with horror, and he was persecuted a number of times, primarily
    by the Emperor Sikander Lodi. He was drowned in the Ganges chained
    in a boat full of stones, but either was miraculously saved at the last
    minute or resurrected from the dead; he was buried alive, but survived
    that also; he was bound and thrown in front of an elephant, but the
    elephant refused to touch him. These stories are part of the tradition, but
    of course are not verifiable; nevertheless, that Kabir's teaching and actions
    brought him into conflict with authority and eventually persecution
    is overwhelmingly probable; to survive such persecution either
    through divine intervention or resurrection is not without precedent; and
    in any case, Kabir's survival is well attested, as is his death in Magahar at
    an advanced age.
    The earliest written reference to Kabir outside of the Sant Mat tradition
    is in the Bhakta Mala, a poem on the lives of various Saints, written
    by Nabha Das about 1600 (eighty years after Kabir's death). It is a very
    interesting and accurate brief summing-up of his career as seen from
    outside:
    Kabir refused to acknowledge caste distinctions, or to recognize the
    authority of the six Hindu schools of philosophy;. . .He held that
    religion without bhakti [loving devotion for God] was no religion at
    all, and that asceticism, fasting and almsgiving had no value if
    unaccompanied by bhajan [meditation]. By means of ramainis,
    shabdas and sakhis [different types of songs] he imparted religious
    instruction to Hindus and Mohammedans alike. He had no preference
    for either religion, but gave teaching that was appreciated by


    11. Ajaib Singh, Streams in the Desert, p. 174.


    the followers of both. He spoke out his mind fearlessly, and never
    made it his object merely to please his hearers.



    KABIR'S SUCCESSORS

    As the seminal figure in the modern history of Sant Mat, Kabir had a
    number of disciples who became Masters and gave initiation after his
    passing: some of them are known only from his writings, but many are
    famous in their own right. Ravidas and Dadu Sahib are two well-known
    Saints who derived directly or indirectly from Kabir, and there are many
    others. The two that are of concern to us here are Dharam Das, who was
    his gurumukh successor and who is honored today especially by the
    members of the Kabir-panth, a religious sect in northern India (it has
    Hindu and Muslim sections) which claims to have been founded by
    Kabir, and Baba Nanak, the first guru of the Sikhs, who is honored
    today especially by the followers of the Sikh religion.
    It is one of the ironies of history that the line continuing through
    Dharam Das, whose special relationship with Kabir is vividly described
    by Sant Ji in his Foreword, should have decayed and become eventually
    one of ceremonial religious leadership, while the line continuing through
    Nanak, who only met Kabir twice and who was himself a swateh sant,
    "born free,"12 should be the line through which Kabir's power and impulse
    continue in their fulness in the modern world.' But it is true: the
    Kabir-panth today has no knowledge of the inner teachings, and has
    reduced its initiation to one of ritual only. While the same is true of the
    Sikh religion, that line went underground after the death of the tenth
    Sikh Guru and has continued unabated down to the present.


    KARIR'S PASSING

    When Kabir was ready to leave, it is said that his Hindu and Muslim
    disciples were prepared to fight over whether his body should be
    cremated or buried. After rebuking them sternly for forgetting his
    teachings so soon, he lay down, covered himself with sheets, and told
    everyone 1 o leave. When they came back into the room, his body was
    gone; where it had been was a heap of flowers. His Muslim followers
    took half of the flowers and buried them, and his Hindu disciples took
    the other half and burned them. Thus in death as in life, Kabir demonstrated
    the universality of the Masters.
    It is also said that Kabir made a number of resurrection appearances
    after his death, including at least one to Dharam Das in which he gave
    him further instruction along the lines of the Anurag Sagar.
    (P#26)

    12. Kirpal Singh, Godman, p. 20.
    13. See Streams in the Desert, p. I I , for a complete list of the Masters descending from
    Kabir through Nanak down to the present.




    http://www.SupremeMasterTV.com/WOW

    "All know that the drop merges into the ocean, but few know that the ocean merges into the drop."

    Kabir

    :giveflower:

    Như ong đến với hoa, không hại sắc với hương của hoa; cho nên người trí huệ đi khắp thế giới.
    ~ Đức Phật, Kinh Pháp Cú: Phẩm hoa đoạn 49

Trang 1 / 2 12 Cuối Cuối

Chủ Đề Tương Tự

  1. Make Your Mind An Ocean
    By Nonregister in forum Engish E-books
    Trả Lời: 0
    Bài Viết Cuối: 11-19-2010, 08:51 AM

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •