Rise from sentimental bhakti to the sentiments from bhakti by
Chaitanya Charan Das Based on Bhagavad Gita
Sentimental bhakti refers to the practice of bhakti that is
dependent on sentiments: “When I feel like practicing bhakti – when it feels
good – I will practice it. When it doesn’t feel good, why should I practice
it?”
Such sentimental practice makes our spiritual progress
sluggish and erratic, like the recovery of a patient who takes treatment only
when it feels good. Just as an uncommitted patient can’t reap the fruit of good
health, similarly an uncommitted bhakti practitioner can’t become spiritually
healed and relish the sentiments from bhakti – the fulfilling devotional
emotions that characterize the soul in its healthy spiritual condition of love
for Krishna.
In the Bhagavad-gita’s twelfth chapter (12.13 – 12.20),
Krishna describes the characteristics of those devotees who are dear to him.
Significantly, in this description he doesn’t focus on how those devotees are
absorbed in directly devotional activities – he has done that already in
previous chapters (09.13-14; 10.08-11). Here, he focuses on how these devotees
practice bhakti without being distracted by worldly ups and downs. He mentions
how these devotees stay fixed in service to him without being agitated by
people and without agitating people, without giving in to dejection, agitation
or even jubilation.
This analysis doesn’t mean that serious devotees are
unemotional; rather, it means that they are ready to subordinate their worldly
emotions so that they can relish devotional emotions – and Krishna finds this
endearing.
In any relationship, commitment is demonstrated by
sacrificing something dear for the pleasure of one’s beloved – and such
commitment is naturally endearing. Krishna demonstrates a similar dynamic in
underscoring that he finds endearing his devotees’ indifference towards worldly
sentiment so that they can stay absorbed in steady committed practice of bhakti
– and he being pleased mercifully rewards them with unending devotional
sentiments.
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