Re: Bhakti-Yoga vs. Bhakti
From the Bhakti List Archives
• December 13, 1997
Sri Krishna and Sri Vijayaraghavan have clearly elucidated bhakti yoga in the vEdAntic sense, and Sri Mani has added to this by contrasting this yoga with the less formal and more natural bhakti. Sri Susarla suggested that we move towards a discussion of prapatti. I would like to begin this by presenting some thoughts on prapatti from a vEdAntic view as it is presented in Sri Ramanuja's Githa Bhashyam. It is clear from the previous postings just how difficult and ardous the path of bhakti yoga can be. Indeed, it can only belong to those rare souls as Sri Vyasa, Narada Muni, and others. The justifiable questions of what the rest of us are to do naturally follows from this. This very same set of questions probably plagued the mind of Arjuna on the battlefield as he realized his own unworthiness in pursuing the path that had just been prescribed to him by the Lord. It is in answer to this feeling of lack of worth that the Lord propogates what we now know as the charama slokam, the third mantram in our rahasyatrAyam. Three different interpretations are offered in analyzing EmperumAnAr's explanation of the charama slokam. These three are discussed in Sri S. S. Raghavachar's scholarly analysis, Sri Ramanuja on the Gita. The first two are very much a part of Ramanuja's brilliant commentary, and connect prapatti as an ancillary to bhakti yoga. The third is a radical divergence from bhakti yoga, not directly found in his BhAshyam, which clearly shows that prapatti is an independent and efficacious "means" for realizing the divine. The first interpretation suggests that what is surrendered to the Lord in prapatti be solely the fruit of our actions, i.e., a devotee is to follow the prescribed rules of bhakti yoga in the mood of service, leaving the fruit of his acts to the Lord. This approach removes any karmic burden associated with self-effort, as the devotee engages in bhakti yoga as a means of worshipful service, with full faith that the Lord, as the real agent of the action, will guide him in the correct course. The second interpretation is in more direct response to Arjuna (and our) feeling of unworthiness and inability to pursue bhakti yoga. Here saranAgathi becomes the initiating agent towards bhakti, in which our surrender to the Lord serves to remove the eons of karma due to our past actions, allows us to develop faith in the Lord, and in turn motivates us to steadfastly pursue the path of bhakti yoga. Once again, though, this interpretation stresses that bhakti yoga is the path to the Lord, with prapatti only serving as an ancillary. It is interesting to note at this point, though, that while Sri Ramanuja was clearly recommending Bhakti Yoga in Sri Gita Bhasyam and other texts, there is very little to indicate that he, his predecessors, or his students ever actually pursued this path. It seems that these scholarly presentations were intended for people outside the SriVaishnava community to validate the tradition among rival schools of thought. For Ramanuja was as much an ardent devotee as he was the philosopher, rapt in the emotions of bhakti as elucidated by the AzhwArs, and deeply connected to the SriVaishnava Community which he led - and continues to lead. And it is among and for this community that EmperumAnAr composed his famous gadyatrAyam, elaborating on his own helplessness and failings in trying to pursue the path of bhakti yoga, and submitting himself wholeheartedly to the Lord as being his sole means to salvation. This emotional experience of prapatti stems out of the vEdantic interpretations as presented above, in which these thoughts are only indirectly suggested, and transforms itself into an independent realization, in which the Lord and His Compassionate Grace, not bhakti yoga, are seen as the means to one's salvation. It is this wondrous and profound interpretation of prapatti which has the become the be all and end all of SriVaishnava tradition. adiyEn rAmAnuja dAsan, Mohan
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