On worship - (Salagramam)
From the Bhakti List Archives
• July 27, 1998
Speaking about worship, sometime ago Mani wrote: "It would seem that the attitude of the worshipper is what is more important. Is not Krishna's teaching in the Gita that selfless action dedicated to Him causes no karma? With this in mind, I would conclude that someone who worships with selfless love, not looking for any personal benefit (i.e., a paramaikAntin) is bereft of any fault if there is a lapse in performance. However small the offering, if given with selfless love, is incomprehensibly dear to Him. What then if an imperfect being unintentionally slips up here or there?" Mani Adiyen's response: Our experience shows that any system that tolerates mistakes and imperfections, ultimately degenerates into nothing. I think sincerity of purpose and striving for excellence go together. An earnest aspirant will do his best not to compromise. For example - if we take the Vedas - but for the emphasis on right svaras and varnas it would not have been possible for a tradition that depended on oral transmission to preserve them intact for thousands of years. The doctrine of Prapatti often comes under attack for the very same reason that we take refuge under prapatti for our acts of omission and commission. They say that we are not courageous enough to own the responsibility for our action. I tell my advaitin friends that the life led by Ramanujacharya, Desika, Manavala Mamunigal and other acharyas were no less rigor and sastraic than the acharyas of other schools notwithstanding the dependance on prapatti. I also understand that acharyas of the 'good old days' would only grant prapatti after ensuring that he/she has lead a sastraic life. On the question of worshipping for material benefits etc., I think it is perhaps easy for people like us (who have been blessed with considerable felicity) to say that it must be eschewed. While we all agree that paramaikantikatvam is the ultimate ideal, it is for too distant a goal for most people. The fact that only a minority of Sri Vaishnavas do not resort to Anya Devata worship (in some form or other) is a clear indication that people are not willing to ignore 'Ihaloka sukam' i.e. the needs of this world. Vijayaraghavan Srinivasan
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