Saint Namdev
Book Specification
Item Code: | IDH138 |
Author: | J.R. Puri and V.K. Sethi |
Publisher: | Radha Soami Satsang Beas |
Edition: | 2004 |
ISBN: | 9788184661262 |
Pages: | 146 |
Cover: | Hardcover |
Other Details | 8.5" X 5.6" |
Weight | 360 gm |
Book Description
If you were to experience the supreme Lord, You would transcend all desire. If with devotion you would constantly remember the Lord You would be free from all care.
How will you ever cross the ocean of the world- If filled with poison. Seeing this world of lies and illusion, You have gone astray.
Regardless of my birth in a cloth printer's house, I have been blessed with the Guru's instruction, Through the grace of the saints, Nama has been granted the gift of union with the Lord.
Preface
This small book was published in 1977 as the first in a series on the lives and teachings of various Eastern mystics. The idea of the series originated with Maharaj Charan Singh. The overall purpose was to present in a simple way the salient features of the saints' teachings with selections from their poetry as a way of introducing them to English-speaking readers.
As one comes to know the teachings of these great saints, it will be realized that their basic tenets and philosophies are the same. All emphasize the there is one supreme God, a power that is al-positive all all-love; that God will be realized within one's own self through the practice of inner meditation and not through the practice of inner meditation and not through ritual and outer forms of worship; that experience of God comes only with the guidance of a living adept; spiritual wisdom comes through devotion and surrender and not through intellectual deliberation, argument or analysis, though these can help clear superstitions and errors of thinking that are often present in religious minds.
The present monograph on Saint Namdev includes poems from the Marathi, Punjabi and Hindi collections of his writing published in Shri Namdev Gatha, Adi Granth and Sant Namdev ki Hindi Padavali. The English translations made from the vernacular by the authors of the book have been modernized for this new edition. It may also be noted that the poems have been arranged thematically. The path of God-realization, the practice of discovering Truth and of realizing Truth within oneself, falls naturally into stages for this edition the poems have been arranged accordingly and a brief introduction to each section has been given, rather than introducing each poem separately as was done in the earlier editions
For the person who can read namdev's work in the original as well as in translation, an index of first lines in the vernacular in Roman script is appended. This will facilitate cross-referencing form one language to the other. Apart from these changes, some minor stylistic modifications have been made in the first part of the book.
Namdev's poems, tough composed almost eight centuries ago, are as fresh and relevant as though written today. Arising from his love for God, they concern themselves with timeless aspects of human experience. Namdev overflows with love for the divine. His poetry, imbued with his experience, is ecstatic and immediate. Essentially, Namdev had only one concern in his message: that those he consummation with might share the wonder and ultimate consummation of love that he had so clearly experienced himself
Preface | xi |
Part One | |
Life and Teachings | 1 |
Part Two | |
Selected Poems | 15 |
Cries of the Heart | 17 |
You Are My Mother | 18 |
You Have Created This Play | 19 |
A Father Is Always Concerned | 20 |
Bless me with Your Love | 21 |
How Shall I Live Without You? | 22 |
The Need for a Master | 23 |
The Waves of Greed Strike | 25 |
O Mind, Why Do You Go to the Passions? | 26 |
As a Parrot Is Allured | 27 |
Iron Turns into Gold | 28 |
If You Were to Experience the Supreme Lord | 30 |
So Long As Your Bonds Are Not Broken | 31 |
It May Be Possible to Ascend to Heaven | 32 |
Sometimes One Is Not Satisfied | 33 |
How Shall I Describe the Bliss of Satsang? | 34 |
The Path of Devotion | 35 |
The Lord's Name Is His Form | 37 |
If You Gave Me a Throne | 38 |
Adore the Lord, Adore the Lord! | 39 |
The Darkness of Ego Was As Dense As Night | 40 |
If The Disciple Were to Flee | 41 |
All People Are One | 42 |
Who Else but the Lord Will Rescue You? | 43 |
No Salvation except through Devotion | 44 |
O My Father, I Do Not Understand | 45 |
Everyone Resorts to His Own Cleverness | 46 |
You Are the Creator | 47 |
Endless Are the Songs of the Vedas | 48 |
Repeat the Lord's Name | 50 |
Liberation through the Name | 51 |
Listen to the Heavenly Music | 52 |
The Whole World Is Dirt | 53 |
So Long As You Are Not Attached | 54 |
Who Has Retained the Stain of Sin? | 55 |
Let My Tongue Be Cut into a Hundred Pieces | 56 |
God's Name is Precious | 57 |
If Someone Repeats the Name | 58 |
The futility of Rituals | 59 |
Pierce through the Six Chakras | 61 |
What Shall I Do? | 62 |
Why Do you Dance? Why Do You Sing? | 63 |
Some Say He Is Near | 64 |
I Bring a Pitcher and Fill It with Water | 65 |
One Who Performs Ashvamedh Yagya | 66 |
Woe Betide the Speaker | 68 |
Chanting the Name of God | 69 |
The Serpent Casts off Its Skin | 70 |
You Cannot Attain the Lord | 71 |
If You Do Not Look at Your Own Deeds | 72 |
Let Go of All Desire | 73 |
The Practice of the Name | 75 |
A Boy Brings Paper, Makes a Kite | 76 |
The Rope Dancer's Mind and Body | 77 |
Always Be in Rapport with the Lord | 78 |
Repeat His Name, Listen to His Voice | 79 |
Listen with Rapt Attention | 80 |
I Shall Never Forget the Lord Now | 81 |
Your Name Is the Staff of This Blind One | 82 |
Transcending Death | 83 |
In the Five Elements | 84 |
The Vina Plays, the Heavens Resound | 85 |
I Do Not Know the Vedas and Puranas | 86 |
My Mind Is the Yardstick | 87 |
The Pain of Mind, Only the Mind Knows | 88 |
I Have Vanquished the Ten Senses | 89 |
In Praise of the Master | 91 |
You Are the Bestower of Bliss | 92 |
The Shelter of Everlasting Mercy | 93 |
Whenever I See Him, I Sing His Praises | 94 |
The Purpose of My Life | 95 |
He Who Perceives the One God | 96 |
I Take from the Saints | 97 |
My Aim Is the Lord | 98 |
The Thundering Resonance of the Word | 99 |
When One Has a Guru | 100 |
To Redeem the Fallen | 103 |
The Nature of the Lord | 105 |
Why Do You Not Lay a Wager With Me? | 106 |
God Pervades Every Being | 107 |
God, the Immanent Lord, Speaks | 108 |
The Absolute Being Has Created a Game | 109 |
The One Manifests in the Many | 110 |
He Is Free from All Impurities | 111 |
Your State Only You Know | 112 |
The Lord and His Lovers | 113 |
My Slave, Who Loves Only Me | 114 |
Even As the Deer Is Drawn | 115 |
I Am Sick with Restlessness | 116 |
No One Has Unravelled the Mystery | 117 |
The Slave of the Lord Is Detached | 118 |
Union and Bliss | 119 |
I Have Gone Mad with Love | 120 |
The Home of the Lord | 121 |
Even If the Heavens Were to Fall | 122 |
My Fickle and Restless Mind | 123 |
I Have Delved into the Four Vedas | 124 |
I Do Not Desire the Delights | 125 |
A Drum Beats without Its Drum Skin | 126 |
In Praise of the Lord | 127 |
The Scriptures Derive Their Meaning | 128 |
Just As a Hungry Man Loves Food | 129 |
Even As Water Is Dear to Marwar | 130 |
Endnotes | 133 |
Bibliography | 134 |
Index of Hindi/Marathi/Punjabi First Lines | 136 |
Addresses for Information and Books | 139 |
Books on This Science | 145 |