The subject of bhakti-yoga involves many detailed considerations that lie beyond the scope of this article. Here we shall simply conclude by making a few observations about the role of faith in sanatana-dharma, in modern science, and in the theory of evolution. Since sanatana-dharma is based on verifiable observations, it does not depend on either blind faith or speculative argumentation. But faith is required in any difficult undertaking, and sanatana-dharma is no exception.VEDA:
For example, before studying modern chemistry the prospective student must have faith that the many experiments upon which the subject is based actually work. He cannot know this in advance, and without such faith he would not be motivated to carry out the arduous work needed to master the subject. Normally, the student will begin with a certain amount of initial faith, and this faith will grow as he acquires more and more practical experience. The same process works in sanatana-dharma. (Sadaputa das, BTG 16-05, 1981)
I don't analyze or deconstruct faith. I've only posted texts about two types of faith.VEDA:
There are also two types of sense of self - real (atma) and unreal (ahankara). The real can't be lost, the unreal has to be lost thru the method of bhakti yoga.
The word belief does not imply experience, however before one can experience god it is necessary to believe.manasi_seva:
There really was an almost funny moment some few months ago. A newcomer came to our Thursday BG readings in the temple. ...ccd:
[br]The formula of "first believe it is true, then you will know it is true" seems backwards to me. Do the Vedas actually ever propose such a formula?[br]Baker:
[br]Can the exact process of how sabda affects the hearer be analyzed?[br]
VEDA:
Krsna katha topics are beyond the modes but the speakers may not be. Therefore it's recommended to listen to as pure devotees as available. To give a material analogy, a mahabhagavata is like a hifi sound system while a beginner is like an ordinary tape recorder. Difference in sound quality is obvious.
> a neutral, objective meta-analytical process on the grounds of which one then chooses between Christianity, Hinduism, humanism, atheism or whichever.[br]VEDA:
One can evaluate any philosophy acc to:[br]
1. sambandha/abhidheya/prayojana content[br]
2. prevailing guna(s)[br]
3. karma-jnana-bhakti content (used by Ravindra Svarupa P. in some of his theological papers)
Do you feel guilty? Listening to various people (prospective gurus included) and choosing to whom to listen preferably is a normal way.
Baker .... I haven't followed closely the progression of questions that you have asked here but I had a thought this morning and it's that when it comes to faith --- I CHOOSE to believe in God; whereas another may CHOOSE not to believe in God. So I think that faith is something that we choose or choose not to have -- just as I may choose to wear a watch or choose not to.Hashama:
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