English, asked by dhiraj2283, 1 year ago

message conveyed by lord krishna short note

Answers

Answered by PalakBansal
2
HEYA!!! YOUR ANSWER IS HERE...

This is how lord KTISHNA teaches theesson of detachment ⬇⬇⬇⬇⬇⬇⬇⬇⬇⬇⬇⬇⬇⬇⬇⬇⬇⬇⬇⬇⬇⬇⬇⬇⬇⬇⬇⬇

1)Detachment

Detachment is very much necessary for a spiritual person, and in fact this is the essence of the famous celestial song sung by Lord Krishna—the Bhagwad Gītā. Almost all the spiritual doctrines of this world echo the same sentiments about detachment.

2) Duality to singularity

Once a person is detached from the dualities of this world, it comes to know the singularity of its own being—divinity.


3) Not about leaving the world

Detachment is not leaving the world and fleeing into the jungle of loneliness (though there is a separate procedure for that which was followed in India during ancient times, and the people who followed that discipline were called Vanprastha—the one who has gone to the Jungle), but to be unconcerned about the dualities of this world. This controlling can constitute being unconcerned about the pleasure and pain, sorrow and happiness, grief and joy, and blame and praise, etc.

4) It's a broad term

Detachment is a very broad term: literally it means “disengagement”, “break-up”, or “non-involvement”. There are different areas of its functionality, and detachment assumes different roles upon itself in those different areas.

5) What Sathya Sai Baba says

Oftentimes, like many other spiritual practices, it is wrongly understood by many and practiced in a hardcore manner; and at the same time, is avoided by many due to its hardness and sheer impracticality. However, the best way would be the middle path, which is described very beautifully by Sathya Sai Baba. He often tells us that this world is like a stage and we have to play our part, willy-nilly. However, we can take heart from the fact that we essentially are divine. He exhorts us to practice this principle: “Hands in the society, heart in the forest.”

6) It's not simple

This is by no means a simple statement, though the choice of words in English language makes it sounds a general line spoken by some philosopher. The deep underlying theme of this line is the hallmark of Indian spiritual thought and perspective. This was actually the outlook that everybody was supposed to have and practice during his/her lifetime. We would discuss the finer aspects of this statement later in our discussion.

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Answered by XxInvictusGirlxX
18

Answer:

Sri Krishna is the central figure of the Bhagavad Gita. Sri Krishna is widely considered by Hindus to be an Avatar – a direct descent of God. ... Since Sri Krishna was the eighth child, he was smuggled out of prison to be raised by his foster parents Nanda and Yasoda in Gokula.

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