Jnana Yoga Quotes

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We only know the universe from the point of view of beings with five senses. Suppose we obtain another sense, the whole universe must change for us.
Vivekananda (Jnana Yoga)
Only the ego wants to get rid of the ego.
Francis Lucille (The Perfume of Silence)
The sages of the world have only the right to tell us that they have analysed their minds and have found these facts, and if we do the same we shall also believe, and not before.
Vivekananda (Jnana Yoga)
Whatever you do, always remember the Divine. 5 May 1954
The Mother (Words of the Mother - II)
Jnana yoga is the yoga of kindness and compassion - serving the self that is everywhere.
Amit Ray (Yoga The Science of Well-Being)
All the basic principles of Bhakti yoga are richly exemplified in Christianity. From the Hindu point of view, Christianity is one great brilliantly lit highway toward God, not greater than other paths, but more clearly marked. On this path God is conceived differently than in jnana yoga, where the guiding image was of an infinite sea of being underlying the waves of our finite selves. This sea typified the all-pervading Self, which is a much within us as without.
Huston Smith (The World's Religions: Our Great Wisdom Traditions)
Indians like to classify, and the eighteen chapters of the Gita are said to break into three six-chapter parts. The first third, according to this, deals with karma yoga, the second with jnana yoga, and the last with bhakti yoga: that is, the Gita begins with the way of selfless action, passes into the way of Self-knowledge, and ends with the way of love. This scheme is not tight, and non-Hindu readers may find it difficult to discover in the text. But the themes are there, and Krishna clearly shifts his emphasis as he goes on using this one word yoga. Here he focuses on transcendental knowledge, there on selfless action, here on meditation, there on
Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa (The Bhagavad Gita)
Everything and everyone has been a teacher, assisting in remembrance of One.
William Walker Atkinson (Jnana Yoga: The Wisdom Path to Spiritual Enlightenment)
When you are present, you will know the Presence. It is that simple, and it is that hard.
Richard Rohr (Just This)
Although devotion is to be given to many institutes and teachers, the essence is to be taken from them all, as the bee takes the essence from many flowers.- Samkhya, 4.13, an Eastern scripture
Vivekananda (Jnana Yoga)
As the traditional chapter titles put it, the Gita is brahmavidyayam yogashastra, a textbook on the supreme science of yoga. But yoga is a word with many meanings – as many, perhaps, as there are paths to Self-realization. What kind of yoga does the Gita teach? The common answer is that it presents three yogas or even four – the four main paths of Hindu mysticism. In jnana yoga, the yoga of knowledge, aspirants use their will and discrimination to disidentify themselves from the body, mind, and senses until they know they are nothing but the Self. The followers of bhakti yoga, the yoga of devotion, achieve the same goal by identifying themselves completely with the Lord in love; by and large, this is the path taken by most of the mystics of Christianity, Judaism, and Islam. In karma yoga, the yoga of selfless action, the aspirants dissolve their identification with body and mind by identifying with the whole of life, forgetting the finite self in the service of others. And the followers of raja yoga, the yoga of meditation, discipline the mind and senses until the mind-process is suspended in a healing stillness and they merge in the Self.
Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa (The Bhagavad Gita)
Religion can be realised. Are you ready? Do you want it? You will get the realisation if you do, and then you will be truly religious. Until you have attained realisation there is no difference between you and atheists. The atheists are sincere, but the man who says that he believes in religion and never attempts to realise it is not sincere.
Vivekananda (Jnana Yoga)
Oh Devi, give me the food for jnana (knowledge) and vairagya. This means not to project my past into the future and destroy my life by quickly aging. Devi then gives the grain of the great truth, the knowledge of not projecting your past into the future. When the grains are offered into that skull, the skull was enjoying so much. So she purposely drops a little bit of grain outside the skull on the ground. The skull felt the taste of the food so much that it just jumped out to eat that food and Shiva was free of the skull. He was liberated.
Paramahamsa Nithyananda
One important aspect of the Gita which remains is that even though it presents to us some diverse paths as a way of life, such as action, devotion, knowledge and meditation, it does not impose any of these paths on an individual. Rather, it leaves the choice to the people, because the followers of all these paths are essential for the smooth functioning of the world, and any en masse inclination towards only one of them would jeopardize the society by causing an imbalance in its system. The Gita also recognizes that the path that one should follow is determined primarily by the free choice of man as well as his inherent nature, which can be interpreted as a genetic inheritance he is endowed with.
Nihar Satpathy (The Puzzles of Life)
The kanchukas explain what happened to Shiva so that He became us. Since Shiva has five shaktis or powers—chit, ananda, iccha, jnana, kriya—it is reasonable to assume that the five kanchukas are limitations of each of the divine shaktis. It is easy to see that jnana shakti is limited by vidya kanchuka (divine knowledge/limited knowledge); iccha shakti is limited by raga kanchuka (completeness/desire); and kriya shakti is limited by kalā kanchuka (omnipotence/limited action). It is less obvious that Chit Shakti has to do with kāla or time, and ananda shakti has to do with space. However, Chit is pure, expanded Consciousness without thought-forms and time begins with thought-forms. And ananda, bliss, is the same as svatantrya, or freedom, and this is diminished by being closeted in a particular space.
Shankarananda (Consciousness Is Everything: The Yoga of Kashmir Shaivism)
There are two Sanskrit words that are used for 'path': marga, which also carries the sense of 'way, method or means' and upaya, that by which one reaches one's aim. In reality, it must be the case that we are already who we really are. Who else could we be? It is the illusory ego that believes that we are in some way limited and that wants to become eternally happy. Whilst this state of affairs continues, the search is doomed to failure. Paths and practices are therefore needed not in order that we may find something new but in order that we may uncover what is already here now. The reason why different paths are needed is that minds, bodies and egos function differently. All paths aim effectively to remove the obscuring effect of this ego. This can be done through the practices of devotion and surrender to a God, for example, in the case of bhakti yoga. It can also be achieved in simple day to day life of working, at whatever may be our particular job, by doing the work for its own sake and giving up any claim to the results, in the case of karma yoga. And it can be achieved by enquiry and reason, using the mind and intellect to appreciate the truth of the non-existence of the ego, in the case of jnana yoga.
Dennis Waite (Back to the Truth: 5000 Years of Advaita)
Jnana Yoga is the path of knowledge, which requires one to question and reflect on the teachings given. SIGNIFICANCE Jnana Yoga is the path that purifies and strengthens the intellect through the process of unlearning.
Rina Jakubowicz (The Yoga Mind: 52 Essential Principles of Yoga Philosophy to Deepen Your Practice)
Karma
Vivekananda (The Complete Book of Yoga Karma Yoga, Bhakti Yoga, Raja Yoga, Jnana Yoga)
The major idea of jnana yoga is to gain greater knowledge of who you really are. What does that mean? Take the first two steps of jnana yoga—shama and dama. They talk about training the mind to internalize and the sensory organs to ‘centre’ themselves so that they can determine what one truly feels or is experiencing. The next natural step in this process is called uparati, which is the practice of not thinking about the senses and going deeper into the consciousness. This is followed by titiksha, which if you think about it, would follow from not being a slave to your senses; it is the idea that no matter whether faced with happiness or sorrow, adulation or insult, one accepts and embraces it without reaction. The mind is consistently calm as if nothing happened. Then comes shraddha or faith, followed by samadhana or the exercise to constantly focus the mind on divinity and finally mumukshutva, the desire to be free from the ties of the world.
Hindol Sengupta (Being Hindu: Old Faith, New World and You)
When naked of ego and mind it hears the Voice; It looks through light to ever greater light And sees Eternity ensphering Life. 02.11_071:054
Sri Aurobindo (Savitri: A Legend and a Symbol)
abnegation
Vivekananda (Jnana Yoga)
ASANA Now I shall instruct you regarding the nature of asana or seat. Although by 'asana' is generally meant the erect posture assumed in meditation, this is not its central or essential meaning. When I use the word 'asana' I do not mean the various forms of asana’s such as Padmasana, Vajrasana, Svastikasana, or Bhadrasana. By 'asana' I mean something else, and this is what I want to explain to you. First let me speak to you about breath; about the inhaling breath-apana, and the exhaling breath-prana. Breath is extremely important in meditation; particularly the central breath-madhyama-pranan, which is neither prana nor apana. It is the center of these two, the point existing between the inhaling and exhaling breaths. This center point cannot be held by any physical means, as a material object can be held by the hand. The center between the two breaths can be held only by knowledge-jnana – not discursive knowledge, but by knowledge which is awareness. When this central point is held by continuously refreshed awareness – which is knowledge and which is achieved through devotion to the Lord – that is, in the true sense settling into your asana. On the pathway of your breath maintain continuously refreshed and full awareness on and in the center of breathing in and breathing out. This is internal asana. (Netra Tantra) Asana, therefore, is the gradual dawning in the spiritual aspirant of the awareness which shines in the central point found between inhaling and exhaling. This awareness is not gained by that person who is full of prejudice, avarice, or envy. Such a person, filled with all such negative qualities, cannot concentrate. The prerequisite of this glorious achievement is, therefore, the purification of your internal egoity. It must become pure, clean, and crystal clear. After you have purged your mind of all prejudice and have started settling with full awareness into that point between the two breaths, then you are settling into your asana. When in breathing in and breathing out you continue to maintain your awareness in continuity on and in the center between the incoming and outgoing breath, your breath will spontaneously and progressively become more and more refined. At that point you are driven to another world. This is pranayama." (Netra Tantra) After settling in the asana of meditation arises the refined practice of pranayama. ‘Pranayama’ does not mean inhaling and exhaling vigorously like a bellow. Like asana, pranayama is internal and very subtle. There is a break less continuity in the traveling of your awareness from the point of asana into the practice of pranayama. When through your awareness you have settled in your asana, you automatically enter into the practice of pranayama. Our Masters have indicated that there are two principle forms of this practice of ‘asana-pranayama’, i.e. cakrodaya and ajapa-gayatri. In the practice of ajapa-gayatri you are to maintain continuously refreshed full awareness-(anusandhana) in the center of two breaths, while breathing in and out slowly and silently. Likewise in the practice of cakrodaya you must maintain awareness, which is continually fresh and new, filled with excitement and vigor, in the center of the two breaths – you are to breathe in and out slowly, but in this case with sound. ― Swami Lakshmanjoo
Lakshmanjoo
Glory to all religions — Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam, Christianity, and all. Glory to the Vedas, the Puranas, the Koran, the Bible, and all other scriptures of the world. Glory to the four great paths — jnana, karma, bhakti, and yoga.
Chetanananda (Ramakrishna as We Saw Him)
Es grandioso conquistar la naturaleza externa, pero más grandioso es aún conquistar nuestra naturaleza interna. Es grandioso conocer las leyes que gobiernan las estrellas y los planetas ; pero es infinitamente más grandioso conocer las leyes que gobiernan las pasiones, los sentimientos, la voluntad de la humanidad. Esta conquista del hombre interior, entender los secretos de los sutiles mecanismos que se producen en el interior de la mente humana y conocer sus maravillosos secretos, corresponde exclusivamente a la religión.
Vivekananda (Jnana Yoga: El Camino del Conocimiento (Spanish Edition))
Trata al individuo, pero sus relaciones alcanzan lo infinito, y también se ocupa de la sociedad, porque la sociedad no es sino un gran número de tales individuos agrupados ; y como se aplica al individuo y a sus eternas relaciones, ha de aplicarse necesariamente al conjunto de la sociedad, en cualquier condición y en cualquier momento. Así, comprobamos que siempre existe la necesidad de la religión espiritual para la humanidad. El hombre no puede pensar siempre en lo material, por muy placentero que sea.
Vivekananda (Jnana Yoga: El Camino del Conocimiento (Spanish Edition))
The apple tree should not be judged by the standard of the oak, nor the oak by that of the apple. To judge the apple tree you must take the apple standard, and for the oak, its own standard.
Vivekananda (THE COMPLETE BOOK OF YOGA: Karma Yoga, Bhakti Yoga, Raja Yoga, Jnana Yoga)
A householder who does not struggle to get wealth is immoral. If he is lazy and content to lead an idle life, he is immoral, because upon him depend hundreds. If he gets riches, hundreds of others will be thereby supported.
Vivekananda (THE COMPLETE BOOK OF YOGA: Karma Yoga, Bhakti Yoga, Raja Yoga, Jnana Yoga)
To the man who has begun to hate himself, the gate to degeneration has already opened; and the same is true of a nation. Our first duty is not to hate ourselves, because to advance we must have faith in ourselves first and then in God.
Vivekananda (THE COMPLETE BOOK OF YOGA: Karma Yoga, Bhakti Yoga, Raja Yoga, Jnana Yoga)
Be and Make. Be Bold.
Vivekananda (THE COMPLETE BOOK OF YOGA: Karma Yoga, Bhakti Yoga, Raja Yoga, Jnana Yoga)
Forbearance is the highest expression of freedom.
Vivekananda (JNANA YOGA)
The yogi is greater than body-disciplining ascetics, greater even than the followers of the path of wisdom (jnana yoga), or of the path of action (karma yoga); be thou, O disciple Arjuna, a yogi!
Paramahansa Yogananda (The Autobiography of a Yogi ("Popular Life Stories"))
In modern times, if a man quotes a Moses or a Buddha or a Christ, he is laughed at; but let him give the name of a Huxley, a Tyndall, or a Darwin, and it is swallowed without salt.
Vivekananda (Complete Book of Yoga Swami Vivekanand: Swami Vivekanand's World Most Popular Books Karma Yoga, Bhakti Yoga, Raja Yoga, Jnana Yoga - Swami Vivekananda's ... Bhakti Yoga, Raja Yoga, and Jnana Yoga)
Raja-Yoga (the path of contemplation), Hatha-Yoga (the path of physical transformation), Jnana-Yoga (the path of knowledge), Karma-Yoga (the path of ego-free action), Bhakti-Yoga (the path of the heart), Mantra-Yoga (the path of mantric repetition), and Tantra-Yoga (the path of ritual).
Georg Feuerstein (Yoga: A Beginner’s Guide)
The Bhagavad Gita presents us with a unitary system of Yoga, one clear and systematic path, wherein all four Yoga techniques of jnana, karma, bhakti and classical ashtanga are - together – all considered crucial for spiritual realization. These four supposedly different paths, in actuality, represent four aspects of one, unified, integral Yoga system. They are akin to the four sides of a square. If one of the sides of the square is missing, then the very structural integrity and being of the square is itself compromised. Indeed, it no longer is logically qualified as a "square" at all. Similarly, the complete and authentic path of Yoga spirituality must include all these four components of Yoga in order to be fully appreciated. It is true that these four Yogas are linked by their common emphasis on devotional meditation upon, and the ultimate loving absorption of our awareness in, the Absolute. However, it is also inarguably clear that Krishna considers bhakti-yoga, or the discipline of focused devotional consciousness, to be not merely one component of these four branches of Yoga, but as the very essence and goal of all Yoga practice itself. Unlike the other aspects of the Yoga path, bhakti (devotional meditation) is distinguished by the fact that it is not only a means (upaya) for knowing God, but it is simultaneously also the goal (artha) of all human existence. As the means, bhakti designates devotional meditation; as the goal, bhakti means devotional consciousness. At no time does one abandon the practice of bhakti, even upon achieving liberation. Rather, devotional consciousness focused with one-pointed awareness upon the Absolute represents the very goal of the entire Yoga system.
Dharma Pravartaka Acharya (Sanatana Dharma: The Eternal Natural Way)
„If action yoga suggests a change in attitude toward action, knowledge yoga requires a change in the way we think. Ordinarily, because the intellect is Self-ignorant and under ego‘s passionate influence, its concepts cause suffering. To right the inner disharmony, knowledge yoga aims to detach intellect from ego and train it to identify with and think from the Self. „Thinking from the Self“ means that impersonal truth, not personal prejudice, becomes the center of one‘s thought life, the point from which thoughts originate and to which they return. Self-ignorance manifests first as a confused and unrealistic thought life, then trickles down to disturb and delude the emotions, eventually contaminating in one‘s contact with the outer world. Because it eliminates incorrect, ignorance-born, ego-centered thoughts, reality-based knowledge produces a harmonious, clear and luminous subtle body, one suited to meditation. (p. 64)
James Swartz (Meditation: Inquiry Into the Self)
I, as I am this minute, am the resultant of all I have done, all I have thought. Every action and every thought has had its effect, and these effects are the sum-total of my progress. The problem becomes difficult. We all understand that desires are wrong, but what is meant by giving up desires? How can life go on? It would be the same suicidal advice, which means killing the desire and the patient too. So, the answer comes. Not that you should not have property, not that you should not have things which are necessary, and things which are even luxuries. Have all that you want, and everything that you do not want sometimes, only know the truth and realize the truth. This wealth does not belong to anybody. Have no idea of proprietorship, possessorship. You are nobody, nor am I, nor anyone else. It all belongs to the Lord, because the opening verse told us to put the Lord in everything. God is in that wealth that you enjoy, He is in the desire that rises in your mind, He is in these things you buy because you desire them; He is in your beautiful attire, in your handsome ornaments. That is the line of thought. All will be metamorphosed as soon as you begin to see things in that light. If you put God in your every movement, in your clothes, in your talk, in your body, in your mind, in everything, the whole scene changes, and the world, instead of appearing as woe and misery, will become a heaven.
Vivekananda (The Complete Book of Yoga Karma Yoga, Bhakti Yoga, Raja Yoga, Jnana Yoga)