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Karma-Yoga and Bhakti-Yoga

por Swami Vivekananda

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Swami Vivekananda. Describes the way to reach perfection through the performance of daily work in a nonattached spirit and by sublimating human affection into divine love.
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Pocket book size. The previous owner underlined and bracketed text of interest. Sometimes I like seeing what interested another reader.
  MarieTea | Jul 31, 2012 |
This volume collects two of "the Yogas" by Vivekananda in their standard English edition. They are paginated separately, and in this review I'll refer to (K #) for Karma-Yoga and (B #) for Bhakti-Yoga.

These short books are quite inspiring. As always, Vivekananda writes as a Vedantist whose essential spirituality is universalist. He often pauses to point out the good and bad in various world religions, and Christianity is certainly not immune to criticism. He implicitly derides the doctrine of original sin and Christian self-hatred (K 16ff.), and he makes numerous anti-Protestant remarks: "at present there is scarcely any difference between the advanced Protestants and the followers of Auguste Comte, or the Agnostics who preach ethics alone" (B 46).

His occasional praises for Christianity concern the features of the Christian legacy most clearly presented in Thelema. Writing of the point at which Karma, Bhakti, and Jnana become indistinguishable, he says: "The worshipper, by keeping constantly before him the idea of God and a surrounding of good, comes to the same point at last and says, 'Thy will be done'" (K 80-1). And in reference to Vatsalya: "The idea of loving God as a child comes into existence and grows naturally among those religious sects which believe in the incarnation of God" (B 98-9).

The second section of Bhakti-Yoga, concerning "Para-Bhakti or Supreme Devotion," is the very best part of this volume. In it, Vivekananda describes the agape of the adepts, and he explains how it is that the obligation of the Master of the Temple to "interpret every phenomenon as a particular dealing of God with my Soul" is in fact the "central secret" of bhakti yoga (B 73).
2 vota paradoxosalpha | Jan 21, 2012 |
This book covers two of the most important spiritual paths of Hinduism in eloquent and evocative language with a direct appeal to the heart.

However, by no means is it restricted to a particular belief or sect. This book is a collection of speeches and writings of Swami Vivekananda on Karma and Bhakti Yoga; the lectures read together very well and if one were not told in advance that this was a collection, it would read just like a book.

Swami Vivekananda has a genius for giving an unexpected angle of thought to these subjects. The logic and reason of these paths are brilliantly treated. We see that these are not doctrinal paths but teachings which are in harmony with modern science and thought. The wisdom of Karma Yoga provides a vital input on leading our lives in the modern age, and Bhakti Yoga, interpreted in such rational language, is as relevant today as it was in ancient times.

It is to the credit of Swami Vivekananda that he makes us realize the importance of these teachings and brings them alive for us. This book is a must for all who wish to practice spirituality in the modern age.

...P.J.Mazumdar, author of The Circle of Fire: The Metaphysics of Yoga ( )
  PJMazumdar | Sep 5, 2010 |
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Swami Vivekananda. Describes the way to reach perfection through the performance of daily work in a nonattached spirit and by sublimating human affection into divine love.

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