Bhakti Yoga

Vivekananda described Bhakti Yoga as the path of divine love, where the devotee cultivates an intense, personal relationship with God that transcends all ritual and dogma. He taught that true devotion is not born of fear or desire for reward, but springs from the soul's innate longing to reunite with its source, culminating in Para Bhakti — supreme love that sees the Divine in all beings. Drawing on the Narada Bhakti Sutras and the lives of great mystics, he showed that Bhakti is both the easiest and the most natural of the four yogas.

Key Quotes on Bhakti Yoga

“The idea of a Personal God has obtained in almost every religion, except a very few”

— Volume 2, Bhakti or Devotion

“The body is the form, and the mind or the Antahkarana is the name, and sound-symbols are universally associated with Nâma (name) in all beings having the power of speech”

— Volume 3, The Mantra: Om: Word and Wisdom

“CHAPTER VIII WORSHIP OF SUBSTITUTES AND IMAGES The next points to be considered are the worship of Pratikas or of things more or less satisfactory as substitutes for God, and the worship of Pratimâs or images”

— Volume 3, Worship of Substitutes and Images


Works on Bhakti Yoga

Showing 12 of 34 works on this topic


Related Topics