651 Jaksot

  1. Within You, Without You

    Julkaistiin: 2.12.2017
  2. Grace vs Self-Effort

    Julkaistiin: 1.12.2017
  3. How to Be Happy

    Julkaistiin: 30.11.2017
  4. Questions about God

    Julkaistiin: 12.11.2017
  5. Questions about "Me"

    Julkaistiin: 8.10.2017
  6. Questions about the World

    Julkaistiin: 1.10.2017
  7. Vedanta in Southeast Asia

    Julkaistiin: 23.9.2017
  8. Creative Imagination

    Julkaistiin: 10.9.2017
  9. Rebirth and Religious Pluralism

    Julkaistiin: 6.9.2017
  10. Self-Reliance vs Self-Surrender

    Julkaistiin: 3.9.2017
  11. How to Live Vedanta

    Julkaistiin: 27.7.2017
  12. The Tree Without a Future

    Julkaistiin: 28.5.2017
  13. Meditation vs Reflection

    Julkaistiin: 21.5.2017
  14. Why Believe in God

    Julkaistiin: 7.5.2017
  15. The Story of Shankara

    Julkaistiin: 30.4.2017
  16. Who Is 'Thy Neighbor'?

    Julkaistiin: 16.4.2017
  17. This Precious Moment

    Julkaistiin: 13.4.2017
  18. Purity, Patience, and Perseverance

    Julkaistiin: 26.3.2017
  19. Renunciation Myths

    Julkaistiin: 24.3.2017
  20. Why Travel

    Julkaistiin: 23.3.2017

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Lectures on Yoga and Vedanta given at the Boston Vedanta Society. Vedanta is one of the world's most ancient religious philosophies and one of its broadest. Based on the Vedas, the sacred scriptures of India, Vedanta affirms the oneness of existence, the divinity of the soul, and the harmony of religions. According to Vedanta, God is infinite existence, infinite consciousness, and infinite bliss. The term for this impersonal, transcendent reality is Brahman, the divine ground of being. Yet Vedanta also maintains that God can be personal as well, assuming human form in every age. Vedanta further asserts that the goal of human life is to realize and manifest our divinity. Not only is this possible, it is inevitable. Our real nature is divine; God-realization is our birthright. Finally, Vedanta affirms that all religions teach the same basic truths about God, the world, and our relationship to one another.

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