Bhakti Is Transcendental Science and Activity
In the teachings of Śrīla Prabhupāda, bhakti is defined not as a passive state of meditation or mere emotional sentiment, but as the dynamic, transcendental activity of the soul. It is the scientific process of engaging the purified senses in the service of the master of the senses, Śrī Kṛṣṇa. This article explores how devotional service is the natural, healthy condition of the living entity, situated far above the desire for material liberation or mundane morality.
Activity of the Soul
Śrīla Prabhupāda repeatedly emphasizes that bhakti is the antithesis of inertia; it is a state of constant, practical engagement. Just as a healthy person is naturally active, the soul in its liberated state is incessantly active in serving the Lord, distinguishing it from the passive meditation often sought by impersonalists.
- Bhakti is activity. Bhakti is not passive.
- Bhakti is explained, "Bhakti is some active service." It is not a sentiment. And service means work.
- Bhakti is nothing artificial. It is the activity of healthy stage. Just like a man, when he is diseased, his activities are differing from the man who is cured and healthy.
Transcendental Science
Contrary to the misconception that devotion is merely a matter of heart or sentiment, Śrīla Prabhupāda presents bhakti as a rigorous transcendental science. It is a specific process involving the purification of the senses, distinct from the accumulation of mundane empirical knowledge.
- Bhakti is not sentiment. Bhakti is the transcendental science.
- Bhakti is a process. Bhakti is not knowledge. That knowledge you acquire by your sense perception, and bhakti is the pure activities of the senses.
- One who has only knowledge or detachment is not necessarily well acquainted with the principles of the bhakti cult. Bhakti is the supermost occupation of the human being.
- It is said, hrsikena hrsikesa-sevanam bhaktir ucyate: (CC Madhya 19.170) bhakti means to engage the senses in the service of the master of the senses, Krsna, who is called Hrsikesa or Acyuta.
Superiority to Liberation
While mukti, or liberation from material existence, is the ultimate goal for many philosophers, Śrīla Prabhupāda explains that bhakti naturally encompasses and surpasses liberation. One cannot truly serve the Lord with material senses; therefore, the very act of beginning devotional service indicates a position that is already transcendental to mundane bondage.
- Bhakti is the stage after liberation. Unless one is liberated one cannot engage the senses in the service of the Lord.
- Bhakti is in a far higher position than mukti because a person's endeavor to get liberation from the material encagement is automatically served in devotional service.
- Bhakti is so powerful that it is also said to be moksa-laghutakrt; in other words, it minimizes the importance of liberation.
- People engage in the activities of religion, economic development and sense gratification, and ultimately they work with an idea that they are going to become one with the Supreme Lord (mukti). But bhakti is transcendental to all these activities.
Exclusive Devotion to Bhagavan
True bhakti is characterized by its exclusivity; it is directed solely toward the Supreme Personality of Godhead, free from all material designations and desires. Śrīla Prabhupāda warns that affection for family, country, or demigods does not constitute bhakti, which is reserved only for the Supreme Lord.
- Bhakti is only for Bhagavan. Not that "My bhakti for this or that, for this demigod, for that demigod, for my family, for my country, for my society, for my wife, for my cat, for my dog." This is not bhakti. They are imitation only. That is lust.
- Bhakti is called sarvopadhi-vinirmuktam (CC Madhya 19.170), indicating that a devotee is freed from all material designations, and anyabhilasita-sunyam (Bhakti-rasamrta-sindhu 1.1.11), situated in a transcendental position, free from all material desires.
- Bhakti is main thing, not your palatable dish. Visnu is quite competent to prepare thousand times better palatable dishes than you can offer. But the real thing is bhakti.
Conclusion
Śrīla Prabhupāda establishes that bhakti is the highest cultivation of the human spirit, transcending the limitations of material knowledge, sentimentality, and the desire for simple liberation. It is the practical, scientific engagement of the senses in the service of Hṛṣīkeśa, Kṛṣṇa. By understanding bhakti as a purified, active science, one can rise above material designations and achieve the ultimate perfection of life—pure love for the Supreme Lord.
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