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| 09 Aug 2017 | | Featured on Radio Sai: | | | | | What should be the summum bonum of a true spiritual effort? Bhagawan lovingly reminds us today. | | Audio Special: 'Afternoon Satsang - What God seeks from us - Part 2' Listen Now | | H2H Special: 'Life is a Game - Play It! ... The Earth is our playground' Read Now | | Join Radio Sai on | | | | | | | |
| The conclusion of a Saptah (seven days long discourse) is called Samapti. But the term Samapti has a profound meaning for it too. It means, the attainment (Aapti) of Samam (Brahman or Divinity). That is the final fruit of listening, recapitulation and absorption (sravana, manana and nididhyasana) of spiritual lessons and discourses. In the worldly sense, it means the conclusion of a series of sessions; in the spiritual sense, it means transcending time! What is the sum and substance of all spiritual endeavour? It is that you must give up your pursuit of sensory objects in your seeking for lasting peace and joy. Material wealth brings along with it not only joy but grief as well. Accumulation of riches and multiplication of wants lead only to the alternation between joy and grief. Attachment is the root of both joy and grief; detachment is the Saviour. - Divine Discourse, Aug 19, 1964. | |
Practice detachment from now on; practice it little by little, for a day will come sooner or later when you must give up all that you hold dear. - Baba |
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