Those who, calm and knowledgeable, dwell in the forest with faith and austerity, living as mendicants—they depart through the gateway of the sun, free from impurity, to the realm where the imperishable and immortal Purusha abides.
Browse topics
Source
- Tradition
- Hindu
- Source text
- Mundaka Upanishad
- Chapter
- Mundaka Upanishad
- Verse / page
- MuU.1.2.11
- Topics
- RenunciationImmortalitySpiritual Practice
Same theme, different voices
The sages, united with pure reason, renounce the results of their actions and, liberated from the cycle of birth, they attain a state of bliss.
It will happen that God will guide the soul through a difficult path of dark contemplation and dryness, making it feel lost. The soul will be filled with darkness, trials, and temptations. It may encounter someone who, like Job's comforters, will say that it's suffering from sadness, low spirits, or a negative attitude, or that it may have a hidden sin, and that's why God has abandoned it.
A devotee serves selflessly, just like a player in a game who doesn't give up despite being hit. The devotee continues to serve with increased enthusiasm, even in the face of adversity.
He can serve God Almighty only when he cuts off all his selfish interests relating either to this world or to the next, and worships God absolutely for His sake alone, inasmuch as whoever worships God for anything's sake worships himself and not God.