 |
|
| |
|
 |
 |
at Global Oneness Community.
Share your dreams and let others help you with the interpretation!
Dream Sharing Forum
|
 |
Ethics |  | Ethics: Ethics is a Means to Yoga |  | All aspirants commit mistakes now in
jumping to Samadhi and Dhyana all at once as soon as they leave their houses
without caring a bit for ethical perfection. The mind remains in the same
condition although they have practiced meditation for fifteen years. They have
the same jealousy, hatred, idea of superiority, pride, egoism, etc. Meditation
and Samadhi come by themselves when one has the ethical perfection.
From "Easy Steps to
Yoga" by Sri Swami Sivananda.
|  | | Spiritual Articles, Spirituality, Spiritual Reading, Spiritual Theory, Spiritual Teachings, Hindu, Hinduism, Veda, Vedic, India, Indian, Religion, Belief, Faith, Beliefs, Faiths, Articles on Yoga, Yoga Articles, Easy Steps to Yoga, Yoga, Yoga, Articles on Yoga, Yoga Articles, Yoga Philosophy, Yoga Practise, Yoga Practises, Yoga Instructions, |  | |
|  |  | Ethics: Ethics is a Means to YogaBy Sri Swami Sivananda
Ethics
is a Means to Yoga
1. All
aspirants commit mistakes now in jumping to Samadhi and Dhyana all at once as
soon as they leave their houses without caring a bit for ethical perfection.
The mind remains in the same condition although they have practiced meditation
for fifteen years. They have the same jealousy, hatred, idea of superiority,
pride, egoism, etc. Meditation and Samadhi come by themselves when one has the
ethical perfection.
2.
Sadachara or right conduct is the foundation of Yoga. Yoga is rooted in virtue.
Ethical discipline is very necessary for success in Yoga. Ethical discipline is
the practice of right conduct in life. One should be well established in
Sadachara to begin with. Sadachara is the practice of Yama-Niyama. Yama and
Niyama are the two moral backbones of Yoga, which the aspirant must practice in
his daily life. These correspond roughly to the ten commandments of Jesus or to
the noble eight fold path of Lord Buddha. Practice of Yama-Niyama will
eradicate all impurities of the mind.
3.
Yama is the very foundation of Yoga, without which the superstructure of Yoga
cannot be built. Yama is the practice of Ahimsa (abstinence from injury and
killing), Satyam (truthfulness), Asteya (abstinence from theft or falsehood),
Brahmacharya (continence) and Aparigraha (abstinence from avariciousness or
greed). Patanjali Maharshi mentions the above five chief items for practice in
Yama. In every religion you will find this to be the foremost. Great emphasis
is given in every chapter of the Gita on the practice of Yama.
4.
Niyama is the observance of the five canons, viz., Saucha, Santosha, Tapas,
Svadhyaya and Isvara Pranidhana. According to Sandilya Rishi, the practice of
Saucha, Daya, Arjava, Dhriti and Mitahara is included in Yama. Saucha is
external and internal purity. Washing the hands, taking baths, etc., are for
external purity. Filling the mind with pure divine thoughts is internal purity.
5.
"The mind becomes pure by cultivating habits of friendliness, compassion,
complacency and indifference towards happiness, misery, virtue and vice."
Whosoever shows friendliness towards all those who are found in the enjoyments
of pleasures, the dirt of envy leaves him. When the mind shows compassion
towards those who are suffering from pain and the wish to remove the miseries
of others as if they were his own, the dirt of the desire to do evil to others
is removed. Whoever shows complacency towards those who are virtuously inclined
beings, the dirt of envy is removed from his mind. Whoever shows indifference
towards the vicious and taking to the middle path and not taking sides, towards
the viciously inclined, the dirt of the impatience is removed from his mind.
6. By
this removal of the characteristics of the qualities of disturbing energy
(Rajas) and inertia (Tamas), the characteristic of essential purity (Sattva)
manifests itself. He becomes possessed of a very high manifestation of
essential purity. His mind becomes inclined to the side of the restraint of
mental modifications, because this enlightenment is natural to that state. When
the mind becomes pure it attains the state of steadiness and becomes
one-pointed. If these moral qualities are not cultivated, the means cannot lead
to steadiness. Therefore, one should be well established in Sadachara if he
wants to attain perfection in yoga. When one is established in it perfectly,
then Samadhi or Nishtha will come by itself.
From "Easy Steps to
Yoga" by Sri Swami Sivananda. See all articles here: Easy Steps to Yoga
|
|
|
More material related to Easy Steps To Yoga can be found here:
|
|
|
More material related to Ethics can be found here:
|
|
« Back
|
Search the Global Oneness web site |
|
|
|
|
 |
Sneak-Peek of Global Oneness Community
Hi friend! The Global Oneness Community, the place for information and sharing about Oneness is not really launched yet (you will see there is still some clean up to do) ...but it is now open for a sneak-peek! And if you wish - please register and become one of the very first members to do so! Jonas
Forum Home,
Articles,
Photo Gallery,
Videos,
News,
Sitemap
...and much more!
|