BHAKTIVINODA THAKURA

SRI HARINAMA CINTAMANI



                           CHAPTER ONE

          INTRODUCTION TO THE GLORIES OF THE HOLY NAME



     All glories to Sri Gadadhara Pandit and Lord Sri Gauranga;
all glories to Lord Nityananda, the life of Srimati Jahnavadevi;
all glories to Sri Advaita Acarya and Mother Sita; all glories to
Srila Srivasa Pandit and all the devotees of Lord Caitanya.

     At Nilacala, within His sacred temple near the ocean shore,
the Supreme Personality of Godhead resides in His form of wood
known as Darubrahman.  The Supreme Lord Hari descended to the
material world in this form of Jagannatha to deliver the living
entities from their eternal bondage.  He grants material benedictions
to those who require them and final release from all
material attachments to those who are more spiritually advanced.

	In this same sacred abode, the same Supreme Lord took the
role of a renounced sannyasi to give His supreme blessing to
humanity. Residing in Kasi Misra's home, He propagated the only
dharma needed by the fallen souls of this age, and so established
the real meaning of religion in Kaliyuga.

     There, like a desire tree yielding unlimited treasures,
surrounded by His many devotees, Lord Caitanya distributed love
of Godhead (Krsnaprema) freely to all people.  Ensuring that His
teachings would be correctly disseminated, He had certain
associates speak on specific subjects while He Himself gave His
blissful audience.

	Thus He relished Sri Ramananda Raya's revelation of the
confidential sweetness of the conjugal love of Sri Sri RadhaKrsna;
Sri Sarvabhauma Bhattacarya's explanation of actual liberation;
Sri Rupa Goswami's intricate analysis of the various levels of
loving exchange with the Lord; and Srila Haridasa Thakura's
glorification of the supreme efficacy and excellence of the Holy
Name.

      One day, after bathing in the ocean, Lord Caitanya met
Srila Haridasa Thakura under the Siddha Bakula tree.  Greatly
pleased at seeing Srila  Haridasa, the Lord inquired from him theÜn
them tightly.  His entire body went into rapture, and he offered
humble prayers punctuated by shivering and tears.  In a choked
voice Srila Haridasa said, "My Lord, Your wonderful pastimes are
unfathomable, and I am but unfortunate and illiterate.  Your
lotus feet are my only resort.  What is the use of asking such
questions of a worthless person like me?"

      Srila Haridasa continued: "You are Krsna, the Supreme
Personality of Godhead, who has appeared in Navadvipa to save all
living entities. O my Lord Gauranga, kindly shelter me in the
shade of Your lotus feet, for only this will engladden my heart.
Your holy name is unlimited, You are the embodiment of endless
excellences, and Your exquisite beauty draws me into a shoreless
ocean of joy.  Your pastimes are everexpanding; You have
manifested Your name, form, qualities and activities in this
material world so even a fallen wretch like myself can relish
them.  It is impossible for one with mundane vision to perceive
Your transcendental features with his limited senses, but now You
are mercifully revealing Yourself for the highest benefit of
humanity; this is indeed the direct display of the internal
spiritual potency of the Lord.

      "You are the spiritual sun and I am an insignificant spark
of Your effulgence. You are my Lord and master and I am Your
servitor eternally. The ambrosia emanating from Your lotus feet
intoxicates all my senses. My only hope lies in the limitless
nectar of Your holy name.  I am fallen  what can I say of my own
volition?  I am here just to execute Your orders. I shall be
greatly satisfied to speak the words You put into my mouth and I
will not consider whether they are right or wrong."



      Lord Krsna is the Supreme Personality of Godhead.  He is
beyond  anyone's jurisdiction, for He alone is the master
(sarvesvara) of all that exists.  He completely independent,
being selfwilled and selffulfilled. His unrestricted desires
are effortlessly satisfied by His inconceivable internal potency
that constantly associates with Him.  This potency is a feature
of His inherent nature and is therefore never independent of Him.

	[Footnote 1 by Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakura:] He is known as
the nondual Supreme Consciousness by dint of His free will and
inconceivable potency.  Empirical philosophers (jnanis) attempt
to rob this nondual Divinity of His personal will and potency by
postulating Him to be the impersonal Brahman.  But in fact the
impersonal Brahman (Krsna's consciousness minus will and potency)
is only the effulgence of the Supreme non-dual Brahman.

    	Through  the  eightfold  yoga  system, yogis can perceive the
nondual  Supreme  Being  within  their  hearts  as  the  localized
Supersoul  or  Paramatma who pervades and witnesses all existence.
But  different  from  them. The Vedas declare Lord Krsna to be the
infinite,   absolute   Vibhu;  His  energies  are  His  attributes
(vaibhava).  His  vaibhava  energies  are the root of all existing
phenomena:   yet   even   in  the  midst  of  unlimited  phenomena
everexpanding   throughout  all  time,  Krsna  remains  aloof  and
indivisible in His original form.

                  The three kinds of vaibhava

      Vibhu is perceivable only by the grace of His vaibhava
energies, of which there are three kinds.  They are, as revealed
in the scriptures, the spiritual energy (cid-vaibhava), the
material energy (maya or acid-vaibhava), and the marginal energy
(jiva-vaibhava).

      [Footnote 2 by Bhaktivinoda:] Krsna's cid-vaibhava is a
direct transformation of His citsakti, His personal internal
potency.  The display of cidvaibhava includes His abode, known
as the Vaikunthaloka; His innumerable names like Govinda, Hari,
etc.; His transcendental forms like the threefold bending form
with two hands playing the flute; His divine qualities, so
sublimely pleasurable to His devotees;  His superexcellent
pastimes like the rasa dance in Vrindavana and its corresponding
appearance in Navadvipa as the the congregational chanting of the
holy names.  These spiritual opulences are countless.

    	Another feature of the citsakti is the sandhini potency by
which all things exist and are held together as an interrelated
whole, including the relationships of the jivas to the Lord.

	Similarly, the citsakti manifests the samvit potency, which
reveals knowledge of Krsna, His energies, and one's own identity.

	The citsakti also generates the hladini potency, which
gives rise to the ecstatic bliss of spiritual relationships,
spiritual emotions and their combination in the sweet exchanges
of rasa or the mellows of divine love.  All of these transformations
of the citsakti or Yogamaya (i.e. cidvaibhava and the
sandhini, samvit and hladini saktis) are beyond material place,
time and qualities, being eternally pure and full of bliss. [End
of footnote 2]
	


     The citsakti is never affected by the inferior acitsakti.
Even when it descends to this material world, citsakti remains
untouched by the inebrieties of matter. Forever spiritual,
embodying the absolute nature of the Supreme Godhead, the
spiritual potency is glorified in the Vedic hymns as being equal
to the Lord Himself; thus it is known as Visnupada (intimately
connected with Visnu). There is no tinge of material influence inÜn
birth, which is a manifestation of passion, nor by annihilation,
which occurs in the mode of ignorance.

	As the Supreme Lord's separated parts and parcels, the jivas
(the living entities, who are individual spirit souls) are
originally suddha-sattva, but due to their contact with nescience
they have come under the sway of the material modes of passion
and ignorance, and hence are now in the mixed or  misra-sattva
category.  Even demigods like Siva, though far superior in many
ways to the ordinary jivas, are nevertheless captivated by the
material glare due to false identification, and so fall in this
category of misra-sattva.

	The Supreme Lord is always in pure goodness.  He descends to
this material world by His inconceivable spiritual potency and is
always the controller of the material nature, maya, who is ever ready
to act as His maidservant. [End of footnote 3]



     All the plenary expansions of the Lord such as Govinda,
Vaikunthanatha, MahaVisnu, Garbhodakasayi Visnu and Ksirodaksayi
Visnu are in the category of absolute goodness, supreme and
divine, and are known as Visnutattva.

	The Visnu-tattva forms may reside in any place, either the
spiritual abodes of Goloka, Vaikuntha, the Causal ocean, or in
this material universe, yet They are always the master of maya
and the supreme controller of every other living entity great or
small.  Their remaining unaffected by the influence of the illusory
potency is evidence of their inconceivable spiritual position.

	Brahma, Siva and the other demigods are misra-sattva, being
influenced by maya. The Visnutattva forms, Their abobes, Their
pastimes, and all else in the spiritual sky exist in pure
goodness.

                          Maya-tattva

     A river called Viraja separates the material universe from
the spiritual abode.  Everything in the fourteen material planetary systems
is acit-vaibhava or the temporary manifestation of
matter.  This place has been described in the scriptures as DeviÜn

    	The  material  universe, including the physical bodies of the
living  entities,  is made up of the five gross elements of earth,
water,  fire, air and either. Mind, intelligence and false ego are
subtle  material  elements that comprise the psychic bodies of the
living  entities.  The  psychic  bodies arise from desire. Yet the
soul is always purely spiritual and distinct from his subtle body;
he   is  by  nature  suddha-sattva,  as  are  his  original  mind,
intelligence and ego.

          The seven higher planetary systems  Bhur, Bhuvar,
Svarga, Mahar, Jana, Tapa, and Satya or Brahma  and the seven
lower planetary systems such as Atala, Sutala and so on are all
manifestations of maya (the illusory potency).  Cid-vaibhava is
the complete whole, and maya is its shadow.


     The jivas are originally completely spiritual, infinitesimal
and endowed with a limited degree of independence.  The jivas are
countless in number and are in urgent need of spiritual bliss for
the attainment of their perfection.  In seeking that
bliss, those who surrender their lives to Lord Krsna are
liberated from birth and death and reside eternally in the Lord's
company as His confidential associates.

     On the other hand, the jiva-souls who desire self-importance
and selfish pleasure become attracted by maya, who awaits them on
the other side of the River Viraja.  She entices them away from
Lord Krsna's service and lures them into the trap of the Devi dhama,
where they are chained to bodies manufactured by material
nature.  Bound by the reactions of their misdeeds, they wander
from birth to birth in gross and subtle forms.  Sometimes they
are elevated to the heavenly planets and afterwards go to hell.
In this way they travel through all the eight million four
hundred thousand species of life, suffering the pains of material
existence.

      The Lord is the Supreme Personality, and the jiva is
His tiny part and parcel.  Krsna is always concerned for the well-being
of His jivaexpansions.  In whatever situation the
jiva may find himself,
Lord Krsna is always prepared to grant the
jiva his heart's desire, like
a well-wisher who never forsakes
his friend.

	Krsna's relationship with the jiva is eternal: He uses the

jiva as an instrument through whom and to whom He manifests His
energies and opulences.  The Lord is the controller, the jiva the
controlled; the Lord is independent, the jiva dependent; the Lord
is master, the jiva the beneficiary of the results of his service
to the master. Ün
sacrifices such as the fire sacrifice (agnistoma); executing the
eight-fold yoga process;  offering havana or oblations; keeping
vows on full-moon days; giving in charity on auspicious days and
other occasions conducive to material benefit.

	Although subhakarma is performed with Lord Visnu as the
presiding Deity, the performer lacks spiritual intentions.  He
unfortunately takes complete shelter of material considerations
of object, time and place and cannot even intuit his dearth of
Krsna consciousness because such ritualistic considerations
thwart the mood of spiritual selfexamination and inquiry.

	The results of subhakarma are material, for they merely
inflame lust for more enjoyment in higher planets.  Such sacrifices
and their results can never satisfy the soul, the real
self, because their cause is illusion.  These socalled auspicious
activities only avail the jiva temporary heavenly pleasures
diametrically opposed to transcendental bliss.



	If a person is fortunate enough to get the association of a
saintly devotee and learns that he, the jiva, is an eternal servant
of Lord Krsna, then he easily surmounts the great obstacle
of material nature.
This is very rare, being the result of a
vast accumulation of piety that can
never be acquired by the
performance of subhakarma, which gives only
insignificant results.

    Empirical   philosophy   (jnanakanda)   elevates  one  to  the
brahmajyoti  The dry empirical philosophers are more advanced than
the  karmis,  for  they  understand the material existence to be a
condition  of  suffering and so strive for liberation. The Lord is
kind  to  them  also: He has given them the jnana-kanda section of
the Vedas so they can pursue impersonal knowledge of the Absolute.
Their   final   goal  is  absorption  into  the  brahmajyoti.  The
brahmajyoti  is  Krsna's  blinding  spiritual  effulgence  and  is
situated  on  the  bank  of the Viraja. All the demons the Supreme
Lord  kills  also merge into Brahman, just beyond the periphery of
maya.  Both  the empiricists and fruitive workers are nondevotees,
disinclined  to  serve  Lord  Krsna.  They  can  never  relish the
sweetness of Lord Krsna's service.

   Piety leading to devotional service

    Sukriti,   or   pious  activity,  is  of  three  varieties:  n
karmonmukhi or piety derived from subhakarma, jnanonmukhi or piety
derived  from  the cultivation of knowledge, and bhakty-unmukhi or
piety  derived  from  devotional  activities.  The first two lead,
respectively,  to  enjoyment  of  the  fruits  of  action  and  to
liberation.   The  last  leads  to  an  appreciation  for  saintly
association.  Bhaktyunmukhi  is  achieved by performing devotional
service to the Lord unknowingly, without spiritual knowledge.

    Bhakty-unmukhi  is  the most important kind of sukriti, for it
impels  the  jiva  to meet a pure, saintly devotee. By associating
with  a devotee of Krsna, the jiva's faith becomes firm. Gradually
he   develops   a  taste  for  chanting  the  holy  name,  becomes
compassionate  towards  all  beings,  and  is then firmly fixed in
Krsna consciousness.

     Compassionately, the Lord guides the karmi and jnani
   to the unknowing performance of devotional service

     The Lord is an ocean of magnanimity, and the supreme
controller of everyone.  He is always keen to serve the
conditioned souls, including the karmis and jnanis.  Thinking of
their welfare, He provides them the opportunity for indirect
devotional service.

	The karmi who follows varnasramadharma associates with
saintly persons and executes his duties for the satisfaction of
the Supreme Lord Hari.  Such activities cleanse his heart and
gradually destroy the desire for more fruitive work.  In its
place the seed of sraddha, or pure faith, is sown within his
heart.

     The jnani who sincerely seeks transcendental wisdom humbly
enters the company of pure devotees and invokes their inherent
compassion towards him.  By their grace, he easily develops firm
faith in the direct process of pure devotional service. In this
way, by the jnani's indirect devotion to knowledge, he gets the
shelter of the pure devotees.

     The Lord says, 'My servant, the jiva, may succumb to the
treachery of My illusory potency, but I keep his best interests
in My heart.  By degrees I inspire him to develop an aversion to
sense enjoyment and liberation, and then grant him attraction to
devotional service unto Me.  I lead the jiva in his pursuit to
fulfill his material desires by engaging him in the indirect
devotional processes of karma and jnana, and in this way I
strengthen his faith and love for Me.'

     Lord Krsna is most compassionate.  The indirect devotional
paths are but a hint of His causeless mercy.  Without His loving
intervention, how could the jiva ever become purified?

    The indirect processes have deteriorated badly in Kaliyuga

    The  Satya-yuga  sages  who  took up the process of meditation
were  personally  purified  by  Krsna  and  given  the treasure of
devotional  service. In the Treta-yuga, the same spiritual success
n   crowned those who flawlessly performed opulent sacrifices to
satisfy  the  Lord.  In  the  Dvapara-yuga, He granted devotion to
those  who  adhered to the path of perfect Deity worship. With the
advent  of Kali-yuga, Lord Krsna saw the dreadful condition of the
jivas  and  relinquished all hope in the processes of karma, jnana
and yoga. People in the Kali-yuga are short-lived, always harassed
by disease, and are born with a weak body and mind. The observance
of  varnasramadharma  and  the  cultivation of sankhya philosophy,
yoga, and empiricism will not yield the strength humanity needs to
redeem itself.

 [Footnote 4 by Bhaktivinoda] In Kaliyuga, the indirect
devotional paths of jnana and karma are extremely narrow and
hazardous.  They are intended to lead one to the shrine of
devotional service through either the association of saintly
persons during philosophical discussions, or by the ritualistic
offering to the Supreme Lord of the results of work performed
without desire.  In Kali-yuga both paths have become contaminated.  Genuine saintly persons, now rarely seen, have been
displaced by crass, commercial pseudospiritualists.  Religious
duties are no longer performed for purifying the consciousness
but for enjoyment of the material results of the rituals.
Therefore these secondary paths are no longer beneficial.  Even
the process of Deity worship that gave the highest spiritual
success in Dvaparayuga has become impure and degraded. [End of
footnote 4]

           The prime process - chanting the holy name

    The   Lord,  considering  the  jivas'  welfare,  descended  in
Kali-yuga  along  with  His  holy name to propagate the yugadharma
(the  religion  of  the age). By taking up the yugadharma the jiva
attains  love of Krsna: he has only to remember the Supreme Lord's
name   (namasmarana   or   japa)   and   chant   the  Lord's  name
congregationally (namasankirtan).

        The holy name is both the means and the end

	The only method or means (sadhana) in this age is the holy
name of the Lord.  The only goal (sadhya) to be attained in this
age is Krsnaprema.  Even in the stage of perfection, the name is
not given up but is chanted all the more, for it is intrinsic to
the activities of prema.  Indeed, the name is not different from
the Lord: it is the very embodiment of prema.  If the means is
the end, then the end and the means never contradict one another.
If process is identical to the objective, then it is easy for the
jivas to attain the desired goal of life, Krsnaprema.  By the
mercy of His holy name, Krsna easily delivers the jivas in the
age of Kali.

    	[Footnote  5 by Bhaktivinoda] In karma and jnana, the sadhana
and  sadhya  are  in conflict. The only real goal or sadhya of the
Vedas  is  to  attain the mercy of the Lord. As one approaches the
goal  via  the  paths  of  karma and jnana, they vanish,  being
impermanent.  But  namasadhya  already exists in nama sadhana, for
the  Lord  is  forever  identical  to His holy name. This truth is
known  only  by  great  good  fortune.  [End  of footnote 5] Srila
Haridasa, the incarnation of Lord Brahma, fell at the Lord's lotus
feet  with  tears  cascading  from his eyes. His body heaving with
sighs,  Haridasa  declared,  "I  am  extremely  fallen and am much
engrossed in material life. Being the rascal I am, I never chanted
Your holy name."

	Only those persons who appreciate Lord Hari, His devotees,
and devotional service can take this Harinama Cintamani to heart.


   CHAPTER TWO

  THE ACCEPTANCE OF THE HOLY NAME


     All glories to Sri Gadadhara Pandit and Lord Sri Gauranga;
all glories to Lord Nityananda, the life of Srimati Jahnavadevi;
all glories to Sri Advaita Acarya and Mother Sita; all glories to
Srila Srivasa Pandit and all the devotees of Lord Caitanya.

     Srila Haridasa continued to weep in ecstatic love.  Lord
Gauracandra encircled him with His arms in a loving embrace and
said, "O Haridasa, a devotee of your caliber is rarely found.
You are wellversed in all spiritual conclusions and you are
always unaffected by maya.

   Elevation by pure devotion

     "Taking birth in a low family and caste, you have proven to
the world that Krsna is not obtained merely by amassing wealth,
reputation, lineage or refinement.  Whoever develops unflinching
faith in unalloyed devotional service to the Supreme Lord as you
have done is factually superior to the demigods.

     "You are learned in all the truths of the holy name of the
Lord; your spiritual conduct is exemplary; and you are an expert
preacher.  Therefore, O Haridasa, kindly reveal to Me something
of the unlimited glories of the holy name.  Please allow Me to
savour your words.

   Three stages of acceptance of the name

    "One  who  chants  the  holy  name  even  once is considered a
Vaisnava devotee, and the householders should be very attentive to
respect  such  a  person.  But  the  devotee who constantly chants
Krsna's name is even a better Vaisnava, for he is endowed with all
good  qualities.  The  most  advanced  Vaisnava  of  all is he who
inspires  others who see him to immediately chant the Lord's name.
When he chants the name even once, attraction to rendering eternal
devotional service to the Supreme Lord is irrevocably established.
Kindly  tell  Me  how  the  nondevotees  can be made to accept the
chanting of the holy name of Krsna."

   The spiritual identity of the holy name

     Srila Haridasa clasped his hands together.  Eyes brimming
with tears and voice choked in spiritual love, he began his reply
in soft, gentle tones.

    	Lord  Krsna's  name  is  cintamani,  formed  of  eternal  and
transcendental   touchstone.  Just  as  a  touchstone  yields  all
desirable  objects,  so  the touchstone of Krsna's holy name gives
religiosity,   wealth,   sense   pleasure   and  liberation  to  a
materialistic  person.  To  a  surrendered devotee, it offers pure
love of Krsna.

    Lord  Krsna  and His holy name are not different; They are the
one  and same Absolute Truth who is the allpervading yet supremely
independent  form  of dynamic spirituality (caitanya vigraha), z
fully  cognizant  and  full  of  bliss,  without beginning or end.
Eternally  free  of  material  imperfection  (nitya mukta), always
situated   in  pure  goodness  (suddha  sattva),  the  holy  name,
identical  (abhinna) with He who is denoted by the name (the nami,
or  Krsna),  descends to this world as the complete incarnation of
the highest sweetness (rasa).

     Krsna's name, form, qualities
    and pastimes are full of potency

     Any object is known by four characteristic features: name,
form, qualities and activities.  Lord Krsna, the Supreme Object,
is knowable in terms of His unlimited and eternal name, form,
qualities and pastimes.  The absence of these four features in
anything denies its status as object.  For example, Brahman is
impersonal and formless; hence it is not an object unto itself,
but simply a distinctive trait of the Supreme Lord.

     Lord Krsna is the nondual Absolute Object who perfectly
manifests Himself through the four features of name, form,
qualities and pastimes.  Each one of these features is fully
potent and able to express Him in totality.  They exist and are
sustained by the Lord's sandhini potency, and they are eternal
and transcendental.  As Lord Krsna attracts all living entities,
similarly the holy name, which is not different from Him, also
attracts everyone.

     Krsna's sublime form is as identical to Him as His holy
name.  Remembering and chanting Krsna's name immediately invokes
His beautiful form in the  mind, and both dance there harmoniously
like inseparable partners.

    	Krsna's sixtyfour qualities are unlimited and transcendental.
Brahma  and  Siva  are  expansions of His qualities, but they only
partially  display  the transcendental nature of the Supreme Lord,
which  is  infinite,  eternal,  unending and absolutely spiritual.
Krsna  alone  has  the  full  sixtyfour  qualities  of the Supreme
Person;  even  His full expansions like Lord Narayana and avataras
like  Lord  Ramacandra  are  ornamented  with  only sixty of them.
Demigods  up  to  the  level  of  Siva  possess fiftyfive of these
qualities,  but  only in limited measure. Ordinary jivas have just
fifty,  visible in mere fractional degrees, like small drops. Only
Krsna,  even  amongst  all  His Visnu expansions, is the master of
four exceptional qualities visible in Him alone.

     If the Lord's qualities are compared to waves, then His
pastimes appear in these waves and continuously form, crest  and
reshape themselves again and again.  Wherever they may be
enacted, either in Goloka, Vaikuntha, or Vraja, they are always
transcendental.  Hence, the Lord's name, form, qualities and
pastimes are of the same spiritual substance.

   Conditioned consciousness is
   opposite to Krsna consciousness

    The   jiva   conditioned   by  the  illusory  material  nature
experiences  a  state of consciousness that is a complete reversal
of  Krsna  consciousness.  Because  he falsely identifies with his
body,  the jiva's name, form, qualities and activities are full of
contradiction. Once he is purified of his material contaminations,
these four features become harmonious and identical with the soul.
But  until  he is liberated by the Lord's grace, the z jiva will
continue   to   suffer  the  pains  of  his  false  identification
eternally.  Krsna,  being  beyond  material  existence,  eternally
enjoys  His  name,  form,  qualities  and  activities as one Truth
inseparable  from  Him.    T  he holy name is the primary feature
  Of  the four characteristic features, the Lord's holy name
is the primary one because it awards cognition of the other three.
Therefore  chanting  the  holy  name  is  the  foremost  religious
activity  (dharma)  of  a  Vaisnava.  From the holy name gradually
blossoms  the  Lord's  form,  qualities  and  pastimes. The entire
panorama  of  Lord  Krsna's  pastimes is present in the holy name.
Lord  Caitanya  has  personally  declared  Krsna's  name to be the
highest Absolute Truth.

      There are only two realities in this world,  the holy name
and  the  jiva  In  the entire material existence there is nothing
comparable  to  the  holy name. The holy name is the most precious
jewel  in  the  Lord's treasurehouse. In this whole universe there
are  only  two  meaningful  truths:  the  jiva  and  the holy name
everything  else  is  deceptive. By the will of the Lord, the jiva
entered  this  realm  of inert matter and was bewildered by it, as
when  in the beginning Brahma thought himself to be all alone. But
when  Krsna  descended  into  the  world  as  His  holy  name, the
spiritual  reality  of which Brahma and the other jivas are a part
was revealed.

   The name is of two kinds - principal and secondary

    The  holy  name can be categorized in two types: principal and
secondary.  By taking shelter of Krsna's principal names, the jiva
obtains  the  real  boon  of spiritual life. The holy names of the
Lord  that  describe His transcendental pastimes and which contain
all  of  the Lord's spiritual excellences are defined as principal
names.   They   are,  for  example:  Govinda,  Gopala,  Rama,  Sri
Nandanandana,     Radhanatha,     Hari,    Yasomati    Pranadhana,
Madana Mohana,   Syamasundara,   Madhava,  Gopinatha,  Vrajagopal,
Raksala,  Yadava,  and  so  on. Anyone who chants the names of the
Lord  that  depict  His  eternal  pastimes  can  attain the Lord's
supreme abode.

   The secondary names and their symptoms

    The  Vedas  address  the  Lord  with  names  that describe His
affiliation  with  His  material  energy.  These are His secondary
names,   e.g.   Creator,   Supersoul,   Brahman,   maintainer  and
annihilator  of the world, Yajneswar, Hara, etc. Such names of the
Lord  are  invoked  by  those  pursuing  fruitive  activities  and
empirical  knowledge.  In  keeping  with the Vedic directions, the
chanting  of  such  names  of  the  Lord  will result in piety and
salvation.   However,  Krsnaprema,  the  most  perfect  result  of
chanting  the  holy  name of the Lord, is attained only by saintly
souls who invoke Krsna's principal names.

      The  pure name and namabhasa; different results If the holy
name  is chanted just once, though impurely so, or if the sound is
simply heard, then the living entity regardless of his high or low
caste  is  immediately  liberated.  This is z the declaration of
scripture.  And  furthermore, when the holy name is chanted in the
clearing stage (namabhasa the stage when impurities are swept from
the heart of the chanter), then the highest goal is attained after
some   delay.   	

    All other auspicious pious results including liberation can be
quite  easily achieved in namabhasa, but the attainment of love of
Godhead is suspended for a while until the jiva reaches the summit
of chanting the pure name or suddhanama. One obtains love of Krsna
only after reaching this stage of pure chanting. In namabhasa, sin
and  unwanted  desires  in  the  heart  are eventually dissipated;
thereafter  the  devotee  chants  purely.  Suddhanama  offers  the
devotee the highest spiritual success, love of Krsna.

   Vyavadhana or 'disruption' causes offense

    Chanting  should  be  free from any form of disruption because
this  will result in offenses against the holy name, which in turn
pose  an insurmountable obstacle on the path to success. Vyavadhan
or  'disruption'  is  of  two  kinds.  The  first type is known as
varna-vyavadhan  or  disruption  in the syllables. For example, in
the  Bengali word 'hathikari', 'ha' and the last syllable 'ri' can
be  put  together to form 'Hari', a name of Krsna. But because the
syllables  'thi-ka'  are inserted in the middle, the repetition of
'hathikari'  will  not  give  actual benefit. Yet the Islamic word
'haram'  is  not  perverted by such disruption of the syllables or
varna-vyavadhan.  The syllables comprising the holy name 'Ram' are
uninterrupted;  hence,  speaking the word 'haram' gives liberation
because it is namabhasa.

    The  second  type of vyavadhana is called tattva-vyavadhana or
disruption of philosophical conclusions. This offense is much more
serious.   Lord   Krsna's   name   and   Lord  Krsna  Himself  are
non-different.  But someone who is polluted by Mayavadi philosophy
imagines  them  to  be  separate.  Such an offensive conclusion is
clearly against all Vedic teachings and will totally destroy one's
spiritual  life.  It  is impossible to obtain Krsnaprema from such
chanting.

    In  summary, one should understand properly that the holy name
is  identical  to  the  Lord Himself. The principal names of Krsna
should  be  chanted  as  suddhanama,  devoid  of namabhasa and the
aparadha  of vyavadhana. The person who takes these considerations
to heart and chants suddhanama even once is considered a Vaisnava.
He is to be served with faith and devotion.

   Overcoming namabhasa and attaining prema

     Anyone wanting to attain the highest spiritual success of
chanting purely must approach a bonafide spiritual master and
serve him carefully and sincerely.  Gradually, as all the
anarthas or unwanted desires in the heart are destroyed, the
transcendental name of Krsna appears and dances on the tongue
of the devotee.  The holy name, now nectarean in taste, cannot
but be relished by the devotee at every moment.  Thus spiritually
intoxicated, the devotee always feels like dancing.  As the holy
name dances, the devotee likewise dances, and at that moment the
ecstasy of love of Godhead also enters dancing into the devotee's
heart.  Then the entire world will dance and maya will flee away.

   Only the faithful are eligible to chant - the omnipotent holy name

     The Supreme Lord has infused His transcendental name with
all of His potencies and offered it to humanity.  One who has
sufficient faith in Lord Krsna's name is eligible to chant, and
only one who chants the name is properly executing the prescribed
duties of the human being.  He is called an adhikari or possessor
of the holy name.

	The holy name is so potent that chanting does not dependent
on conditions of time, place, rules, cleanliness, and so on.
Pious activities, such as the giving of charity, the performance
of sacrifices, the taking of ablutions, or the recitation of
Vedic mantras are all regulated by stringent rules.  But for the
chanting of the holy name, the only prerequisite is faith.  One
who takes shelter of the holy name with unflinching faith will
attain all perfection.

   Accept things favorable to chanting  and reject things unfavourable

     The jiva in Kaliyuga must become free from deceit, join
Lord Krsna's family of devotees and continuously chant the holy
name.  He should accept everything favorable for devotional
service and at the same time reject unfavorable things.  He
should seek out the association of devotees and utilize his life
in service to the Lord's holy name and the Vaisnavas.  He should
forgo all other religious practices and pious activities and
never worship any other devata.  Nor should he think anything to
be independent from Krsna.  One who always chants the holy name
and serves the devotees will surely obtain Krsnaprema.

      Srila Haridasa Thakura again placed his head on the Lord's
lotus feet.  Weeping, he begged the Lord that he might develop
attachment for the holy name.

	One who is blessed with love and devotion and who takes
pleasure in serving Srila Haridasa Thakura's lotus feet will find
the touchstone of the holy name to be as precious as life itself.


   CHAPTER THREE

    THE UNCLARIFIED NAME (NAMABHASA)


     All glories to Sri Gadadhara Pandit and Lord Sri Gauranga;
all glories to Lord Nityananda, the life of Srimati Jahnavadevi;
all glories to Sri Advaita Acarya and Mother Sita; all glories to
Srila Srivasa Pandit and all the devotees of Lord Caitanya.

      Extending His lotuslike hands, the merciful Lord Caitanya
lifted up Srila Haridasa and said, "My dear Haridasa, please take
hold of yourself and inform Me about namabhasa.  The holy name is
so potent and endowed with such transcendental qualities that
anyone can easily achieve liberation simply by chanting.  Once
namabhasa is understood, one can strive to chant purely the holy
name of Krsna.

    Ajnana is like mist, and anartha is like clouds

     "The holy name is an allpowerful, brilliant sun that
disperses the darkness of maya or nescience.  Clouds and mist may
sometimes blanket one's vision; the sun is then not visible.
Similarly, the jivas are covered over by the mist of ajnana
(ignorance) and the clouds of anartha (material tendencies).

    	"Lord  Krsna  and  His  holy  name are identical. They are an
omnipotent  spiritual sun that destroys the darkness of nescience.
To  stream  mercy  upon  the conditioned souls the sun of the holy
name has arisen on the horizon of this material world. The mist of
ignorance  and  the  clouds  of  anartha spread a blanket over the
jiva's  vision  so that he is unable to see the sunlike holy name.
The  sun  is  too  big  for any cloud or mist to cover, but if the
jiva's vision is obscured, then the sun is hidden from him.

      Ignorance  covers  knowledge of the holy name,  the Lord's
position, and selfidentity "Even after accepting the holy name, if
one  does  not  understand  the name's identity and transcendental
nature,  a mist of ignorance is created that plunges the jiva into
darkness.  One who is ignorant about Lord Krsna's position becomes
confused  and begins to worship the demigods. Thus he is entangled
in  the cycle of fruitive action or karma. That person who has not
realized  the  jiva's  transcendental  nature suffers from svarupa
bhrama  (confusion of identity), and is in material consciousness,
deluded and always in ignorance."

    Srila  Haridasa Thakura exclaimed in exhilaration, "Today I am
most  fortunate,  for  from  my  mouth the Supreme Lord Himself,
Caitanya  Mahaprabhu,  wants to hear about the holy name!" He then
began by elaborating further on the subject of ignorance.

    	One  who  is  in  ignorance  does not know that Lord Krsna is
supreme  over  all. His eternal servitors are the demigods and all
other   jivas.  He  does  not  know  that  the  jiva's  nature  is
transcendental,  and  that  the material world is an appearance of
maya,  the  Lord's  illusory  energy. Anyone who understands these
truths  and  their  relationships  is  freed  from the darkness of
ignorance and can pass beyond the veil of namabhasa.

      The cloud of anartha is comprised of hankering for illusory
things, weakness of heart, and offenses

     Hankering for things temporary and unreal, weakness of the
heart and mind, and offenses are clouds of anarthas that
keep the jivas in constant suffering.

	Asat-trsna ('thirsting for the illusory') indicates desires
for things not related to Lord Krsna.  These desires are: the
craving for socalled material gains in this world or in heaven,
the craving for mystic powers, and the craving for impersonal
liberation.

	Hridaya-daurbalyam refers to propensities of the heart and
mind (viz. material attachment, deceit, enviousness of another's
advancement, and desire for name, fame and glory) that arise from
a condition of spiritual weakness.

	Aparadha means offenses; these may be offenses to the holy
name (namparadha), to Krsna's service (sevparadha), to
Krsna's devotees (vaisnavparadha), or to other living entities
(jivparadha).

	These clouds hide the sun of the holy name.  If one chants
the holy name while maintaining these anarthas, the chanting can
at best be only the unclarified name (namabhasa).  The holy name
is always perfect in itself, but namabhasa obfuscates the jiva's
vision of it.

   Namabhasa is counteracted by sambandhatattva

    As long as the jiva is not firmly established in the knowledge
of   sambandha-tattva   or   the   correct  understanding  of  the
relationship  between  God,  His  energies,  and the jiva, he will
continue to chant in the namabhasa stage. When the serious chanter
takes  full  shelter of a bonafide spiritual master, he learns how
to  expertly perform devotional service and thus disperse the mist
and  clouds in his heart. Once the cloud and mist are removed, the
sun  of the holy name shines brilliantly once more and bestows the
devotee with love of Godhead.

   Sambandha as relationship, abhideya as indication,
   prayojana as necessity

    The    bonafide    spiritual   master   gives   the   disciple
sambandha-jnana.  The  chanting of the holy name is the indication
(abhideya) of this eternal relationship (sambandha). The spiritual
master  enthuses the disciple to take up abhideya or chanting. The
sun  of the holy name then shines stronger and evaporates the mist
and  clouds.  Chanting at this stage becomes an indispensable need
(prayojana).  Prayojana leads the devotee to pure love of Godhead,
at which point he experiences ecstasy in every moment of chanting.

    The  spiritual  master must exactingly explain sambandha-jnana
to  the  disciple,  who in turn must receive it with proper faith.
The quintessence of this knowledge is that Lord Krsna is eternally
the  Supreme  Personality  of  Godhead,  the  jiva  is His eternal
servitor,  and  the  jiva's  loving  relationship  with  Krsna  is
likewise eternal as an inherent trait of his nature.

	In contact with material nature, the jiva forgets his
eternal relationship with the Lord and loiters aimlessly in this
world of illusion searching for bliss.  The material world is a
veritable prison house where the jiva is penalized for turning
his back on Krsna.  It consists of the fourteen planetary systems
which together are known as the Devidhama. These planetary
systems are the cells within the prison where the recalcitrant
jivas are confined.  Devidhama is not a place for experiencing
happiness and bliss. The material socalled pleasures offered to
the jivas here are only temporary, and as such are the cause of
further suffering.  As is the plan of any penal system, the jivas
are gradually reformed through this punitive arrangement.

    By  the mercy of a Vaisnava devotee of the Lord, an imprisoned
jiva  may  accept  the holy name and the attendant sambandha-jnana
and  finally ascend to pure love of Godhead. Such a fortunate soul
will  consider  even  sayujya-mukti or impersonal liberation to be
reprehensible.   But   until   he   is  solidly  grounded  on  the
sambandha-jnana  understanding,  his  chanting will be polluted by
anarthas.  This is namabhasa. In this stage, the jiva cannot chant
the pure name of Krsna.

    The result of namabhasa chanting

     However, the value of the namabhasa stage of chanting is not
to be underestimated, for it avails many positive benefits to the
jiva and increases his piety.  Verily, namabhasa prooves to be
one of the jiva's greatest benefits.  It offers him more good
fortune than all religiosity, vows, yoga, or sacrifices can offer
together.

    	In namabhasa, all sins are absolved, liberating the jiva from
the   effects   of  Kaliyuga.  The  namabhasa  chanter  becomes  a
wellwishing  servitor  of the fallen souls because he frees others
as  well  as  himself  from the disease of material consciousness.
Fear  and  distress  are  subdued,  allowing  the chanter to enjoy
security and equanimity. The miseries inflicted by demons, ghosts,
hobgoblins,  evil  spirits  and  malefic  planetary influences are
easily  averted.  Even  if  the  chanter  is  destined for the
hellish planets he will attain liberation, because prarabdha karma
(sinful  reactions  of  previous lives' activities that are taking
effect now) is countered. 	

    Namabhasa  is  greater  than  the  result  of studying all the
Vedas,  of visiting every pilgrimage place, or of performing every
possible  altruistic  and  pious  work.  The four goals offered in
Vedas  -  religiosity,  wealth, sense enjoyment and liberation are
made  freely  available  by namabhasa chanting. It is endowed with
unimaginable  power  to  reclaim  any  living  entity.  It bestows
unlimited  joy  and  elevates even the derelicts to a very exalted
stage  of  realization.  Namabhasa offers eternal residence in the
spiritual  abode of Vaikuntha, especially in Kaliyuga. This is the
declaration of scripture.

   Namabhasa has four attitudes: sanketa, parihasa, stobha and hela

     The four attitudes in namabhasa chanting are sanketa
(unintentionally or coincidentally), parihasa (in jest or
ridicule), stobha (derisively) and hela (with disregard and
neglect).

	Sanketa is of two kinds: 1) when one, though intending to
chant Lord Visnu's name, has a material conception of it, and 2)
when one has something entirely different than the Lord or His
name on his mind, but chants the holy name being somehow or other
reminded of that transcendental sound.  The yavanas eat cows, yet
in spite of this they can attain liberation by uttering 'haram',
an ordinary word of their language (Urdu).  Because sanketa is
the least offensive attitude of namabhasa, the power of the holy
name is largely undiminished when chanted in that way.

     Chanting in jest - parihasa, like Jarasandha  results in
liberation, as does chanting derisively (stobha, like Sisupal).
Even chanting inattentively and with disregard (hela) results in
deliverance from the pangs of material existence.  Namabhasa
chanting can purify anyone. People of low upbringing like
mlecchas, gross materialists, and lazy persons can all avail of
this opportunity to obtain liberation.

   The difference between sraddhanamabhasa and namabhasa

     Faithful chanting that is yet afflicted by anarthas is known
as sraddhanamabhasa.  The element of sraddha (faith) is absent
in the four attitudes of namabhasa chanting; even sanketa
chanting is tinged with neglect.  Nontheless, the lowest attitude
of namabhasa (hela) gives one liberation, what to speak of
faithful chanting.  Chanting with faith establishes one on the
platform of sambandha-jnana, which results in rati or attraction
for the holy name.  Sraddhanama actually clears away anarthas
very easily and quickly.

   Anarthafree namabhasa chanting becomes suddhanama,
   which gives Krsnaprema  n

     Short of Krsnaprema, every other success is available in
namabhasa.  When anarthas are nullified, then namabhasa is
converted to nama or suddhanama, the pure name.  By pure
chanting and by following the rules of sadhana as instructed by
guru, sadhu and sastra, one slowly but surely acquires Krsna
prema - love of Godhead. But namabhasa chanting can never give
Krsnaprema.

     That soul is indeed fortunate who has freed himself from
committing namparadha in the namabhasa stage.  The offenseless
stage of namabhasa is far superior to karma and jnana, for it
nurtures the seed of faith that sprouts rati or attraction.  This
attraction leads the chanter to suddhanama and finally to prema.

     [Footnote 1 by Bhaktivinoda] The scriptures are filled with
words like 'namabhasa', 'Vaisnavabhasa', 'sraddhabhasa', 'rati-
abhasa', 'premabhasa', 'mukti-abhasa', etc.  The suffix 'abhasa'
has a special meaning that is applicable in many ways.

    	Abhasa  (faint  or indistinct image) is of two sorts: svarupa
abhasa   and   pratibimba-abhasa.  Svarupbhasa  is  the  partial
infiltration  of the full brilliance. For example, on a cloudy day
the  light  of  the sun is only partially visible because the full
brilliance of the sun is shaded by the clouds. Namabhasa caused by
the  cloudlike  coverings of ignorance is called chayanamabhasa or
'the faint shadowy name.' The way to the shadowy name is opened by
chayasraddhabhasa or the faint shadow of sraddha (faith).

	Pratibimba-abhasa means the reflection of a distorted image
of the real object, as sunlight is distorted when reflected off
the surface of water.  Such a distorted, broken reflection can
never result in a complete perception of the original source of
light.

    When  the  rays  of  the  holy name reflect off the heart of a
Mayavadi,  pratibimbanamabhasa  appears, bequeathing sayujya mukti
upon the Mayavadis who chant it. Such chanting, however, will fail
to  generate  the  quintessence  of chanting - Krsnaprema. Indeed,
this type of namabhasa is a major namaparadha; therefore it cannot
really be counted as a namabhasa at all.

	Chayanamabhasa or svarupanamabhasa is the real namabhasa,
and is subdivided into four categories of attitude, as previously
mentioned.  The scriptures, while praising namabhasa, profusely
condemn pratibimba namabhasa.  Chayanamabhasa is the result of
chanting the holy name with anarthas born of ignorance.  But the
chanting of the holy name with anarthas nurtured by wicked and
distorted philosophy produces pratibimbanamabhasa, and this is a
major obstacle to devotional service and a grave offense.

    A  Vaisnavbhasa  person,  though  not  honored  as a genuine
Vaisnava, should still be given the respect due a neophyte devotee
as long as he is not contaminated by the Mayavadi philosophy. Such
a  person  can  easily become elevated by contact  with saintly
personalities.  The  elevated Vaisnavas consider such neophytes to
be  innocent and so shower mercy on them. They must not be ignored
and  avoided  like  the agnostic Mayavadis. The pure devotees will
resuscitate   the  small  spark  of  devotion  in  the  neophytes,
encourage  their propensity to worship the Deity and progressively
give them sambandha-jnana and establish them in devotional service
of the Supreme Lord and His devotees. But if a neophyte exhibits a
strong  inclination  to  incorrigible  Mayavadi attitudes, then he
must be avoided. [End of footnote 1]

    When  such  a  person  sees  pure  firm faith in others, he is
impressed,  and  dim  faith is invoked in him by good association.
Desiring  elevation,  he  may  chant  constantly,  but  because he
nurtures  strong attachments to sense pleasure and liberation, his
sraddha  is  not  real  it  merely  appears to be sraddha. This is
defined  in  the  scriptures  as pratibimba-sraddha-abhasa. Hence,
pratibimba-sraddha-abhasa results in pratibimba-namabhasa. If this
sort   of   namabhasa   becomes   further  aberrated  by  Mayavadi
philosophy, the chanter thinks that the perfect and transcendental
name  of  the  Lord  is  mundane and imperfect, and requires to be
perfected   by  impersonal  knowledge.  This  offense  obliterates
whatever little bit of genuine sraddha he may have had.

 The difference between chaya and pratibimba namabhasa

    Chaya-namabhasa  is  symptomatic  of ignorance and weakness of
the heart. Many anarthas may plague the devotee in this condition,
but  all  these faults are rectified by continuous chanting of the
Lord's  holy  name.  But  pratibimba-namabhasa  chanting increases
one's offenses.

    	According   to   the  Mayavadis,  Lord  Krsna's  name,  form,
qualities  and  pastimes  are  all  illusory, false, temporary and
contaminated.  They  mistake  prema  or  pure  love of Godhead for
sentimentalism. Mayavadi philosophy characteristically contradicts
the  devotional path of bhakti at every turn. Therefore, Mayavadis
are the greatest offenders.

	The Mayavadi's chanting is not real chanting. The syllables
of the Lord's name may emanate from his mouth, but the vibration
is bereft of the potency of the Lord.  His chanting is filled
with yearnings for sense pleasure and liberation, and all the
while he thinks the Lord's name is material.  Because he tries to
cheat, his chanting results in unrelenting misery.

  How does the Mayavadi redeem himself?

    If  by  some good fortune the Mayavadi relinquishes the desire
for  sense  gratification  and  liberation and, thinking himself a
servant  of Krsna, begins to chant, he becomes exonerated from his
offenses  and  philosophical aberrations. He then takes shelter of
the  holy  name and repents. This opens the way to again hear from
and  associate with the pure devotees. Thus his chanting leads him
to  comprehend  sambandha-jnana.  If  he chants while continuously
shedding  tears of contrition, he can invoke the mercy of the holy
name.  n   The Mayavadi's offense is he sees bhakti as material
The  Mayavadi considers both the transcendental form of Lord Krsna
and  the  jiva's  constitutional  position  as  the Lord's eternal
servitor  to  be transient and imaginary. This Mayavadi philosophy
is  a  grievous  namaparadha. Namabhasa is truly a wish fulfilling
tree,  for  it even offers to the Mayavadis the sayujya liberation
so  desired  by  them.  Because  the name is omnipotent, it offers
mukti-abhasa  or  seeming  liberation  in  the pratibimbanamabhasa
stage. Amongst the five types of liberation, sayujya (becoming one
with  God) is considered abhasa, or merely the hint of liberation.
Material  suffering  is  indeed terminated in sayujya, but certain
spiritual doom follows.

    The  Mayavadis,  captivated by maya, find sayujya pleasurable;
but  it  is  only  a  mere  hint of actual happiness. They forever
forfeit   transcendental   existence,   knowledge,  happiness  and
devotional service, because sayujyamukti obfuscates remembrance of
Krsna.  Where is the question of eternal bliss when the eternality
of bhakti and prema is doubted?

  If the chaya-namabhasa chanter  refrains from Mayavadi contamination,
  he gradually attains suddhanama

    If   the   chaya-namabhasa  chanter  is  not  contaminated  by
atheistic  concepts,  then  he  has  a good chance. He is ignorant
about  the potency of the holy name, but it is the inherent nature
of  the  name  to  impregnate that knowledge into the chanter. For
example,  the  sun  may not be visible when the sky is cloudy, but
once  the  clouds  are  dispersed,  the sun shines through in full
glory.  The  disperal  of  the  clouds  of anartha and ignorace is
greatly assisted by the powerful influence of a bonafide spiritual
master, and in a short time the chanter is able to attain the pure
name and Krsnaprema.

      A  devotee must not associate with Mayavadis Concluding his
explanation   of  namabhasa,  Haridasa  said,  "The  devotee  must
diligently  avoid the association of Mayavadis and serve Vaisnavas
who  are  attached to the pure holy name. O Lord Caitanya, this is
Your  injunction  and  whoever follows it is very fortunate. Those
who  disregard  and disobey this instruction are wretches who will
suffer  for  a  hundred  million births. My Lord, please rescue me
from bad association and keep me at Your lotus feet, for I can see
no other alternative to your lotus feet."

	One who takes shelter at the feet of Srila Haridasa Thakura
will incessantly chant the holy name and find real satisfaction
in life.


   CHAPTER FOUR


   TEN OFFENSES AGAINST THE HOLY NAME (NAMAPARADHA);
   BLASPHEMY OF THE DEVOTEES (SADHU-NINDA)
   IS THE FIRST OFFENSE

[Introductory note by Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakura: "Namabhasa was
described in the previous chapter; the next ten chapters deal
with the ten offenses to the holy name, and Chapter Fourteen
explains offenses to the Deity (sevaparadha).  The nama and seva
aparadhas initially arise from anarthas that cause namabhasa.  If
these aparadhas are not corrected and become intentional, they
not only impede one's spiritual progress, but remove one from
devotional service entirely, placing him in hell.  The first of
these offenses is the subject of this chapter.  Criticism or
harmful intent to a qualified sadhu is a serious offense to the
holy name.  How can the Lord tolerate criticism of those who
spread the glories of His name?"]

    All glories to Lord Sri Gauranga, the life of Sri Gadadhara
Pandit; all glories to Lord Nityananda, the heart of Srimati
Jahnavadevi; all glories to Sri Advaita Acarya, the Lord of
Mother Sita; all glories to Srila Srivasa Pandit and all the
devotees of Lord Caitanya.

     Lord Caitanya said, "Haridasa, now describe in detail the
offenses against the holy name."  Srila Haridasa replied, "My
Lord, whatever I say will be on Your prompting alone.  I am a
mere puppet.

   The ten offenses against the holy name

     "The scriptures enumerate ten offenses against the holy
name.  I am very fearful of these offenses.  I will list them one
by one. As I do, please give me the strength to avoid them, my
Lord."

     1) Blasphemy of the devotees of the Lord.

     2) To consider demigods to be independent of the Supreme
	Lord, and to similarly think Lord Krsna's name, form,
	qualities and pastimes are separate from Him.

     3) To disobey the spiritual master who reveals the truth
	about the holy name.

     4) To criticize the scriptures that describe the
	glories of the holy name.

     5) To think the excellences and divine qualities of the holy
	name are imaginary, and to so interpret the scriptural
	glorification of the holy name.

     6) To commit sinful activities on the strength of the holy name.

     7) To instruct the faithless on the glories of the holy
	name.

     8) To equate chanting of the holy name with auspicious
	ritualistic activities recommended in the karmakanda
	sections of the Vedas.

     9) To be inattentive while chanting the holy name.

     10) To not develop love for the holy name after learning the
	the name's glories because of maintaining attachments to
	the body and things related to the body.

    To  blaspheme  devotees  is  the  first offense To blaspheme a
devotee  of  the  Lord is the first offense against the holy name,
and   it  completely  disrupts  one's  spiritual  life.  The  good
qualities  of  a  devotee  have  been personally described by Lord
Krsna  in His instructions to Uddhava, as recorded in the Eleventh
Canto of Srimad Bhagavatam.

     The devotee is merciful; is tolerant; is equal to all; does
penance without injuring the body; is truthful; is pure-hearted;
is compassionate; is free from lust in his intelligence; is
master of the senses; makes no claims of ownership; is gentle; is
clean; is regulated in eating; is peaceful; is apathetic to
materialism; is patient; is steady; takes Lord Krsna as his only
shelter; is free from illusion; is grave; has conquered over
hunger, thirst, lamentation, envy, old age and death; does not
expect honor from others; offers respect to others; is expert; is
not a cheater; is knowledgeable.

   Qualities are of two kinds - svarupa and tathasta

     These qualities can be divided into two categories: svarupa,
or the direct and indigenous quality of any substance, and
tathasta, qualities that are ornamental and visible when the
substance comes in contact with something else.  The devotee's
acceptance of Lord Krsna as his only shelter (Krsna eka sarana)
is his svarupa-laksana, and all the other qualities are tathasta.

	If by some good fortune one associates with a Vaisnava, he
may develop a taste for the holy name and takes complete shelter
at Krsna's lotus feet.  Thus he develops the svarupa-laksana, and
then through continued chanting he will gradually develop all the
other laksanas or symptoms.  The other symptoms are tathasta but
nevertheless are essentially present in a Vaisnava.

    Saintliness depends not on external designations
    but on svarupa-laksana

    External  designations  such  as the four social and religious
orders   of  brahmana,  ksatriya,  vaisya,  sudra  and  bramacari,
grihastha,  vanaprastha,  sannyasi  are  not  the  symptoms  of  a
devotee.  The  scriptures say the quality of complete surrender to
Lord  Krsna  is  the hallmark of a devotee, and he alone can chant
Krsna's name purely. Through Raghunatha das Goswami's example, Sri
Caitanya  taught everyone how the proper grihastha Vaisnava should
behave.  Srila Raghunatha das Goswami appeared not in the brahmana
caste  but  in  the  inferior  kayastha  caste  of  the village of
Saptagrama.  The  Lord  instructed  him  not  to  be impatient and
impulsive, but to return to his household life and remain there.

    	One is purified in degrees by following this orderly process.
There  is  no need to prematurely pretend that one is detached and
renounced  just  to impress people. Renunciation has to take place
within  the  heart.  Wearing  the  dress  of a renunciate when the
senses  are  still  uncontrolled  is called monkey renunciation or
markatavairagya.

	The householder should regularly fulfill his duties.
Detatchment from matter will naturally arise within his heart as
he internally cultivates firm faith in Krsna while conducting
normal external social dealings among the people in general.
Very quickly Lord Krsna will personally liberate him.

   The symptoms of a renounced sadhu

     When Srila Raghunatha das Goswami at last left his household
and embraced a sannyasi's life, the Lord personally instructed
him about the proper path of renunciation.  The sannyasi should
not engage in nor give audience to frivolous materialistic
conversations.  The wearing of fine clothes and the tasting of
delicacies must be rejected.  Being always ready to offer respect
to others, demanding no respect for oneself, the sannyasi should
constantly chant the holy name.  He should render intimate
service to Sri Radha and Krsna in the mood of the residents of
Vraja.

   The svarupa-laksana of both the householder - and sannyasi is the same

    The  svarupa-laksana  or  principal symptom (i.e. surrender to
Lord  Krsna)  must prevail in a devotee regardless of his varna or
asrama.  The  tathasta-laksana or marginal symptoms will naturally
vary  according  to  the  varnas  and  asramas,  while undeviating
surrender to Lord Krsna remains as the fixed symptom of devotional
service in all cases.

	Once he has this symptom, gradually but unfailingly the
marginal symptoms appear in the devotee's character.  Even if the
marginal symptoms haven't reached full maturity in a surrendered
devotee, and instead some serious discrepancies are visible in
his character, he is still to be respected as a sadhu or saintly
soul.  This is the verdict of the scriptures as expressed in Lord
Krsna's own words in the Bhagavad Gita, and it must be given full
respect.

    It  is  offensive to criticize a devotee  on the basis of his
past sins When one has developed a real taste for chanting, then a
single utterance of the holy name can eradicate all previous sins.
Some  vestiges of sinful reaction may still remain in a particular
individual,  but  these will steadily be removed by the process of
chanting. As these last traces of sin disappear, he emerges a pure
devotee.  Of  course,  the  lingering  traces  of  sin are seen by
ordinary  people as actual sin; if a devotee is criticized because
of  the traces of almostextirpated sin in his character, that is a
grievous  offense. If criticism is made against a devotee for sins
committed  prior  to  his  surrendering to Krsna, that is likewise
another  serious  offense.  Such  a faultfinder surely invites the
wrath of Lord Krsna.

      A few words on the principal symptom of a devotee

     One who has fully surrendered to Lord Krsna will naturally
only chant Lord Krsna's name. By the grace of the Lord, such a
person is entitled to be called a sadhu.  Only a devotee of Lord
Krsna is eligible to be respected as a sadhu, and none other.
One who proclaims himself a sadhu is but a charlatan and a
braggart; one who humbly says he is a poor soul surrendered to
Lord Krsna and who constantly chants Krsna's name is a real
sadhu.  He, considering himself lower than a blade of grass and
more tolerant than a tree, offers all respects to others without
expecting any for himself.  The holy name of Krsna grants such a
sadhu pure love of Godhead.

A Vaisnava firmly fixed in the holy name
is the real sadhu; criticizing him is nama-aparadha

    Hearing such a sadhu chant the holy name, one should offer him
all  respects, knowing him to be a perfect Vaisnava. A Vaisnava is
the  spiritual  master of the world, a true friend of every being,
and is always an ocean of compassion. Anyone who criticizes such a
Vaisnava  goes  directly  to  hell  and suffers untold pains birth
after  birth.  The  doors of bhakti are closed to such an offender
because  devotional  service is the merciful gift of a Vaisnava to
the  living  entities.  The  Vaisnava  is an abode of Lord Krsna's
spiritual  potencies;  others  receive  Krsna  bhakti  only by his
confidential association.

 This pure bhakti potency is distributed by a perfected pure
devotee to the aspirant devotee, and that devotee, becoming
perfect, distributes it to another aspirant. Thus the bhakti
potency expands.  The three great touchstones of bhakti
sakti are the mercy of the pure devotee in the form of his
eatable remnants, the water from his foot bath, and the dust
from his lotus feet.

How a Vaisnava imbues his potency in others:
By remaining in the presence of a Vaisnava for some time,
one absorbs the bhakti energy flowing from the body of that
saintly person.  If one is sufficiently faithful, he can bind
that energy within his own heart and experience immediate
ecstasy.  By just a moment's association with a Vaisnava, bhakti
is invoked in the heart of a pious person, who will immediately

be inspired to chant Lord Krsna's name; gradually, the holy name
will award him all good qualities.

	[Footnote 1 by Bhaktivinoda] The potency or sakti of pure
devotion is a blend of hladini (Krsna's pleasuregiving potency)
and samvit (Krsna's knowledgegiving potency).  Bhakti reposes in
the heart of the transcendentalist and uses him as a vehicle for
further movement.  When a jiva becomes free from envy and is
inclined to devotional service, the bhakti potency is then
transferred from the pure devotee's heart into that jiva's heart,
where it takes shelter of his soul and acheives perfection there.
This is a great mystery. [End of footnote 1]

There are four kinds of blasphemy of a devotee

     The offender criticizes a Vaisnava about his caste, or some
unpremeditated accidental fall-down, or the last traces of his
previous sins, or his sinful activities prior to his surrendering
to Lord Krsna.  Such an offender will never develop a taste for
chanting the holy name.

	One who has taken complete shelter of the pure devotional
process is considered a pure Vaisnava.  The four abovementioned
faults may be present in him, but he is totally free from all
other shortcomings.  Hence, criticizing him spells doom for the
offender.  The glories of the holy name are propagated by the
Vaisnava, and Lord Krsna does not tolerate any criticism against
him.  One may discard all other activities like religiosity,
yoga, sacrifices, fruitive activities, empirical knowledge and so
on; if one simply chants the holy name, that is the quintessence
of spiritual culture.

The sadhu takes complete shelter of the holy name

     Never criticizing demigods or other scriptures, the Vaisnava
simply chants the holy name.  Regardless of whether such a sadhu
is a householder or a sannyasi, one should eagerly take the dust
from his lotus feet.  The purity of a Vaisnava is judged by how
much attraction or rati he has for the name. His purity has
nothing whatsoever to do with his official status as a Vaisnava,
or his wealth, erudition, youth, pleasing appearance, strength or
following.

	One who aspires to take shelter of the holy name must shun
the propensity to criticize devotees.  Pure devotion in the
chanting of the holy name depends on association with the pure
devotee and his pure devotion.  Without this assocation, everything
becomes perverted and spoilt.  Bhakti immediately recedes at
the first indication of sadhuninda, which immediately becomes
nama-aparadha.  Let the aspirant devotee reject sadhuninda and
associate with and serve the pure devotees.

There are two types of bad association,
the first being association with women

     The proper Vaisnava behavior is to avoid asatsanga or bad
company that influences a person to disrespect a sadhu.  Bad
association is of two kinds. The first is association with a
woman, which means either to have illicit connection with a woman
other than one's wife, or to be excessively fond of one's own
wife.  The scriptures permit a husband only a properly regulated
relationship with his spouse.  Keeping company with a licentious
or henpecked man also falls within this first category of asat sanga
or bad association.

Non-devotees are of three kinds

The second type of bad association is to mix with nondevotees.  There are
three kinds of non-devotees: the Mayavadi,
the dharmadhvaji (pretender), and the nirisvara (atheist).
Mayavadis never accept the Supreme Lord's form as being eternal.
They say the Deity form of the Lord is material, and that the
jiva is also a product of maya.  A dharmadhvaji is a person who
has no devotion or attachment in the heart but makes a show of it
externally.  He wears the clothes of a devotee to accomplish
materialistic ends.  A nirisvara is a nonbeliever who rejects God
outright.  A serious aspirant or sadhaka must shun such bad
association.  If anyone argues that avoiding such nondevotees is
sadhuninda, their company must also be shunned.  One has to keep
away from such bad association and take complete shelter of the
holy name.  Only then is love of Godhead ensured.

There are three kinds of devotees;
the lowest is the kanistha devotee

     The neophyte devotee (kanistha Vaisnava) displays a faith
that is formal and worldly.  He worships the Deity but has no
service attitude towards the devotees of the Lord.  He is almost
a Vaisnava (Vaisnavapraya), but is not a real Vaisnava yet;
hence, he is not able to take full advantage of sadhusanga.
Such a neophyte will have to receive the blessings of a pure
devotee to advance further.

The madhyama devotee

The madhyama devotee knows well the importance of the Lord's
devotees, and remains always in their association.  He is
convinced of Krsna's position as the Lord, the jivas as His
eternal servants, the means of advancement as bhakti and the goal
as prema.  He is compassionate to the innocent and avoids the
company of atheists.

    The  madhyama  stage  of  devotee  marks the beginning of pure
Vaisnavism  because at this stage one become eligible to chant the
pure  name.  The madhyama devotee knows well the different effects
of  different  types  of association. He distinguishes between the
Vaisnavas  and the non-Vaisnavas, for he is especially required to
serve  the advanced devotees and avoid asatsanga and sadhu nindha.
Indeed,  this  is  his  necessity. If he neglects to differentiate
between   the   grades  of  devotees  and  between  Vaisnavas  and
nonVaisnavas, then he stands to commit Vaisnava aparadha.

The uttama devotee

A pure devotee of the highest order sees Lord Krsna manifest
everywhere and knows that everything rests in Him. He sees Krsna
is his very life and soul.  He is unconcerned with distinctions
of who is a Vaisnava and who is not  thus for him there is no
regulation to serve a Vaisnava.  His whole life revolves around
the holy name, which he considers to be the essence of everything.

     The scriptures declare that a kanistha devotee, being
ignorant of the proper attitudes towards Krsna, the devotees and
the holy name, is only capable of namabhasa chanting.  A madhyama
devotee is worthy of chanting the pure name: therefore he must
always carefully avoid offenses to other devotees, so that his
chanting will be pure.  The uttama Vaisnava can never commit any
offense, because he perceives Lord Krsna everywhere.

     Every sadhaka should consider these points calmly and
reflect upon his real position.  First, he must stop sadhuninda.
Then he should chant with firm faith, according to his status as
a Vaisnava.  He should aspire to become fixed on the madhyama
platform through association with equal devotees, service to
superior devotees, avoidance of nondevotees, compassion for all
living entities and constant chanting of the holy name.

The remedy for sadhuninda

If anyone offends a devotee in a moment of delusion or
madness, he must fall at the devotee's feet and repent bitterly
and, weeping and full of contrition, beg forgiveness.  He should
declare himself a fallen wretch, in need of that devotee's grace.
A devotee is very merciful; his heart will soften and he will
embrace the offender, thus exonerating him from his offenses.

Concluded Thakura Haridasa, "I offer this explanation of the
first of ten nama-aparadhas at Your lotus feet."

One who is like a bumble-bee lingering the lotus feet of
Srila Haridasa Thakura will find his life and soul in this
Harinama Cintamani.



CHAPTER FIVE

WORSHIPING THE DEMIGODS INDEPENDENTLY OF KRSNA
IS THE SECOND OFFENSE


All glories to Lord Sri Gauranga, the life of Sri Gadadhara
Pandit; all glories to Lord Nityananda, the heart of Srimati
Jahnavadevi; all glories to Sri Advaita Acarya, the Lord of
Mother Sita; all glories to all the devotees of Lord Caitanya.

Srila Haridasa Thakura continued speaking with folded hands:
"O Lord of the Universe, now I pray that You may listen to my
explanation of the second offense against the holy name."

Visnutattva, or the principle of the Supreme Godhead Visnu

    Lord Visnu is the supreme nondual Absolute Truth. Though He is
the   ultimate   lord  of  material  creation,  His  own  form  is
transcendental, being always situated in pure goodness. Lord Krsna
in  Goloka  is  the  original  and supreme form of Visnu. Krsna is
embellished  with  sixty-four extraordinary excellences, and He is
the shelter of all transcendental mellows. Lord Narayana possesses
sixty  of  those  excellences,  and to a lesser degree of fullness
than Him, so do Lord Visnu and the purusvataras.

    [Footnote  1  by  Bhaktivinoda]  Lord  Narayana,  the  Lord of
Vaikuntha,  is Lord Krsna's vilasavigraha or partial expansion. In
Vaikuntha,  the Sankarsana form of Narayana expands as Maha Visnu,
Who  lies in the Causal Ocean. This is the first purusa expansion;
the  next  is Garbodakasayi Visnu, the source of Brahma. He enters
every   universe  as  the  purusvatar.  He  further  expands  as
Ksirodakasayi Visnu, the Supersoul within every living entity.

    	The   three  purusa  expansions  are  known  as  Lord  Visnu.
Ksirodakasayi Visnu is the source of the incarnations like Matsya,
Kurma, etc. All these incarnations are different forms of the same
Visnu  principle  and  are  ornamented  with  sixty transcendental
characteristics.  The  saktyavesvataras are jiva-tattva; in them
the  potency  of the Lord has descended. They are Lord's separated
expansions  or  vibhinnamsa  and  are  exemplified  as Parasurama,
Buddha, Prithu, and so on. [End of footnote 1]

     The Supreme Lord's separated parts or vibhinnamsa are of two
categories.  The ordinary jivas possess only fifty of the Lord's
transcendental characteristics, and these in lesser degree.  But
in the second category of jivas, including the demigods, the same
fifty characteristics are found in full potency.  Additionally,
five more qualities are partially evident in Siva.  These five
qualities are exhibited in full potency only by the Visnu
category.

    Thus  the  Visnu  forms are adorned to the fullest degree with
the  fiftyfive qualities of the demigods. They furthermore display
an extra five qualities for a total of sixty, which are visible to
a degree of absolute fullness in Lord Narayana alone. Siva and the
other  demigods  are  the  Supreme  Lord's  servitors.  Though the
demigods  are superior jivas, the Supreme Lord Visnu is the master
and controller of the jivas and demigods alike.

  - Out of sheer ignorance,
    people equate the Supreme Lord with the demigods

     People who are ignorant of the Visnutattva principle try to
equate the Supreme Lord with the demigods, but Siva and the other
demigods are simply the order carriers of the Supreme Lord Visnu.

    	Mayavadis say that Brahman is really impersonal and formless,
and   that   the   worshipable   forms  of  God  (i.e.  the  three
predominating  deities  of  the  modes  of  goodness,  passion and
ignorance)  are material. But the scriptures unequivocally declare
that Brahma only creates the material world and Siva only destroys
it,  while  Lord  Narayana  or  Lord  Visnu  maintains  everything
eternally,  including Brahma and Siva and their cycles of creation
and  destruction.  Therefore  only  He  is the eternal worshipable
Lord. Whoever worships other demigods and disregards Vasudeva, the
Supreme  Lord  Narayana,  rots  eternally  in the hell of material
existence.

     On the basis of the Vedas, some persons, accepting Lord
Visnu as the all-pervading Absolute Truth, argue that since the
Lord is present in all the demigods, the worship of demigods is
equivalent to the worship of Lord Visnu.  This argument is
fallacious.  The scriptures do not support the notion that the
worship of the demigods is the same as the worship of Lord Visnu.
In truth, Lord Visnu's worship accomplishes the worship of all
the demigods.  Hence, separate worship of demigods is not
required.

     The correct interpretation of the Vedic truth is: if
Lord Visnu is omnipresent, then worship of Him is automatically
worship of all the demigods.  By watering the roots, a tree
prospers, but by watering the limbs, leaves and branches, the
tree withers and dies.  Only foolish people who have forgotten
all Vedic principles can commit such a mistake.  They fail to
understand that worship of Lord Visnu is an eternal activity in
pure goodness, beyond the three material modes.

     Due to the advent of Kali Yuga and the contamination of
Mayavada, people disregard the supreme position of Lord Visnu and
worship the demigods independently of Him.  Individual demigods
offer only specific benefits, while the Supreme Lord Visnu alone
can offer all benedictions.  He is the maintainer of everyone.
If only these greedy materialists could realize the advantage of
worshiping Lord Visnu, they would abandon that kind of demigod
worship.

   A householder Vaisnava's responsibilities

    The householder Vaisnava should simply worship Krsna in all of
his  duties and not worry about transgressing the Vedic codes. For
example,  in  all  samskaras  from  insemination  (garbhadhana) to
funeral  rites  (antyesthi),  he  should worship Krsna through the
Vedic  mantras.  The real purport of the Vedic injunctions is that
one  should  worship  Visnu and the Vaisnavas directly and worship
the forfathers and demigods by offering them the remnants of Visnu
and Vaisnava worship.

	If on the other hand the householder devotee worships the
demigods or forefathers directly, as is the Mayavadi method, he
commits the second offense to the holy name and is immediately
disqualified from the path of pure bhakti.

	Another dangerous form of this same namaparadha is to
consider demigods like Siva to be separate supreme divinities.
Such polytheism is a heinous offense.  "Lord Visnu is the Supreme
Godhead, but Lord Siva and the other demigods are also individual
supreme godheads"  such thinking is completely wrong.

	One can, however, worship the demigods as gunvataras,
saktyavesvataras or as Lord Visnu's servants.  No one is
independent of the Visnu's control, for He is the Supreme
Controller and master of all energies.  Demigods like Siva,
Brahma, Ganesa and Surya have been invested with the Supreme
Lord's potencies.  Hence, they are powerful.  The Supreme Lord is
one, the rest are His energies.

    	The   householder   devotee   should   abandon  outright  all
materialism in the execution of his duties. He should increase his
mood  of  pure  devotion while satisfying his social and religious
obligations  according  to  the  varnasrama  system.  He should be
convinced  that  just  by  worshiping  Krsna and His devotees, all
results will be attained.

    	[Footnote  2  by  Bhaktivinoda]  Human society should conduct
itself  according to the guidelines of the varnasrama system; such
a  lifestyle is called sanatanadharma or 'eternal religion'. India
is  the  land  of piety (punyabhumi), and the varnasrama religious
system  was  introduced  and  implemented  there by great sages of
yore.  In other countries varnasrama is also present in some form,
though  it never evolved into the perfected socio religious system
that  was  established  in  India.  Human  nature cannot find full
expression nor attain consummation without the social divisions of
varna. [End of footnote 2]

	Even the lowborn outcastes are fully eligible to enter
devotional service to Krsna.  But they must live their lives free
from sin and offenses; they will do that only by submitting to
the duties of householder life prescribed at least for the sudra
class.  Without situating oneself in one of the four varnas,
there is no question of dharma or religious life.  Even those
desiring just their own material welfare respect the customs of
varnasramadharma.

    On  the strength of worshiping Krsna in full surrender, one is
gradually  elevated  through  varnasramadharma  to the platform of
saintliness.  But  if  one  follows  the varnasrama system without
worshiping  Lord Krsna, he is doomed. Every householder is obliged
to  fulfil  his  varnasrama  responsibilities. He should therefore
live  with restraint and accept only what is essential for serving
Lord  Krsna,  and fulfill the formal rules and responsibilities of
his varna. One easily accomplishes all this simply by chanting the
holy  name  and  engaging  in  devotional  service.  Moreover, one
attains  bhava  or  spiritual  ecstacy  by  these  same devotional
practices.   With   the   advent  of  bhava,  one  transcends  the
jurisdiction of rules and regulations.

    	As long as one needs a regulated, formal social life, he must
remain  within  the  bounds  of  varnasrama.  But  after the first
stirrings  of  love  of  Godhead with the attainment of bhava, the
jiva's own divine nature becomes apparent: he will then require no
further    inspiration    from    the   external   guidelines   of
varnasramadharma.   The  mood  of  bhava  is  incomprehensible  to
materialistic  persons  because  it  is  transcendentally dynamic,
appearing  in  a  person  by  its  own volition regardless of that
person's  varna  or  asrama.  The Vaisnava householder who follows
this    path    of    Krsna    conscious   varnasramadharma   with
singlemindedness,   shunning   the  Mayavadi  contamination,  thus
transcends the limits of varna and asrama.

    Lord  Visnu's  name  and qualities are not different from Him;
lack  of  this  knowledge  is  namabhasa  Lord Visnu's name, form,
qualities  and so on should never be viewed as being separate from
the  Lord  Himself.  He is nondual (advayatattva); as the complete
whole, He is the Supreme Absolute. If due to ignorance someone has
a  dualistic  concept of God, he can at best rise to the namabhasa
stage  of  chanting, but he will never reach prema. Then again, if
he  can  get  the  mercy  of  a bona fide spiritual master and can
overcome  his  anarthas,  he  will  attain  the  pure  name by the
progressive clearing process.

     [Footnote  3  by  Bhaktivinoda]  Selfopinionated philosophers
fall  into  duality  when they try to conceptualize God with their
tiny  brains.  Imposing  duality  upon  Lord Visnu is an offensive
tendency that is very difficult to overcome. Mayavadi philosophers
propose  that  Brahman  is  formless and impersonal, and that Lord
Visnu's  name,  form  etc  are  all products of illusion; with the
lifting  of  the  veil  of  illusion, they expect to perceive Lord
Visnu  as  impersonal Brahman and nothing more. But such arguments
are  foolish  and  nihilistic.  The  Mayavadi viewpoint stems from
madness and a stubborn ignorance of the fact that the Supreme Lord
is endowed with omnipotency. 'Omnipotent Brahman' is verily a name
for the Supreme Person, Lord Visnu. [End of footnote]

    	The  intelligence  of  the  Mayavadi philosopher is extremely
demented.  Seeing  that  the  material existence is variegated, he
concludes  that  the  spiritual  existence,  being opposite to the
material realm, must be void. This incomplete, immature theorizing
leads  him  to  imagine  Brahman as dry and impersonal. In its
original  state, Brahman has a name, form, qualities, pastimes and
so on but the Mayavadi is incapable of accepting this truth. If he
would  accept  it,  Brahman would appear before him as Lord Visnu.

  Mayavada  is  the  wretched condition of human existence, and the
pure  devotee  is  the scourge of this mischievious philosophy. He
establishes the correct scriptural viewpoint that the Supreme Lord
is nondifferent from His name, form, pastimes and qualities. 	

  Nirvisesa and Savisesa Visnu versus the Mayavadi notion of Brahman

    	Both  the  personal  and  impersonal features are inherent in
Lord  Visnu's divine Being. The Lord's acintyasakti (inconceivable
potency) harmoniously displays His personal and impersonal aspects
(savisesa,  with  variety,  and  nirvisesa,  without variety). The
Supreme  One,  by  His acintyasakti, exhibits allattractive beauty
and  pastimes  that  silence  all contradictory speculations about
Him.

      Human  intelligence  is  limited  and puny. It cannot easily
fathom  the  Lord's  inconceivable  potency. So when a human being
tries to conceive of a supreme truth with his inadequate brain, he
can only come as far as the impersonal Brahman, which is a partial
representation  of  the Absolute Whole. In this way he is diverted
from the supreme goal of worship, Lord Visnu, whose lotus feet are
worshiped  even  by the great demigods. Ignorant of the benefit he
has  lost,  he  becomes  attached  to  the  worship  of impersonal
Brahman.  But  anyone who comprehends the transcendental nature of
the  name, form and qualities of the Supreme Lord, knowing them to
be  not  different from Him, can perceive Lord Krsna in His divine
fullness by chanting His holy name purely.

	Duality exists only on the material plane  here a name is
different from the object it identifies.  But as this is not the
case on the spiritual platform, it is a gross blunder to imagine
such a difference between the Lord and His name, form, qualities
and so on.  The same pitfall entraps those who consider Siva and
other demigods to be independent of the Supreme Lord's control.

   Why devotees do not mix with Mayavadis

    	The  devotee  who  has taken singleminded shelter in the holy
name  is  a truly elevated soul. He worships Krsna and no one else
as  the  Supreme  Lord.  He  does  not attack the deities of other
scriptures,  but  worships  and respects them as servitors of Lord
Krsna.  He  always  refrains  from dry speculation. When different
scriptures  try to establish the superiority of other demigods, it
is  only  to  facilitate  the  limited  ability  of  a  particular
mentality  to  grasp  the  absolute  truth.  These  scriptures are
actually  trying  to elevate their followers to become devotees of
Krsna.  Therefore  one should never criticize other scriptures and
the demigods described therein, for such criticism is an offense.

    A  devotee should not accept remnants of food or garlands from
a  Mayavadi,  even  if  they were offered to Lord Visnu, because a
Mayavadi's  worship  is  impure. A Mayavadi's chanting of the holy
name  is likewise offensive. The Lord never accepts the Mayavadi's
offerings  or  worship.  It  is also an offense for the devotee to
accept garlands and other remnants of demigod worship, for this is
detrimental  to the development of pure devotion. But if a devotee
worships  Krsna  and  offers His remnants to the demigods, it will
not  be  offensive  to  receive  these  remnants,  nor  will one's
spiritual development be hampered in any way.

	A pure devotee must always avoid the second offense to the
holy name and chant the name constantly.  Thus he attains prema.
His entire success is found in the holy name.

   The remedy for the offense

	Illusion and madness blind the jiva, and thus he thinks that
others are also on the same platform as Lord Visnu.  The only
remedy is to repent intensely and meditate on Lord Visnu, Krsna,
for by this remembrance all offenses are dissolved.  Thereafter,
one must meticulously avoid committing the same offense again.

	Remembrance of the Lord is the most effective penance; the
Vedas always recommend imperiled brahmanas to meditate upon the
lotus feet of Lord Visnu for protection.  Remembering the Lord's
name is the same as meditating upon His lotus feet.  The holy
name can disperse all previous offenses, for it acts as the
devotee's best friend.  The Lord is an ocean of mercy and
forgiveness. Like a dear friend, he forgives one for previous
mistakes.

	In conclusion, the devotee must disassociate himself from
demigod worshippers and polytheists and seek the company of
Vaisnavas who exclusively worship Krsna as their Supreme Lord.

	One who is blessed with love and devotion and takes pleasure
in serving Srila Haridas Thakura's lotus feet will find this book
Harinama Cintamani as valuable as life itself.


   CHAPTER SIX



 TO DISRESPECT AND DISOBEY THE SPIRITUAL MASTER (GURUAVAJNA)
    IS THE THIRD OFFENSE




     All glories to Sri Pancatattva and Sri Sri RadhaMadhava.
All glories to Navadwipadhama, Vrajadhama, Jamunadevi and all
the Vaisnava devotees.

	Srila Haridasa Thakura said, "O Lord, kindly allow me to
explain the third namparadha.  This aparadha is to disobey the
orders of the spiritual master and thus to disrespect him."

    	The  soul  travels through many lifetimes in different bodies
and  at  last  gets  a  chance  at  the rare human birth, which is
auspicious   in  every  respect.  The  soul  has  rotated  through
8,400,000   different   species,   It   is   by  ajnatasukriti  or
unintentional  pious  activities  that  the soul finally attains a
human  body.  A  birth in the human form is most uncommon, because
only  in  that  body are spiritual activities possible to perform,
unlike any other species.

	A demigod or denizen of the heavenly planets is destined
only to enjoy the reactions of his past good karma. He cannot
voluntarily initiate any spiritual activities.  Animals are
likewise bound by karmic reactions and are too steeped in gross
ignorance to undertake any pious activities independently.  The
human birth alone is most conducive for spiritual life and
service to the Supreme Lord.

    A  spiritual  master  is  essential  for everyone Yet the fact
remains  that  this  body  is transient. If one does not carefully
endeavor  for  selfrealization, which is the greatest benediction,
then  he returns again to the endless cycle of birth and death. An
intelligent  person  will therefore utilize this rare opportunity.
He  will  search  out  a  spiritual master who can lead him to the
Supreme Lord Krsna.

    	[Footnote  1  by Bhaktivinoda] Such a spiritual master is the
only  helmsman who can help the drowning jiva get across the ocean
of  material nescience. Only the most foolish persons will attempt
to  cross this ocean by their own intelligence. The achievement of
any  success  in  this  world  requires  the  help  of a teacher's
instructions. How, then, will one obtain perfection in the best of
all  subjects, spiritual science, without the aid of a teacher? He
is  who  fit  to teach this science is he who is self realized and
fully proficient in Krsna consciousness. [End of footnote 1]

    	A  few of the characteristics of a bona fide spiritual master
are  that he is peaceful, unperturbed and a pure devotee of Krsna.
 He should be approached with humility. The jiva should satisfy
him  with  service and receive from him formal initiation into the
worship of Lord Krsna. Herein lies his best chance to surmount the
material  entanglement.  The  jiva's  inherent love for Krsna lies
dormant  in  the  heart  and  can easily be revived by a qualified
spiritual master.

    But   the  jiva  can  just  as  easily  lose  this  chance  by
challenging  the  spiritual master through speculative debates and
mischievious  logic. He must evade such pitfalls, surrender to the
spiritual master's instructions and receive the proper mantra from
him.  As  for householders, they should take shelter of a bonafide
spiritual master and remain within the varnasrama system.

  A good brahmana is fit to be a spiritual master

    	A  brahmana is fit to be a spiritual master for all the other
varnas  or social orders as long as he is a devotee of Lord Krsna.
But  if  a  brahmana  spiritual  master  is  not  available then a
spiritual  master  from  another  varna should be searched out. If
there is a choice, the householder would be best advised to accept
initiation from a spiritual master in the brahmanavarna.

     A real spiritual master is one who is conversant with the
science of Krsna consciousness.  A spiritual master can be from
any varna or asrama, but he must be a kalpataru or touchstone
that can fulfill the spiritual needs of people from all varnas
and asramas.  He must be able to give the jiva suddharati (pure
attraction) for Krsna.

	The prestige of having a spiritual master from a superior
varna is a material consideration, because that prestige simply
depends on the caste status of the one who judges the spiritual
master's caste.  The factor of caste rarely has any bearing on
spiritual realization.

    	Necessity  demands  that one must find a spiritual master who
is  bonafide  and  qualified.  If he happens to belong to a higher
varna,  so much the better. A householder may look for a spiritual
master  from  a higher varna, and if he finds one who is qualified
then he need not look for one from a lower varna. It must be noted
well, though, that in looking for a 'high class' spiritual master,
one  should  not  choose  an  unqualified  person  simply  for the
prestige of having a spiritual master from a higher varna.

   A renunciate should accept a sannyasaguru

    	If  a  householder  leaves  home  to  embrace  the  life of a
renunciate  but  has not yet been satisfactorally trained in Krsna
consciousness, he naturally requires a qualified spiritual master.
For  one  who is determined to renounce, a spiritual master in the
sannyasa  order  is  best.  By  receiving  spiritual  guidance and
initiation  from  a sannyasaguru, the renunciate will very quickly
relish  the  ecstacy  of  chanting  the  holy  name.

    If  the  householder  previously  had  a  qualified  spiritual
master, he should not, when planning to renounce householder life,
disrespect  or  neglect  that  guru.  Indeed,  while  he is in the
grhasthsrama,  the  householder  is  advised  to take shelter of a
householder  guru who is qualified and pure. That spiritual master
should always be honored.

    	But  if such a householder spiritual master is not available,
one  can  take  initiation  from  a qualified sannyasi even before
leaving home. In any case, the spiritual master must be qualified.
Under  his  instructions,  the  neophyte  householder begins Krsna
consciousness  and gradually advances to experience transcendental
loving emotions in the service of the Lord.

    Only  when  the  neophyte  householder  develops  distaste for
material  life is he ready to become a sannyasi. This is a natural
development  of  the  practice of Krsna consciousness. Once he has
actually  renounced sense gratification, he is obliged to accept a
sannyasi  spiritual  master.  He  must  be  trained in the life of
renunciation from the sannyasaguru and accept from him the clothes
or vesa of a mendicant.

    Both diksaguru and siksaguru must be equally respected

     There are two kinds of spiritual masters: the initiating
spiritual master or diksaguru, and the instructing spiritual
master or siksaguru.  Both gurus have to be respected equally.
This is the key to success in Krsna consciousness.

    	The diksaguru initiates his disciple into the chanting of the
holy   name   and   gives   diksamantra.   The  siksaguru  imparts
sambandhajnana  or  the  knowledge of the jiva's relationship with
the  Supreme  Lord  and his energies. The diksaguru is one but the
siksaguru can be many. In fact, all the pure Vaisnava devotees who
benedict  the world by distributing the holy name are siksa gurus.
Both  the  diksaguru  and  the  many  siksagurus are to be equally
respected.

  - The Vaisnava sampradayas

	The four Vaisnava disciplic successions (sampradayas) are
the only real schools of saintly teachers.  These sampradayas
have since days of yore disseminated the bona fide mantras, the
proper scriptural conclusions, the authorized devotional process
and the ultimate goal of life.  If one wants to be saved from the
perils of false doctrines, then he should surrender to a saintly
spiritual master from one of the four Vaisnava schools.

    	The   teachings  left  by  the  founderacaryas  of  the  four
sampradayas  are  to  be  especially  honored.  Sri  Ramanuja, Sri
Madhavacarya,  Sri  Nimbarkacarya, and Sri Visnuswami are the four
original  acaryas  of the Vaisnava schools. One should accept only
their teachings and conclusions and not others. One should receive
spiritual  initiation  in  one  of  these four sampradayas and not
others.  The founderacarya is the principal siksaguru. The
founderacarya  of  the  sampradaya is the principal siksa guru for
the  entire disciplic succession. Speculations that contradict his
teachings  are  to be immediately rejected. Only a saintly devotee
who  has  understood  the  teachings of the principal siksaguru is
eligible  to  be a diksaguru for others. If one thinks that he can
be  initiated  by  an  unauthorized  guru or a Mayavadi into these
teachings,   he   errs   severely.  He  will  never  attain  Krsna
consciousness.

  One should accept only a pure devotee as his spiritual master.

     He who imparts wrong teachings and he who receives them are
both destined for hell.  One who has accepted teachings and
conclusions outside the line of pure bhakti has wasted his life.
How then can such a person become a spiritual master?  How can he
save other conditioned souls?  He himself is in illusion and is
therefore imperfect, so how can he bring good fortune to others?
One must understand that a pure devotee is not an ordinary soul.
The scriptures declare that only he is eligible to be worshipped
as the spiritual master.

   The principle of the spiritual master

    The  diksaguru  and the siksaguru are both intimate associates
of  Lord  Krsna.  They are eternally situated in the Vraja mood of
service, and they are manifestations of Lord Krsna's own energy.

	[Footnote 2 by Bhaktivinoda] Never make the mistake of
judging the guru as an ordinary mortal.  The spiritual master is
the representitive of Lord Krsna's potencies, sent by the Lord as
the eternal master of the disciples.  He must always be worshiped
as an eternal associate of the Supreme Lord, empowered by the
Lord's superior spiritual potency.

    	On  the  other  hand,  the  spiritual  master  must  never be
considered  to  be  the Supreme Lord Himself, for this is Mayavadi
philosophy  and is not in line with the pure Vaisnava conclusions.
The  Vaisnava  devotees  are  very wary of such misinterpretations
because   the   Mayavadi   whirlpool   of   word  jugglery  is  so
contaminating  to  the  heart. The spiritual master must always be
worshiped  according  to  the  scriptural  conclusions,  for  when
properly   executed,   this   worship   results   in   pure  Krsna
consciousness. [End of footnote 2]

       Gurupuja and how to respect the spiritual master

    Before  one  can  worship  Krsna,  he  must  first worship the
spiritual  master.  While  doing  gurupuja,  upacaras  like  seat,
footwash,  arghya,  bath,  cloth,  ornaments  and  so on are to be
offered; then with the spiritual master's permission one may begin
worship  of  RadhaKrsna  vigraha. The Deity's prasadam is given to
the  spiritual  master  first,  then  to  the  demigods  and  n
forfathers.  Just as the disciple is required to get the spiritual
master's  blessings before worshipping RadhaKrsna, before chanting
the  holy  name  the disciple should remember the spiritual master
and his instructions.

    One  who  disrespects  the  spiritual master commits a serious
offense that will expel him from the path of bhakti. The spiritual
master, Lord Krsna, and the Vaisnavas must be worshiped with equal
attention.  Undeviating faith in the spiritual master will lead to
pure chanting and the final goal of Krsnaprema.

    When to reject a guru

     If by some misfortune the spiritual master falls into bad
association, he may gradually lose his spiritual realization and
potency.  At the time the disciple accepted him, the guru was
exalted, famous and greatly realized.  But offenses against the
holy name are so dangerous that even a highly qualified soul
becomes bewildered.  In that condition he comes to detest
Vaisnava company and the chanting of the holy name. Gradually, he
is enslaved by lust, greed, wealth and women.  If by the mercy of
Lord Krsna the disciple sees through all this, he must reject
that guru, seek out a pure devotee and under his spiritual
guidence cultivate the pure chanting of the holy name.

   The spiritual master must be strict

    	The  spiritual  master  must be strict with his disciples. He
must  straighten  out  the prospective disciples before initiating
them,  and  punish the wayward initiated ones. This is the symptom
of  a responsible spiritual master. A disciple's spiritual life is
rendered  useless if he serves and worships a slack, irresponsible
guru. But as long as the relationship between the spiritual master
and  the  disciple  is  stable (i.e. each remains qualified in his
position) then there is no question of one rejecting the other.

    The  gurudisciple  relationship  is  eternal. If both maintain
their pure positions and are bona fide, their eternal relationship
is  never  jeapordized.  However, if the spiritual master is later
exposed  as  perfidious,  the  disciple must immediatley repudiate
him.  The  same  is  to  be  done  by  the spiritual master if the
disciple  is  similarly exposed. If such repudiation is not is not
carried  out by both parties when it is necessary, then they stand
to be condemned.

   A spiritual master must be tested before acceptance
   to insure that he is a pure devotee

     One who disrespects the bona fide pure Vaisnava spiritual
master is a reprobate fit to be shunned by all.  It is advisable,
therefore, that before accepting a spiritual master one should
carefully choose the right person.  Basically, the spiritual
master must be a pure devotee of the Lord.

    	[Footnote  3  by  Bhaktivinoda] The scriptures recommend that
both  the spiritual master and the disciple place each other under
strict  scrutiny  before  mutual acceptance. This, then, precludes
the  acceptance  of  a  kulaguru  or  traditional  family guru. Of
course,   if  the  kulaguru  is  qualified,  it  is  of  immediate
convenience to accept him; but if he is not, a pure devotee should
be searched out and taken as one's spiritual master.

	Since even ordinary household items are tested before
acquisition, it is only an unfortunate fool who will fail to go
through a testing period in the selection of the his true
spiritual master, who is his ever wellwisher.  The unqualified
kulaguru, after he is offered due respect and worship, should be
requested to release the disciple from all duties of allegiance.
Having abandoned his connection to the family guru, the genuine
aspirant then must seek out a qualified spiritual master.

	The point is that one must not bring upon himself the
calamity of having to reject his spiritual master.  If one is
prudent then he can avoid such a situation.  One must be very
careful not to commit any offense against a pure devotee guru.
This is so disasterous it will ruin both men and demigods alike.
[End of footnote 3]

    How to serve the spiritual master

     Never disrespect the articles used by the spiritual master:
for instance, his seat, bed, shoes, vehicle, footstool, bath
water, etc. Stepping on his shadow, worshipping another person in
his presence, giving initiation while he is still alive, showing
off spiritual knowledge in his presence and trying to control him
are to be totally rejected.

	Whenever and wherever one sees his spiritual master, he
should offer his prostrated obeisances to him with prayers.  The
guru's name must be uttered with great reverence.  His orders are
never to be disobeyed.  Always be eager to honor his remnants and
do not say anything that is displeasing to him.  Fall humbly at
his feet and beg shelter from him and in this way act to please
him.  Simply by behaving thusly, one can easily develop a taste
for chanting, which in turn offers all perfection.  All this is
confirmed in the Vedas.  But if one offends the namaguru, the
spiritual master who initiates one into the chanting of the holy
name of the Lord, he will surely fall into the sinful company of
atheists.

    	[Footnote  4 by Bhaktivinoda] The namaguru teaches scriptural
conclusions  and reveals the esoteric nature of the holy name, and
he  initiates  the  disciple  in the mantra consisting of the holy
name.  The Vaisnava diksaguru is the namaguru, and the diksamantra
is  namatmika,  receiving  its life from the holy name. The mantra
loses  its  meaning  and  purpose if it is separated from the holy
name,  and  conversely,  simply  by  uttering the holy name of the
Lord, the mantra is automatically chanted. [End of footnote 4].

     The remedy for guruavajna

    The  only  way  to  be pardoned for this offense is to forsake
sinful  company,  cast  away  blasphemous  literatures  and  throw
oneself at the spiritual master's lotus feet, repenting piteously.
As  a  compassionate Vaisnava, the spiritual master will surely be
forgiving  and  bestow  prema  upon  the disciple through the holy
name.

     I, the wretched author of Harinama Cintamani, am a sinner.
My only hope of redemption is the dust of the lotus feet of
Haridasa Thakura.


   CHAPTER SEVEN


    CRITICISM OF THE VEDIC SCRIPTURES (SRUTISASTRA NINDA)
    IS THE FOURTH OFFENSE


     All glories to Srila Gadadhara Pandit, Sri Caitanya
Mahaprabhu, Sri Nityananda Prabhu, Sri Advaita Acarya and all the
devotees of Lord Gouranga.

     Srila Haridasa Thakura said, "My Lord!  To criticize the
Vedic literature and other literatures in pursuance of the Vedic
version is a serious offense that denies a person the ecstacy of
pure devotion."

     The Veda (sruti) is the only proof

     The srutisastra (the Vedic literature), which includes the
four Vedas, the Upanisads, the Puranas and other collorary
scriptures, has emanated from the Supreme Lord Krsna's own lips.
This literature establishes and proves the Absolute Truth.  It
contains transcendental knowledge that is beyond the range of the
material senses, and it can be understood by Lord Krsna's grace
alone.

	The senses are capable of experiencing only material
objects; transcendence lies completely beyond their bounds.  The
science of Krsna consciousness is purely spiritual: hence it is
transcendental.  That knowledge of transcendence has been
mercifully given by Lord Krsna in the Vedic literature for the
ultimate benefit of humanity.  The word veda specifically refers
to scriptural knowledge received through the proper authorized
disciplic succession or parampara.

     Human beings are born with four natural faults: they commit
errors, they are subject to illusion, they have the propensity to
cheat, and they have imperfect senses.  Everything they do is
tainted by these faults.  Vedic literature is free from any
mistakes or discrepancies. It is the only means to spiritual
salvation.  The Vedic knowledge was originally revealed by the
mercy of Lord Krsna. It was compiled by sages who had received
this knowledge while in samadhi, or total spiritual absorbtion,
far beyond the range of the four natural human faults.

    The sruti teaches ten principles

    The  Vedic  literature  teaches  that  both  mundane  fruitive
activities (karma) and empirical speculative knowledge (jnana) are
inferior  paths.  The  conclusion  is that perfection is available
only   through   bhakti.  The  Lord  gives  karma  and  jnana  for
preliminary  purification  of the jivas, and afterwards gives pure
bhakti.   	In   the  Vedic  literature  there  are  ten  principle
instructions.  The  first  is that the proof or basis (pramana) of
real  knowledge  is  the  sruti.  The  other  nine  principles are
prameyas  ascertained  from  the  pramana.  These  ten  principles
destroy nescience and establish true spiritual knowledge. The nine
ascertainable  principles:  the  first  three pertain to Krsna The
first  of  the  nine  prameyas  is  that  Hari, Krsna, is the only
Supreme  Absolute  Truth. The second is that He is omnipotent. The
third  is  that  He  is Rasamurti, the embodiment of all spiritual
mellows.  He is the source of bliss for all living entities and He
eternally  resides  in His abode in the spiritual sky. These first
three teaching pertain to the Supreme Lord, Krsna.

   The second three pertain to the position of the jiva

    The  fourth  prameya  is that the jiva is the Lord's separated
part  and parcel. The jivas are the infintesimal eternal spiritual
sparks  of  pure consciousness who comprise the innumerable living
entities.  The  jiva  is  of two types: eternally conditioned, who
populate the material world, and eternally liberated, who populate
the spiritual world.

	The fifth prameya is that the conditioned souls are enamored
by the glitter of maya's illusory potency. They have forgotten
Krsna and remain eternally in this phenomenal world, enjoying and
suffering material existence.

	The sixth prameya is that the eternally liberated jivas are
associates of Lord Krsna.  They reside in the spiritual world and
enjoy transcendental loving relationships with the Lord.  These
three, then, are the teachings about the jiva found in the sruti.

    The seventh prameya is acintyabhedabhedasambandha

    Everything   material   and   spiritual  is  acintyabhedabheda
sambandha (simultaneously one and different). The jivas and matter
are  inconceivably  manifested from Lord Krsna's internal potency.
Once knowing acintyabhedabhedatattva, the jiva understands that he
is  the  servant  of  Krsna  and  is  like the spark or ray of the
spiritual sun that is Krsna.

	The transformations of the Lord's energy are beyond the
mind's grasp (acintya), says the sruti. But the socalled
transformations of the Supreme Lord Himself that the Mayavadis
would like to have us all believe in are only mischievious and
offensive postulations.

    Thus,  so  far,  the  above  seven prameyas comprise sambandha
jnana  or knowledge of the eternal connection between the Lord and
his  energies. The sruti further points out abhideya, which is the
means   to  acheive  prayojana,  the  supreme  goal.  Abhideya  is
devotional  service  The  nine  limbs  of  devotional service are:
hearing,  chanting,  remembering,  worshiping,  praying, rendering
service,  carrying  out  the orders of the Lord, being a friend of
the  Lord and completely surrendering to the Lord. The chanting of
the  holy  name is the most important devotional activity, and for
this  reason  the  Vedas  glorify the chanting of the syllable om.
Devotional  service  (sadhanabhakti) has two divisions: vaidhi and
raga.  Abhideya,  the  ninefold  process  of sadhanabhakti, is the
eighth prameya.

  - Prayojana is Krsnaprema

     By the mercy of Lord Krsna, the jiva who takes shelter of
abhideya will attain Krsnaprema or love of Godhead.  Krsna prema
is the prayojana (necessity and ultimate goal) of the jiva; it is
the ninth prameya.

    	[Footnote  1  by  Bhaktivinoda] Pure devotion is indicated by
the human proclivity to always render favorable devotional service
to  Krsna.  Such  devotion  strives only for further excellence in
service,  being  satisfied  with  nothing  else.  Pure devotion is
uncontaminated  by  fruitive  activity or empirical knowledge. The
Vedic  literature  recommends  that  we cultivate pure devotion by
taking full shelter of the holy name. [End of footnote 1]

     These nine basic principles were ascertained from the sruti
by learned spiritual masters who taught them for the guidance of
all conditioned souls.  But those who criticize the sruti, the
very source of spiritual knowledge, are offenders against the
holy name and are known as the lowest among men.

   Philosophers who opposed the sruti

    Jaimini,  Kapila,  Nagna,  Carvaka,  Sugata Buddha and Gautama
were  philosophers  who propagated theories based on mundane logic
and  reasoning. Some of them did some lip service to the teachings
of  the  sruti, but they all rejected God. Jaimini proclaimed that
the  best  knowledge  the  sruti  has  to  offer  is  the fruitive
ritualistic  portion  known  as  karmakanda. Kapila dared to argue
that  God  is  imperfect.  He  accepted  the  process of yoga, but
without  understanding  its  real  goal  realization of Paramatma.
Nagna  spread  poison by teaching tantric practices in the mode of
ignorance.  Carvaka  Nastika was an atheist who never accepted the
Vedic  authority,  and  Sugata devised his own path of religion in
place  of  the sruti. Gautama propagated logic and did not worship
the Supreme Lord.

    These   mischievious  interpretations  are  in  fact  offenses
against  the  Vedic literature. Through sophism, such philosophers
speak halftruths that are likely to confuse the ordinary listener,
though  a learned devotee knows their sole object is to defame the
sruti.  One  who  develops  faith  in  these  theories  becomes an
offender.  Therefore  the  devotee  avoids  hearing them.  	The
Mayavadi  philosophy  is  equally  as  dangerous, for it supresses
bhakti  in the heart of the jiva. Mayavadi philosophy is factually
camouflaged  Buddhism. On the Lord's behest, Siva became its chief
proponent  in  the  Kaliyuga.  As  Jaimini  seemingly upheld Vedic
authority but practically propounded a warped version of the Vedic
conclusions,  similarly Mayavadi philosophers pervert Vedic proofs
to  establish  their covert Buddhism. Thus they hide the essential
message of the sruti, which is the science of devotional service.

    Astavakra,  Dattatreya,  Govinda,  Gaudapada, Sankaracarya and
his  followers  are  wellknown Mayavadi philosophers. In Buddhism,
the  principal teaching is the nonexistence of the soul, and there
is no concept of Brahman. The theory of nothingness, the last word
in  Buddhism, is rendered by the Mayavadis into the concept of the
formless,  impersonal  Brahman  which they argue is beyond matter.
Such  ideas diametrically oppose the eternal science of devotional
service.  Any  affiliation  with such thoughts automatically makes
the jiva commit namaparadha.
	
   The direct meaning is the real meaning

    When  all the principle understandings of the Vedic philosophy
are  brought  together,  they add up to pure devotional service by
which  the  jiva  attains  pure  love  of  Godhead.  Wherever  the
principle understandings are applicable, it is wrong to substitute
secondary  understandings in their place. These principle meanings
all  indicate  the science of Krsna consciousness. To artificially
impose  secondary meanings upon the Vedic statements is a sin that
distances one from the Absolute Truth.

    	From   beginning   to   end,  the  srutisastra  expounds  the
superexcellence of the syllable om. The omkara is a name of Krsna,
and  by  chanting  the  Lord's  name,  the jiva attains the Lord's
supreme  abode.  The Vaisnava devotees of the Sri Sampradaya chant
om  as a holy name of the Lord. The Vedas declare the holy name to
be  the  trancendental  form  of the Supreme Lord in this material
world;  even  namabhasa,  the  holy  name's indistinct appearance,
grants  all  perfection.  Only unfortunate fools will purposefully
disregard  such  Vedic  teachings  and  thus  ruin  their lives by
offenses.

    The sruti teaches pure chanting of the holy name

     The devotee who takes shelter of the pure name accepts the
absolute authority of the Vedas, and quickly attains the nectar
of the name, Krsnaprema.  The sruti proclaims that by chanting
the holy name of Hari, one experiences ecstatic bliss.  Further,
it is declared that the eternally liberated residents of the
spiritual sky are always engaged in chanting the pure name.

    Mayadevi engages the presentday critics of the sruti in sinful practices

    As  Kaliyuga  degrades, more and more people worship maya, the
material   energy.  Even  socalled  great  devotees  give  up  the
opportunity  to chant the Supreme Lord Krsna's holy name, which is
full  of  ecstacy, and instead take up tantric worship in the mode
of  ignorance.  Evercritical  of the Vedic literature, they swerve
from  the  real  path  of  religion to eat meat, drink alcohol and
perform other sinful activities. These offenders can never receive
the  shelter  of  the  name, nor can they enter the Supreme Lord's
eternal abode of Vrndavana.

     Mayadevi   engages  such  atheists  in  everincreasing  sin,
depriving  them  of  the  nectar  of  chanting  the holy name. The
superior  spiritual  energy  is Lord Krsna's original and primeval
energy.  Maya  (Durga,  Kali)  is  its shadow. Her intention is to
rectify  the erring jivas who drift away from Krsna and bring them
back to Krsna consciousness. Indeed, this is her prime duty to the
Lord.

     [Footnote  2  by  Bhaktivinoda:]  Maya  showers two kinds of
graces   niskapata   (honest   and   unrestricted)   and  sakapata
(capricious and illusory). By her niskapata mercy she gives bhakti
by  way  of  jnana  (bhaktijnanamisra).  Her  sakapata mercy gives
temporary  pleasures  that  overwhelm the jiva, bringing him under
the control of illusion. And when she is thoroughly merciless, she
casts the jiva into brahmasayuja liberation; thus he is doomed.

        But she becomes pleased when someone renders service to a
saintly Vaisnava, and showers him with her true mercy, connecting
him to Lord Krsna's lotus feet.  Maya is an eternal maidservant
of Lord Krsna.  She punishes the wayward jivas who drift away
from Krsna's service, for those who want to serve maya are simply
cheaters who can never know happiness.  Yet Mayadevi rewards
those who chant the holy name. She helps them cross over the
ocean of material nescience. [End of footnote 2]

   The remedy for srutininda

	One must avoid commiting the offense of criticizing the
Vedic scriptures and constantly chant the holy name.  If one
inadvertently criticizes the sruti, he should sincerely repent
his error by properly glorifying the sruti.  He should worship
the Vedic literature and the Srimad Bhagavatam with great joy and
respect, offering them flowers and tulasi.  The Srimad Bhagavatam
is the essence of the Vedic teachings and is the scriptural
incarnation of Lord Krsna.  The Bhagavatam will certainly shower
mercy upon the offender, because the Bhagavatam is an ocean of
mercy.

	One who hankers for the dust of the lotus feet of Srila
Haridasa Thakur will wear this gem necklace called Harinama
Cintamani around his neck.


   CHAPTER EIGHT

    TO CONSIDER THE GLORIES OF THE NAME AS IMAGINARY
   (ARTHAVADA HARINAMA KALPANAM)
    IS THE FIFTH OFFENSE


      All glories to Lord Gauranga and Srila Gadadhara Pandita;
all glories to Sri Sri Radha Madhava.  All glories to the places
of Lord Gauranga's pastimes and all the Vaisnava devotees of the
Lord.

      "O Lord Gauranga!  The fifth namaparadha is to think that
the glories of the holy name are exaggerated, as for example when
one thinks, 'The scriptural presentation of the glories of the
Lord's holy name is not entirely true, because hyperbole has been
employed to increase the readers' faith in the chanting of the
name.'"

	It is a fact that in the karmakanda and jnanakanda
sections of the Vedas, ritualism and philosophical speculation
have been overly praised. Such praises are intended to elicit
interest in these processes.  But the same is not true in the
case of the holy name. Therefore to think so is an abominable
offense.

   The glories of the holy name

    The  Puranas  (smritisastras)  say  that anyone who chants the
holy  name,  whether  with faith or neglect, attracts the mercy of
Lord  Krsna.  The holy name is the purest form of knowledge; it is
the  best  of  all  vratas  or vows and the highest meditation; it
gives the most auspicious fruits; it is the greatest renunciation;
it  gives  incomparible peace; it is the most pious of holy works;
it  is  the  supreme  path  of selfrealization; it is the greatest
liberation and goal; it is the topmost destination; it is the best
devotional service; it is the purest inclination; it gives love of
Godhead  and  is the essence of remembrance of the Lord; it is the
cause  of  all  causes, the Supreme Absolute Truth; it is the most
worshippable object and acts as the supreme spiritual master.

      'A thousand names of Lord Visnu is equal to one name of
Lord Rama, and three names of Lord Rama are equal to one name of
Lord Krsna': thus the holy name's transcendental nature is ever
glorified in the scriptures.

   One goes to hell for thinking the the glories
   of the name are exaggerated

    Only  a hardened atheist thinks that the passages of the sruti
and  smriti  scriptures describing the superexcellent qualities of
the name contain exaggerations. Whoever commits such an abominable
offense   rots   eternally   in   hell.   Offenders   claim   that
misrepresentations  have  been  made  to  increase  attraction for
chanting.  They  have no idea of the purport of the scriptures and
of  what  is beneficial for humanity, because they take everything
backwards.

    	Because  they  have  no  reserve of previous pious activities
(bhaktisukrti),  they  can  never  develop faith in the scriptural
science  of devotional service. The chanting of the holy name is z
the  best  form  of devotional service. Without sufficient piety a
person  can neither acquire a taste for chanting nor have adequate
faith  in  its results. Those who are attached to just one section
of  the scriptures (i.e. karmakanda) cannot perceive the essential
meaning  of  the  scriptures. There is no appeal to selfishness in
the methodology of the holy name

      The exaggerations in the karmakanda section of the Vedas
appeal to ambitious materialists.  Concessions to selfishness are
absent from the scriptural presentation of the method of chanting
the holy name in pure devotion.  The scriptures frankly declare
that the results of the karmakanda process are merely transient
sensual enjoyments, whereas the results of chanting the holy name
and engaging in Krsna's service are eternal and permanent.

    	In the chanting of the holy name of the Lord, capriciousness,
cheating  and  exaggeration  are  shunned.  For  instance,  when a
devotee  inspires  someone  to  chant,  he  does  so  without self
interested motives. He engages another in Krsna's service only for
the  pleasure  of  Krsna.  Though  attractive  material results of
chanting the holy name may be mentioned in some scriptures, a pure
devotee pays no heed to them, for he is beyond material desire.

	But the officiator of a ritualistic sacrifice displays
explicit selfishness, for as a matter of course he expects
remuneration.  Since the scriptures declare that chanting begets
unlimited auspicious results, why do such seekers of fruitive
rewards minimize the glories of the holy name?

    The  follower  of  karmakanda is supposed to gradually realize
that  pious  fruitive works, being material, give only unimportant
fruits.  He  should then perform his duties free of self interest.
This  will  purify  his  heart  and  help  him to see the need for
chanting  the  holy  name.  A  purified  heart  strives  for  self
realization and is naturally repelled by material activities.

    Thus the real success of karma kanda, when performed without
material motivation, is attraction for the chanting the holy name
of the Lord.  Pious results that a brahmana could not accrue
anywhere in the entire universe are easily obtained by chanting
Krsna's name.  The supreme position of the chanting of the holy
name cannot be diminished by the envious statements of stubborn
karmis and jnanis.

     Simply by namabhasa chanting one gains all the results of
the paths of karma and jnana.  So if mere namabhasa offers such
wonderful results, then surely the pure name will offer so much
more, unlimitedly.  Therefore, whatever results the scriptures
say are gained from chanting are easily obtainable by the devotee
who is attached to the pure name.

    There is no point in objecting
   to what the Lord Himself has wrought.

    One  who doubts this fact is a sinner who is doomed because of
commiting  namaparadha.  All  the  revealed  scriptures the Vedas,
Ramayana,  Mahabharata,  the  Puranas  and  others are filled with
glorifications of the superexcellence of the holy name. x What can
the  person  who  blatantly disregards this evidence expect? He is
simply  abominable.  The  holy  name  and the Lord Himself are the
same. Krsna personally positioned the chanting of His holy name at
the   very   top   of  all  auspicious  activities.  He  is  fully
independant,  autocratic  and  omnipotent. All processes have come
into  force  due  to  His energy. He invested karma kanda with his
material energy, and jnana kanda with his impersonal energy. Krsna
then invested of His own accord His entire personal potency in the
syllables  of  His  holy  name.  There is no point in objecting to
these arrangements. An intelligent person will therefore carefully
avoid offending the allpowerful name of the Lord.

   The remedy for the arthavada offense

     If this namaparadha is somehow commited, the offender has to
go humbly to the assembly of Vaisnavas and attentively listen to
the narrations of the pastimes and qualities of the Supreme Lord
from the lips of a pure devotee.  Full of remorse, the offender
must admit his transgression against the holy name and beg
forgiveness from the Vaisnavas.  The Vaisnavas are realized in
the glories of the name, and they will mercifuly deliver the
offender from his sins by embracing him.  The offender, now
purified, will be protected from further onslaughts of maya.

    	If  a  devotee  meets  or  even  just  sees  the  face  of an
unrepentent  doubter  of  the  power  of  the holy name, he should
immediatly  plunge  himself,  fully  clothed,  into the Ganges for
purification; if the Ganges is not nearby, he should bathe in some
other  pure water. In the event that this also is not possible, he
should purify himself by bathing mentally.

    One  who takes shelter of the mercy of Krsna's dear companion,
His flute, will be adorned by the glory of Harinama Cintamani.


   CHAPTER NINE

   TO COMMIT SIN ON THE STRENGTH OF CHANTING THE HOLY NAME
    (NAMNO BALAD YASYAHI PAPABUDDHI)
    IS THE SIXTH OFFENSE


     All glories to Sri Gadadhara Pandit and Lord Sri Gauranga;
all glories to Lord Nityananda, the life of Srimati Jahnavadevi;
all glories to Sri Advaita Acarya and Mother Sita; all glories to
Srila Srivas Pandit and all the devotees of Lord Caitanya.

   Chanting destroys all anarthas

     Srila Haridasa Thakur continued by explaining that the holy
name is eternally situated in pure goodness. Those jivas who take
shelter of Krsna's holy name are most fortunate, because chanting
soon removes the anarthas from their hearts. Consequently,
hridaya daurbalyam (weakness of heart) disappears.

    	As faith in the Lord's holy name becomes firm, the propensity
to   sin  is  totally  extirpated.  All  previous  sins  are  then
dissolved,  and  the  heart  shines  with  positive purity. Sinful
activities  sprout  from  the seeds of sinful desire in the heart,
and  the  sinful desire seeds are rooted in ignorance; these three
(ignorance,  the  seeds  of  sin  and  sin)  are the source of all
suffering  for  the  conditioned  soul. Not being able to bear the
sufferings  of  His  dependent  parts and parcels, the Lord in His
infinite  compassion  gives  them  help  through  the  process  of
bhaktiyoga  by  which  the lust to enjoy the senses is driven from
their hearts.

    As  one  practices  bhakti, he finds materialistic endeavor to
enjoy   wealth  and  women  repulsive.  He  follows  the  path  of
righteousness,  being  satisfied  in  his  service to the Lord. He
accepts  only  what  is favorable for executing devotional service
and  rejects that which is unfavorable. He has absolute conviction
in  all  situations  that  Lord Krsna is his protector, savior and
maintainer.  He  is  free  from  attachments  to  the body and the
notions  of  'me'  and  'mine.'  In  a  humble  state  of mind, he
constantly  chants  the  holy  name  of the Lord. Such a person is
never again inclined to sinful activities.

   Previous sin and its faint residue are also destroyed

     Chanting gradually diminishes the propensity to sin and
simultaneously purifies the consciousness.  As the inclination to
commit sinful activities vanishes, taste for the holy name
appears, though a faint residue of previous sinful activity still
lingers on in the consciousness.  The receeding sinful reactions
leave an odor of sinful habit (papa gandha), but the chanter's
contact with the name engenders a strength of willpower and a
purity of mind that overcomes this clinging smell of sin.

    Lord  Krsna promised Arjuna that His devotees will never be in
danger  of  destruction. If there are reverses He personally comes
to His devotees' rescue. The devotees' sins are annihilated by the
Lord's  mercy alone. The empirical philosopher or jnani may subdue
his  sins with great efforts and penance, but as soon as he leaves
or  denies  the  shelter of Lord Krsna's lotus feet, he immediatly
falls  down.  The  scriptures testify that whoever simply embraces
the  Lord's  protection is an elevated soul, and his progress will
never be impeded by obstacles.

 There is no need for ritualistic penances or prayascitta

     By chance, a devotee may commit some sin, but still he does
not have to undertake the penance of prayascitta.  Such sins are
a passing phase that will be drowned in the nectar of the holy
name.  The devotee is never lost from the path of pure devotion.

     However, if a devotee again commits another sin, this time
calculating that the strength of holy name will counteract the
reaction, then he is not fixed on the path of pure devotion.
Rather, he is a deceitful person doomed by his offenses to the
holy name.  Scripture affirms that there is a vast difference
between sin committed due to sudden weakness or mistake and due
to premeditation.

   Just being inclined to this namaparadha is utterly ruinous.

     For karmis, the means to get free of sinful reaction is the
performance of prayascitta in repentence.  But if someone even
contemplates relieving himself of the reaction of deliberate sin
by exploiting the purifying strength of holy name, he is utterly
ruined, and no amount of prayascitta will help him.  Even after
untold retribution in hell, he will not be absolved from this
mental namaparadha.  If just the inclination to commit sin on the
strength of chanting results in such tribulations for the soul,
the fate of one who acts on that inclination is too terrible to
envision.

    This namaparadha is inevitable for the cheaters The scriptures
declare  the  holy  name  to  be so potent that it can eradicate a
burden  of  sins  that  even in ten million lifetimes could not be
committed.  Even  the gravest of sins are counteracted just in the
'namabhasa'  stage  of  chanting.  And  that  is precisely why the
cheats  and  charlatans  are attracted to the chanting of the holy
name.  They  forsake the responsibilities of honest labor as being
drudgery  and,  disguised  in the renunciate's attire, travel from
country  to  country,  their  hearts  smoldering  with desires for
wealth  and  women.  Such  persons  are called markata vairagis or
'monkey renunciates'.

    These  unfortunate  fellows dress as sannyasis but nurture the
householder  mentality.  They  are  nothing more than dead weights
upon mother earth and human society and must be avoided. A devotee
who has taken shelter of the holy name can live in any n situation
in  household  life or in the forest as a hermit. If the household
situation  is  conducive to chanting, then the life of a mendicant
is  unnecessary, but if household life is unfavorable, the devotee
is  dutybound  to  forsake  it.  In  either case, it is a terrible
offense  to  commit  sins  on  the  strength  of chanting. Such an
offender is forever banished from the path of devotional service.

    Devotees  in  the  namabhasa  stage of chanting must beware of
such  cheating  company  because  that  company  will have an evil
influence  on  them  they will also fall down into committing this
dreaded  namaparadha. As for those who are chanting the pure name,
they are always free from this namaparadha.

     Pure devotees are free from the ten namaparadhas

    Devotees  who have taken complete shelter of chanting the pure
name  are  never  prone to commit any of the ten namaparadhas. The
holy   name   Himself   protects  these  pure  devotees  who  have
surrendered  themselves  to chanting. But as long as the pure name
has  not  dawned  in  the  heart  of  the  devotee,  he  is always
threatened  by  the  danger  of  commiting  namaparadha. Therefore
devotees  in  the  namabhasa stage have to particularly avoid this
offense of commiting sin on the strength of chanting.

   Vigilance is required in the namabhasa stage

    A devotee must seek the association of pure devotees who chant
the  holy  name  without offense, and he should personally be very
alert  against committing offenses. One who chants the name purely
is  of  fixed mind and consciousness, since he never deviates from
thinking  about  Krsna  for  even a moment. As long as one has not
strengthened  his  chanting  to the point of full surrender to the
holy  name,  he  must  be very vigilant to avoid offenses. He must
especially  guard  against  the  offense  of  commiting sin on the
strength  of  chanting. He should continuously chant the holy name
and  thus  attract  his  spiritual  master's  mercy,  which yields
sambandhajnana.   This  knowledge  reveals  the  science  of  pure
devotion and the pure holy name.

   The remedy for this namaparadha

    If  by  some  error  one commits this namaparadha, one must go
before  an  assembly  of  pure Vaisnavas. The propensity to sin is
like  a  highway  robber,  and  the  pure  devotees  are  like the
guardians of the path who come to one's aid when the someone calls
aloud   for  their  help.  Just  hearing  that  call,  the  robber
immediately  runs  away,  fearing  that  the guards will come. The
guardians,  the  pure  Vaisnavas,  will  console  the devotee with
soothing words and assurances of their protection.

     I, the author of Harinama Cintamani, am a useless wretch. I
recite this composition having taken shelter of the pure Vaisnavas.


   CHAPTER TEN


 TO INSTRUCT THE GLORIES OF THE HOLY NAME TO THE FAITHLESS
   (ASRADDADHANA VIMUKHE'PY ASRNVATI)
   IS THE SEVENTH OFFENSE


     All glories to Lord Sri Gauranga, the life of Sri Gadadhara
Pandit; all glories to Lord Nityananda, the heart of Srimati
Jahnavadevi; all glories to Sri Advaita Acarya, the Lord of
Mother Sita; all glories to Srila Srivasa Pandit and all the
devotees of Lord Caitanya.

     With his hands folded and in a soft voice Srila Haridasa
Thakur said, "Now please hear about another namaparadha".

   Sraddha (faith) is essential for chanting the holy name

    	The  foremost  requirement  for chanting Krsna's holy name is
sraddha  or  firm  faith.  One who is bereft of it cannot hear the
name  and  is  therefore  unfit  to chant. High birth, respectable
family,  knowledge, strength, learning or wealth are not qualities
that  make  a  person  eligible  to chant the name. The scriptures
extol  sraddha  to  be the one indispensible ingredient for proper
chanting.  Lord Krsna's name is the jiva's most valuable treasure.
Faith means to have complete conviction that chanting Lord Krsna's
name  will automatically fulfill all duties and complete all pious
activities.  Those  who  do  not  possess  such faith are unfit to
chant.

 It is an offense to instruct the faithless on the holy name

     According to Vaisnava etiquette, a person who does not have
faith in the name should not be initiated into chanting.  If a
faithless person is initiated into chanting or is instructed
about the glories of the holy name, then he will only defile and
neglect the name.  This is the statement of scripture.  The swine
will crush the pearls strewn before it and the monkey will tear
the cloth it is given; the faithless person will likewise
increasingly offend the holy name and thus invite his doom.
Simultaneously, the initiating guru will be dragged down by his
share in these offenses. Very soon, he will be forced off the
path of devotional service.

   What is to be done if a faithless person wants to
   be initated

    The faithless person sometimes slyly comes to the Vaisnavas to
beg  initiation into chanting. The devotee should see through this
pretentious  cheating  and  refuse  him  initation.  The pretender
thinks,  "The  holy  name  of Krsna is the allpurifying agent, and
once  I've  received  the  name  I  will  not  have to worry about
commiting  sins.  Besides,  when  I  chant people will respect and
worship  me  as  a  Vaisnava then I can extract a goodly amount of
service  from  them. The prestige I have lost by my bad deeds will
be regained fully by chanting; such a loss will never occur again.
I  shall  at  last  become  very happy in material life", etc. The
devotee  should  demand  of the pretender his full renunciation of
dishonesty.  To  become  worthy  of  initiation,  he  must at once
neglect  his  desires  for  distinction  and adoration, and should
instead try to develop sraddha for the holy name.


    Only  when  faith in the holy name is present in the heart can
one  be  initiated  into  chanting. The holy name then carries the
chanter across the material ocean of nescience. But as long as one
has  not  developed  sufficient sraddha, he is unfit to chant. One
should  hear the glories of the holy name from a saintly Vaisnava.
Becoming  humble by hearing his instructions, he should cast aside
material  desires  and begin to chant. When the Vaisnava spiritual
master perceives the proper degree of sraddha in the candidate, he
initiates  him  into  the greatest spiritual treasure Krsna's holy
name. But to initiate a faithless person is an abominable offense.
The guru goes to hell if he gives initiation to a faithless person
for remuneration.

    If  the  guru  knows  that a person who has approached him for
initiation  is an insincere, faithless pretender, and yet he still
heedlessly  initiates  this  unfit person out of consideration for
the  material  gain  it  may  bring  him,  he  is  condemned  as a
namaparadhi.  If  the guru was unable to make a correct assessment
and  gave  the candidate initiation only to later discover that he
is a pretender, he must make immediate redress for his mistake.

     The remedy for this namaparadha

    If  it was due to inadvertence and lack of experience that the
mistake of instructing and initiating a faithless person occurred,
the  initiating  spiritual  master  should be filled with fear and
remorse.  He  has  to  publicize  his  offense before the Vaisnava
community and reject that insincere disciple, excommunicating him.
If the guru fails to act promptly, he will gradually sink into the
depths  of  moral  depravity  and illusion, and be disenfranchized
from  the  path  of  devotion.  Lord  Caitanya's  instructions  to
preachers

     Srila Haridasa Thakur said, "O Lord Caitanya, in Your
instructions to those You have ordained to propagate the holy
name, You specifically give warning about this.  Preachers may
instruct the glories of the holy name only to the sraddhavan
(persons with sraddha).

	"This the way by which the whole world will be inundated
with the chanting of the holy name: with loud congregational
chanting, the holy name is to be propagated widely among the
masses.  Those who are faithful will come forward and choose a
bona fide spiritual master, receiving instructions and initiation
in the name from him.  By sincere chanting they will surely
obtain love of Godhead, Krsnaprema.

	"Prostitutes, criminals, cheaters and other sinful people
should first be made to give up their unrighteous, harmful ways.
Sincere faith should then be implanted in their hearts by good
association.  When their faith in Krsna's holy name matures, only
then may they receive initiation.  This is the duty of a preacher
as he goes from place to place.

   The result of this namapardha

    "If,   without  paying  heed  to  Your  instructions,  a  guru
initiates  an  insincere  pretender, he commits a grievous offense
for  which  he  goes  to  hell.  The  namapardhas committed by the
charlatan disciple slowly but surely diminish the guru's spiritual
potency,  and  finally  the  guru  is ruined. This offense has a z
devastating  effect  on  both  the guru and the disciple they both
must enter hell. Sraddha first, then initiation

        "My  dear  Lord,  You  were very merciful to Jagai and Madhai.
These  brothers  were  born  in  a brahmana family, their original
names being Jagadananda and Madhavananda. They became known as the
worst rascals in Navadvipa due to their virulent and violent acts.
First  You  invoked  faith in them and then You gave them the holy
name.  O  Lord,  Your  character and activities are exemplary, and
they spread illumination throughout the world. Let everyone follow
Your wonderful example."

     Those who are servants of the servants of the Vaisnavas are
entitled to wear the precious gem of this Harinama Cintamani.


   CHAPTER ELEVEN

  TO EQUATE CHANTING WITH OTHER PIOUS ACTIVITIES
   (DHARMA VRATA TYAGA HUTADI)       IS THE EIGHTH OFFENSE
 

	All glories to Lord Gauracandra, the avatara Who delivers
the holy name; all glories to the holy name, the essence of all
Vedic conclusions.

	Srila Haridasa Thakur continued, "O Lord, other pious
activities can never be equal to chanting the name."

   The original form of the holy name

    	The  Supreme  Lord is like a transcendental sun Whose potency
is  unlimited,  everpure  and  allpervading consciousness. All His
endless    expansions   exhibit   this   absolute   transcendental
consciousness,  as  do His name, abode, and pastimes. Unlike forms
of  inert  matter  which are separate from their names, his direct
names are not different from Him.

     Descending from Goloka, having been summoned by the chanting
of the pure devotee, the holy name enters that devotee's soul. The
pure  name  then emanates out of the soul and permeates his entire
body,   dancing   on  the  tip  of  his  tongue.  One  who  chants
understanding this is actually chanting the holy name, but one who
nourishes a material concept of the name is drowned in despondency
and suffers eternally in hell; a devotee should never see the face
of such an offender.

    The scriptures declare Lord Krsna to be the only object of
research for seekers of the Absolute Truth.  According to their
abilities, different reseachers adopted their own means to find
that one goal.  Thus different paths like karma, jnana and bhakti
are deliniated.  Those who are attached to gross materialism are
recommended the path of karma for purification.  For souls
attracted to the illusionism of maya, the suggested path is the
cultivation of monistic philosophy.  But for all jivas, pure
devotional service is the best and most suitable.

  ! What is subhakarma?

	Persons pursuing mundane existence take to the worship of
the Supreme Lord out of fear of death.  The Lord's lotus feet are
the perfect shelter, free from all anxiety, and are the only
means to cross over the ocean of nescience.  But when the process
to obtain the protection of the Lord becomes colored by material
motives, then the process itself becomes mundane.  Even though it
is the Lord who is being worshiped, because the process of
worship is mundane, the worship becomes materially pious activity
or subhakarma.

     Subhakarma   includes:   altruistic  work,  fire  sacrifices,
ablutions,   charity,  yoga,  the  practice  of  varnasramadharma,
pilgrimages,   vows,   offerings   to   forefathers,   meditation,
cultivation  of  empirical  knowledge,  propitiation  of demigods,
penances,  austerities,  etc.  All  these  activities are means to
mundane  objectives.  But  after  a  long  period  of  practice of
subhakarma,  the  performer gradually obtains the real goal of all
his  endeavors  the shelter of the lotus feet of the Supreme Lord.
At   this   juncture,  he  must  abandon  the  temporary  ways  of
subhakarma,  for he now knows the genuine essence of all religious
duties bhakti, devotion to the Lord.

    	Subhakarma  is  indeed a viable path for conditioned souls to
attain  the ultimate goal, i.e. love of Godhead. Yet one fact must
be  clearly  stated  reaching  perfection  through subhakarma is a
timeconsuming affair. The ultimate objective is Krsna prema, which
is  fully  spiritual,  but  on  the  subhakarma path, the means to
attain  it  is mundane. Thus there is a gulf of difference between
the means and the objective.

      [Footnote 1 by Bhaktivinoda] The evolution of the jiva from
mundane religiousity to Krsna consciousness is the master plan of
Providence, which impels the jiva to aspire for perfection.  The
conditioned souls cannot exist without contacting matter.  All
their thoughts and activities are intimately woven into the
fabric of materialism.   Pious activities (subhakarma) provide a
means for the jiva to approach pure devotion through skillful
efforts of material contact.  Simultaneously, this contact with
matter gives rise to discontent and suffering.  Therefore, to
achieve the bliss of Krsna consciousness, in the end the jiva
must give up subhakarma.	[End of footnote 1]

   Chanting the holy name is not subhakarma

    	Out  of His causeless compassion, the Supreme Lord incarnated
as  the  holy  name,  making  Himself immediately available to the
jivas;  thus  the  holy  name  is  accepted by the intelligent and
righteous  jivas as their only means of perfection. The scriptures
recommend  chanting  the Lord's name as the most effective process
of obtaining the supreme goal, but some persons understand this to
mean  that chanting is one of many subhakarmas. This misconception
is  similar  to Lord Visnu being seen as just another demigod like
Siva or Brahma.

	The holy name is fully spiritual and transcendental to
material nature.  It is untainted by matter.  Though the jiva is
likewise spiritual, he thinks himself material due to gross
ignorance. Consequently, he thinks that everything, including the
holy name of the Lord, is also material.  Thus the chanting of
Lord Krsna's holy name came to be categorized as subhakarma, and
the jivas with Mayavadi leanings are convinced that this is right
and proper.  But those who adhere to this view are excluded from
the path of devotional service.

     The holy name is both the means and the end n 	The holy name
is  the  repository  of  spiritual bliss. He has descended to this
material  world  to  be the means by which He, the summum bonum of
bhakti,  is  attained. The scriptures eulogize His divine glories,
for  Krsna's  name  is  both  the means to prema and prema itself.
According to the individual jiva's degree of spiritual perfection,
he  considers  the  Lord's holy name to be either the means or the
end. As long as one has not attained full Krsna consciousness, the
name appears as the means to reach that goal.

   Subhakarma is the secondary means;
   the holy name is the primary means

	There are two means to the supreme goal: primary and
secondary.  Subhakarma is the secondary means and the Lord's holy
name is the primary means.  Though the holy name is counted as a
'means', it is nevertheless eternally the principle means. Once
this point is clearly understood, the differences between the
holy name and subhakarma will be clearly seen.  The scriptural
verdict is that the holy name is the essence of spiritual bliss,
and is thus incomparible to any other subhakarma.  One who chants
purely experiences how the insurpassable joy of the Lord and His
pastimes enters the heart and makes it soar with sublime delight:
such is the nature of the holy name of Krsna.

   The joy of sayujamukti is insignificant

	Even the bliss of selfrealization through jnana or yoga
cannot be compared to that of chanting the holy name, for the
state of joy in impersonal liberation is merely the cessation of
material suffering.

    	The  wonderful  quality  of  the holy name is that during the
sadhana  (practice)  period  it is the means, and in the perfected
stage,  it  is the ultimate goal. Even while being utilized as the
means,  the holy name remains always the goal. This cannot be said
of  other  subhakarmas, which are all mundane activities. The holy
name  is  purely spiritual, being selfmanifested from the realm of
suddhasattva.  Even  during the practice of sadhana, the holy name
is  situated  in  pure  goodness;  the sadhaka's imperfections and
anarthas only seem to color it.

     The  holy  name  must  be  chanted  in  the  association  of
devotees: then all the material inebrities and anarthas disappear,
being  replaced  by  the  pure  name  of  Krsna.  The  practice of
subhakarma must be discarded upon attainment of the shelter of the
ultimate  destination. But chanters have never to give up the holy
name. They simply chant the pure name in the perfected stage.

     The Lord's holy name is diametrically opposite in nature to
mundane subhakarma activities.  In the sadhana stage, the devotee
should, by the grace of his spiritual master and on the basis of
Vedic proofs, comprehend the difference between the holy name and
subhakarma.

 	[Footnote 2 by Bhaktivinoda] Sraddha, when sufficiently
mature, brings one to the association of devotees.  In that
association, one begins devotional service.  The heart is
cleansed of all anarthas by chanting the holy name of the Lord.
As much as the heart is cleansed of anarthas, to that degree the
chanting becomes pure.  Progressively, one is fixed in devotion
and develops taste for the holy name.  The knowledge of these
developmental stages must be preliminarily understood and
believed in by the sadhaka through the grace of his spiritual
master.  Otherwise, his anarthas will multiply due to his
committing namaparadha.  But with this proper understanding and
faith, the pure name manifests very quickly. [End of footnote 2]


   The remedy for this namaparadha

	This namaparadha of equating the holy name with subhakarma
is committed because of sinful activities, especially the sin of
offending the devotees of the Lord.  Immediate countermeasures
must be undertaken, because as a result of these offenses, the
jiva acquires the perverted Mayavadi understanding of the holy
name.  Only the association of devotees can exculpate such
offenses.

	To rid himself of this namaparadha, one must approach a
householder Vaisnava who originally came from a very low caste;
this is to stamp out any false understandings of designation and
caste distinctions.  The offender should then smear all over his
own body, with great respect and faith, the dust of the feet of
that Vaisnava.  He must also eat the remnants of this Vaisnava's
food and drink the water that washed his feet.  In this way, the
proper attitude towards the pure name will again develop within
the offender's heart.  The whole world sings of how Kalidasa was
saved from this namaparadha by the mercy of the Lord.

   Srila Haridasa Thakur's attachment to the holy name

    	"My dear Lord, my consciousness is thoroughly mundane. Though
I  mouth the names of the Lord, I am too unfortunate to experience
their  transcendental  touchstone  qualities. O Lord! I beg You to
please  appear  as the holy name and dance on my tongue. I fall at
Your  lotus  feet  and  pray: if You like, You can keep me in this
material  world  or place me in the spiritual sky. Whatever desire
is  Yours,  You  are  free to fulfill, but please let me taste the
divine nectar of Krsna's holy name. You have descended amongst the
conditioned  souls  to  distribute  the  holy name, so kindly also
consider me, an insignificant jiva. I am a fallen soul and You are
the  savior of the fallen. Let this be our eternal relationship. O
Savior!  On  the  strength of this relationship, I am begging from
You the nectar of the holy name.

   Why the name is the religion of the age

    	"In  Kaliyuga  all  other  processes except the holy name are
incapable of redeeming the fallen souls. Therefore the chanting of
the  holy  name  is  the  yuga  dharma. Actually, it is the most n
efficient  religious practice throughout all the ages. But in Kali
Yuga,  unlike  other  ages,  there is no other religion available.
Thus  the  holy  name appears as the only religion that can redeem
the fallen souls."

	Only one who is blessed with loving devotion as the servant
of Srila Haridasa Thakura, and who thinks himself devoid of
qualification, is fit to recite this Harinama Cintamani.

	

   CHAPTER TWELVE


    TO CHANT INATTENTIVELY (PRAMADA) IS THE NINTH OFFENSE



	All glories to Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu and all His devotees;
by their causeless grace alone, I perform congregational chanting
of the holy name of the Lord.

   The offense known as pramada or inattentive chanting

	Srila Haridasa Thakura then said, "O Lord Caitanya, to Srila
Sanatana Goswami here in Jagannatha Puri and Srila Gopala Bhatta
Goswami in South India, you taught that the holy name must be
chanted attentively.  Inattention in chanting is namaparadha.
One may carefully avoid all other namaparadhas, yet still not
experience the ecstasy of the pure name.  This is an indication
of another type of namaparadha known as pramada, which prevents
the chanter from reaching the stage of nistha, or firm faith.
This in turn blocks the further growth of bhakti to the flowering
of Krsnaprema."

   Three kinds of inattention

    	Pramada means 'madness', but 'inattention' and 'carelessness'
are  also  synonyms  of  this  word. Inattentive chanting sows the
seeds  of anarthas which soon develop in the heart. Inattention is
of  three  kinds.  The  first  is  called audasinya, or 'apathetic
devotional  service',  meaning a lack of fixed resolve in sadhana.
The  second type is jadya, 'laziness' or even 'inertia'. The third
kind  is  viskepa,  which means 'distraction' or 'misplacing one's
attention in engagements other than sadhana bhakti.'

      It  is  essential  to  give special attention  to chanting
while anuraga is undeveloped 	By a special stroke of good fortune,
a  jiva  develops enough sraddha to take shelter of the holy name.
By  regularly  chanting  a fixed number of holy names with special
care  and  attention,  he may, by degrees, progress to anuraga, or
spontaneous  attraction  for  the Lord's name. He should chant his
prescribed  number  of  rounds  on  a  Tulasimala and increase his
rounds  with time. Before he reaches the stage of anuraga, he must
be very cautious about offenses in chanting.

    Most  people  are  naturally very attached to material things,
their  memories  always  absorbed in matter. They may indeed chant
the  holy  name  of the Lord, but their minds may be far away from
the  chanting.  Even  if  they  daily chant one lakha (one hundred
thousand)  holy names on the japamala, not a drop of taste for the
Lord's  name  will be produced in their hearts. It is difficult to
restrain materialistic hearts from such offenses.

       The process of overcoming apathy

    	One  must  make  it his daily routine to chant for an hour in
the company of saintly Vaisnavas in a sacred, undisturbed place. z
Taking note of the Vaisnavas' devotional attitude and their relish
for  the  holy  name, the neophyte should try to emulate this mood
and gradually rid himself of his apathy to chanting. Step by step,
his  mind  and  attention should become fixed in the holy name. By
constant  chanting,  the  sweetness  of  the  holy  name makes him
anxious to taste more of that nectar.

	Advanced Vaisnavas advise that chanting is best performed in
the presence of Tulasidevi and in a place of Lord Krsna's
pastimes.  The chanter should always seek the association of
saintly devotees and emulate their discipline.  He must follow in
the footsteps of previous acaryas in the joyful method of
worshiping the Lord through His holy name.  He may begin with an
hour of such chanting, then two, then increase it to four until
finally he will chant not less then three lakhas of holy names a
day.  This helps him to soon sever his links with materialism.

     Another effective method for ridding oneself of apathy
towards the holy name is to sit in a closed room alone and
meditate on the name as did the previous sages.  Or one can cover
the head and face with a cloth and concentrate on the sound of
the holy name.  This will immediately fix the mind firmly on the
holy name; slowly, one develops attraction for the name, and the
offense of apathetic inattentiion will vanish.

    Overcoming laziness

	Inattention arising from laziness (jadya) prevents a person
from relishing the nectar of the holy name.  He is slow to chant
and remember the holy name. Even after trying, he very soon finds
the effort unendurable and wants to sleep or otherwise engage
himself in frivolity.

	Advanced devotees are cautious against such an offense. They
never waste a single moment in useless talks or activities. Their
meditation on the Lord's holy name is unbroken.  They are so
absorbed in the nectar of the holy name that they do not want
anything else.  One must therefore aspire to associate with such
rare devotees and follow their example, thus ridding himself of
his laziness.

	It is the nature of saintly Vaisnavas to be always engaged
in devotional activities.  They never waste time uselessly.  One
should become attracted to this devotional trait.  One should ask
himself how he also can become like these devotees, immersed in
meditation upon the holy name; how, from this very day, he can
increase his chanting step by step until such time as he can
actually chant three lakhas of holy names with inspiration and
eagerness.  When Lord Krsna sees such enthusiasm, He reciprocates
by removing the neophyte's mental inertia with the power of His
name, and by allowing him to remain in the association of His
advanced devotees.

   Overcoming distraction

	Distraction in chanting breeds illusion which becomes the
cause of further serious offenses against the holy name.  This
illusion, difficult to overcome, engenders attraction to wealth,
women, position, success and the cheating propensity.  When these
attractions cover the heart, the neophyte becomes neglectful of
the chanting of the holy name.

    One  must  make  a  constant  effort  to  try  and  drive such
attractions away from the mind by diligently following the ways of
Vaisnava  culture.  This  will  bring  back  his good fortune. For
instance,   he   should  nicely  observe  the  Ekadasi  vows,  the
appearance  days  of  the  Lord  and other such important festival
days.  He  should spend the entire festival day and night chanting
and  singing  the  glories  of  the Lord in association of saintly
devotees. The ideal way to observe these festivals is to be in one
of the dhamas (Navadvipa, Vrindavana, Puri etc.) with sadhus (pure
devotees in the line of Srila Rupa Goswami) reading and discussing
sastra (Vedic literatures like Bhagavadgita, Srimad Bhagavatam and
other Vaisnava scriptures). He should wholeheartily participate in
the  festival  programs  without  anxiety  and  hesitation.  These
festivals  will  rekindle the dying spark of spiritual taste. Thus
he will be attracted to the pastimes of the Supreme Lord.

    	Tasting  the  superior flavor of pure Krsna consciousness, he
will  naturally be disgusted by his inferior material attachments.
He  will  be enraptured by sweet songs of the Lord's pastimes sung
by  the  devotees,  and  his  ears  will  fill up with nectar that
dislodges  his  mind  from  matter and fixes it upon the holy name
again.  The  devotee  can  then  chant  steadily  in  a joyous and
peaceful mood.

  - Good advice for chanters

	One must diligently complete the chanting of the daily
prescribed number of holy names according to one's vow.  But
another kind of distraction occurs when one is too eager to
complete the fixed number of holy names even at the sacrifice of
quality.  One must therefore always insure that he chants his
rounds sincerely.  Also, one should better improve the quality of
his chanting rather than try to increase his daily number of
rounds for show.  The name of the Lord should be always be
pronounced distinctly.  Only by the grace of the Lord can this be
achieved.  Thus one should pray to the Lord that he never falls
victim to the wiles of the illusion of distraction, and that he
can continue to taste the full nectar of the holy name.

   The secret to success is humility

    	The  devotee  should  make  it  a regular practice to spend a
little  time  alone in a quiet place and concentrate deeply on the
holy  name.  He  should  utter and hear the name distinctly. It is
impossible  for  the jiva to singlehandedly avoid and overcome the
illusion  of  distraction. By the mercy of the Lord, however, this
is   accomplished   with   ease.  Therefore  it  is  essential  to
prayerfully beg for the Lord's grace with great humility, for this
is the only means to salvation from this offense.

   The necessity of developing enthusiasm

	"O Lord Caitanya!" cried Thakur Haridasa.  "You are an ocean
of compassion!  I wholeheartedly beg for Your mercy. Indeed, if I
was unable to pray to You in this way, then no one would be more
unfortunate than I.

    "Those who attempt to take up devotional service on the merits
of  their  individual  intelligence and mental expertise will find
that  all their endeavors are fruitless. Lord Krsna's mercy is the
prime  cause  of all successful work. One who does not z aspire to
obtain the Lord's mercy is indeed a very unfortunate soul." A note
about the vow of nirbandha

    Srila  Haridasa  Thakur  advised that we concentrate deeply on
the  holy  name of Krsna. Lord Caitanya's teachings on this matter
are  found  in  the Caitanya Bhagavata, Madhya 23.650: "Hare Krsna
Hare  Krsna  Krsna  Krsna Hare Hare, Hare Rama Hare Rama Rama Rama
Hare  Hare. The Lord said, 'This is the maha-mantra; now go and do
japa  meditation, chanting these holy names a prescribed number of
times  (nirbandha)  each  day.  You  will  achieve  all  desirable
perfection   from   this   chanting.  Just  chant  the  holy  name
constantly,   because   no   rules  or  regulations  can  restrict
chanting.'

    		The  word  nirbandha  needs  elaboration. The sadhaka should
chant  the  mahamantra  on  a  japamala  of 108 Tulasi beads. Four
rounds  on  the beads makes a granthi. By gradually increasing his
chanting,  the  sadhaka  should aspire to chant 16 granthis or one
lakha  of  holy  names: this number is considered as nirbandha. If
chanting  is then even further increased to three lakhas of names,
the  devotee  will always be immersed in the Lord's holy name. All
the  previous acaryas and mahajanas have followed this instruction
of  Lord  Caitanya  and  attained perfection. Even now, anyone can
attain perfection by proper chanting. Everyone, including the pure
devotees,  the  salvationists,  and  the materialistic persons are
eligible to chant the holy name of the Lord.

    	Two  different  moods  of  Krsnaprema  are  visible  in  pure
devotees,  but  the nectar of the holy name is relished in both of
these moods, in the happiness of meeting the Lord and in the pangs
of separation from the Lord.

     One who wears the gem of Harinama Cintamani as a crown upon
his head will certeinly find shelter at Srila Haridasa Thakura's
lotus feet.


    CHAPTER THIRTEEN  			

    TO MAINTAIN MATERIAL ATTACHMENTS OF 'ME' AND 'MINE'
    IS THE TENTH OFFENSE


     All glories to Sri Gadadhara Pandit and Lord Sri Gauranga;
all glories to Lord Nityananda, the life and soul of Srimati
Jahnavadevi; all glories to Sri Advaita Acarya, the Lord of
Mother Sita; all glories to all the devotees of Lord Caitanya.

     Drenched in tears of ecstatic love, Srila Haridasa Thakura
went on to explain, in a choked voice, the last of the offenses
to the holy name.  "My Lord, this last namaparadha is the worst
kind of offense; its presence stops the flow Krsnaprema."

    	Even after having taken spiritual initiation, most materially
attached  persons  cannot  fully give up bodily designations. They
maintain a 'me' and 'mine' mentality that sidetracks them from the
path  of devotion. Bodily designations, e.g. 'I am a brahmana', 'I
am   Vaisnava',   'I   am  king',  or  'I  am  a  rich  man';  and
possesiveness,  e.g.  'This  is my position, wealth, son, grandson
and   so   on',  symptomize  immaturity  of  realization  and  are
deterrents  to proper cultivation of devotional service. This is a
terrible offense that is only gotten rid of when one surrenders to
the holy Name.

 The necessity and symptoms of surrender to the holy name

    Having  given  up  first nine namaparadhas, every devotee must
surrender   completely   to   the  holy  name.  According  to  the
scriptures,  the  process of surrender (saranagati) has six limbs.
It  is impossible to explain them in detail here, but briefly they
are as follows.

     The vow to accept everything favorable for the execution of
devotional service; likewise, to reject anything unfavorable; to
be convinced that Lord Krsna will always give protection; to
depend wholly on Krsna for everything; to always feel meek and
humble; and to throw oneself at Lord Krsna's lotus feet in full
selfsurrender - these are the six limbs of surrender .

     Devotional service is possible only while alive. Hence one
must accept that which keeps the body and soul together, and not
more.  Life must be molded to facilitate devotional service.
Therefore one should develop a taste for objects that are
connected to Lord Krsna.  Simultaneously, a natural distaste for
deterrents to devotional service will also arise within the
heart.  Lord Krsna becomes the only protector and maintainer,
because no one is as dependable as He is.  Knowing this, one
should think, 'As His eternal slave, I am somehow also an
insignificant member of Lord Krsna's family. My only aspiration
is to act according to His will.'

    One  must  then  drop  all  false  designations like brahmana,
sudra,  father, husband, king, subject, master, donor, maintainer;
and  attachments  to  money,  body,  sons,  wife etc. Instead, one
should  enter  the  mood  of  the  paraphernalia  of  Lord  Krsna,
thinking:  'He  is  the  real  Master  and  Lord,  and His will is
imperative. I am ready to act only to fulfil Lord Krsna's desire z
and  will  not  even  think  about my own wishes. I will adjust my
household  affairs for the Lord's satisfaction. By His wish I will
cross  the  material ocean. Only by His desire will I feel genuine
compassion  for  the  suffering  souls.  In  times of both joy and
sorrow  I  remain  eternally  Lord Krsna's servitor. My moments of
material  enjoyment  and  my moods of renunciation are experienced
only   due   to  the  Lord's  will.'  When  these  feelings  arise
spontaneously,  one  achieves the stage of atmanivedana (surrender
of the soul).

   The consequences of not surrendering

     One unable to accept the six limbs of surrender is a
prisoner of false ego who always thinks in terms of 'me' and
'mine'.  He proudly declares, 'I am the master here.  This
household and family belong to me.  The fruits of work are mine
by right of labor, and I am their enjoyer, whether they be bitter
or sweet.  I am my own protector and maintainer.  This women is
my wife, here is my brother, he is my son.  By the sweat of my
brow I earn my own living, and success is the reward of my endeavors.'

    	Intoxicated  with  such  egoism,  these materialistic persons
overestimate   their  own  ability  and  intelligence.  Scientists
propagate  their  theories  and develop technology to flaunt their
denial  of  God.  Among atheists, these are the worst demons. They
take credit for the so-called advancement of scientific technology
and  for  the  material  comfort  it brings. But factually, it all
happens by the Lord's will: this they completely fail to see.

     When the atheists hear the glories of the holy name they
disbelieve them.  Yet sometimes even they utter Krsna's holy name
due to the pressure of social custom.  But since this kind of
chanting is bereft of faith, they never experience bliss.  Such
are the stereotyped ways of cheaters who make a mere show of
religion.  By repeating Krsna's name, even though in neglect,
they earn a little piety, but they are deprived of the actual
result of chanting - pure love of Godhead.

	The cause of their offensiveness is material engrossment.
They are so captivated by the illusory potency that they are
blinded, and it is extremely difficult for them to get free of
their offensive condition.  Only one who acquires a taste for
pure devotional service becomes disgusted with material life;
leaving it, he takes full shelter of the holy Name.

   How to rid oneself of this offense

     Leaving aside all material attachments and accepting
voluntary poverty, one should humbly worship Lord Krsna's lotus
feet, taking full shelter of the chanting of the holy name.  He
should aspire for the association of devotees and serve them
without material desires.  Gradually his heart will become
impregnated with attraction for the holy name. The egoistic
mentality of 'me' and 'mine' will disappear and he will surmount
the ocean of material nescience.

    	By  hearing  the glories of the holy name, the last traces of
false  ego will dissipate, and the symptoms of a pure devotee will
then  blossom  in his heart, and he will take to the six processes
of  surrender. He who finds complete shelter in the holy name is x
a  great  soul, for he becomes the recipient of the great treasure
of  Krsnaprema.  The  symptoms  of  one  who  is free from the ten
namaparadhas  	In  being  warned  to avoid the ten offenses to the
holy name of the Lord, one is actually being ordered to positively
implement   the  specific  saintly  qualities  that  render  these
aparadhas impossible. Therefore, one must: not criticize but serve
the saintly Vaisnavas; worship Krsna as the Absolute Supreme Lord;
give  full  respect to the spiritual master who initiates one into
the  holy  name;  regard the scriptures that reveal the glories of
the  holy  name as preeminent; know within the heart that the holy
name  is  eternally  situated  in pure transcendence; root out and
destroy  the desire to commit sins; preach the glories of the holy
name  only  to  the faithful; give up ritualistic pious activities
entirely;  chant  with  full  attention and surrender fully to the
holy name.

      Bhava  is  attained  quickly when the chanting is free from
offenses  When one is thus free from offenses, he becomes the most
fortunate soul in the three worlds. He acquires all good qualities
and  is  eligible  to  receive  Lord Krsna's causeless mercy. Very
quickly,  his  chanting  awards him the divine fruit of bhava, the
first  stage  of  prema.  Thus the offenseless chanter is promoted
from  the  sadhana or practice stage to bhava, or spontaneous pure
devotional  service.  From  bhava comes prema, which, according to
the  scriptures,  is  the  mature  fruit  of  pure  devotion,  the
pinnaccle  of  all perfection. Lord Caitanya personally guarantees
that  if  any  devotee chants the holy name free from offenses, he
will quickly obtain Krsnaprema.

  - Pure bhakti is priceless;
   other attainments are imitation

     If one continues to chant with offenses, then in spite of
many endeavors, he will never attain pure devotion.  The fruitive
worker or karmi enjoys heavenly bliss through karma; the jnani
obtains liberation as a result of empirical knowledge; but pure
devotion to Krsna and Krsnaprema, which is very rarely attained,
is had only through the proper execution of sadhanabhakti.

    	The  bliss  of  heaven and liberation is compared to motherof
pearl  (the  shining  inner  surface of a pearl oyster shell), and
pure  bhakti to Krsna is the priceless gem pearl. It is the jiva's
prerogative  and  the  success  of his human birth to acquire pure
devotion.  If one sincerely and expertly practices sadhana bhakti,
he  very  soon  receives  the  seed of pure devotion or prema. The
meaning   of   expert   practice   is  that  one  avoids  the  ten
namaparadhas.

   One must be greedy for pure bhakti
     to avoid offending the holy name

    	If  one  is  sufficiently greedy for obtaining pure devotion,
then  he will chant free from the ten offenses. He must diligently
avoid  each  of  the offenses with feelings of deep repentance for
having  ever  commited them. He should pray sincerely to the lotus
feet of the holy name and chant with determination. Only then will
he  be  blessed  with  the  mercy  of  the holy name, which z will
destroy  all  of  his  offenses.  No other activity or penance can
possibly  exculpate  his  offenses.  -  How  to  stop  namaparadha
	Offenses  to the holy name of the Lord are dissolved only through
constant  chanting.  When  they  are  so destroyed, they can never
reappear.  Constant  chanting means, apart from a minimal time for
rest  and  other  bare physical necessities, that one should chant
throughout  all hours of the day with intense contrition. No other
penance  or  ritual is as effective as this. When the offenses are
destroyed,  the pure holy name blossoms within the heart. The pure
name of Krsna delivers bhava and finally prema.

     Srila Haridasa Thakura concluded, "O Lord Caitanya, I humbly
pray at Your lotus feet that the ten offenses in chanting the
holy name of the Lord never find a place in my heart.  Please
kindly grant that I may remain submerged in the nectar of the
pure name."

     Bhaktivinoda, the servant of the devotees, is able to recite
Harinama Cintamani in great delight only on the strength of Srila
Haridasa Thakura's causeless mercy.



   CHAPTER FOURTEEN

   OFFENSES IN DEVOTIONAL SERVICE (SEVAPARADHA)

    All glories to Sri Gadadhara Pandit and Lord Sri Gauranga; all
glories   to  Lord  Nityananda,  the  life  and  soul  of  Srimati
Jahnavadevi;  all  glories  to Mother Sita and Sri Advaita Acarya;
all  glories  to Srila Srivasa Pandit and all the devotees of Lord
Caitanya.

   Srila Haridas Thakura is Namacarya

    Lord Caitanya said, "My dear devotee Haridasa, the conditioned
souls  of  Kaliyuga  will  greatly  benefit  from  this  elaborate
explanation  of  the  offenses against the holy name that you have
given. You are indeed a great spiritual master and acharya."

	Srila Haridas Thakura is Namacharya, or the foremost
spiritual authority on the chanting of the holy name of Krsna.
He practiced everything he preached.  He taught the jivas about
suddhanama, namabhasa, and the glories of Krsna's name; he also
instructed how one may stop comitting namaparadha  all this by
his own example.

     Lord Caitanya continued, "I much relished your dissertation
on the holy name.  As an acarya, you are exemplary and as a
preacher, you are profound.  You are always ornamented by the
priceless gem of the Lord's pure holy name.  Ramananda Raya
taught me the sublime science of transcendental mellows, and now
you have revealed the glories of the holy name.  Kindly tell me
something about the different kinds of offenses made in the
execution of devotional service to the Deity."

     Srila Haridasa Thakura replied, "You are asking about a
subject that is known to a servant of the Deity.  All my time is
taken up in serving the holy name. I don't know how to reply, yet
I cannot disregard Your instruction.  I will speak whatever you
make me say."

  - Varieties of sevaparadha

     Offenses in devotional service (sevaparadha) are numerous.
In some scriptures, thirtytwo such offenses are listed, and in
others, fifty.  By definition, sevaparadha is always related to
Deity worship.  Learned devotees identify four classifications of
sevaparadha, which are: those pertaining to persons engaged in
Deity worship; those pertaining to the installation of Deities;
those pertaining to persons taking darsana of the Deity in the
temple; and those that generally apply in all cases.

  - Thirty-two sevaparadhas
    The  list  of  thirty  two  offenses  in  Deity  worship is as
follows: 1) entering the temple with shoes on; 2) alighting from a
vehicle  before  the Deity; 3) not observing the festival days; 4)
forgetting  to  offer  obeisances  and  prayers  to  the Deity; 5)
offering worship to the Deity in an unclean or contaminated state;
6) offering obeisances on one hand; 7) circumambulating before the
Deity; 8) extending the feet towards the Deity or sitting on one's
haunches  before  the  Deity;  9)  sleeping  or  reclining  in the
presence  of  the Deity; 10) eating before the Deity; 11) speaking
lies  before  the Deity; 12) speaking out loudly before the Deity;
13)  talking  with  others  before  the  Deity;  14) using abusive
language  before the Deity; 15) giving charity or giving thanks to
others  before  the  Deity;  16) quarrelling before the Deity; 17)
Crying,  howling  or  shedding  false  tears before the Deity; 18)
criticizing  someone before the Deity; 19) covering oneself with a
blanket or quilt before the Deity; 20) praising someone before the
Deity;  21)  using obscene language before the Deity; 22) belching
or   passing  air  before  the  Deity;  23)  offering  substandard
paraphernalia  in  the  service  of  the  Deity in spite of having
better;  24)  eating  or drinking unoffered food; 25) not offering
seasonal   fruits   and   vegetables;   26)   offering  the  Deity
contaminated  food,  or  food  first  eaten  by  someone else; 27)
sitting with one's back to the Deity; 28) acting immodestly before
the  Deity,  as  by  sitting  directly  in front of the Deity; 29)
respecting  or  worshiping  someone else before the Deity; 30) not
glorifying  and  offering  obeisances  to  one's  spiritual master
before the Deity; 31) glorifying oneself before the the Deity; 32)
slandering the demigods before the Deity.

      More offenses listed in other scriptures

     Other scriptural sources have listed additional offenses:

    It  is offensive to eat the food of materialists; to touch the
Deity  of  Hari  in  darkness;  to  touch the Deity without proper
rituals;   to   open  the  altar  doors  without  an  accompanying
performance  of  music  and  song for the pleasure of the Lord; to
offer  food  to  the  Lord  that  has been seen by a dog; to speak
during  Deity worship; to leave the altar during Deity worship; to
offer  arati  without  putting a flower garland on the Deities; to
worship  Lord  Krsna  with unattractive or nonfragrant flowers; to
offer  worship  to Lord Krsna without first cleansing the face and
mouth;  to  offer  worship to the Deity after sexual relations; to
touch  a  woman  during her menstrual period; to touch fire during
Deity  worship;  to  pass  air  before the Deity; to offer worship
wearing  dirty  or  contaminated  clothes;  to offer worship while
angry;  to offer worship directly after having been at a cremation
grounds, or having touched a dead body or seen a dead body's face;
to offer worship while suffering from indigestion or dysentery; to
eat  garlic  and  onions;  to chew betel and tobacco; to touch the
Deity  after  having had a massage with oil; to offer flowers from
an  unclean  pot;  to  worship at an inauspicious time; to worship
while  sitting  on the bare floor; to touch the Lord with the left
hand  while  bathing  the  Deity;  to offer old or already offered
fruits  or flowers; to boast during worshiping; to spit habitual n
®ly;  to  worship  the  Deity  after  having  applied  smudged  or
horizontal  (i.e.  threelined)  tilaka;  to  enter  temple without
washing   the   feet;   to  offer  the  Deity  food  cooked  by  a
non-Vaisnava;  to  do  puja  in  front  of  a non-Vaisnava; to not
worship Visvaksena (in place of Ganesa) before the puja; to see or
speak to a Siva or Durga worshipper; to bathe the Deity with water
touched  by  the  fingernails; to use water for worship into which
sweat has fallen; to make oaths before the Deity; to step over the
Deity's prasada.

    Sevaparadha   is  to  be  avoided  those  serving  the  Deity;
namaparadha is to be avoided by all devotees One who is engaged in
Deity  worship  must  carefully  avoid  the  sevaparadhas, and all
Vaisnavas  must  strictly abstain from the namaparadhas and relish
the  taste  of  pure devotional service to Lord Krsna. The devotee
himself is the best judge of which offenses in seva to be vigilant
about,  according  to  the  service  he  is  engaged  in.  But the
responsibility  of  avoiding  namaparadha  is  applicable to every
Vaisnava at all times.

      On  the  path  of  bhava-seva,  or spontaneous  devotional
service,  namaparadha must be nonexistent Especially, that devotee
who  worships  the  Lord  in  a  secluded  place in the ecstacy of
separation from the Deity must be free of the ten offenses against
the  holy  Name.  In  bhavaseva, service is performed in the mind;
there  is  not  even  opportunity  for  sevparadha.  Only when the
devotee  on  this  path  is  completely free of namaparadha can he
attain bhava, spontaneous loving devotional service to Krsna.

    	Constant  meditation  upon  the  holy name of the Lord is the
sadhana   practice   in   bhava-seva,  the  offenseless  stage  of
devotional  service.  By  the  grace of the Lord, each of the nine
limbs of sadhanabhakti finally culminates in the prema of the pure
holy  name.  One who has ascended to this stage of realization may
then  fully  submerge  himself  in the nectar of chanting the holy
name, leaving aside other services.

    	[Editor's   footnote:]   Lord   Caitanya   instructed   Srila
Raghunatha  das Goswami on the worship of Sri GovardhanSila thusly
(as recorded in Caitanya Caritamrita, Antya 6.294-304):

     '"This stone is the transcendental form of Lord Krsna.
Worship the stone with great eagerness. Worship this stone in the
mode of goodness like a perfect brahmana, for by such worship you
will surely attain ecstatic love of Krsna without delay.  For
such worship, one needs a jug of water and a few flowers from a
Tulasi tree.  This is worship in complete goodness when performed
in complete purity.  With faith and love, you should offer eight
soft Tulasi flowers, each with two Tulasi leaves, one on each
side of each flower."

    	'After  thus  advising  him  how  to  worship,  Lord Caitanya
Mahaprabhu personally offered Raghunatha das the Govardhana-Sila n
with  His  transcendental hand. As advised by the Lord, Raghunatha
das worshiped the Sila in great transcendental jubilation. Svarupa
Damodara  gave  Raghunatha  das  two cloths, each about six inches
long,  a  wooden platform and a jug in which to keep water. 	'Thus
Raghunatha  das began worshiping the stone from Govardhana, and as
he worshiped he saw the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Krsna, the
son  of  Nanda Maharaja, directly in the stone. Thinking of how he
had  received  the  Govardhana-Sila directly from the hands of Sri
Caitanya  Mahaprabhu,  Raghunatha  das was always overflooded with
ecstatic  love. The amount of transcendental bliss that Raghunatha
das  enjoyed  simply by offering water and Tulasi is impossible to
achieve  even  if  one  worships  the  Deity with sixteen kinds of
paraphernalia.

	'After Raghunatha das had thus worshiped the Govardhana-Sila
for sometime, Svarupa Damodara spoke to him as follows: "Offer
the Govardhan stone eight kaudis worth of the first-class
sweetmeats known as khaja and sandesh.  If you offer them with
faith and love, they will be just like nectar."' [End of editor's
footnote]

     It is on the strength of Srila Haridas Thakura's instruc
tions that a lowly person without means can recite the Harinam
Cintamani.


   CHAPTER FIFTEEN

   THE BHAJANA OF CONFIDENTIAL WORSHIP
  " OF THE HOLY NAME
  " (BHAJANA PRANALI)



      All glories to Sri Gadadhara Pandita and Lord Gauranga; all
glories to Lord Nityananda,; all glories to Sri Advaita Acarya,
the Lord of Mother Sita; all glories to all the devotees of Lord
Caitanya.  One who rejects all other processes of elevation and
simply immerses himself in the chanting of the holy name is truly
a magnanimous soul and is glorious in all respects.

     Lord Caitanya said, "My dear Haridasa, simply on the
strength of your wonderful devotion, you are conversant with all
knowledge.  All the Vedic philosophical conclusions about the
Absolute Godhead, the jiva, maya, the pure name of the Lord,
namabhasa and namaparadha are revealed in your speech. It is
therefore rightly said that the Vedas gleefully dance upon your
tongue."   The Lord, fully satisfied with His devotee, now
desired to hear the precepts of namarasa, the rare spiritual
science of the sweet mellows of the holy name, from the mouth of
Srila Haridasa.

     Lord Caitanya continued, "Now please instruct Me about
namarasa.  How can a jiva become eligible to receive it?"  Srila
Haridasa Thakur then prayed at the Lord's lotus feet, submitting
with intense prema that whatever he would speak on this subject
would be inspired by the Lord Himself.

   The true Rasa

     In the Vedas the Supreme Personality of Godhead is called
Rasa.  This rasa or the nectar of transcendental love permeates
the spiritual Kingdom of God.  Worldy poets dabble in a rasa that
is totally mundane. Factually, theirs is not rasa but a perversion of it.

    	The  rasa  that  is  transcendental and ever situated in pure
goodness,  beyond  the  jurisdiction of the twentyfour elements of
material  nature, is in truth the real rasa. It is unknown even to
the  atmaramas,  the  self-satisfied  mystics  who  have surpassed
material  nature  but  are  yet  unable to perceive transcendental
variegatedness.  Rasa  is  eternal,  full  of  cognizance and ever
blissful, eversheltered at Lord Krsna's lotus feet.

	The Supreme Absolute Truth exists as saktiman or the
Energetic and sakti or the Energy.  Qualitatively, saktiman and
sakti are the same, though differences between the two are to be
appreciated.  Saktiman is always the Supreme Controller, willful
and independent; sakti always displays His full and supreme
potency.  His sakti or potency manifests in three ways: the cit
potency or the spiritual nature, the jiva, and maya or the
material nature.

    The  cit  potency  reveals the Supreme Truth, His name, abode,
pastimes  and  beauty.  Lord  Krsna  is  that  Supreme  Truth. His
exquisite  dark  complexion,  syama,  is His beauty. Goloka is His
abode  and  the  place  of  His  pastimes.  His name, abode, form,
qualities  and  pastimes  are everexistent features of the nondual
spiritual  substance,  and  the  display  of  these transcendental
varieties is the function of His cit potency.

    	Lord  Krsna  is  the  original  form  of  all  transcendental
qualities.  His  eternal  divine  nature is His spiritual potency.
There  is no inherent difference between the form of Krsna and His
divine  nature. Yet spiritual variety (rasa) creates an impression
of difference, which is exhibited in the spiritual world.

   Mayasakti is the external potency

     The reflection of the spiritual potency is called mayasakti
or material nature.  She is also known as the external potency.
She has produced this material world or Devidhama as ordered by
Lord Krsna.

   There are two types of jivasakti

     The marginal region (tatastha) of the spiritual potency
manifests the jiva-sakti.  The jiva is eternal and inconceivably
one with and yet simultaneously different from the Supreme Lord.
He is Lord Krsna's spiritual energy and is therefore meant to be
part of the transcendental paraphernalia of the Lord's service.

    There  are two categories of jivas: nitybaddha and nityamukta,
or  eternally  conditioned  and  eternally  liberated  souls.  The
eternally  liberated jiva is entitled to render eternal devotional
service.  The  eternally conditioned jiva is engrossed in material
activities.  He  can  also be said to be of two types: extroverted
and introspective.

    	The  introspective  nityabaddha  jivas  are searching for the
Absolute  Truth. The extroverted jivas are totally absorbed in the
external  features  of  gross matter and thus are far removed from
Krsna.  They  simply want to exploit things meant for Lord Krsna's
service  for  their  own  enjoyment.  The more fortunate and pious
jivas  amongst  the  introspective  ones  come  into  contact with
devotees  and in their association take to the chanting the Lord's
holy  name,  which  transports  them  through  the  portals of the
spiritual  world.  The  less  fortunate  introspective  jivas  are
attracted  to  the  paths of karma and jnana by which they worship
various demigods or finally merge into the impersonal Brahman.

    The flowering of rasa

     The holy name of Lord Krsna is the bud of the flower of
rasa, which is the essence of pure transcendence. By the grace of
Krsna, rasa is propagated in the material world in the form of
His holy name.

     With the first opening of the bud of the holy name comes the
realization of the enchanting Syamasunder form of Krsna in Goloka
Vrindavan.  The Lord's sixty-four transcendental qualities are
like the irresistible fragrance from the partially blossomed
flower.

    When  this  flower  comes  into  full  bloom, it manifests the
eternal  and  confidential  pastimes  of  Lord  Krsna known as the
asta-kaliya-lila,  or  the  eightfold  loving  affairs  of Sri Sri
RadhaKrsna.  And although this manifestation is transcendental, it
still  appears  in  the  material  world. " The bhaktisakti Latent
within  the  jiva  are the miniscule spiritual potencies of ahlada
(bliss)  and  samvit  (knowledge). With the flowering of rasa, the
svarupasakti  (the  internal potency of the Lord Himself) descends
to  contact and revive these tiny spiritual potencies of the jiva;
all  this is effected by the causeless mercy of the holy name. The
svarupasakti  descends  as  Bhakti  devi,  who  embodies  the full
mixture  of  the  hladini  and  samvit  potencies. This mixture is
called  the  bhaktisvarupamsakti,  the potency of the form of pure
devotion.  When  his  latent  bliss and knowledge are infused with
this bhaktisvarupamsakti, the spontaneous loving attitude required
for  entering  the  asta  kaliyalila  appears  in the heart of the
chanter of the holy name.

    The churning of rasa

     Thus one reaches a state of perfection known as sthayibhava,
or permanent emotion, which is also known as rati.  Four bhavas
combine to transform rati to rasa.  The four bhavas
are: vibhava, anubhava, sattvika, and vyabhicari (or sancari).

    	Vibhava,  the  element that excites loving sentiment, has two
subdivisions: alambana and uddipana. Alambana or the root is again
of two parts: the visaya (subject) and the asraya (recipient). The
devotee of Lord Krsna is the asraya, and Lord Krsna Himself is the
visaya. Lord Krsna's transcendental beauty and qualities are known
as uddipana or the impetus. Thus where there is alambana (the root
relationship  of  the devotee and Krsna) and uddipana (the impetus
of  the  realization of Krsna's form and qualities), lila and rasa
can occur.

	Anubhava (the external symptoms of the internal permanent
emotion) is what results from vibhava, or the effect of alambana
and uddipana.  When these emotions become more intense, they are
transformed into sattvikabhava (loving emotions that cannot be
checked).  At this same time sancaribhava (emotions that set
into motion the progress of rasa) come into play.

	Rasa is like a machine.  Rati, or permanent emotion, is the
axle of this machine.  Once the machine starts moving by the
combined energy of the four bhavas, the permanent emotion
(sthayi-bhava) is then converted into rasa.  The devotee, who is
the asraya (like a shelter or container), becomes the relisher of
that rasa.  And that rasa is the Vraja-rasa or the spiritual
mellow of Vrindavan.  That rasa is the essence of everything, and
is for the jiva the highest goal.  The Vedas expound four goals -
dharma, artha, kama, moksha; but in fact the pinnacle of all
these perfections is rasa.  The fully realized and perfected
beings are entitled to taste that rasa.

   Elevation via the Hare Krsna mahamantra.

    Amongst  the  introspective jivas, he who is attracted to pure
devotional  service  is the most evolved. The jiva can take up the
path  of  bhakti  only  after he has accrued sufficient sukriti or
piety from previous births. When such a jiva develops strong faith
or  sraddha,  he  comes into contact with a pure devotee spiritual
master. By the grace of the spiritual master, he is initiated into
the  chanting  of  the Hare Krsna mahamantra the holy names of the
Divine  Couple.  z  Though  this jiva is blessed with sraddha, his
desire  for  material  gain  poses  an  obstacle  on  his  path of
progress. The spiritual master graces the jiva with a disciplinary
process  suitable  for  overcoming  this  obstacle.  Thus he gains
spiritual  strength  from  chanting.  Chanting on Tulasi beads and
meditating  on  a fixed number of holy names every day is the best
form  of  worship,  and will surely lead to success. Therefore, in
the  beginning,  a  little time should daily be spent in seclusion
for full concentration upon the holy name. In degrees, as chanting
increases,  a  more  profound  relationship  with the holy name is
developed, and the material impediments fall away.

	The path of bhakti features two important engagements, one
of which is Deity worship, the other chanting and meditating upon
the holy name.  Although both engagements are expedient, chanting
and meditating on the holy name is preferred by the more deeply
serious devotees.

	Many elevated pure devotees at times chant aloud the holy
names on their beads, and then at other times meditate upon
Krsna's pastimes on the beads.  The advantage of performing
kirtan, or audibly chanting the maha-mantra on the beads, is that
three kinds of devotional service  hearing, chanting and
remembering  are accomplished simultaneously.  Of course, all
the nine limbs of devotional service reside in the holy name; of
them, hearing, chanting and remembering are the best.

     Chanting automatically manifests the other limbs of
devotional service, like pada-sevanam, dasyam, sakhyam, atma-
nivedanam, and so on.  Thus the process of Deity worship is
automatically accomplished by the devotee surrendered to the holy
name. But the devotee attracted to Deity worship will have to
acquire attraction for hearing and chanting in order to attain
complete perfection in Krsna consciousness.

   Who is eligible to chant the holy name?

    Three  kinds  of  jivas  are  captivated  by external material
phenomena: the gross materialists, the karmis and the jnanis. They
are  therefore  extroverts  all,  chasing  after  false  hopes for
happiness   in  the  realm  of  fleeting  appearances.  The  gross
materialist  endeavors for sensual delights. The karmi aspires for
ephemeral  heavenly  bliss  in  the hereafter. The jnani is wholly
concerned  with  how  to mitigate his existential suffering. After
surpassing  these  stages,  the  jiva becomes truly introspective,
seeking  entrance into the realm of the internal spiritual energy.
The   introspective  jivas  are  divided  into  three  categories:
kanistha,   madhyama,  and  uttama  (neophyte,  intermediate,  and
advanced).

	The neophyte devotee rejects demigod worship and worships
only Krsna, but with certain material motivations due to lack of
sambandhajnana.  Simple and naive, he is not offensive; he is
just selfpreoccupied.  Therefore, although such neophytes are
not considered to be pure Vaisnavas, they are certainly to be
accepted as Vaisnava-praya or resembling Vaisnavas.

    	The  intermediate  or  madhyama  devotee  is pure and is very
firmly  situated  in  faith.  The  uttama  or  advanced devotee is
completely indifferent to material things and is fully surrendered
to Krsna. The pure name avails Himself to those who have exclusive
faith in Krsna. z Stepbystep advancement in hearing, chanting, and
remembering  The  order of discipline (sadhanakrama) for realizing
the  identity  of  the  holy name with the Lord is as follows. The
devotee  must in the beginning discard the ten offenses and simply
absorb  himself in the holy name by chanting constantly. He should
distinctly   pronounce   the  holy  name  and  meditate  upon  the
transcendental sound vibration. When his chanting is steady, clear
and  blissful,  he  will be able to meditate upon the Syamasundara
form of the Lord. With chanting beads in hand, he should thus seek
out  the  transcendental  form of the holy name, which will appear
when his vision is pure.

	Another method he may employ to see this form is to sit in
front of the Deities, drink the beautiful sight of the Lord with
his eyes and meditate upon the holy name.  After reaching the
stage where the holy name and the form of the Lord become one, he
must then absorb the transcendental qualities of Lord Krsna into
his meditation.  Thus the holy name and the qualities of Krsna
merge to become one through constant chanting.

     Next, he goes on to practice the remembrance of particular
pastimes of the Lord. This remembrance, called mantradhyana mayi
upasana, facilitates further absorbtion into the holy name.  This
lila-smarana or pastime meditation also gradually become one with
the holy name, form, and qualities.

    	At   this   point,   the  first  rays  of  namarasa,  or  the
transcendental  mellow  of  the  holy name, dawn on the horizon of
perception.  Chanting  the name in great delight, the devotee sees
Krsna  surrounded by cowherd boys and girls under a desire tree at
the   Yoga   Pitha.   Progressively,  the  devotee's  practice  of
lila-smarana  intensifies to the point where he begins to meditate
on  the  most  confidential  pastimes  of  the  Lord  known as the
asta-kaliya-  lila,  or the eightfold pastimes of RadhaKrsna. When
he reaches maturity in this meditation, rasa rises in full glory.

    The svarasiki process of worship

    Asta-kaliya-lila  smarana  is also known as svarasiki worship.
In  this  stage  of  bhajana,  one  is  awarded the opportunity to
accordingly  serve  Krsna in the times and places of his pastimes.
Now  the  devotee realizes the full grace of his spiritual master,
who,  in  his  eternal spiritual form (siddha-svarupa), guides the
disciple to a sakhi (confidential gopi) who in turn introduces him
into  the  pastimes  of  the  Lord.  Of  all  the  gopis,  Srimati
Radharani, the daughter of King Vrisabhanu, is the most excellent.
She  embodys  the  highest spiritual sentiment, mahabhava. Serving
Krsna under Her leadership is the supreme spiritual experience.

    The   five   main   rasas  or  spiritual  mellows  are:  santa
(neutrality),  dasya (servitorship), sakhya (friendship), vatsalya
(parenthood),  and  sringara  or  madhurya  (conjugal).  Of these,
sringara  or  conjugal  is the highest. Devotees eligible to enter
the  conjugal  rasa are the recipients of the special mercy of Sri
Krsna Caitanya.

    	In  the  conjugal  rasa,  Lord  Krsna has many yutheswaris or
female  group leaders; but everyone prefers Srimati Radharani. She
is  the  direct  manifestation  of  Lord  Krsna's svarupa-sakti or
spiritual   potency,   and  all  the  other  vraja-gopis  are  Her
expansions. She is the Absolute embodiment of all the rasas. It is
therefore the goal of devotional service to enroll in Her yutha or
group.  Service to Lord Krsna in Vraja is impossible without first
taking shelter of the vrajagopis. One should furthermore aspire to
enter   Srimati   Radharani's   camp   and  serve  directly  under
Lalitadevi.

   When the material coverings are removed,
   the spiritual goal is acheived

 	As the devotee becomes disciplined in rasa, the gap between
sadhana (practice) and bhajanasiddhi (perfection of worship)
closes. Soon, the servitor's spiritual form begins to take shape.
By the mercy of the yutheswari, he becomes easily overpowered by
attraction to Lord Krsna. This strong spiritual attraction
eradicates the gross and subtle material concepts of form that
captured him when he turned away from Krsna.  Thus the jiva gains
entrance into Vraja in his original spiritual form.

	Up to this point, the jiva's progress in spiritual life can
be framed in words. Beyond it, there are even higher stages of
Krsna consciousness that are indescribable.  These will be
revealed by the grace of Krsna.  The cultivation of the conjugal
loving relationship with the Lord is the highest mode of service;
by this, everincreasing Krsnaprema will be experienced.  By
adopting the bhaumavrajarasa, or the vrajarasa revealed on
this material plane in Vrindavandhama, one becomes eligible to
enter such conjugal love.

    Sri Ramananda Raya said, 'Therefore one should accept the mood
of  the gopis in their service. In such a transcendental mood, one
should  always think of the pastimes of Sri Radha and Krsna. After
thinking  of Sri Sri RadhaKrsna and Their pastimes for a long time
and after getting completely free from material contamination, one
is  transferred  to the spiritual world. There the devotees attain
an  opportunity  to serve Sri Radha and Krsna as one of the gopis.
Unless one follows in the footsteps of the gopis he can not attain
the service of the lotus feet of Krsna, the son of Nanda Maharaja.
If one is overcome by knowledge of the Lord's opulence, he can not
attain  the  Lord's  lotus  feet  even  though  he  is  engaged in
devotional service." (Sri Caitanya caritamrita, Madhya 8.228230)

    	The  devotee  who  is inclined to cultivate the conjugal rasa
must  accept  the  form of a gopi under the guidance of a superior
vrajagopi.  One  can  become  a  gopi  when  eleven transcendental
sentiments adorn the heart. They are: 1) sambandha (relationship),
2)  vayasa (age), 3) nama (name), 4) rupa (form), 5) yutha-pravesa
(entrance into a group), 6) vesa (attire), 7) ajna (instructions),
8)  vasasthana  (place  of  residence),  9)  seva  (service),  10)
parakastha  (excellence),  11) palyadasi-bhava (the mood of a kept
maidservant).

   Five stages of consciousness
   are ascended in bhavasadhana

    The  cultivation  of  these  eleven  gopi  sentiments develops
through  five  stages.  They  are:  1)  sravana-dasa (the stage of
hearing),  2) varana-dasa (the stage of acceptance), 3) smarana- z
dasa   (the   stage  of  remembering),  4)  apana-dasa  (stage  of
application),  and  5) sampati-dasa (stage of inheritance). 	Srila
Ramananda Raya says, 'One who is attracted by the ecstatic love of
the  gopis  does not care about the regulative principles of Vedic
life  or  popular  opinion.  Rather, he completely surrenders unto
Krsna  and renders service unto Him.' 'In this liberated stage the
devotee  is  attracted  by  one  of the five humors (rasas) in the
transcendental  loving  service  of  the  Lord. As he continues to
serve  the Lord in that mood, he attains a spiritual body to serve
Krsna  in  Goloka  Vrindavan.'  (Sri  Caitanyacaritamrita,  Madhya
8.220,  8.222)  So  saying,  Srila  Ramananda Raya instructs us to
first attain the form and mood of a vraja- gopi in order to obtain
service in the conjugal relationship.

    When  a  sadhaka  devotee,  having  heard  about  Lord Krsna's
pastimes,  is  attracted  to  the  conjugal mellow, he should take
further  instruction  on  rasa  from a realized, saintly spiritual
master.  This is called the stage of hearing or sravana-dasa. When
the  sadhaka  devotee  anxiously  and eagerly accepts the conjugal
mellow,  varana-dasa  commences.  Then, by pure remembrance of the
sentiments  of  rasa, he desires to practice them: thus he reaches
the third stage, smarana-dasa. When he is able to perfectly invoke
these  sentiments  of rasa, he attains apana- dasa or prapti-dasa.
Finally,  when  he  can  separate  himself  from all his temporary
material  designations  and  is  steadily  fixed  in that original
spiritual   identity   for   which   he  yearns,  he  has  reached
sampati-dasa: the inheritance of his spiritual identity.

      Bhajan from the stage of sravanadasa to smaranadasa.

	If, after having tested the disciple, the spiritual master
determines that he is eligible to perform bhajan and serve in the
sringara rasa, he then confidentially informs the disciple about
his eternal spiritual form as a manjari in Srimati Radharani's
camp, under the supervision of Sri Lalitadevi.  The spiritual
master teaches the disciple how to develop the eleven sentiments
of the gopis, how to meditate on the asta-kaliya-lila, and how to
properly be established in both.

    	So  that  he  may fully understand them, the sadhaka is shown
his  siddhadeha  or  spiritual  identity, viz. his spiritual name,
form,  qualities,  service  and  so  on. The spiritual master also
discloses who the parents of the sadhaka's manjariidentity are, at
which  house  she was born, who her husband is, and so on. At this
point,  the  disciple  must spurn all Vedic religious pursuits and
simply  be  a  fully surrendered maidservant of Srimati Radharani,
the  camp  leader;  thereafter, the guru will reveal in detail the
disciple's   eternal   service   to   Srimati   Radharani  in  the
asta-kaliya-lila.  The  sadhika  (now  a  female sadhaki) embraces
these  revelations  in varanadasa. He enters into smaranadasa when
he  actually  remembers them for himself. In this way, the sadhaka
prepares himself for spiritual birth as a gopi in Vraja.

   A digression on the subject of ruci

    But  in  the  beginning the spiritual master and disciple must
together  sort  out  the disciple's natural inclination (ruci) for
rasa.  If  the disciple finds his natural taste coincides with the
identity  indicated  by  the spiritual master, he should so inform
his  guru  and  embrace that identity as his life and soul. But if
the  disciple  does  not  have  a natural taste for the selected z
identity, he must frankly reveal this to his spiritual master, who
will  give  him  another identity. If the disciple has a taste for
the  new  identity,  he should accept it. His inherent nature will
then  manifest  itself.  	Ruci  or taste is the natural devotional
propensity  born  out  of  bhaktisukriti,  or  previous devotional
service.  It  may  therefore  be  long  standing  or only recently
developed.  But  in  either case ruci is natural to the soul. When
this inclination is determined by the spiritual master, it must be
confirmed  by  the  disciple. If the inclination is not fixed, the
spiritual master's instructions on rasa will not take effect.

	Those who are not attracted to the sringararasa, preferring
dasya, sakhya or vatsalya, must likewise receive instructions
from the spiritual master on these relationships in order to get
the fruit of their devotion, or else return to a life of anarthas.

	The great devotee Syamananda at first was not aware of his
own siddharuci or permanent devotional propensity; he was made
to embrace the sakhyarasa or the mood of friendship.  Later, by
the grace of Srila Jiva Goswami, he attained his real position.

    If  an  inappropriate ruci is falsely attached to the sadhaka,
it  is compared to the gopiidentity's acceptance of a husband. But
by  the grace of his spiritual master, the sadhaka at last attains
Krsna's service in the parakiyarasa or paramour relationship. Rasa
comes  to  a  full  bloom only in the parakiya mood. The summit of
Lord  Caitanya's  teachings  is  that the parakiya attitude is the
permanent  feature  of  the  pastimes  of  the Lord, both in their
appearance   [when   Krsna   descends  to  Vrajabhumi]  and  their
disappearance  [into  the  invisible  Vraja  of the transcendental
world].

     The conjugal rasa is completely transcendental 	Sringararasa
is   totally   devoid   of   even  an  iota  of  materialism.  The
transcendental  jiva,  in  order  to enjoy and exchange pure rasa,
becomes  a  transcendental  gopi and renders devotional service to
the transcendental personalities of Sri Radha and Sri Krsna in the
transcendental  realm  of  Vrindavana.  There is not the slightest
tinge of the mundane man-woman relationship in Vrndavana. Only the
purest  essence  of  conjugal  love is manifested in the perfected
identity  of  the  soul. And realization of this is available only
from  a  pure  devotee  spiritual master. Other than by his grace,
this inconceivable truth can never be understood. It is beyond the
realm  of  speculation  and  pedantic scrutiny. Its realization is
extremely rare.

   The transition from smaranadasa to apanadasa is crucial

     Perfection eludes the disciple if he does not elevate
himself from the stage of smarana-dasa to apana-dasa.  The
confidential process of apanadasa is most exalted, devoid of the
false posturing of karma, jnana or yoga.  Externally, the devotee
engages himself fully in the chanting the holy name, leading a
renounced and simple life.  Internally, he keeps the splendorous

    Editor's  note:  refer  to C.c. Adi 4.50, purport, for further
elaboration  on  this  topic.  z  flames of rasa burning with pure
intensity all the time. 	Those sadhakas who are prone to a pompous
external  display  of  devotion or who fail to steady and properly
direct  their internal spiritual aspirations are unable to elevate
themselves  from  the  platform of smarana to apana-dasa. Thus the
sadhaka  may  linger,  unaccomplished,  through  many lifetimes of
devotional  practice.  	This  path  of  worship  or bhajana is the
simplest,  but  if  the  purity  of  the  bhajana  is  in  any way
disfigured by a tinge of the contaminated desires for recognition,
distinction or preference, then the sadhaka is thrown off the path
of  vraja-sadhana  or  bhajana  in  the  mood  of  Vraja. One must
approach  the spiritual master with simple humility and learn this
pure process properly.

     By always remembering that he is pure spirit soul, part and
parcel of the Absolute Whole, that he has a transcendental
original form that is allperfect, that He has forgotten his
perfect spiritual state and come under the clutches of maya, that
he is offensive to Lord Krsna, being inebriated with the false
designations of his gross body, but by the mercy of his spiritual
master he can regain knowledge of his real self  the method for
the reawakening of the disciple's original identity can be
quickly accomplished.

  - Two methods of sadhana:
  ! vaidhi and raganuga

	There are two methods of sadhanabhakti: one is vaidhi
(rules and regulations) and the other is raganuga (spontaneous).
In the beginning, these two methods appear to be contradictory,
but upon comprehension of their real purpose, the differences
between them are dissolved.  The vaidhi method of sadhana arises
from respect for the regulations of scripture. Raganugasadhana
is born out of an intense attraction for the activities of the
residents of Vraja.  The first is the usual method, whereas the
second is extremely rare and confidential.

    To  the stage of apanadasa via vaidhisadhana 	The vaidhibhakta
crosschecks all his activities of service to Krsna with scriptural
injunction.  Thus his beginning faith (sraddha) for the process of
devotional  service leads him step by step to nistha (firm faith),
then to ruci (taste or attraction), then asakti (attachment). When
he  reaches  the  first  stage of spontaneity and slight bhava, he
discards   his   dependence   upon  scriptural  directives  as  an
impediment  to  his  progress.  After  this, he is elevated to the
stage   of  apana-dasa,  where  the  difference  between  devotees
following vaidhi and raganuga disappear.

    To the stage of sampatidasa via raganugasadhana
   [continued from the section subtitled

 "Bhajana from the stage of sravanadasa to smaranadasa"]

     In the smaranadasa stage of raganugasadhana, the eleven
sentiments of the gopis are first remembered by the sadhaka;
these sentiments must adorn his emotions before he can remember
the astakaliyalila.

    There   are   five   levels  of  remembrance  in  smaranadasa.
Initially,  his  remembrance  will  not  be  steady; this level is
called   smarana.  Sometimes  he  remembers  the  sentiments,  his
position  and  his  service, and at other times he forgets. But by
steady  practice  of  smarana,  gradually he reaches permanency of
remembrance,  or  dharana. As one meditates on every aspect of the
subject  of  remembrance, part by part, minutely, dharana develops
into  fixed  meditation  -  this  is  dhyana.  When dhyana becomes
continual,  is  is  called  anusmriti.  Following anusmriti is the
fifth  level  of  remembrance,  samadhi,  when  the devotee has no
interest in anything other than perfect absorption in the pastimes
of Lord Krsna.

    	From the samadhi level of smarana-dasa, the crucial ascension
to apana-dasa or the stage of application takes place. For one who
is not adept, elevation through the five stages of smarana-dasa to
apana-dasa  may  require  many  yugas  of  effort; for a dexterous
sadhaka, reaching apana-dasa is accomplished quickly.

    	In    the   apana-dasa   stage,   identification   with   the
psychophysical  body  is  reduced to insignificance. His spiritual
identity    (svarupa)   becomes   more   and   more   predominant.
Intermittently, it manifests and he experiences sublime ecstasy in
rendering devotional service to Sri Sri RadhaKrsna in Vraja. These
experiences  develop until he spends long periods of time in Vraja
interacting  with  the  residents in his vraja-svarupa, seeing the
dhama and the transcendental pastimes within.

     The devotee's constant namabhajana inevitably brings about
a face to face meeting with Lord Syamasundera.  By the Lord's
merciful will, all trace of the devotee's subtle body of mind,
intelligence and false ego are extinguished with the demise of
the gross body of five elements.  Thus he enters the sampati dasa stage.

	This is when the devotee's pure spiritual form fully
manifests, free of material coverings. In the mood of pure bhava,
he takes up his eternal service to Sri Sri RadhaKrsna in the
transcedental dhama.  He thus becomes a sadhana-siddha or a
perfected soul now reinstated in his svarupa through practice of
sadhana and bhajana. He now serves the Lord in the company of the
nityasiddhas, the eternal associates of the Lord who were never
conditioned.

  ' Summary

     The holy name is the greatest and yet the easiest obtainable
spiritual treasure.  This treasure is obtained by the jiva who
chants with faith and devotion, not caring for  karma, jnana and
yoga.  That jiva quickly and easily ascends to the highest
perfection by following the method of namabhajana described
above.

    	This  method  is  the best of methods, better even than other
methods   of   bhakti.   The   basic  requirement  for  successful
accomplishment  of  namabhajana  is  that the sadhaka must totally
shun  bad  association  and  engage  in the practice of devotional
service  in the company of saintly devotees of the Lord. Pure love
of Krsna is the expression of unalloyed devotional service. Only a
pure  devotee's  heart  has  the  inclination  and  capability  of
receiving  prema; the non-devotee's heart denies it. Prema refuses
to  enter the heart of one who does not keep the company z of pure
devotees.  The  jiva's  decision  to  accept  either  good  or bad
association has a powerful and lasting influence on his destiny.

    There  are  three  essential traits that must be cultivated to
obtain  success  in  chanting  the  holy name of the Lord: saintly
association,  isolation from the disturbances of mundane life, and
determined, confident enthusiasm.

    	After saying this, Srila Haridasa Thakura declared himself to
be  very  low and materially engrossed, bereft of good association
and  always  engaged  in selfdeception. Although Srila Haridasa is
himself  a nityasiddha associate of the Lord, he expressed himself
in this humble way. Humility is the ornament of prema.

     The Lord's special favor upon Srila Haridasa Thakur

    Srila  Haridasa continued, "O Lord, kindly shower upon me Your
causeless  mercy  (ahaitukikripa).  I pray that You grant me entry
into  the  realm of bhakti-rasa." Saying this, Srila Haridasa fell
unconscious in loving ecstasy, fully selfsurrendered at the Lord's
lotus feet.

         Ahaitukikripa means 'causeless mercy'.  By saying this,
Srila Haridasa implied that he was spiritually unaccomplished and
therefore had no hope for the kind of mercy Lord Krsna bestows
upon His pure devotees. In his mood of utter helplessness he
simply prayed for Lord Caitanya's unconditional grace.

 	Srila Haridasa Thakur is famous for nama-bhajana and his
teachings on the glories of the holy name,  yet he is also the
recipient of Lord Caitanya's special mercy.  He is such an
authority on the philosophy of namarasa that once, when Lord
Caitanya was relishing the topics of RadhaKrsna lila with Sri
Ramananda Raya and Sarvabhauma Bhattacharya in the courtyard of
Srila Haridasa Thakur's bhajana-kutir, Srila Haridasa repeatedly
expounded at length on the glories of nama-rasa to the rapt
attention of the other exalted persons present.

     Lord Caitanya was moved by divine loving emotions upon
hearing Srila Haridasa's Thakura's plea for mercy.  Lifting Srila
Haridasa up in His embrace, the Lord then spoke in confidence to
him.  "O Haridasa!  Listen attentively to what I have to say.
The truth about the holy name will be hidden by mischievious
rascals who will create a dark shroud of ignorance over the
entire world.  At that time, these excellent and unrivalled
instructions of yours about chanting in the association of
saintly persons shall be understood only by a remaining handful
of devotees."

     What did Lord Caitanya mean by 'mischievous rascals'?  The
prime candidates for this appellation are the various upstart
sects like the sahajiyas, aulas, baulas and so on, who propagate
bogus mundane doctrines disguised as Mahaprabhu's own teachings;
they indeed conceal from the world the pure philosophy of Krsna
consciousness expounded by the Lord Himself in His Siksastaka.

    The  Lord  continued,  "The true path of the holy name will be
followed  by  saintly souls who are totally detached from material
life.  They will chant the holy name with bhava and will therefore
be  known be known as rasikabhaktas. Their bhava will be z that of
separation;  by  their  chanting  they will relish the pastimes of
RadhaKrsna and the eight principal gopis.

    "The  jiva is blessed with pure bhakti only on the strength of
his  sukriti, or piety and faith. Not everyone is entitled to have
such devotion, but in order to instill such devotion in the hearts
of the faithful, I have descended to propagate the chanting of the
holy name as the religion for this age. The chanting of Hare Krsna
Hare  Krsna  Krsna  Krsna Hare Hare, Hare Rama Hare Rama Rama Rama
Hare Hare is factually the jiva's inherent and eternal religion.

     "My dear Haridasa, in the accomplishment of this mission I
depend upon your help, and thus I am hearing from you the glories
of the holy name."

     The Harinama Cintamani, this touchstone of the Lord's holy
name, is an unfathomable mine of divine nectar.  Whoever tastes
it is truly fortunate and is blessed by Krsna; he is a great soul
and always blissfully serves Lord Krsna in spontaneous loving
devotion.  I am a fallen soul; I clasp his feet and humbly pray
that the remnants of this nectar should be distributed profusely,
thus spreading divine bliss to everyone.

    THUS ENDS SRI HARINAMA CINTAMANI