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Answer: Bhakti and jnana are as inseparable
as two sides of a coin. Jnana means spiritual wisdom. To gain
the highest jnana--knowledge of God--an extraordinary degree
of effort will certainly be required. But will our limited
efforts ever be sufficient to scale the lofty heights of jnana
to finally know God? Without grace, without the Lord's
blessings, those heights will forever remain beyond our grasp.
Yet, when we invoke the Lord's grace with our prayers and
worship, then our sincere efforts to gain jnana will be
blessed. Thus bhakti helps us attain jnana.
As for bhakti, consider this question: "How can we worship a
God who is totally unknown to us?" In human relationships, we
find it difficult to love people whom we do not know.
Conversely, the more intimately we know a person, the stronger
our bond of love grows. In the same way, the more intimately
we know the Lord, the more intense our devotion will grow.
Therefore, jnana, knowledge of the Lord, strengthens our
bhakti.
In our lives of spiritual growth, we need both jnana and
bhakti. How sad it is when someone says, "I am a very
intellectual person; bhakti is not for me," or when someone
else says, "I am a very emotional person, so I avoid jnana."
We need both; we need all the help we can get! To focus
exclusively on either bhakti or jnana and to ignore the other
is to deny ourselves the very spiritual practices we need most
to lift our minds and hearts to the Lord. |