Tag: Gaudiya

The Role of Sri Guru in the Gaudiya Sampradaya

It is said in the revealed scriptures that to understand the very meaning of religion, self-realization and to know God, one has to approach a bona-fide spiritual master through the proper process. A guru or acarya heads a certain sampradaya and brings down the knowledge of the revealed scriptures from the previous acaryas. He practices according to his spiritual master’s instructions and distributes those instructions through his disciples to deliver the fallen souls in this material world.
Author
Chaitanya Dasa

The Worship of Gaura-Gadadhara

I have seen on your website that you are worshiping Gaura-Gadadhara at your ashrama. Why are you worshiping Gaura-Gadadhara rather than Gaura-Nitai?
Author
Swami B.G. Narasingha

The Worship of Lord Narasimha

I have seen on your website that you have installed and worship Deities of Lord Narasimha in your ashram. When Gaudiya Vaisnavas are devotees of Sri Sri Radha-Krsna why do you worship Lord Narasimha?
Author
Swami B.G. Narasingha

Worship of Govardhan

Some devotees worship Govardhana as Krsna or Balarama and others worship Him as the best devotee of Krsna (Srimati Radharani). How should we worship Govardhana?
Author
Swami B.G. Narasingha

Gayatri as Radharani

I have read in an article that brahma-gayatri worships Srimati Radharani. Where does this conception have its origin?
Author
Swami B.G. Narasingha

The Vision of Guru

It has been said that the disciple should see his guru as a direct manifestation of Srimati Radharani. Is such actually appropriate?
Author
Swami B.G. Narasingha

The Sarasvata Parampara and the Caste-Brahmana Guru

Recently our attention was drawn to a small pamphlet entitled 'Guru Nirnaya Dipika' written by Mahant Krsna Balarama Svami, who considers himself to be a disciple of His Divine Grace Srila A.C. Bhaktivedanta Svami Prabhupada. In 'Guru Nirnaya Dipika' the author has strongly advocated that only a Vaisnava born in a brahmana family has the right to initiate disciples and confer diksa-mantras to them. Coincidentally, the author just happens to be born in a brahmana family.

Ativadi Apa-sampradaya

Srila Bhaktivinode Thakura has written that there were thirteen apa-sampradayas that developed after the time of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu. One of these apa-sampradayas is called ativadi, which means too great. Can you please explain how those who are ‘too great’ have become an apa-sampradaya?
Author
Swami B.G. Narasingha

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