There are two classes of devotees. One class has the nature of the kitten. The kitten depends completely on its mother. It accepts whatever its mother does for it. The kitten only cries, ‘Mew, mew!’ It doesn’t know what to do or where to go. Sometimes the mother puts the kitten near the hearth, sometimes on the bed.
Devotees of this class give God the power of attorney and thus become free of all worry. The Sikhs said to me that God was kind. I said to them: ‘How is that? He is our Father and our Mother.
Shouldn’t parents bring up their children after begetting them? Do you mean to say that the neighbors will look after them?’ Devotees of this class have an unwavering conviction that God is our Mother and our Father.
“There is another class of devotees. They have the nature of the young monkey. The young monkey clings to its mother with might and main. The devotees who behave like the young monkey have a slight idea of being the doer. They feel: ‘We must go to the sacred places; we must practice japa and austerity; we must perform worship with sixteen articles as prescribed by the sastras. Only then shall we be able to realize God.’ Such is their attitude.
“The aspirants of both classes are devotees of God. The farther you advance, the more you will realize that God alone has become everything. He alone does everything. He alone is the Guru and He alone is the Ishta. He alone gives us knowledge and devotion.
“The farther you advance, the more you will see that there are other things even beyond the sandal-wood forest – mines of silver and gold and precious gems. Therefore go forward.
“But how can I ask people to go forward? If worldly people go too far, then the bottom will drop out of their world.
One day Keshab was conducting a religious service. He said, ‘O God, may we all sink and disappear in the river of bhakti!’ When the worship was over I said to him: ‘Look here. How can you disappear altogether in the river of bhakti? If you do, what will happen to those seated behind the screen? (The Master referred to the ladies.) But do one thing: sink now and then, and come back again to dry land.'”
Sri Ramakrishna: “Do all your duties, but keep your mind on God. Live with all – with wife and children, father and mother – and serve them. Treat them as if they were very dear to you, but know in your heart of hearts that they do not belong to you.
A maidservant in the house of a rich man performs all the household duties, but her thoughts are fixed on her own home in her native village. She brings up her master’s children as if they were her own. She even speaks of them as ‘my Rama’ or ‘my Hari’. But in her own mind she knows very well that they do not belong to her at all.
The tortoise moves about in the water. But her thoughts are on the bank, where her eggs are lying.
The 177th birth anniversary of Sri Ramakrishna Paramhamsa will be celebrated on February 18.
Sri Ramakrishna