THE LOVE OF GOD - SWAMIJI.
THE LOVE OF GOD
(The Detroit Free Press report
of this lecture is printed in Vol. VIII of the Complete Works.)
(Detroit Tribune, February 21, 1894)
The First Unitarian Church was crowded last night to hear Vive
Kananda. The audience was composed of people who came from Jefferson Avenue and
the upper part of Woodward Avenue. Most of it was ladies who seemed deeply interested
in the address and applauded several remarks of the Brahman with much
enthusiasm.
The love that was dwelt upon by the speaker was not the love
that goes with passion, but a pure and holy love that one in India feels for
his God. As Vive Kananda stated at the commencement of his address the subject
was "The Love the Indian Feels for His God." But he did not preach to
his text. The major portion of his address was an attack on the Christian
religion. The religion of the Indian and the love of his God was the minor
portion. The points in his address were illustrated with several applicable
anecdotes of famous people in the history. The subjects of the anecdotes were
renowned Mogul emperors of his native land and not of the native Hindu kings.
The professors of religion were divided into two classes by the
lecturer, the followers of knowledge and the followers of devotion. The end in
the life of the followers of knowledge was experience. The end in the life of
the devotee was love.
Love, he said, was a sacrifice. It never takes, but
it always gives. The Hindu never asks anything of his God, never prayed
for salvation and a happy hereafter, but instead lets his whole soul go out to
his God in an entrancing love. That beautiful state of existence could only be
gained when a person felt an overwhelming want of God. Then God came in all of
His fullness.
There were three different ways of looking at God. One was to
look upon Him as a mighty personage and fall down and worship His might.
Another was to worship Him as a father. In India the father always punished the
children and an element of fear was mixed with the regard and love for a
father. Still another way to think of God was as a mother. In India a mother
was always truly loved and reverenced. That was the Indian's way of looking at
their God.
Kananda said that a true lover of God would be so wrapt up in
his love that he would have no time to stop and tell members of another sect
that they were following the wrong road to secure the God, and strive to bring
him to his way of thinking.
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(Detroit Journal)
If Vive Kananda, the Brahmin monk, who is delivering a lecture
course in this city could be induced to remain for a week longer, the largest
hall in Detroit would not hold the crowds which would be anxious to hear him.
He has become a veritable fad, as last evening every seat in the Unitarian
church was occupied, and many were compelled to stand throughout the entire
lecture.
The speaker's subject was, "The Love of God". His
definition of love was "something absolutely unselfish; that which has no
thought beyond the glorification and adoration of the object upon which our
affections are bestowed." Love, he said, is a quality which bows down And
worships and asks nothing in return. Love of God, he thought, was
different. God is not accepted, he said, because we really need him, except for
selfish purposes. His lecture was replete with story and anecdote, all going to
show the selfish motive underlying the motive of love for God. The Songs of
Solomon were cited by the lecturer as the most beautiful portion of the
Christian Bible and yet he had heard with deep regret that there was a
possibility of their being removed. "In fact," he declared, as a sort
clinching argument at the close, "the love of God appears to be based upon
a theory of 'What can I get out of it?' Christians are so selfish in their love
that they are continually asking God to give them something, including all
manner of selfish things. Modern religion is, therefore, nothing but a mere
hobby and fashion and people flock to church like a lot of sheep."
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