
The Upanishads

Those who follow or “worship” the path of selfishness and pleasure (Avidyâ), without knowing anything higher, necessarily fall into darkness; but those who worship or cherish Vidyâ (knowledge) for mere intellectual pride and satisfaction, fall into greater darkness, because the opportunity which they misuse is greater.
Swami Paramananda • The Upanishads
When a man sees God in all beings and all beings in God, and also God dwelling in his own Soul, how can he hate any living thing? Grief and delusion rest upon a belief in diversity, which leads to competition and all forms of selfishness. With the realization of oneness, the sense of diversity vanishes and the cause of misery is removed.
Swami Paramananda • The Upanishads
He who sees all beings in the Self and the Self in all beings, he never turns away from It (the Self).
Swami Paramananda • The Upanishads
Work done with unselfish motive purifies the mind and enables man to perceive his undying nature. From this he gains inevitably a knowledge of God, because the Soul and God are one and inseparable; and when he knows himself to be one with the Supreme and Indestructible Whole, he realizes his immortality.
Swami Paramananda • The Upanishads
The indefinite term “That” is used in the Upanishads to designate the Invisible-Absolute, because no word or name can fully define It. A finite object, like a table or a tree, can be defined; but God, who is infinite and unbounded, cannot be expressed by finite language. Therefore the Rishis or Divine Seers, desirous not to limit the Unlimited, cho
... See moreSwami Paramananda • The Upanishads
Upanishad shows that the only hell is absence of knowledge. As long as man is overpowered by the darkness of ignorance, he is the slave of Nature and must accept whatever comes as the fruit of his thoughts and deeds. When he strays into the path of unreality, the Sages declare that he destroys himself; because he who clings to the perishable body a
... See moreSwami Paramananda • The Upanishads
He who is rich in the knowledge of the Self does not covet external power or possession.
Swami Paramananda • The Upanishads
When a man performs actions clinging blindly to his lower desires, then his actions bind him to the plane of ignorance or the plane of birth and death; but when the same actions are performed with surrender to God, they purify and liberate him.