Saturday, September 29, 2012

Desires

Once Narada muni was traveling and he met a beggar on the way. 

The beggar asked Narada muni for some charity in his begging bowl. 

Narada muni said, "I myself am penniless but I can help you get charity from another person." 

He then took the beggar to Kuber and asked him to give some donation. 

Kuber was surprised that Narada muni had to bring the beggar all the way for some insignificant charity, but nevertheless he took some lakshmi from his treasury and filled the bowl. But to his surprise the bowl became empty. He again took many more 

  1. jewels, 
  2. gold, 
  3. precious gems etc one by one but everytime he was filling the bowl, it was becoming empty again and again. 

It came to a point that Kuber's treasury was almost exhausted and Kuber being completely bewildered asked what material the begging bowl is made off. When Narada muni turned the begging bowl upside down, he found that the bowl is nothing but the human skull

The greedy desires of the cannot be fulfilled even if the wealth of the entire universe is given as charity to them.

Monday, January 16, 2012

kshetra puranas

http://kshetrapuranas.blogspot.com/search?q=narada

Four Kumars / Parampara


Vaishnavism (the devotees that worships Vishnu as the Supreme) is divided into four sampradayas or traditions. Each of them traces its lineage to a heavenly being. The Kumara Sampradaya, also known as the Nimbarka Sampradaya, Catuḥ Sana Sampradaya and Sanakadi Sampradaya, and its philosophy Dvaitadvaita ("duality in unity") is believed to be propagated in humanity by the four Kumaras. The swan avatar of Vishnu Hamsa was the origin of this philosophy and taught it to the four Kumaras, who in turn taught Narada, who finally passed it to the earthy Nimbarka, the main exponent of the sampradaya.

Labels