“We all need joy, and we can all receive joy in only one way, by adding to the joy of others.”
EKNATH EASWARAN
(1910–1999)
These inspired texts from world scripture and the writings of great saints and sages have been selected for reading, study, and use in passage meditation. They come from Easwaran’s collections of inspirational passages, Timeless Wisdom and God Makes The Rivers To Flow. Click on a passage title in the right-hand column below to read and print that passage. If an audio icon is displayed next to the passage title, an audio player will be displayed with the passage; use it to hear Easwaran reading that passage.
The Bhagavad Gita
The Self dwells in the house of the body,
Which passes through childhood, youth, and old age.
So passes the Self at the time of death
Into another body. The wise know this truth
And are not deceived by it.
When the senses come in contact with sense-objects
They give rise to feelings of heat and cold,
Pleasure and pain, which come and go.
Accept them calmly, as do the wise.
The wise, who live free from pleasure and pain,
Are worthy of immortality.
What is real never ceases to be.
The unreal never is. The sages
Who realize the Self know the secret
Of what is and what is not.
Know that the Self, the ground of existence,
Can never be destroyed or diminished.
For the changeless cannot be changed.
Bodies die, not the Self that dwells therein.
Know the Self to be beyond change and death.
Therefore strive to realize this Self.
Those who look upon the Self as slayer
Or as slain have not realized the Self.
How can the Self be killed or kill
When there is only One?
Never was the Self born; never shall it
Cease to be. Without beginning or end,
Free from birth, free from death, and free from time,
How can the Self die when the body dies?
Who knows the Self to be birthless, deathless,
Not subject to the tyranny of time,
How can the Self slay or cause to be slain?
Even as we cast off worn-out garments
And put on new ones, so casts off the Self
A worn-out body and enters into
Another that is new.
Not pierced by arrows nor burnt by fire,
Affected by neither water nor wind,
The Self is not a physical creature.
Not wounded, not burnt, not wetted, not dried,
The Self is ever and everywhere,
Immovable and everlasting.
The Self cannot be known by the senses,
Nor thought by the mind, nor caught by time.
If you know this, you will not grieve.
Even if you mistake the Self to be
Subject to birth and death, you must not grieve.
For death is certain for those who are born,
As rebirth is certain for those who die.
Why grieve over what cannot be avoided?
We perceive creatures only after birth,
And after they die we perceive them not.
They are manifest only between birth
And death. In this there is no cause for grief.
Some there are who have realized the Self
In all its wonder. Others can speak of it
As wonderful. But there are many
Who don't understand even when they hear.
Deathless is the Self in every creature.
Know this truth, and leave all sorrow behind.
Bhagavad Gita, chapter 2, verses 13 2 30. This is the beginning of Lord Krishna's teachings before the epic battle at Kurukshetra, which Mahatma Gandhi said symbolizes the battle between right and wrong, good and evil, which takes place in the human heart. Translated for meditation by Eknath Easwaran.
Abu Sa'id
If You Want to Draw Near to God
Ansari of Herat
Baba Kuhi of Shiraz
Bahya Ibn Paquda
Brother Lawrence
The Practice of the Presence of God
Cardinal Newman
Kabir
Simple Union
The Unstruck Bells and Drums
The Fruit of the Tree
Weaving Your Name
Lao Tzu
The Best
Mother of All Things
Finding Unity
Mahatma Gandhi
The Path
In the Midst of Darkness
Meera
The Path to Your Dwelling
Come, Beloved
Life of My Life
Narsinha Mehta
Native American Tradition
Psalm 100
Psalm 23
Psalm 24
Rabbi Abram Isaac Kook
Rabbi Eleazar Azikri
Saint Anselm
Saint Augustine
Saint Catherine of Genoa
Saint Francis
Saint Ignatius Of Loyola
Saint Matthew
Saint Patrick
Saint Teresa of Avila
You Are Christ's Hands
I Gave All My Heart
Let Nothing Upset You
Her Heart Is Full of Joy
Seng Ts'an
Shantideva
Solomon ibn Gabirol
Sri Ramakrishna
Sri Sarada Devi
Sutta Nipata
Discourse on Good Will
The Island
Swami Omkar
Swami Ramdas
The Amritabindu Upanishad
The Bhagavad Gita
Living in Wisdom
The Way of Love
What Is Real Never Ceases
Whatever You Do
Be Aware of Me Always
The Chandi
The Chandogya Upanishad
The City of Brahman
You Are That
The Dhammapada
The Blessing of a Well-Trained Mind
The Brahmin
Twin Verses
The Isha Upanishad
The Katha Upanishad
Perennial Joy
The Razor's Edge
The Tree of Eternity
The Ruler Within
The Kena Upanishad
The Rig Veda
The Shvetashvatara Upanishad
The River of God
The Lord of Life
The Tejobindu Upanishad
The Torah
The Upanishads
Thomas a Kempis
The Wonderful Effect of Divine Love
Lord That Giveth Strength
Four Things that Bring Inward Peace
Tukaram
Yoga Vasishtha
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