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Glossary›Bhakti Meditation

Glossary

Bhakti Meditation

A meditative practice rooted in devotional love toward a personal deity, using mantra, visualization, and surrender to cultivate union with the divine.

What is Bhakti Meditation?

Bhakti meditation is a contemplative practice within the broader path of bhakti yoga, the Hindu tradition of devotional love as a means to spiritual liberation. Unlike concentration-based meditation techniques that emphasize mental discipline or insight practices that cultivate detached awareness, bhakti meditation channels the practitioner’s emotional capacity—longing, love, reverence—toward a chosen form of the divine. The Sanskrit term bhakti derives from the root bhaj, meaning “to participate in, share, belong to,” and in this context signifies devotion, attachment, and loving relationship with a personal deity.

The practice centers on directing one’s full attention and emotional energy toward a specific manifestation of the divine—often Krishna, Rama, Shiva, or the Divine Mother in her various forms—using techniques such as mantra repetition (japa), visualization of the deity’s form (dhyana), or immersion in the deity’s qualities and pastimes. Rather than seeking to transcend or dissolve the sense of self, bhakti meditation cultivates intimacy and relationship, framing spiritual attainment as union through love rather than annihilation of the ego.

Origins & Lineage

The philosophical foundation of bhakti meditation appears in the Vedas (composed circa 1500 BCE), where hymns express devotion and praise to various deities, though the term bhakti itself is not yet systematically employed. The Shvetashvatara Upanishad, composed between the 1st century BCE and 4th century CE, explicitly mentions bhakti as devotion and love for spiritual endeavor.

The practice received its definitive articulation in the Bhagavad Gita (composed approximately 400-200 BCE), where Krishna instructs Arjuna that bhakti yoga is one of three primary paths to moksha (liberation), alongside jnana yoga (knowledge) and karma yoga (selfless action). Chapter 12 of the Gita elevates bhakti as the most accessible path: “Surrender in love of the fruit of one’s actions” brings peace, Krishna teaches. The Bhagavata Purana (composed 400-1000 CE), particularly the Uddhava Gita within it, elaborates the philosophy and practices of Krishna bhakti, presenting devotion through narrative rather than abstract philosophy.

The bhakti movement proper emerged in 7th-century Tamil Nadu with the Shaiva Nayanars and Vaishnava Alvars, poet-saints who composed devotional hymns in vernacular languages rather than Sanskrit, democratizing spiritual practice beyond the priestly caste. This movement spread across India between the 12th and 17th centuries, producing figures such as Mirabai, Tulsidas, Kabir, and Chaitanya Mahaprabhu (1486-1534), who popularized congregational chanting (kirtan) and mantra meditation as central bhakti practices.

How It’s Practiced

Bhakti meditation typically begins with preparation of a sacred space, often including an altar with images or murtis (sacred statues) of the chosen deity, candles, flowers, and incense. Practitioners may cleanse the space with sage, palo santo, or singing bowls before sitting in meditation.

The core techniques include:

Japa meditation: Silent or whispered repetition of a mantra, often using a mala (prayer beads with 108 beads) to count recitations. Common mantras include “Hare Krishna,” “Om Namah Shivaya,” or the Gayatri Mantra. Practitioners typically aim for 108 repetitions or set a timer for sustained practice.

Deity visualization: Meditating on the form of the chosen deity—visualizing the face, feet, or entire form in the heart center or at the ajna chakra (third eye). This cultivates intimacy and concentration.

Contemplation of divine qualities: Reflecting on the deity’s attributes—Krishna’s playfulness, Shiva’s stillness, Durga’s fierce compassion—to absorb those qualities.

Heartfelt prayer: Unlike petitionary prayer, bhakti prayer expresses gratitude, longing for divine connection, and surrender of personal will.

Kirtan: While often practiced communally, kirtan (call-and-response chanting of mantras set to music) can be a solitary meditative practice, using recordings or live instruments like harmonium.

Practitioners may adopt a relationship with the deity—as servant to master, friend to friend, parent to child, or lover to beloved—a framework outlined in the Bhakti Sutras.

Bhakti Meditation Today

Contemporary practitioners encounter bhakti meditation through multiple channels. Kirtan has become popular in Western yoga studios, with artists like Krishna Das, Jai Uttal, and Deva Premal bringing devotional music to global audiences. The Bhakti Center in New York and similar communities worldwide host weekly kirtans and meditation sessions, often free or donation-based.

Modern teachers blend bhakti meditation with other modalities: “Bhakti Flow” classes combine asana with mantra; online platforms offer guided bhakti meditations accessible to beginners. Annual gatherings like Bhakti Fest in California create immersive environments for practice.

Some teachers adapt the practice for non-Hindu contexts—Christian contemplatives may practice bhakti-style meditation on Jesus or Mary; Buddhist practitioners may direct devotion toward Buddha or Tara. The democratizing spirit of the original bhakti movement continues as practitioners choose their own objects of devotion, whether traditional deities, natural elements (water, fire), or abstract principles.

Common Misconceptions

Bhakti meditation is not emotional indulgence or sentimentality. While it engages emotion, the practice requires consistent discipline and, according to classical texts, guidance from a qualified teacher.

It is not idol worship in the pejorative sense. The murti serves as a focal point for concentration, not as the divine itself but as a doorway to formless reality—though traditions differ on whether the ultimate goal is union with a personal God or transcendence of all form.

Bhakti meditation is not passive. The tradition distinguishes between apara-bhakti (lower devotion), characterized by ritual and emotional expression, and para-bhakti (supreme devotion), a state of spontaneous, unwavering love that arises after sustained practice—a progression that requires active engagement, not mere wishful thinking.

It is not exclusively for Hindus. While rooted in Hindu tradition, bhakti as “the yoga of devotion” has influenced Sikhism, Sufism, and Christian mysticism. Historical figures like Kabir practiced nirguna bhakti (devotion to the formless divine), demonstrating the tradition’s theological flexibility.

How to Begin

For those new to bhakti meditation, begin by selecting a form of the divine that resonates—whether a traditional deity, a spiritual teacher, or even a quality you wish to embody (compassion, peace). Create a simple altar with an image or object representing your chosen focus.

Start with 5-10 minutes daily of japa meditation. Choose a simple mantra—“Om Shanti” (peace) or “Om” itself for those uncomfortable with deity-specific mantras. Use a mala or set a timer. Sit comfortably, close your eyes, and repeat the mantra silently or in a whisper, allowing your attention to rest in your heart center.

Read foundational texts: the Bhagavad Gita (try the translation by Eknath Easwaran or Stephen Mitchell) provides philosophical grounding. The Narada Bhakti Sutras offers practical instruction. “The Path of Love” by Swami Vivekananda contextualizes bhakti within the broader yoga tradition.

Attend a kirtan at a local yoga studio or bhakti center. The communal energy can catalyze devotional feeling difficult to access alone. Online platforms like YouTube offer kirtan recordings for home practice.

Approach with humility and consistency rather than intensity. Bhakti meditation unfolds gradually—the “honeymoon phase” of initial sweetness often gives way to a “desert phase” of dryness before deeper devotion stabilizes.

Related terms

bhakti yogajapa meditationkirtanmantra meditationdevotional meditationishvara yoga
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