What are everyone's thoughts on Ramakrishna and the Ramakrishna Mission/Order?
The big realization that I've come to about myself is that I tried to force myself into traditional Hinduism. Nothing wrong with traditional Hinduism or those who practice it, but I tried to force myself to fit something that didn't come naturally. Something that should have been liberating or a joy to do became a massive burden. Yeah, this comes as a shock to probably no one, but it finally dawned on me.
In my process of looking into what Ramakrishna taught and the organizations he created, I do like a lot of what he had to say. Particularly about the unity of Hinduism (as practically improbable as that may be), Realization as the ultimate goal of life, and the synthesis of Yogas.
Yes, what he taught, and by extension what the Ramakrishna Mission teaches, isn't traditional Vedanta, but it is still Vedanta. I feel as if it could be a practical Hinduism where devotion and Bhakti to God is of high importance.
The big realization that I've come to about myself is that I tried to force myself into traditional Hinduism. Nothing wrong with traditional Hinduism or those who practice it, but I tried to force myself to fit something that didn't come naturally. Something that should have been liberating or a joy to do became a massive burden. Yeah, this comes as a shock to probably no one, but it finally dawned on me.
In my process of looking into what Ramakrishna taught and the organizations he created, I do like a lot of what he had to say. Particularly about the unity of Hinduism (as practically improbable as that may be), Realization as the ultimate goal of life, and the synthesis of Yogas.
Yes, what he taught, and by extension what the Ramakrishna Mission teaches, isn't traditional Vedanta, but it is still Vedanta. I feel as if it could be a practical Hinduism where devotion and Bhakti to God is of high importance.