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Glossary›Bhakti

Glossary

Bhakti

A Sanskrit term for devotional love and service to the divine, central to Hindu spiritual practice and expressed through chanting, music, prayer, and ritual.

What is Bhakti?

Bhakti is the path of devotional love in Hinduism—a spiritual practice rooted in the cultivation of an emotional, personal relationship with the divine. Unlike paths emphasizing ritual mastery (karma yoga) or philosophical knowledge (jnana yoga), bhakti centers on loving surrender, whether to a personal deity like Krishna, Rama, or Shiva, or to the formless absolute (Brahman). The term appears in early Hindu texts but gained prominence as a distinct spiritual path in the Bhagavad Gita, where Krishna instructs the warrior Arjuna that devotion is a valid and powerful route to liberation (moksha). Bhakti is not passive emotion; it is committed engagement—combining heartfelt feeling with conscious practice, expressed through song, chant, pilgrimage, service, and contemplation.

Origins & Lineage

Bhakti’s earliest seeds appear in the Vedic hymns (circa 1500–500 BCE), particularly in the Rig Veda, which contains devotional praise to deities such as Agni and Varuna. However, bhakti as a formalized path crystallized in the Bhagavad Gita (composed between 400–200 BCE), where it is named bhakti yoga and presented alongside karma and jnana as a means to spiritual realization. The Bhagavata Purana (circa 9th century CE), a foundational Vaishnava text, elaborates nine forms of devotional practice—including listening (shravana), chanting (kirtana), remembering, and self-surrender—codifying what would become the Bhakti movement’s template.

The Bhakti movement as a mass phenomenon began in South India during the 6th–7th centuries CE, led by the Tamil poet-saints known as the Alvars (devotees of Vishnu) and Nayanars (devotees of Shiva). These ecstatic mystics composed hymns in vernacular Tamil rather than elite Sanskrit, making devotion accessible to all castes and genders. Notable early figures include the female poet-saint Andal (8th century) and the philosopher Ramanuja (1017–1137 CE), who provided theological grounding for Vaishnavism and challenged the non-dualist interpretations of Adi Shankara.

From the 12th to 17th centuries, the movement spread northward across India. Key figures include Jnaneswar (13th century Maharashtra), Jayadeva (12th century, composer of the Gita Govinda), Kabir (15th century, a weaver-saint who merged Hindu and Islamic themes), Chaitanya Mahaprabhu (1486–1533, Bengal Vaishnava ecstatic), Mirabai (1498–1546, Rajasthani princess devoted to Krishna), Tulsidas (1532–1623, author of the Ramcharitmanas), and Guru Nanak (1469–1539, founder of Sikhism). These saints preached in regional languages—Hindi, Bengali, Marathi, Gujarati—and often defied caste hierarchy, drawing followers from marginalized communities.

How It’s Practiced

Bhakti is practiced through a spectrum of devotional activities. Kirtan—call-and-response chanting of divine names and mantras—remains the most recognized form in contemporary settings, accompanied by harmonium, tabla, and melodic singing. Japa, the repetition of a mantra (often using mala beads), quiets the mind and focuses devotion. Puja, ritual worship at home altars or temples, involves offerings of flowers, incense, fruit, and water to images or symbols of the deity. Pilgrimage (yatra) to sacred sites—Vrindavan, Varanasi, Tirupati—embodies physical devotion. Bhajans, devotional songs, and satsang, gatherings in the presence of a teacher or community, create collective energy and shared reverence.

Bhakti traditions distinguish between saguna bhakti—devotion to God with form and attributes (Vishnu, Krishna, Durga)—and nirguna bhakti—devotion to the formless, attributeless divine. Saints like Kabir and Guru Nanak emphasized nirguna practice, while Vaishnava and Shaiva traditions cultivated saguna devotion through rich iconography, mythology, and ritual.

Bhakti Today

In the contemporary spiritual landscape, bhakti is encountered primarily through kirtan gatherings, which have become global phenomena in yoga studios, conscious music festivals, and retreat centers. Artists like Krishna Das, Jai Uttal, and Deva Premal have introduced bhakti chanting to Western audiences, blending traditional Sanskrit mantras with modern instrumentation. Bhakti yoga classes integrate devotional singing with asana practice. ISKCON (International Society for Krishna Consciousness), founded by A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada in 1966, brought Gaudiya Vaishnavism—the ecstatic Krishna devotion of Chaitanya—into American and European cities.

Beyond kirtan, seekers encounter bhakti through teacher lineages (sampradayas), pilgrimage tours to India, online satsangs, and recordings of traditional bhajans. Devotional poetry from Mirabai, Kabir, and Rumi (whose Sufi mysticism shares affinities with bhakti) circulates widely in translation. Bhakti also informs seva (selfless service) traditions in ashrams and spiritual communities.

Common Misconceptions

Bhakti is not sentimentalism or blind faith. While it engages emotion, classical bhakti texts emphasize discernment, ethical living, and disciplined practice. The Bhagavad Gita and Bhagavata Purana describe stages of maturity in devotion, from fear-based worship to spontaneous, unconditional love. Bhakti is also not monolithic—it encompasses theistic dualism (Dvaita, where devotee and God remain distinct) and qualified non-dualism (Vishishtadvaita), differing sharply from Advaita Vedanta’s emphasis on the illusory nature of individual identity.

Bhakti is not inherently egalitarian in practice, despite the movement’s anti-caste rhetoric. While poet-saints like Kabir and Ravidas challenged Brahmanical privilege, many bhakti lineages were absorbed back into orthodox structures, and caste distinctions persisted in temple worship and ritual participation. The movement’s legacy is complex—both radical and recuperated.

Finally, bhakti is not purely Hindu. The concept appears in Buddhism (as devotion to the Buddha or bodhisattvas), Jainism (reverence for Tirthankaras), and Sikhism (devotion to the formless Waheguru). Sufi Islam in India developed in dialogue with bhakti, sharing practices of ecstatic remembrance (dhikr/kirtan) and poet-saint traditions.

How to Begin

Beginners can explore bhakti through kirtan recordings or live gatherings—search for local kirtan circles or events at yoga studios and spiritual centers. Essential listening includes Krishna Das’s “Live on Earth” or traditional renditions of the Hanuman Chalisa. Read accessible translations of the Bhagavad Gita (Stephen Mitchell or Eknath Easwaran editions) or the poetry of Mirabai and Kabir (Robert Bly and Jane Hirshfield translations). Visit a temple or ashram offering bhajans or satsang; observe without pressure to convert or commit. Learn a simple mantra—“Om Namah Shivaya” or “Hare Krishna”—and practice japa for five minutes daily. Approach bhakti as experiment rather than doctrine, noting how chant, song, or devotional reading shifts your inner landscape.

Artists & teachers in this practice

Deva PremalDeva PremalKirtanKrishna DasKrishna DasKirtan Artist

Related terms

kirtan leadersanskritdevotional musicharmoniumsatsanghinduism
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