
Recorded at the Vedanta Society of Western Washington on June 19, 2016.In this Father's Day talk, Swami Bhaskarananda reflects on the place of the father in human society, religion, and spiritual life. Drawing from history, anthropology, Hindu scriptures, and personal experience, he explores how reverence for parents developed across cultures and why the father came to be regarded as a protector and guide within the family. He explains how many religious traditions have expressed devotion to the Divine through the image of the Father, while also recognizing that the ultimate reality described in Vedanta transcends all human categories, including gender and form. The talk examines how human beings project familiar relationships onto the infinite and thereby come to worship God as Father, Mother, or through other sacred forms.Swami Bhaskarananda illustrates these ideas through teachings from the Upanishads, the Ramayana, and other Hindu scriptures, emphasizing the traditional instruction to regard one's mother, father, teacher, and guest as manifestations of the Divine. Recounting the example of Sri Rama's obedience to his father and sharing memories from his own upbringing in India, he highlights the values of respect, gratitude, and moral character that were cultivated through reverence for parents. He concludes by noting that honoring the virtues embodied by fathers and recognizing goodness in others can elevate the mind and support spiritual growth and awareness of our inherent divinity.
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