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Glossary›Ramakrishna

Glossary

Ramakrishna

A 19th-century Bengali mystic and priest at the Dakshineswar Kali Temple who experienced direct spiritual realization across Hindu, Islamic, and Christian traditions.

What is Ramakrishna?

Ramakrishna (1836–1886), born Gadadhar Chattopadhyay in the village of Kamarpukur, Bengal, was a Hindu mystic whose firsthand spiritual experiences across multiple religious traditions made him a pivotal figure in modern Indian spirituality. Unlike systematic philosophers or institutional reformers, Ramakrishna was a practitioner-mystic who spent twelve years in intense sadhana (spiritual practice) while serving as a priest at the Dakshineswar Kali Temple near Calcutta. His central teaching—that all religions are different paths to the same Ultimate Reality—emerged not from theological speculation but from his personal experiments with Hindu Tantra, Vaishnavism, Advaita Vedanta, Islam, and Christianity.

Origins & Lineage

Ramakrishna was born on February 18, 1836, to Khudiram Chattopadhyay and Chandramani Devi, impoverished Brahmin villagers. His father died when he was seven, deepening his introspective tendencies. In 1855, his elder brother Ramkumar became a priest at the newly built Dakshineswar temple founded by Rani Rasmani, and Ramakrishna eventually assumed priestly duties there.

His spiritual education unfolded through a series of teachers. In 1861, the Bhairavi Brahmani, a female Tantric adept, initiated him into sixty-four Tantric sadhanas, which he completed in approximately three years. Around 1864, the wandering Advaita Vedanta monk Totapuri guided him to nirvikalpa samadhi—the highest non-dual absorption described in Hindu texts—which Ramakrishna reportedly sustained for six months. He also undertook Islamic practices under a Sufi teacher (exact name not consistently recorded) and Christian contemplation, experiencing visions he interpreted as encounters with the essential truth underlying each tradition.

Ramakrishna’s wife, Sarada Devi (married when he was twenty-three, she was five), later joined him at Dakshineswar and became a spiritual figure in her own right; their relationship remained celibate. Among his disciples, Narendranath Datta (later Swami Vivekananda) emerged as his chief successor. Before Ramakrishna’s death from throat cancer on August 16, 1886, he gave ochre robes to his young disciples, laying the foundation for what would become the Ramakrishna Order.

How It’s Practiced

Ramakrishna did not teach a codified method. His approach emphasized bhakti (devotion), particularly to the Divine Mother in the form of Kali, combined with an experimental attitude toward spiritual paths. He told seekers to choose the path suited to their temperament—whether jnana yoga (knowledge), bhakti yoga (devotion), karma yoga (selfless action), or raja yoga (meditation)—and pursue it with intensity and sincerity.

His daily life at Dakshineswar involved worship, ecstatic states (samadhi), and spontaneous teaching through parables and songs—often compositions by the 18th-century Shakta poet Ramprasad. He met householders, scholars, skeptics, and seekers, addressing each according to their capacity. His pronouncement “Jatra jiv tatra Shiv” (wherever there is a living being, there is Shiva) became a theological basis for service as worship, though Ramakrishna himself engaged primarily in spiritual instruction rather than organized social work.

Ramakrishna Today

Contemporary seekers encounter Ramakrishna primarily through three channels:

  1. The Ramakrishna Order: Founded by Vivekananda in 1897, comprising the Ramakrishna Math (monastic order) and Ramakrishna Mission (service organization), with over 166 centers worldwide. Belur Math in West Bengal serves as headquarters.

  2. The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna: The English translation of Sri Sri Ramakrishna Kathamrita, a five-volume Bengali work by Mahendranath Gupta (writing as “M.”), who recorded Ramakrishna’s conversations between 1882 and 1886. The first volume appeared in 1902; Swami Nikhilananda’s 1942 English translation (with a foreword by Aldous Huxley) became the standard text in the West. Some scholars, including Jeffrey Kripal, have contested the completeness of published editions, while others affirm their substantial accuracy.

  3. Vedanta Societies: Western branches of the Ramakrishna Order, focused on teaching Advaita Vedanta philosophy and meditation. The Vedanta Society of New York, established in 1898, was the first.

Ramakrishna’s teachings also influenced figures such as Mahatma Gandhi, who called him a model of “religion in practice,” and Western thinkers including Christopher Isherwood, Thomas Merton, and Joseph Campbell.

Common Misconceptions

Ramakrishna was not a social reformer. He did not campaign against caste discrimination, though he personally treated all visitors with equal reverence. Social service became central to the Ramakrishna Mission under Vivekananda’s leadership, rooted in Ramakrishna’s teaching that serving humans is serving God, but Ramakrishna himself focused on spiritual realization.

He was not a systematic philosopher. His teachings came in parables, songs, and spontaneous responses to questions, not treatises. Vivekananda organized these insights into a coherent Vedanta framework.

He was not religiously syncretistic in the modern pluralist sense. Ramakrishna practiced each tradition as an exclusive path during his sadhana periods, experiencing their distinct phenomenologies before concluding they converged on the same Ultimate Reality. His famous dictum “Yato mat, tato path” (as many faiths, so many paths) reflects experiential validation, not theological liberalism.

Scholarly debates exist about the hagiographic editing of his life story, particularly regarding the Ramakrishna Order’s stewardship of biographical materials. These debates do not diminish his historical importance but highlight the gap between lived experience and institutional memory.

How to Begin

Start with The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna (Swami Nikhilananda translation), focusing on the “Introduction” and individual encounters rather than attempting a cover-to-cover read. The text functions less as scripture than as recorded spiritual conversation.

Visit a Ramakrishna-Vivekananda Center or Vedanta Society if accessible; most offer free Sunday lectures, meditation sessions, and libraries. The Ramakrishna Order maintains a non-proselytizing ethos and welcomes people of all backgrounds.

For contextual understanding, Christopher Isherwood’s Ramakrishna and His Disciples (1965) offers a readable narrative biography, though it is devotional in tone. Academic treatments include Jeffery Kripal’s Kali’s Child (1995, controversial) and studies by scholars Lex Hixon and Swami Tyagananda that address interpretive questions around primary sources.

Ramakrishna emphasized direct experience over belief. His legacy lies not in doctrines to accept but in the possibility he demonstrated: that sustained spiritual practice, regardless of tradition, can yield transformative encounter with what he called “the One who is known by many names.”

Related terms

swami vivekanandaadvaita vedantabhakti yogasamadhitantravedanta society
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