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Glossary›Bhakti Yoga

Glossary

Bhakti Yoga

The yoga of devotional love, cultivating an intimate, emotional relationship with the divine through chanting, prayer, service, and surrender.

What is Bhakti Yoga?

Bhakti yoga is a devotee’s loving devotion to a personal god as the path for spirituality. The term derives from the Sanskrit root bhaj, meaning to love, share, or participate in. Unlike paths emphasizing intellectual knowledge (jnana yoga) or selfless action (karma yoga), bhakti yoga is the path of the heart—an approach to liberation (moksha) through emotional devotion, loving surrender, and intimate relationship with a chosen deity. The Bhagavad Gita is the first text to explicitly use the word “bhakti” to designate a religious path, using it as a term for one of three possible religious approaches or yogas (i.e. bhakti yoga).

Practitioners express devotion through nine classical forms outlined in the Bhagavata Purana: śravaṇa (“listening” to the scriptural stories of Krishna and his companions), kīrtana (“praising,” usually refers to ecstatic group singing), smaraṇa (“remembering” or fixing the mind on Viṣṇu), pāda-sevana (rendering service), arcana (worshiping an image), vandana (paying homage), dāsya (servitude), sākhya (friendship), and ātma-nivedana (complete self-surrender). The Bhakti yoga tradition has been historically most associated with Vaishnavism. The personal god here is Vishnu or one of his avatars. The specific avatar varies by the devotee and region, but the most common are Krishna and Rama. Bhakti is also practiced toward Shiva, Devi, and other deities within Hinduism’s diverse traditions.

Origins & Lineage

The essence of devotion can be traced back to the Vedas, the ancient scriptures of Hinduism. The origins of Bhakti Yoga can be found in the Bhagavad Gita (meaning “the song of God”), a sacred scripture of Hindu philosophy dating back to around 500 BCE. The Shvetashvatara Upanishad also contains early references to devotional practice.

Originating in Tamilakam during the 6th century CE, it gained prominence through the poems and teachings of the Vaishnava Alvars and Shaiva Nayanars in early medieval South India, before spreading northwards. The Alvars were twelve poet-saints devoted to Vishnu; the Nayanars were sixty-three devotees of Shiva. Their Tamil hymns laid the foundation for bhakti as a mass movement accessible beyond brahmanical ritual.

It swept over east and north India from the 15th century onwards, reaching its zenith between the 15th and 17th century CE. Prominent Bhakti saints and poets, such as Ramanuja, Mirabai, and Tulsidas, played a crucial role in popularising Bhakti Yoga during this period. Ramanuja (11th–12th century) provided philosophical grounding in Vishishtadvaita Vedanta. Mirabai (c. 1503–1573), a Rajput princess, composed ecstatic poetry to Krishna, defying caste and gender norms. Tukaram (1608–1650) in Maharashtra wrote devotional abhangs to Vithoba. Kabir, Guru Nanak, Chaitanya Mahaprabhu, and others championed both saguna (devotion to deities with form) and nirguna (devotion to the formless absolute) streams.

How It’s Practiced

Bhakti yoga has no required physical postures or meditation techniques in its classical form. It is practiced through emotional and relational engagement with the divine. The Bhagavata Purana’s nine forms provide a practical framework:

Shravana (listening): Hearing sacred stories, scriptural recitations, or teachings about the divine, often in satsang or spiritual gatherings.
Kirtana (chanting): Singing or chanting the names and glories of God, typically in call-and-response format. Kirtan gatherings are common in modern bhakti communities.
Smarana (remembrance): Continuous mental recollection of the deity’s name, form, or qualities throughout daily activities.
Pada-sevana (service to the deity’s feet): Physical acts of service, such as cleaning temple spaces or serving the community.
Arcana (ritual worship): Puja—offerings of flowers, incense, food, and prayers to a deity image or altar.
Vandana (prostration and homage): Bowing, offering respect, or performing ritual gestures (mudras).
Dasya (servitude): Viewing oneself as a servant of God, an attitude of humility and obedience.
Sakhya (friendship): Relating to God as a friend, with intimacy and ease.
Atma-nivedana (self-surrender): Complete offering of one’s ego, will, and life to the divine.

Practitioners often cultivate a chosen deity (ishta devata) through japa (repetition of mantras), deity meditation, and daily devotional rituals. Communal singing (kirtan, bhajan), pilgrimage, reading devotional poetry, and seva (selfless service) are central practices.

Bhakti Yoga Today

Modern seekers encounter bhakti yoga primarily through kirtan circles, devotional music concerts, mantra meditation, and yoga studios that incorporate chanting into asana classes. Artists like Krishna Das, Jai Uttal, and Deva Premal have introduced bhakti chanting to global audiences. Bhakti festivals, satsangs, and ashrams such as those in the Sivananda, ISKCON (International Society for Krishna Consciousness), and Ananda Marga lineages offer immersive experiences.

Retreats often blend bhakti practices with other yogic paths—mantra meditation, sacred music, storytelling, and communal seva. Online platforms stream kirtan, offer courses on the Bhagavad Gita and Bhagavata Purana, and facilitate virtual satsangs. Bhakti is also woven into temple worship, devotional art, and pilgrimage traditions in India and the diaspora.

Common Misconceptions

It’s purely emotional, not rigorous: While bhakti emphasizes feeling, it is also grounded in scriptural study, ethics, and disciplined practice. The Bhagavad Gita and Bhagavata Purana provide sophisticated philosophical frameworks.

It requires belief in a specific deity: Bhakti can be practiced toward any form of the divine—personal or universal. Nirguna bhakti (as taught by Kabir or Guru Nanak) directs devotion toward the formless absolute.

It’s only for Hindus: While rooted in Hindu traditions, bhakti’s core principle—loving devotion as a spiritual path—resonates across religious boundaries. Sufi Islam, Christian mysticism, and Sikh devotion share parallel structures.

It’s passive or escapist: Bhakti historically empowered marginalized communities. Salvation, which had been considered attainable only by men of the Brahmin, Kshatriya and Vaishya castes, became available to everyone. Most scholars state that Bhakti movement provided women and members of the Shudra and untouchable communities an inclusive path to spiritual salvation.

Physical yoga is required: Traditional bhakti yoga includes no asana practice. The yoga of devotion is relational, not postural.

How to Begin

Attend a kirtan: Find a local kirtan circle, bhakti yoga studio, or live-streamed chanting session. Let yourself sing or listen without judgment.

Choose a mantra: Simple Sanskrit mantras like Om Namah Shivaya, Hare Krishna, or Om Shanti can be repeated silently or aloud as part of daily japa practice.

Read foundational texts: The Bhagavad Gita (especially chapters 9 and 12), Narada Bhakti Sutras, and poetry by Mirabai, Kabir, or Rumi offer entry points.

Establish a personal altar: Create a small sacred space with an image, candle, or symbol representing your chosen form of the divine. Offer flowers, light, or simple prayers.

Explore devotional music: Listen to recordings by Krishna Das, Snatam Kaur, or traditional Carnatic/Hindustani bhajans to feel the texture of devotional practice.

Find a teacher or community: Seek out satsangs, bhakti yoga classes, or ashrams where devotional practice is taught and lived communally.

Related terms

kirtanmantra meditationjnana yogakarma yogasatsangbhajan
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