The Three Reflections: Silence Beneath the Banyan Grove
Ganapatya Upanishad - The Three Ganas (The narrative is a philosophical synthesis (Dharma-Katha) drawing upon Vedantic concepts (Trika/Advaita) but is not traceable to a single canonical verse, chapter, or canto in the Vedas, Upanishads, or Puranas.)
Three brilliant scholars at a sacred ashrama debate the most important path to Ganesha: the path of scripture (Scholar), the path of song (Devotee), or the path of pure experience (Yogi). Ganesha intervenes, revealing that these three practices are not separate methods, but three necessary reflections of the single, ultimate Self (Atman), teaching the scholars that unity lies in the journey itself.
The Three Reflections: Silence Beneath the Banyan Grove
Three brilliant scholars at a sacred ashrama debate the most important path to Ganesha: the path of scripture (Scholar), the path of song (Devotee), or the path of pure experience (Yogi). Ganesha intervenes, revealing that these three practices are not separate methods, but three necessary reflections of the single, ultimate Self (Atman), teaching the scholars that unity lies in the journey itself.
Ganapatya Upanishad - The Three Ganas (The narrative is a philosophical synthesis (Dharma-Katha) drawing upon Vedantic concepts (Trika/Advaita) but is not traceable to a single canonical verse, chapter, or canto in the Vedas, Upanishads, or Puranas.)
Sacred Storyen
Moral & Divine Teaching
True devotion is not found by mastering a single discipline, but by realizing that knowledge, worship, and direct experience are three inseparable facets of the Self.