divyaM jJAnaM yato dadyAt kuryAt pApasya saGkSayam |
tasmAd dIkSeti sA proktA dezikais tattva kovidaiH ||
ato guruM praNamyaivaM sarvasvaM vinivedya ca |
gRhNIyAd vaiSNavaM mantraM dIkSA pUrvaM vidhAnataH || (bhakti-sandarbha 283)
“That, which bestows divine knowledge and destroys all sins, is called diksa by the knowers of the truth. Therefore, paying obeisance to the guru and offering unto him one's all, one should receive Vaisnava mantra-diksa preceded with proper procedures.”
The great teachers have further glossed the importance of meditating on the diksa-mantra as a means of establishing a specific relationship with the Lord, which is, after all, the object of raganuga-bhakti-sadhana.
divyaM jJAnaM hy atra zrImati mantre bhagavat-svarUpa-jJAnaM, tena bhagavatA sambandha-vizeSa-jJAnaM ca || (ibid.)
“Here divine knowledge means the knowledge about the Lord’s intrinsic identity which lies within the mantra, along with specific knowledge of one's relationship with the Lord.”
This is repeated over and over again:
zrI-nAradAdi-vartmAnusaradbhiH zrI-bhagavatA saha sambandha-vizeSaM dIkSA-vidhAnena zrI-guru-caraNa-sampAditaM cikIrSadbhiH kRtAyAM dIkSAyAm arcanam avazyaM kriyetaiva || (ibid.)
“Those who are following the path of Narada and others, and who desire the particular relationship with the Lord that is brought about at the feet of the guru through the rite of diksa, necessarily perform arcana (worship) when diksa is completed.”
Steadfast contemplation on the diksa-mantra gradually gives rise to and strengthens a certain loving relationship with the Lord. To refine the conception of the practitioner, it is customary for the guru to further instruct the initiate on the nature of his specific eternal, spiritual identity.
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