Sri Sri Jagadguru Shankaracharya Mahasamsthanam, Dakshinamanaya Sri Sharada Peetham, Sringeri



Dakshinamnaya Sri Sharada Peetham, Sringeri

Stotras


Out of His own volition, projecting power of His maya, Bramhan becomes Iswara, the personal God and to bless the devotees manifests Himself in several divine forms in which a seeker contemplates on Him.  Hence Sri Shankara Bhagavat Pada purified the rituals of worship of Shiva, Devi, Vishnu, Surya, Ganapati and Kumara and composed devotional hymns on each of these divine forms to help the devotees.  These divine forms are not different.  They are manifestations of the Supreme, and devotion to any one of them accompanied with complete self surrender will bring divine grace, which will lead the Sadhana to Jnana and liberation.  Because of his acceptance of the worship of six divine forms then in vogue, he is known as Shanmata Sthapaka.  Since God is omnipresent, it is also possible to speak of His limited presence; or special presence;  just as a King ruling over the whole earth can be referred to as the King of Ayodhya.  This is done for the sake of contemplation, God is taught to be meditated upon there in the lotus of heart, just as Lord Hari is taught to be meditated on a Saligrama.  A certain state of intellect catches a glimpse of Hari there.  God though omnipresent, becomes gracious when worshipped there.  Just as space, though all pervasive is referred to as having a limited habitation and minuteness form the point of view of its association with the eye of the needle, so also is the case with Bramhan.

Sri Adi Shankara, after writing his life-giving commentaries upon the sacred books of our culture, provided the seekers with a voluminous devotional literature, singing his own love of the Lord.  Every one of this Stotras is culled out from the garden of the Upanishads, and strung together on the chord of His poetry, interspersed with his inquisitive similes.

 
  • For the protection of the righteous ones (committed to dharma), for the destruction of the unrighteous ones (follow adharma), and for the establishment of dharma I take birth in every age. Bhagavan Sri Krishna on Significance of God
  • O devotee, (with the mind) fixed upon the lotus feet of the Guru! May you soon be free from Samsara. Through the control of the senses and the mind, you shall behold the Lord indwelling in your heart! Jagadguru Sri Adi Shankara Bhagavatpada on Mohamudgara
  • Have firm faith in God, his words and his servants. Have staunch belief in your religion and in dharma. Jagadguru Sri Chandrashekhara Bharati Mahaswamigal on Significance of God
  • An ideal disciple will indeed act as per the Guru’s instructions and not give place to thoughts as “Is it possible for me to do as he says? Shall I try something else?” If we follow our Guru’s instructions, it does not mean that we are unintelligent. It only implies that we have surrendered for our own good to a power superior to us. Jagadguru Sri Abhinava Vidyatirtha Mahaswamigal on Significance of God
  • If we poke our nose into matters that do not concern us, it is we who lose our precious time. Jagadguru Sri Bharati Tirtha Mahaswamigal on Significance of God's Names