Sadhana to transform the mind
Christ lived two thousand years ago. Why do we still remember this day? Not because Christ was the founder of Christianity. Christianity was established in Rome, not in Bethlehem or Jerusalem. The founder of the organized Christian system was St Peter.
The teaching of Christ, of Jesus, before the establishment of Christianity was very simple. If we are to express Christ's teaching in the language of today, we would say, “Live for others, to alleviate the suffering of others and to reconnect them with their source, God.” This would be Christ's teaching in a nutshell, and it is the most important one to transform the human mind.
Who lives for other people? Today we are so self-centred that we forget about the suffering of others; we are too caught up in our own conflicts and problems. To connect with God, the source, becomes a distant reality in our lives.
But if we can conceive of a process to fulfil these three important mandates of Christ, we become true Christians in heart and in spirit; we become true yogis in heart and in spirit; we become true human beings in action and in thought.

This has to be the form of our sadhana in order to humanize ourselves. We call ourselves 'humans', but it is only a social label. In reality we are different. What are the qualities of a human being? What determines that we are human beings?
Thinking is not a quality of a human being, thinking is a process of intellect, intelligence. Intellect does not define a human being because the same intellect, when used in the wrong manner, can make us satanic.
Spirit is beyond the mind
The thing that makes us really human is the knowledge of the connection, the invisible thread that exists connecting the individual and the transcendental, the Divine; the ability to see this link, this connection, in everything, in everyone else;
and the destruction of the thought that “I am superior” or “I am inferior”, “I know more” or “I know less” – because these are all the plays of ego.
Ganga Darshan, December 24, 1999
From “Yoga Magazine, Issue March 2000, The Spirit of Christmas”, Swami Niranjanananda Saraswati






