June 22, 2026
The whole world is a mansion of joy. You see, if you spit on it, it becomes impure; but the world itself is pure." — Ramakrishna, as recorded in The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna
Ramakrishna said this to his disciples in the 1880s at the Dakshineswar Kali Temple, where he spent most of his adult life in a state of near-constant devotional intensity. He was speaking directly against the idea, common in certain strands of Hindu renunciation, that the world must be rejected to find God. For Ramakrishna, beauty and joy were not distractions from the sacred but evidence of it, right there in the courtyard, in the river, in the face of whoever was sitting in front of him. That directness — the world is not the problem, your attitude toward it is — lands just as hard now as it did then.
Reflection
Think about something in your daily life you have decided is ordinary or beneath notice. What would you actually see if you looked at it today without that decision already made?