Knowledge Bank · Sanatana Dharma Series
Sanatana Dharma — Ultimate Truth & Universal Constitution
Sanatana Dharma is not merely a religion — it is the Universal Application and Ecological Constitution, a complete way of life that aligns individual human existence with the cosmic order.
The human being is a replica of Earth — and Earth is a replica of the Universe. Energies change through human activity. Cosmos, Earth, and human systems are interconnected in an unbroken web of mutual influence. This is the foundational insight of Sanatana Dharma.
What is Dharma?
Dharma derives from the Sanskrit root dhri — "to hold, to support, to maintain." Dharma is the inherent nature of a thing and the law that governs its right functioning:
- Water's Dharma is to flow downward and nourish life
- Fire's Dharma is to burn, transform, and illuminate
- The Sun's Dharma is to rise every morning without exception
- The human being's Dharma is to act in alignment with Truth, sustaining the cosmic order
Sanatana means eternal, perennial, without beginning or end. Sanatana Dharma is thus the Eternal Law — not a human invention but a cosmic principle that has always existed and always will.
Achar · Vichar · Vyavahar
Right action in the physical world — how one lives, eats, sleeps, works, and behaves in alignment with Dharma.
Right thought and reflection — the quality of one's inner life, the thoughts one cultivates and the wisdom one applies.
Right relationship — how one engages in transactions, relationships, and social interactions with honesty and integrity.
Eight Dharmic Systems
| # | Dharmic System | Form | Function |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Devotion (Bhakti) | Prayer, worship, surrender | Opens the heart; dissolves the ego through love |
| 2 | Songs | Bhajan, Kirtan, Stotras | Raises vibration; creates sacred sound fields |
| 3 | Dance | Bharatanatyam, Odissi, Kuchipudi | Embodies cosmic forms; the body becomes an instrument |
| 4 | Food (Prasad) | Sattvic diet, Prasad | Nourishes body and consciousness; food as medicine |
| 5 | Respect to Nature | Tree worship, river worship, animal care | Maintains ecological balance; honors the sacred in Nature |
| 6 | Astrology (Jyotisha) | Horoscope, Muhurtha, remedies | Aligns individual actions with cosmic timing |
| 7 | Yoga | Asana, Pranayama, Meditation | Integrates body, breath, and mind; evolves consciousness |
| 8 | Vastu | Sacred architecture, home orientation | Aligns living spaces with natural energy flows |
Karma, Aura & Consequences
Karma is not punishment — it is physics. Every action (Karma) creates a corresponding energy impression in the Aura (bio-field). These impressions attract circumstances that allow the karma to complete itself:
- Sanchita Karma — accumulated karma from all past lives; the storehouse
- Prarabdha Karma — the portion of Sanchita Karma ripening in this life; "fate"
- Agami Karma — karma being created now through present actions and intentions
- Truth in thought, word, and deed creates a harmonious Aura and attracts positive circumstances
- Untruth (Adharma) disrupts the Aura, creates confusion and suffering for the individual and society
Moksha — Liberation
The ultimate goal of Sanatana Dharma is Moksha — liberation from the cycle of birth, death, and rebirth. Moksha is achieved when all Karma has been resolved and the individual consciousness recognizes its identity with universal consciousness (Brahman). The four paths are:
- Jnana Yoga — path of knowledge and discrimination between the real and unreal
- Bhakti Yoga — path of devotion and surrender to the Divine
- Karma Yoga — path of right action performed without attachment to results
- Raja Yoga — path of meditation and psychic control leading to Samadhi