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Glossary›Devotional

Glossary

Devotional

A spiritual practice centered on loving dedication to the divine, expressed through music, prayer, chanting, or ritual across Hindu, Christian, Sufi, and Buddhist traditions.

What is Devotional?

Devotional refers to spiritual practices rooted in bhakti (loving devotion) toward the divine, a deity, guru, or sacred principle. Unlike meditation techniques focused on emptying the mind or intellectual study of scripture, devotional practice engages the heart through song, chant, prayer, prostration, or ritual offering. The practitioner cultivates an emotional relationship with the sacred—one of love, surrender, longing, or service. Devotional traditions appear across religious lineages: Hindu kirtan, Sufi dhikr, Christian hymnody, Buddhist puja, and Indigenous ceremony all share this orientation toward the holy through affective expression rather than doctrinal analysis.

Origins & Lineage

The term “devotional” derives from Latin devotio (consecration, dedication), but the practice predates the word. In India, bhakti movements emerged between the 7th and 12th centuries CE as populist alternatives to Brahmanical ritualism. Saints like Andal (9th century Tamil poet), Mirabai (1498–1546, Rajasthani princess-poet), and Tulsidas (1532–1623, author of the Ramcharitmanas) composed vernacular songs expressing ecstatic love for Krishna, Rama, and Shiva. The Bhagavad Gita (circa 200 BCE–200 CE) codified bhakti as one of three valid paths to liberation, alongside karma (action) and jnana (knowledge).

In Islamic tradition, Sufism developed devotional practice through remembrance (dhikr) and ecstatic poetry. Rumi (1207–1273) and Hafiz (1315–1390) wrote verses blurring the boundary between human and divine love. Christian devotional culture centered on hymnody, liturgy, and saints’ lives; figures like Hildegard von Bingen (1098–1179) and Teresa of Ávila (1515–1582) articulated intimate encounters with God. Theravada and Mahayana Buddhism incorporated devotional elements through chanting (paritta, Pali Canon texts; nembutsu, Amida Buddha’s name) and offerings, though these often serve as preliminary practices before insight meditation.

How It’s Practiced

Devotional practice typically involves repetition—of names, mantras, melodies, or gestures. In Hindu kirtan, a lead singer chants Sanskrit or Hindi lines (Hare Krishna, Hare Rama; Om Namah Shivaya) while participants respond, often accompanied by harmonium, tabla, and kartals (hand cymbals). Sessions last 20 minutes to several hours, building intensity through call-and-response structure. Sufi dhikr circles repeat Allah or La ilaha illallah (There is no god but God) rhythmically, sometimes with swaying or whirling (as in Mevlevi tradition). Christian devotional singing ranges from Gregorian chant to gospel, often corporate rather than ecstatic.

Bhajan (devotional song) differs from kirtan in being performed rather than participatory; the audience listens to a soloist or ensemble. Puja (ritual offering) involves presenting flowers, incense, food, or water to a deity’s image while reciting prayers. Prostrations—full-body bows repeated 108 or 100,000 times—are common in Tibetan Buddhism and Hindu temple culture. The emotional tenor varies: some practitioners cultivate madhurya (sweet intimacy), others dasya (servitude), still others sakhya (friendship) with the divine.

Devotional Today

Contemporary Western seekers encounter devotional practice through yoga studios offering kirtan nights, bhakti yoga teacher trainings (e.g., Bhakti Fest, founded 2009), and recordings by artists like Krishna Das (Jeffrey Kagel, who studied with Neem Karoli Baba in the 1970s), Jai Uttal, Snatam Kaur (Sikh gurbani tradition), and Deva Premal. Sufi gatherings occur through lineages like the Nur Ashki Jerrahi Order or the Chishti Ruhaniat International. Christian contemplative communities (e.g., Taizé in France) emphasize meditative chant.

Devotional practice has migrated from temple and ashram into secular wellness spaces, concert venues, and online platforms. This raises questions about cultural appropriation, commodification, and theological dilution—Sanskrit mantras sung by non-Hindus without understanding their sectarian context, or Sufi poetry marketed as self-help. Traditional practitioners debate whether devotion can be “extracted” from its religious cosmology or whether sincerity alone suffices.

Common Misconceptions

Devotional practice is not inherently theistic. Some Buddhist and non-dual Hindu schools treat the deity as a provisional form, a skillful means (upaya) for focusing the mind rather than a metaphysically independent entity. Devotion is not necessarily emotional abandonment; classical texts distinguish between sadhana bhakti (cultivated through discipline) and raganuga bhakti (spontaneous, ecstatic). Not all chanting is devotional—Transcendental Meditation uses mantras as concentration tools, not expressions of love.

Devotional practice is not anti-intellectual. The Bengali Vaishnavism of Chaitanya Mahaprabhu (1486–1534) produced sophisticated theology alongside ecstatic street chanting. It is not uniformly gentle; vira bhakti (heroic devotion) embraces fierce deities and the shadow aspects of divine relationship.

How to Begin

Attend a kirtan or bhajan event (search local yoga studios, Sikh gurdwaras, or ISKCON temples). Listen to Krishna Das’s Live on Earth (1997) or Snatam Kaur’s Grace (2004) to familiarize yourself with call-and-response structure. Read the Bhagavad Gita (chapters 9 and 12 focus on bhakti) or Mirabai’s poetry in translation. For Christian devotional practice, explore Taizé chants or the Iona Community’s Wild Goose Resource Group. Sufi seekers might begin with Coleman Barks’s Rumi translations or seek a local zikr gathering.

Start with a single mantra or phrase repeated daily for five minutes. Focus on the felt sense of offering the words rather than perfect pronunciation. Devotional practice is cumulative; sincerity matters more than technique.

Artists & teachers in this practice

S. P. BalasubrahmanyamS. P. BalasubrahmanyamMusicianJubin NautiyalJubin NautiyalMusicianShankar MahadevanShankar MahadevanMusicianK. S. ChithraK. S. ChithraMusicianJagjit SinghJagjit SinghMusicianManoj MuntashirManoj MuntashirMusicianSaindhaviSaindhaviMusicianGhibranGhibranMusicianT. M. SoundararajanT. M. SoundararajanMusicianSnatam KaurSnatam KaurKirtan ArtistAyla NereoAyla NereoMusicianPandit Bhimsen JoshiPandit Bhimsen JoshiMusician

Related terms

kirtanbhakti yogamantrapujasacred musicsufi
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