IndianSanskriti

How to find God in Hinduism

Finding God to attain authentic spiritual happiness is the essence of all Hindu teachings.

In a world where there is unlimited variation and variety, Hinduism teaches there are only three paths or means to attain God. With so many developments that are taking place in material science, you might wonder how spiritual science could produce only three paths for finding God. Still, no matter what the human mind creates through any kind of science, science can’t be contrary to our fundamental nature.

For example, our eyes perform the action of seeing. No matter how technology develops, we will never be able to create a way to see through our ears. Similarly, because of the fundamental divine nature of God, the scriptures of Hinduism explain there are only three paths:

  • Karma or action
  • Jnana or knowledge
  • Bhakti or devotion

There is no fourth path; whatever other style of devotion, meditation or practice exists, it is included within these three.

The Science of the the Three Paths

The science behind this is that God (or brahm) has three powers, corresponding to three natures, which directly relate to these three paths.

He is sat brahm (eternal existence), chit brahm (unlimited knowledge), and ananda brahm (unlimited bliss).

The nature of sat is karma or action, the nature of chit is jnana or knowledge, the nature of ananda is prem or divine love. Here is a simpler way to see this:

  1. Sat brahm –> nature of karma or action
  2. Chit brahm –> nature of jnana or knoweldge
  3. Anand brahm –> nature prem or divine love

The soul is your original spiritual self. As an eternal but infinitesimal fraction of God the soul also has these three kinds of natures: karma (action), jnana (knowledge), ananda (bliss).

Thus, the three paths of how to find God or Divine attainment correspond to these three natures — the path of karma (karma yoga), the path of jnana(jnana yoga), and the path of bhakti (bhakti yoga). God does not possess a fourth nature — all of His powers, forms, names, abodes, aspects, qualities and so on are within these three.

These paths were originally revealed in the Vedas. To know we could learn how to find God so easily is an extremely elegant and simple solution. But what happened to make these three into three thousand or even the thirty thousand we may observe nowadays?

Astonishingly, this same question was asked in the Bhagwatam by Uddhava to Krishna over 5,000 years ago.

“My Lord, so many paths have been told for the spiritual upliftment of the souls. Which ones are true and which are not? Why have so many of them come into existence? How can an ordinary person decide what to do? It’s like asking a blind person to describe something he could only do if he had sight. It’s impossible!”

Krishna’s response was that although these paths were revealed in the Vedas in their original form, the complication and confusion was due to interpretation. Those who read these teachings were under the influence of the three qualities or gunas of maya.

Because of this, those who were predominantly governed by the quality of satva, produced a satvik interpretation of the Vedas. Those dominated by the quality of rajas, gave a rajasi interpretation. Those dominated by tamas, gave a tamasi interpretation.

In this way over time, many paths were created for how to find God. On top of this, other traditional ideologies came into existence whose inner devotional essence was long since lost or forgotten. This was due to misinterpretation — not seeing and therefore not accepting the truth for what it was.

The Current Age

Fortunately, the knowledge for how to find God remains the same in every age, because not only our own spiritual nature, but also God’s nature is unchanging.

From time to time, true Saints also appear in this world to re-invigorate and re-establish the knowledge of these paths in their original form. By following their guidelines, we can follow the path to God in its original form and successfully fulfill our ultimate spiritual aim.

You may also like

Search the website

Like us on Facebook

Get daily updates via Email

Enter your email address:

Recent Posts

Jamai Shashthi 2026 — The Story of Maa Shashthi, the Cat, and the Wife Who Was Forgiven

Jamai Shashthi 2026 — The Story of Maa Shashthi, the Cat, and the Wife Who Was Forgiven

On Saturday, June 20, 2026, Bengali households across Bharata will welcome their married daughters and sons-in-law home for the legendary jamai-aador feast and perform the Shashthi Vrata. But behind the warmth lies a story most Bengalis know by heart and most non-Bengalis have never heard — the wife who stole the hilsa, blamed the cat, lost six sons to Maa Shashthi’s wrath, and was finally forgiven. The Vrat Katha, the vidhi, the mantras, and the deeper teaching.

Vat Purnima 2026 — The Wife Who Argued Yama Into Returning Her Husband’s Life

On Monday, June 29, 2026, women across Maharashtra, Gujarat, and southern Bharata will tie red thread around banyan trees and hear the story of Savitri — the wife who walked behind Yamaraja Himself when He came for her husband, and out-argued the Lord of Dharma into returning Satyavan’s life. The Mahabharata’s Pativrata Mahatmya Parva, the vrat vidhi, and why the banyan witnessed everything.

Purushottam Maas — The Month No Deity Would Claim, and the Lord Who Made It Supreme

Every month of the Hindu calendar has a lord — except the rare thirteenth, the Adhika Maas, born an orphan and shunned as the “impure month.” The Puranas tell how this rejected month went in grief to Bhagavan Vishnu, who claimed it, gave it His own name — Purushottam — and made it the most fruitful month of all. The origin story, the teaching, and what it means for Purushottam Maas 2026 (May 17 – June 14).

Padmini Ekadashi 2026 — The Ekadashi Even the Devas Descend to Keep

Padmini Ekadashi 2026 — The Ekadashi Even the Devas Descend to Keep

The rarest Ekadashi of the entire Hindu calendar is three days away. The Padma Purana preserves a conversation between Bhagavan Krishna and Yudhishthira about a single Ekadashi the great Rishis spend lifetimes waiting for — Padmini. The Vrat Katha of Queen Padmini of Mahishmati, the lotus teaching, and why May 27, 2026 is the morning Vaishnavas across Bharata are preparing for.

Varada Chaturthi 2026 — The Rare Ganesha Day of Purushottam Maas

Varada Chaturthi 2026 — The Rare Ganesha Day of Purushottam Maas

Once every 2.5–3 years — when the rare 13th month of Adhika Maas opens — a thirteenth Vinayaka Chaturthi appears. The Mudgala Purana calls it Varada Chaturthi, the “boon-giving” Chaturthi, and holds it as the most fruit-bearing Ganesha day of the entire calendar. Today, Wednesday May 20, 2026, is that day.

css.php