The service of love and devotion offered to Krishna, God, the Supreme Person is the manifestation of love for God. Blessed are those who act for God, because their actions have no effect or consequence, good or bad. In truth, those who act in the conscience of God, automatically escape the imprisonment of karma. If they intend for the Lord alone, all their acts, they neither suffer nor suffer their effects. Although they continue to act, they shine brightly among men, because they do it for God. Their actions are pure because they do not result in any material consequences.
Those who are immersed in pure spirituality have no fear, because they know they are servants of the Supreme Lord, Krishna, and never hesitate to act in the consciousness of God or Krishna consciousness. All their acts, free from all material desires, are aimed only at the pleasure of God, and their only consequence is absolute happiness. By acting in full awareness of their subordination to Krishna, God, the Supreme Person, they are immune to all material consequences of their actions. This is the perfection of love for God.
Logos 334
The Lord said: “Unshakable faith and determination must accompany the practice of fellowship with the Absolute. The spiritualist must unreservedly get rid of all the material desires generated by the false ego and thus, by the mind, master all of the senses. Driven by a firm conviction, he must progressively rise, by intelligence, to perfect concentration, and thus fix his mind on the Supreme Being, without thinking of anything else. Wherever it is carried away by its febrile and fickle nature, it is certainly necessary to bring the mind back under the control of the spiritual self. The spiritualist whose mind is absorbed in Me undoubtedly knows ultimate happiness. Having understood that he participates in the Absolute, he is already released; serene is his mind, appeased his passions. He is delivered from all sin. Established in spiritual realization, purified of all material defilement, the spiritualist benefits from the supreme happiness that comes from constant union with the Absolute”.
His intelligence well convinced, man must, by degree, reach the stage where all sensory action ceases. Once his mind is dominated by the certainty of the goal to be achieved, meditation and the cessation of all action of the senses, the spiritualist must settle in spiritual bliss, where all danger of falling back to the material level disappears. In other words, although one is forced, as long as the body exists, to remain in contact with matter, one should in no case surrender one's thoughts to the pleasures of the senses. The only satisfaction to be sought is that of the Supreme Lord; this search generates a perfect state, which is easily achieved by the simple and