The Laws of Manu
by Unknown
📚 Related Sacred Texts
The Upanishads
by Swami Paramananda
Swami Paramananda’s Upanishads invite you into the quiet forest schools where sages speak in images of fire, breath, and the sun to reveal a single truth the Self is one with the Infinite. This graceful translation with lucid commentary opens the Vedic scriptures for modern readers, balancing scholarly care with a devotional heart. Dialogues and parables lead from ritual to inward vision, from name and form to the still center named Om. You will meet the teaching neti neti that peels away illusion and the promise that fearless freedom arises from self knowledge. A gentle doorway to Vedanta’s deepest light.
Rig Veda (Selections)
by Various
The Rig Veda selections gather the earliest Sanskrit hymns where speech burns like fire and breath moves like wind. You meet Agni the sacrificial flame, Vayu the swift air, Indra the thunder bearer, Soma the ecstatic draught, the Dawn as a young goddess, and the vast guardians of order called Rita. Praise, petition, and wonder weave together as poets sing of cattle and rivers, stars and creation itself. The chants are mantras and mirrors, practical and visionary at once, carrying offerings from hearth to cosmos. Read to hear an ancient world still alive in bright syllables and steady reverence.
Bhagavad Gita
by Sri Swami Sivananda
On a chariot paused between two armies, the Gita unfolds as Krishna counsels the bewildered archer Arjuna. In Sivananda’s lucid rendering and commentary, this ancient dialogue becomes a manual for modern life, uniting the paths of action, devotion, meditation, and wisdom. Duty without attachment, love offered to the Highest, steady mind in the midst of turmoil, and insight into the immortal Self are woven into clear practice. The text moves from intimate guidance to the awe of the cosmic vision, then back to the heart’s quiet surrender. If you seek a guide that is practical yet luminous, this edition invites you to walk with courage and clarity.
Vedanta Sutras (Brahma Sutras)
by Badarayana
The Brahma Sutras of Badarayana are Vedantas compact compass, a string of aphorisms that gather the many voices of the Upanishads into a single thread. Through staged debate called purvapaksha and siddhanta, the text tests how we know, setting perception, inference, and scripture in conversation. It asks what Brahman is, who the Self is, how this world appears, and what frees us from sorrow. The style is seed like rather than narrative, meant to bloom through commentary, from Shankara to later masters. Enter expecting sparks struck from flint, terse lines that open into vast quiet, where river mind leans toward ocean being.
Gospel of Truth
by by Mark M. Mattison
The Gospel of Truth reads like a luminous homily from the Gnostic tradition, not a biography of Jesus but a meditation on the Savior who reveals the unknown Father and dissolves ignorance like mist in morning light. In rich metaphors of fullness and forgetfulness it portrays Error as a fog that blinds and the Word as a voice that calls each soul by its true name. Knowledge becomes healing and joy, a homecoming to the source. Mark M. Mattison’s lucid translation lets newcomers taste its serene urgency and poetic fire, inviting seekers to listen for the quiet revelation already within.