The Cool Light of Wisdom

Teachings
& Philosophy

The luminous gospel of Shitalanatha Bhagwan rests upon a deceptively simple architecture: live gently, see clearly, hold lightly, return often to the soul. Below are the seven pillars of his eternal counsel.

Where the mind is cool, the soul is free. Where the soul is free, the universe rejoices.
— A Teaching of Shitalanatha Bhagwan
Seven Pillars

The Architecture of Right Living

Each pillar is a doorway. Each doorway leads, in its own quiet way, to the same chamber of inner stillness from which liberation arises.

I

Ahimsā

Non-violence as the supreme dharma — in thought, in speech, in action; toward all beings, including the one within.

II

Satya · The Vibration of Truth

To speak only what is true, kind and beneficial. Truth is the soul’s own voice; falseness is karma in the making. Shitalanatha taught that even an unkind truth must yield to a deeper truth — that of compassion.

III

Saṃyama · Self-Discipline

Mastery over the senses is not their suppression, but their orchestration. The disciplined seeker is a temple of contained light.

IV

Śīlatā · Inner Calmness

The signature teaching: a coolness within, untroubled by joy or sorrow. From this temperature alone do clarity and right action arise.

V

Vairāgya · Detachment

To enjoy without grasping, to release without bitterness, to participate fully while remaining unentangled. Detachment is the great art of living.

VI

Karuṇā

Compassion that flows ceaselessly, unconditionally, equally — the dharma of the awakened heart.

VII · Mokṣamārga

Liberation Through Right Conduct

The triple jewel of Jainism — Samyak Darśana (right faith), Samyak Jñāna (right knowledge) and Samyak Cāritra (right conduct) — together form the path Shitalanatha walked and offered to all souls. Liberation is not a place to reach; it is the soul’s natural state, uncovered when karma is laid down.

The Threefold Path

Ratna-traya · Three Jewels

Right Faith, Right Knowledge and Right Conduct — together they form a single luminous path. Apart, none alone suffices.

Samyak Darśana

Right Faith

The soul’s clear-eyed reverence for truth, free of dogma and heat. Faith here is a kind of seeing.

Samyak Jñāna

Right Knowledge

Knowledge purified of bias, illusion and pride — knowledge as the soul’s own crystalline awareness.

Samyak Cāritra

Right Conduct

Living the truth one has seen and known — the daily, gentle architecture of śramaṇa ethics.

For the Modern Seeker

Living the Teaching Today

The wisdom of Shitalanatha Bhagwan is not confined to scriptures or temple walls. It is a living grammar of conduct, equally relevant in the office, the kitchen, the long commute and the late evening. To live by it is to bring a discreet revolution into one’s own life.

  • SpeechPause before speaking. Ask: is it true, kind, necessary?
  • ConsumptionChoose what reduces harm — in food, in habits, in influence.
  • TimeSit in silence each day. Even five minutes is a sacred return.
  • WealthHold lightly. Let generosity be your second instinct.
  • RelationshipsListen more deeply. React less. Bless quietly.
Devotee in serene meditation before Shitalanatha Bhagwan
In Scripture & Verse

How the Tradition Remembers Him

Kalpa Sūtra

Lives of Tirthankaras

Honoured among the twenty-four with detailed accounts of his five auspicious kalyāṇaka events.

Stotras

Hymns of Devotion

Numerous medieval and contemporary hymns invoke him as the Cool One, dispeller of inner heat.

Iconography

Sacred Forms

Depicted in deep meditation, with the auspicious emblem of Svastika or Srivatsa at his chest.

The Soul Already Knows the Way.

Shitalanatha’s teaching is not a doctrine to be added to ourselves — it is a remembering of who we have always been.

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