Skip to content
Sacred Lotus Dharma Teachings Society
Sacred Lotus Dharma
Teachings Society
  • Home
  • About Us
  • The Aram Sutra
  • Teachings
  • FAQ
  • Contact
Donate
Sacred Lotus Dharma Teachings Society
Sacred Lotus Dharma Teachings Society

Frequently Asked Questions

This path is an ancient wisdom tradition rather than an organized religion. It reaches back to humanity’s earliest seekers, long before temples, sects, or formal hierarchies, teaching universal truths and personal growth through mindful energy, ethical living, and deep meditation.

Over time, many cultures have drawn inspiration from these primordial insights. Great religions such as Hinduism and Buddhism developed their own rich practices and rituals, each offering unique expressions of the search for truth. Yet this older way remains distinct: it preserves the original simplicity of direct connection to the life force, which we call Inmai, free of later additions or elaborate ceremonies.

Its essence is equality and inner realization, inviting every person to experience the timeless teachings directly, without boundaries.

The Ancient Way of Aram
Long before temples or scriptures, the first peoples of India lived by a quiet wisdom about harmony, balance, and the living energy within all beings. This path, known as Aram, is older than any organized religion. Over time, parts of it were absorbed into Hinduism.

Around 400 BCE, the Buddha also drew from this ancient wisdom, teaching compassion and mindful living. Later, Buddhism developed into organized schools with many practices.

Aram in the South
In southern India, many communities stayed close to the original spirit of Aram even as Hindu traditions spread. Temples of Murugan (Seyon) and Korravai still reflect this heritage, and millions continue to honor these protectors of courage and justice.

Living the Aram Path
Aram worship is simple. We honor Inmai, the formless cosmic energy, through meditation, ethical living, and compassionate service.

  • To follow Seyon is to protect the innocent with clarity and wisdom.
  • To follow Korravai is to live with fearless strength and justice.

The true shrine is the heart that lives by these timeless virtues, free from hierarchy or ritual, carrying forward the world’s oldest wisdom

Aram teachings describe a vast, intentional cosmos shaped by Inmai, the boundless creative energy. The universe is understood as one grand system of 100 galaxies, each woven into the cycle of human rebirth. These galaxies are divided by immense curtains of living fire, radiant barriers sustained and guided solely by Inmai’s will. Within this system, life flourishes on 550 planets, arranged in a precise pattern:
The first ten galaxies each hold one life-bearing planet (10 total). The next ten galaxies each hold two planets (20 total). This sequence continues, adding one planet per group, until the final ten galaxies each hold ten life-bearing planets (100 total).

Humans inhabit the first ten galaxies, spread across ten human worlds. Beyond them lies the outermost galaxy, the realm of Inmai, a domain of pure, luminous energy that sends forth currents of harmony and sustains all creation.

The universe began not with a mere explosion but with the Primordial Unfolding, the first pulse of Inmai’s creative force. From that silent surge, stars ignited and life was seeded on Earth and many other worlds, all under the eternal guidance of Inmai.

In Aram, good energy is the radiant force from Inmai, the cosmic source. It strengthens the soul and leads to higher rebirth. We gather good energy through compassion, kindness, generosity, empathy, and by avoiding anger, gossip, conflict, or domination. Prayer, meditation, and mindful living help it grow.

Bad energy is a dark, harmful force. It feeds on fear and can be used as black magic to cause trouble. Yet good energy is stronger and can dissolve it.

A thoughtful, calm mind attracts good energy, while cruelty, revenge, or outbursts push it away. Over time, these energies build within the soul, shaping each rebirth. Living fully by Aram allows the soul to merge with the pure light of Inmai.

Do’s

  • Practice kindness, compassion, mercy, and empathy.
  • Be discreet: forget help given, remember help received.
  • Stay curious and reflective.
  • Pray, live mindfully, and ensure none go hungry before eating.
  • Offer help quietly and humbly.

Don’ts

  • Avoid gossip, idle talk, conflict, anger, revenge, shouting, or profanity.
  • Do not exert authority—everyone is equal.
  • Reject greed, attachments, dishonesty, cruelty, oppression, and exploitation.
  • Condemn abuse, forced marriage, coercion, and environmental harm.
  • Shun extremes of indulgence or harsh denial, misuse of power, and hatred of diversity.

Core Values

  • Live with compassion, fairness, and justice.
  • Protect the weak, honor children and elders, and respect equality across all.
  • Value love and consent as sacred.
  • Treat wealth as a trust to be shared.
  • Defend yourself if needed, but with dignity, not hatred.
  • True offerings to Inmai are truth, compassion, and righteous action—not fear or empty ritual.

The Path

Through meditation, mindfulness, and selfless service, the soul aligns with Inmai. To follow Aram is to live gently, act justly, and rise above cruelty, moving both soul and society toward balance and light.

In Aram, life and afterlife flow within the moral current of Inmai. Every thought, word, and action either draws the soul toward harmony or pushes it into imbalance.

After death, three main paths unfold:

  • Ascending Path: Virtuous souls rise to realms of peace and wisdom.
  • Returning Path: Imperfect but not cruel souls are reborn to learn again.
  • Gray Realm: Souls burdened by cruelty or harm drift in heaviness until their darkness dissolves.

The ultimate destiny is Final Union (Mukti): merging the soul’s light with Inmai, not as loss but as fullness. To walk in Aram is to rise, to harm is to fall, and to love is to return to the Source.

All three traditions prize compassion, ethical living, mindfulness, and a disciplined path toward liberation through the cycles of rebirth, yet they diverge in what liberation is and how it is realized. Hinduism seeks moksha as union with Brahman through devotion, knowledge, or yoga; Buddhism aims at nirvana by ending craving and realizing not‑self through the Noble Eightfold Path; Aram pursues mukti as union with Inmai by aligning inner life and social action, living with heart, acting with justice, and walking in harmony. Placing love and moral balance at the center of spiritual fulfillment.

Sacred Lotus Dharma Teachings Society logo

A Society which focuses on Aram Sutra

8551 Selkirk Street Vancouver, BC

1-778-700-2618

Main Menu

  • Home
  • About Us
  • The Aram Sutra
  • Teachings
  • FAQ
  • Contact

© 2026 Sacred Lotus Dharma Teachings Society

  • Home
  • About Us
  • The Aram Sutra
  • Teachings
  • FAQ
  • Contact