Ask Osho!

What is the significance of moksha and liberation?

Synthesized from Source definition

"Moksha is not the end of the journey, but the beginning of a direct encounter with the Divine, where all supports fall away and you become one with the ocean of liberation."

According to Osho, moksha is the sanctum beyond the doorway of the Master: the culmination of the journey where all supports—even the Master—are released, and one meets the Divine directly. The joy near the Master is only a drop; liberation is the ocean. Keep moving, unstuck by world or religion, until nothing remains ahead and the reflection yields to the source.
Moksha means not stopping at the first sweet taste or even the teacher, but going all the way to meet the real Divine for yourself.
Why this matters practically
- Prevents getting stuck in teachers, methods, or early bliss.
- Focuses practice on direct realization, not secondhand reflections.
- Teaches when to accept guidance and when to let go for true freedom.
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