Every pilgrimage begins with a journey. We travel to the temple, hoping for a glimpse of the Lord. But once every year, at Puri, something extraordinary happens.
The Lord Himself comes looking for His devotees.
Leaving the sanctum of the temple, Lord Jagannath, accompanied by Balabhadra and Subhadra, rides through the streets on majestic chariots. He does not wait for the world to come to Him. He goes out to embrace the world.
The timing of this divine journey is equally remarkable. The Rath Yatra takes place during the heart of the monsoon. The skies are often overcast, the roads are wet, and rain is expected rather than feared. Yet the Yatra never loses its spirit.
Long before the festival begins, thousands work tirelessly to prepare for the rains. Roads are strengthened, drainage systems are cleared, emergency services are stationed, and volunteers stand ready. Human effort does everything within its power.
Then the Lord begins His journey.
The rain that falls upon the chariots falls equally upon everyone. Kings and commoners, scholars and labourers, the wealthy and the poor, all stand together under the same sky. Nature itself makes no distinction, and neither does Jagannath.
Perhaps this is one of the deepest messages of the Yatra.
Life does not wait for perfect weather. There will always be storms, uncertainties, disappointments, and unexpected obstacles. If we postpone our journey until every cloud disappears, we may never begin. The Lord teaches us to move forward despite the rain.
The thousands of hands that pull the ropes remind us that no great journey is ever completed alone. Every hand matters. Every prayer matters. Every step matters.
And as the chariots roll through the streets, another profound truth unfolds. Many who cannot enter the temple—the elderly, the infirm, the poor, or those who have travelled from distant lands—receive His darshan. Divine grace steps beyond the temple walls.
The Lord is not confined to stone sanctums. He walks among His people.
Perhaps that is why He is called Jagannath—the Lord of the Universe.
Sometimes we believe we are searching for God. But the Rath Yatra gently reminds us that, long before we began our search, He had already begun His journey towards us.
The rain may fall. The roads may be difficult. The crowds may be immense.
Yet the chariot moves on.
So does faith.
So does grace.
And so does the Lord, who never tires of coming in search of His devotees.
Why does the Lord come looking for His devotees?
Perhaps because He sees in us what we do not yet see in ourselves.
We see our limitations; He sees our possibilities.
We see our failures; He sees the strength waiting to awaken.
We see the mistakes of yesterday; He sees the person we can become tomorrow.
We often think we must become worthy before approaching God. But the Rath Yatra tells a different story. The Lord comes first. He meets us where we are, not where we think we ought to be.
His glance is not merely one of compassion—it is one of recognition. He recognizes the divine spark within every soul, even when it lies hidden beneath fear, doubt, ignorance, or sorrow.
Perhaps that is the greatest miracle of the Rath Yatra. The Lord does not simply come to see His devotees.
He comes because He already sees the greatness within them.
From the perspective of the Bhagavad Gita and the broader Hindu tradition, the Lord sees not only what we are, but also what we are capable of becoming. He sees the hidden strengths, the buried goodness, the unspoken pain, and the divine potential within us—even when we ourselves are unaware of them.
Krishna says in the Bhagavad Gita that He dwells in the heart of every being as the Inner Witness (Antaryāmin). He knows our thoughts before they become words, our intentions before they become actions, and our possibilities before they become realities.





