Right Thinking
Cultivating discernment between transient pleasure and lasting truth — the foundation of every conscious life.
Born in the sacred city of Ayodhya to King Megha and Queen Mangalavati of the Ikshvaku dynasty — a sovereign turned ascetic whose teachings of right thinking, compassion and inner clarity continue to illuminate the path of seekers across the ages.
Of the present Avasarpini era
Cradle of dharmic civilisation
Solar lineage of righteous kings
Symbol of clarity and serenity
Sumatinatha Bhagwan stands among the most revered Tirthankaras of Jainism — the fifth ford-maker of this descending half-cycle, whose very name means “The Lord of Right Wisdom.”
His life embodies the highest ideal of Jain dharma: a sovereign who renounced the throne to seek the ultimate truth, who tempered austerity with compassion, and who left behind a body of teaching that remains startlingly relevant for our restless modern age.
Through meditation, ahimsa, and an unwavering devotion to truth, he attained Keval Gyan — omniscient knowledge — and ultimately Moksha, becoming an eternal beacon for souls in pursuit of liberation.
Discover his Life →Where the mind awakens to wisdom, the soul ceases to wander. There — in stillness — dwells the eternal. — Essence of the Sumatinatha tradition
Sumatinatha Bhagwan’s teachings distil the essence of Jain dharma — a quiet yet uncompromising philosophy that places conscience above conquest and clarity above commotion.
Cultivating discernment between transient pleasure and lasting truth — the foundation of every conscious life.
Non-violence in thought, word and deed — extending reverence to every form of living consciousness.
Integrity that flows from inner alignment — speech rooted in clarity, never coercion or deception.
Wisdom expressed as kindness — the natural radiance of a soul that recognises itself in another.
Mastery of the senses and the mind — the silent, sovereign power that liberates the soul from circumstance.
Engagement without grasping — a stance that leaves the world untouched and the heart unburdened.
The Ikshvaku dynasty — that legendary solar lineage from which arose kings, sages and Tirthankaras alike — was the cradle of Sumatinatha Bhagwan’s royal birth. King Megha and Queen Mangalavati raised an heir of extraordinary gentleness, whose presence in the palace, it is said, brought an uncommon spirit of fairness and clear judgement.
Ayodhya was the seat of his dharma. From its golden walls, he ruled as a wise sovereign before turning inward — a renunciation that transformed an empire into an eternal exemplar.
Heritage of Ayodhya →