(2) The teachers increase daily and ask others to follow them. The teachings
multiply and the books about them too. They are not your concern. Let them do
their very much needed work. But you are to enter a new and different rhythm and
tell such as will listen that they need not be forlorn, lost, or without hope
because they find none to appeal to their heart or mind. They are asked only to
follow the God within themselves, for "The Kingdom of Heaven is within
you." P.B. - give this message while giving all proper respect and honour to the
teachers of today and yesterday. Those who feel alone in this matter or who can
only walk outside the groups on an independent path should be reminded that
there is a God within them who can guide and help them if they turn to
him.
WHAT THE QUEST IS
General description
1
The Quest not only begins in the heart but also ends
there too.
2
It is an endeavour to lift to a higher plane, and
expand to a larger measure, the whole of his identity. It brings in the most
important part of himself - being, essence, Consciousness.
3
"Man Know Thyself!" There is a whole philosophy
distilled into this single and simple statement.
4
Between the ordinary man who takes himself as he is,
and the philosopher who does exactly the same, there stands the Quester. In the
first case, outlook is narrow, being limited by attending to the inescapable
necessities and demands of day-to-day living. In the other case, peace of mind
has been established, the thirst for knowledge fulfilled, the discipline of self
realized. In between these two, the Quester is not satisfied with himself, has a
strong wish to become a better and more enlightened man. He tries to exercise
his will in the struggle for realization of his ideal.
5
It lifts human consciousness vertically and enlarges
human experience spiritually.
6
If the Infinite Being is trying to express its own
nature within the limitations of this earth - and therefore trying to express
itself through us, too - it is our highest duty to search for and cultivate our
diviner attributes. Only in this way do we really fulfil ourselves. This search
and this cultivation constitute the Quest.
7
It offers a conception of life which originates on a
higher level.
8
The Quest is both a search for truth and a dedication
to the Overself.
9
By "Quest" I mean the deliberate and conscious
dedication to the search for spiritual truth, freedom, or awareness.
10
The inner meaning of life does not readily reveal
itself; it must be searched for. Such a search is the Quest.
11
When a man begins to seek out his real nature, to
find the truth of his real being, he begins to follow the Quest.
12
It is a call to those who want inner nourishment
from real sources, not from fanciful or speculative ones. It calls them away
from things, appearances, shows, and externals to their inward being, toward
reality.
13
After such considerations, we are led to wonder
what constitutes the reality behind the universe. This is a quest which takes us
into religion, mysticism, and philosophy and the great mysteries of life, a
quest which eventually confirms those celebrated words of Francis Bacon: "A
little thinking may incline the mind toward atheism, but greatness of study
bringeth the mind back again to God."
14
The quest we teach is no less than a quest for
knowledge in completeness and a search for awareness of this Universal Self, a
vast undertaking to which all men are committed whether they are aware of it or
not.
15
The great central questions of life for the
thinking man are: What am I? What is my true relation to, and how shall I deal
with, my surroundings? What is God, and can I form any connection with God?
16
Every puzzle which fascinates innumerable persons
and induces them to attempt its solution - be it mathematical and profound or
ordinary and simple - is an echo on a lower level of the Supreme Enigma that is
forever accompanying man and demanding an answer: What is he, whence and
whither? The quester puts the problem into his conscious mind and keeps it
there.
17
It is a quest to make a life of better quality,
both inside and outside the self, in the thoughts moving in the brain, in the
body holding that brain, and in the environment where that body moves.
18
It is a clarion call to man to seek his true self,
a voice that asks him, "Have you found your soul?"
19
The quest is simply the attempt of a few pioneer
men to become aware of their spiritual selves as all men are already aware of
their physical selves.
20
It is a quest to become conscious of Consciousness,
to explore the "I" and penetrate the mystery of its knowing power.
21
The secret path is an attempt to establish a
perfect and conscious relation between the human mind and that divinity which is
its source.
22
When a man passes from the self-seeking motives of
the multitude to the Overself-seeking aspirations of the Quest, he passes to
conscious co-operation with the Divine World-Idea.
23
It is, from another standpoint, a quest for his own
centre.
24
It is the opening up of one's inner being.
25
The very idea of a quest involves a passage, a
definite movement from one place to another. Here, of course, the passage is
really from one state to another. It is a holy journey, so he who is engaged on
it is truly a pilgrim. And as on many journeys, difficulties, fatigues,
obstacles, delays, and allurements may be encountered on the way, yes! And here
there will certainly be dangers, pitfalls, oppositions, and enmities too. His
intuition and reason, his books and friends, his experience and earnestness will
constitute themselves as his guide upon it. There is another special feature to
be noted about it. It is a homeward journey. The Father is waiting for his
child. The Father will receive, feed, and bless him.
26
It is a movement from the outward to the inward but
it is effected only with much labour, through much despondency, and after much
time.
27
The aspirant enters on the Quest of the heavenly
kingdom from the first moment that he becomes willing to try to give up his ego.
It does not matter that it will engage his whole lifetime, that success may only
be found in some future incarnation. From that first moment he becomes a
disciple of the Overself, and a candidate for the kingdom of heaven.
28
It is a brave struggle for freedom, a noble refusal
to be the ego's puppet or the animal-self's victim, a fine resolve to win
strength from weakness.
29
How shall he deliver himself from his weaknesses?
How can he get free from his pseudo-self and let his true being reveal itself?
How cease to negate and begin to affirm his own best values? The quest, with its
practical disciplines and mystical exercises, is part of the answer.
30
It is a way of life which calls him to deny his
closest pleasures and oldest habits. So it is and must be a hard way. But a time
comes when he values it out of his own clearer perception, and follows it out of
his own glad choice.
31
Many aspirants wrongly believe the quest to be a
movement from one psychic experience to another or from one mystical ecstasy to
another. But in fact it is a movement in character from animality to
purity, from egoism to impersonality.
32
The Quest teaches a man the art of dying to the
animalistic and egoistic elements in himself. But it does not stop with these
negative results. It trains him also in the art of re-creating himself by the
light of the ideal.
33
Coming to this Quest in the philosophic sense
simply means coming to human maturity.
34
Who does not prefer joy to grief? The instinct is
universal. There is a metaphysical basis for it. Individual beings derive their
existence from a universal Being, whose nature is continuously blissful. This is
dimly, briefly echoed in the satisfactions of earthly desires. The quest of
spiritual fulfilment is really the search for a fuller and more lasting share in
the Divine Peace, the true heaven which awaits us in the end, whether in the
freedom of so-called death or in the confines of physical flesh.
35
The worldling seeks to enjoy himself. Do not think
that the truly spiritual man does not seek to enjoy himself too. The difference
is that he does it in a better way, a wiser way.
36
Here is a goal for men and women which can bring
them the fulfilment of their best purposes, the happiness of being set free from
their inward bondages, and the calmness of knowing their own soul.
37
The Quest is a veritable re-education of the self,
leading in its turn to a noble transcendence of the self.
38
What is the quest but a process of moral
re-education and mental self-conquest, a probing for and overcoming of those
faults which keep the Light out of the mind?
39
What is the hidden metaphysical meaning of the
Quest? It is that the infinite self in man finds that it cannot achieve adequate
self-expression in the finite and imperfect life of the world. The ego may try
as it will, do what it may, but the bliss, wisdom, serenity, and perfection that
are the natural attributes of the Overself, in the end elude its every move.
There is ultimately no alternative except to let go of searching and grasping
the outer world, and retreat within. There, deep inside its own being the
journey to enduring satisfaction will thenceforth be. This is the Quest leading
to discovery of Overself.
40
We ought perhaps to have particularized the
significance of this word, for many men and women are engaged on the food-quest,
the pleasure-quest, and so on; only a few, however, are on the Philosophical
Quest.
41
Some come to the truth in a roundabout way. The
Quest is direct.
42
The quest is governed by its own inherent laws,
some easily ascertainable but others darkly obscure.
43
It is a search for meaning in the meaningless flow
of events. It is response to the impulsion to look beyond the ever-passing show
of earthly life for some sign, value, or state of mind that shall confer hope,
supply justification, gain insight.
44
This quest of the soul is ageless. Never has the
human race been without it, never could it be without it.
45
It is not a new thing in human experience, but
rather one of the oldest. Its long history in many lands makes impressive
reading.
46
It is a method, a teaching, and an ideal combined
for those who seek a genuine inner life of the spirit.
47
The quest means disciplined emotions and
disciplined living, sustained aspiration and nurtured intuition.
48
It is not an ideal so far off that those who have
realized it have no human links left with us. On the contrary, because it is
truly philosophic, it skilfully blends life in the kingdoms of this world with
life in the kingdom of heaven.
49
The quest is an adventure as well as a journey: a
work to be done and a study to be made, a blessing which gives hope and a burden
of discipline which cannot be shirked.
50
There is another kind of exploration than that
which traverses deserts, penetrates jungles, climbs mountains, and crosses
continents. It seeks out the mysterious hinterlands of the human mind, scales
the highest reaches of human consciousness, and then returns to report routes
and discoveries, describe the goals to others so that they also may find their
way thereto if they wish.
51
The spiritual quest is not a romantic or dramatic
adventure, but a stern self-discipline. Nevertheless there is an element of
mystery in it which at times can be quite thrilling.
52
The quest is spiritual mountaineering.
53
It is not a path of anaemic joylessness for lean
cadaverous votaries, as some think. It is a path of radiant happiness for keen
positive individuals.
54
Its ideals offer an invitation to nobility and
refinement. "Become better than you are!" is its preachment. "Live more
beautifully than you do!" is its commandment.
55
It is an uncontentious teaching, knowing that it
is, in practice, only palatable to those who come readily equipped for it.
56
It is not a doctrine of life only for ageing
hermits, but quite as much for keen young men who wish to do something in the
world. It is a practical goal which could also be a practicable one for millions
who now think it beyond their reach, if only they would accept and act on the
psychological truth that "thinking makes it so." It is a strengthening
reassurance to minds awakening from the slavish dreams of lust that they need
not stay slaves forever. It is not an asceticism that is happy only in making
itself miserable, but a comprehension that weighs values and abides by the
result.
57
The quest is a continual effort of self-release
from inward oppressions and self-deliverance from emotional obstructions.
58
This quest is really a system of therapeutic
training devised to cure evil feelings, ignorant attitudes, and wrong thinking.
59
The high teachers of the human race have given us
goals and taught us ways to approach them.
60
It is not a subject for academic students of
technical metaphysics or for professional followers of institutional religion -
although they are welcome to all that it has to give them, to the richer form
and the inspired understanding of their own doctrine. No - it is primarily for
the ordinary person who is willing to heed his intuitive feeling or who is
willing to use his independent thinking power.
61
It escapes pushing into recognizable and separate
divisions, definitions, or groups.
62
Nature and Need of Mysticism
Let it be stated clearly that mysticism is an a-rational type of experience, and in some degree common to all men.
It is an intuitive, self-evident, self-recognized knowledge which comes fitfully to man. It should not be confounded with the instinctive and immediate knowledge possessed by animals and used by them in their adaptations to environment.
The average man seldom pays enough attention to his slight mystical experiences to profit or learn from them. Yet his need for them is evidenced by his incessant seeking for the thrills, sensations, uplifts, and so on, which he organizes for himself in so many ways - the religious way being only one of them. In fact, the failure of religion - in the West, at any rate - to teach true mysticism, and its overlaying of the deeply mystic nature of its teachings with a pseudo-rationalism and an unsound historicity may be the root cause for driving people to seek for things greater than they feel their individual selves to be in the many sensation-giving activities in the world today.
Mysticism is not a by-product of imagination or uncontrolled emotion; it is a range of knowledge and experience natural to man but not yet encompassed by his rational mind. The function of philosophy is to bring these experiences under control and to offer ways of arriving at interpretations and explanations.
Mysticism not so controlled and interpreted is full of pitfalls, one of which is the acceptance of confusion, sentimentality, cloudiness, illusion, and aimlessness as integral qualities of the mystical life - states of mind which go far to justify opponents of mysticism in their estimate of it as foolish and superstitious.
The mystic should recognize his own limitations. He should not refuse the proffered hand of philosophy which will help his understanding and train his intuition. He should recognize that it is essential to know how to interpret the material which reaches him from his higher self, and how to receive it in all its purity.
The belief that the neglect of actual life is the beginning of spiritual life, and that the failure to use clear thought is the beginning of guidance from God, belongs to mysticism in its most rudimentary stages - and has no truth in it.
The world will come to believe in mysticism because there is no alternative, and it will do so in spite of mysticism's historical weaknesses and intellectual defects. But how much better it would be for everyone if those weaknesses and defects were self-eliminated.
He has so learned the art of living that the experiences of everyday life yield up their meaning to him, and the reflections of daily meditation endow him with wisdom.
If it be asked, "What is the nature of mystical experience?" the answer given very tersely is, "It is experience which gives to the individual a slant on the universal, like the heart's delight in the brightness of a May morning in England, or the joy of a mother in her newborn child, in the sweetness of deep friendship, in the lilt of great poetry. It is the language of the arts, which if approached only by intellectual ways yields only half its content. Whoever comes eventually to mystical experience of the reality of his own Higher Self will recognize the infinite number of ways in which nature throughout life is beckoning him. The higher mystical experience is not a sport of nature, a freak phenomenon. It is the continuation of a sequence the beginning and end of which are as vast as the beginning and end of the great cycle of life in all the worlds. No man can measure it."
The Yoga Vasistha states, "There are two kinds of paths leading to liberation. Now hearken to them. If one should, without the least fail, follow the path laid down by a Teacher, delusion will wear away from him little by little and emancipation will result, either in the very birth of his initiation by his Guru or in some succeeding birth. The other path is where the mind, being slightly fortified with a stainless spontaneous knowledge, ceaselessly meditates upon it, and there alights true gnana in it, like fruit falling from above unexpectedly."
There are primary and secondary levels of mind and consequently primary and secondary products. The former are insights, the latter are intuitions.
Sages speak from the highest level; mystics contemplate, while genius speaks, writes, paints, and composes from the secondary levels.
Primary consciousness is exalted but calm; secondary consciousness is exalted but excited. The first does not change its settled mood, but the second falls into rapture, ecstasy, and absent-minded reverie.
63
Is the inner life irreconcilable with the world's
life? Religio-mystical disciplines and practices are usually based on such a
fundamental irreconcilability. Traditional teaching usually asserts it too. Yet
if that be true, "Then," as Ramana Maharshi once sceptically said to me, "there
is no hope for humanity."(P)
64
It is a teaching which prepares him to find a deep
inner life without necessarily deserting the active outer one.
65
It is a teaching which can guide us through this
world without itself becoming worldly.
66
The lower mysticism may cause a man to lose all
interest in his external life, whereas the higher mysticism imparts a new
because diviner interest. If the first may enervate him, the second will enliven
him.
67
The term "spiritual" is very loosely used nowadays.
It includes in its domain, but is not limited to, certain states of mystical
consciousness, certain religious mental experiences, high moral attitudes, and
non-worldly emotional reactions. Thus, one man may be called "highly spiritual"
although he may not have had any mystical experience, when what is meant is that
he is "highly moral."
68
Nobody, not even its bitter critics, may question
the purity and nobility of its ethics, however much they may question the
accuracy of its metaphysics.
69
This is not a quest which tries to tempt
prospective candidates with the offer of prosperity or to bribe them with the
satisfaction of their desires.
70
This quest is not in the private jurisdiction of
any particular group, sect, school, or religious following. That is a narrow
concept which must be firmly repudiated. It is the quest of life itself, the
need of self to comprehend its own being.
71
The Quest is not to be looked upon as something
added to his life. Rather it is to be his life itself.
72
This tormenting feeling of the lack of a spiritual
state in his own experience, will drive him to continual search for it. But his
whole life must constitute the search and his whole being must engage in it.
73
If you take the widest possible view, all the
different sections of his action and thought are inseparable from the amount of
spirituality there is in a man.
74
The truth must pass from his lips to his life. And
this passage will only become possible when life itself without the quest will
be meaningless.
75
It is only the beginner who needs to think of the
quest as separate from the common life, something special, aloof, apart. The
more proficient knows that it must become the very channel for that life.
76
The Quest is not anything apart from Life itself.
We cannot dispense with common sense and balance in relation to it. No single
element in life can be taken too solemnly, as if it constituted the whole of
life itself, without upsetting balance.
77
The quest is the most important adventure in human
experience.
78
He who stands on the threshold of this Path is
about to commence the last and greatest journey of all, one which he will
continue to the end of his days. Once begun, there is no turning back or
deserting it, except temporarily. And since it is the most important and most
glorious activity ever undertaken, its rewards are commensurate.
79
He cannot stake too much on the outcome of such
exalted strivings. Even all that the world can offer falls far below what the
quest can offer. If outer sacrifices and inner renunciations are called for, the
compensation will be more than just. In the end he gains immensely more than he
loses. So why not let go freely if the quest bids him do so?
80
The meaning and end of all such work is to arouse
men to see certain truths: that the intuitive element is tremendously more
important than the intellectual yet just as cultivable if pursued through
meditation, that the mystical experience is the most valuable of all experience,
and that the quest of the Overself is the most worthwhile endeavour open to
human exertions.
81
If there is anything worth studying by a human
being, after the necessary preliminary studies of how to exist and survive in
this world healthily and wisely, it is the study of man's own consciousness -
not a cataloguing of the numerous thoughts that play within it, but a deep
investigation of its nature in itself, its own unadulterated pure self.
82
This is the higher cause that is really worth
working for, the spiritual purpose that makes life worth living.
83
In first, the discovery of the Overself, and
second, the surrender to it, man fulfils the highest purpose of his life on this
earth.
84
Each man has only a limited fund of life-force,
time, and ability. He may squander it on worldly pleasures or spend it on
worldly ambitions. But if, without neglecting the duties of his particular
situation, he realizes that these are changing and transient satisfactions and
turns instead to the quest of the Overself, he begins to justify his
incarnation.
85
The businessman who does not know that the true
business for which he was put on earth is to find the Overself, may make a
fortune but will also squander away a lifetime. His work and mind have been left
separate from his Overself's when they might have been kept in satisfying
harmony with them.
86
Every man has another and veiled identity. Until he
finds out this mystical self of his, he has failed to fulfil the higher mission
of his existence.
87
If you want to know the purpose of life, read Acts
17:2: "God made man to the end that he should seek the Lord."
88
It comes to this: Are we to worship man or God?
89
Life offers man a variety of meanings, but in the
end one meaning comes to the top of all the others and that is the meaning which
shall reveal the truth about his relation to God.
90
When he sees life whole and therefore sees it
right, he will understand why Jesus said, "Seek ye first the kingdom of heaven
and all these things shall be added unto you," and why, if he is to insist upon
any single renovation in human life, it must be its own self-spiritualization.
If he is to put emphasis anywhere, it must be upon the rediscovery of the divine
purpose of his earthly life.
91
The old Sanskrit texts tell us of the "little
purpose" of human life and of the "great purpose." All know the one but few know
the other; fewer still seek to realize it.
92
If men only knew how glorious, how rich, how
satisfying this inner life really is, they would not hesitate for a moment to
forsake all those things which bar their way to it.
93
We do not understand the depths of our own being,
the mystery in which it is grounded. I speak for mankind in general, not for
those few great ones who have banished illusion and ignorance.
94
What amid all the noise of the world is the hidden
purpose of life, what kind of men are we ultimately meant to be? It is the
business of great prophets to answer these questions.
95
Socrates: "I spend all my time going about trying
to persuade you, young and old, to make your first and chief concern ...for the
highest welfare of your inner selves."
96
What grander ideal could a man have than to live
continuously in the higher part of his being?
97
That which really is, as opposed to that which
appears to be, behind all the countless objects of this varied universe, is one
alone, beginningless, endless, the source of all, the parent of the
"I"-consciousness. This truth provides the final hope for man. Somewhere along
his way he will discover it, act upon it, and be redeemed. This will be his last
conversion, his final salvation, his best quest. Then only will the horrors he
has contributed to the race's history begin to fade out. All else is utopian
chimera based upon wishful thoughts and fanciful imaginations.
98
When men acquire proper values, whether by
reflecting over their experience or by listening to their prophets, they will
recognize this truth - that nothing really matters except the search for the
Overself. If this calls for the giving up of earthly obstacles, then they are
worth giving up for it.
99
When he has become ripened by experience and
reflection, he will accept this truth with the spontaneity of a biological
reaction.
100
If some are to be aroused to its importance they
must first be given something of its meaning.
101
"Having a human body one must think with one's
heart on life's end." - Chinese text Fachi-yao Sung Ching.
102
This enterprise of the quest is the most serious
in which a man can engage. We must treat it as such. But let this not cause
anyone to lose the sense of humour.
103
In pursuing this integral quest, they have the
satisfaction of knowing that they are pursuing the only quest which can bring
them to a truth which is all-embracing and all-explaining.
104
The fact that so few have ventured on this quest
offers no indication of what will happen in the future. If mankind could take
any other way to its own self-fulfilment, this situation might remain. But there
is no other way.
105
For him there must exist something more than
merely being a member of the herd; there must be a higher direction leading to
truth to satisfy the mind, to a nobler character to satisfy the conscience, to
refined beautiful and gentler moods inspired by the arts, music, literature, and
reverence. For him there must be a Quest.
106
This is the only way whereby man can impregnably
demonstrate to himself the illustrious dignity of his true being. This is the
only way he can obtain the power of living in and by himself, that is, of living
in the only real freedom possible on this earth.
107
If consciousness is to be enlarged, if the mind's
dark places are to be lit up, if a blessed inspiration for living, work, or
virtue is to be discovered, then this self-quest must be started.
108
The Ideal is in these critical days no longer a
mere wish: it has become the necessary.
109
It is not enough to know with the intellect that
God is everywhere and everywhen. It is also necessary to establish a practical
working connection with God, if we are to obtain the actual benefit of this
knowledge. Moreover this, and this alone, will give absolute assurance.
110
He needs to recover his conscious relationship to
the Overself: the subconscious one is never lost.
111
The vision of the world and the understanding of
life which he receives from the lips or books of others will never be so true
nor so real as that which he makes his own. What shall it profit a man if he
hear a thousand lectures or read a thousand books but hath not found his
Overself? The student must advance to the next step and seek to realize within
his own experience that which is portrayed to him by his intellect. And this is
possible only by his entry upon the Quest.
112
With every day that passes, a man makes his
silent declaration of faith in the way he spends it. It is a poor declaration
that modern man makes when he brushes aside all thought of prayer and meditation
as something he has no time for.
113
To become so lost in this world of appearances,
as so many have become lost, is to shut the door to the world of reality. This
is why the lost art of contemplation is a necessity and must be regained if we
are to open that door and let truth in.
114
What comes with the years and which is ascribed
to the older people is the wisdom of practical living. This is merely
information, knowledge from experience in practical affairs; it is not the
wisdom which comes from the deeper being, the deeper self. That will arise only
when one looks for it, aspires to it.
115
The profound meaning of life is not put before
our eyes. We have to dig for it with much patience and much perseverance.
116
We must put a spiritual purpose into our lives.
117
The first duty of man, which takes precedence
over all other duties, is to become conscious of his Overself. This is the
highest duty and every other duty must bow before it. Even domestic happiness
must not stand in the way of spiritual salvation when, and if, the two collide.
The training which makes this possible may be largely unpracticable in his
particular circumstances but it is never entirely so. The difficulty of
performing this duty is not enough excuse to relieve him of it.
118
What a man sees and thinks is only an awareness
gleaned by the shallower part of himself. There is his deeper being - indeed,
the term "part" is quite inapplicable here - his real essence, the greater
Consciousness from which thoughts and emotions emerge for their limited lives.
To find and know this is a duty to which he must one day come.
119
The search for truth becomes, for such a man,
neither a spare-time hobby nor an intellectual curiosity, but a driving moral
compulsion.
120
The more deeply we understand the nature of man,
the more reliably shall we understand the duty of man.
121
The risks of entering such a spiritual adventure
may be quite formidable, but the risks of not entering it are unquestionably
frightful. For the probabilities of wrong action and mistaken choice will still
remain, with the painful karmic aftermath.
122
The man who fails to touch the Overself's beauty
in this life and under this pressure can hardly be blameworthy, but the man who
fails to try to touch it, is blameworthy.
123
Nobody really knows how to live correctly unless
he knows the higher laws governing life itself.
124
Whether on college campus or life's school, the
higher laws have to be learnt at some time, in some birth - whether by
instruction when young or by experience when older. The fact of their existence
may be disregarded at our own peril.
125
Man can come into the personal knowledge that
there is this unseen power out of which the whole universe is being derived,
including himself. But neither the animal nor the plant can come into this
knowledge. Here we see what evolution means and why it is necessary.
126
The most important questions which a man can ask
himself - What he is and What he is here for - must be answered before his life
finds its proper course. Otherwise, in the higher sense, he remains a mere
animal.
127
Both Hindu and Buddhist teachers concur in
regarding the human creature as being the most fortunate of all living
creatures, because he alone has the potential capacity and opportunity to become
spiritually "aware."
128
Every life in the fleshly body represents an
opportunity to obtain spiritual realization because man can only discover his
divinity to the fullest whilst in the waking state.
129
The refusal to reach up towards the higher truth
and power leaves problems basically unsolved and questions really unanswered,
for the cosmic urge within must assert and reassert itself.
130
When a man comes to his real senses, he will
recognize that he has only one problem: "How can I come into awareness of, and
oneness with, my true being?" For it is to lead him to this final question that
other questions and problems have staged the road of his whole life. This
answered, the way to answer all the other ones which beset him, be they physical
or financial, intellectual or familiar, will open up. Hence Jesus' statements:
"Seek ye first the kingdom of heaven and all these things shall be added unto
you," and "To him that hath [enlightenment] shall be given [what he
personally needs]."
131
Because we have lost our way, these truths are
once again as fresh and significant and important as if they had never before
been known to humanity.
132
The earlier the age at which a man begins these
studies and practices the better for him. To be born into a family where they
already prevail, is to have an exceedingly good destiny. But however late in
life anyone comes to them, it is never too late. He will have to contend with
set ways and fixed habits that will need changing, it is true.
133
The middle-aged and the elderly should take to
spiritual studies as a duty. They have come to a period of life when they can
evaluate its experiences better than the youthful.
134
It is not too late at any period of life, even in
old age, to obtain a firm footing upon the spiritual path and gain its
satisfying rewards.
135
In the end we all must turn to the inner
Source of all our best human sources, to the Guru of all the gurus, to the
Overself. Then why not now?
136
NOW is the right moment to practise philosophy,
to crush the ego, and to think positively.
137
The quest, with its ideas and goals, is essential
to the awakened man. He could not live without it without feeling half-dead,
empty and futile.
138
He who lacks the capacity to worship something
higher than himself, to revere something better than himself, is already
inwardly dead before his body is outwardly dead.
139
Suffering men resort to travel in order to forget
their burdens, but ruefully find that memory paces the steamer deck beside them,
the ego travels in their train, and mind lays its throbbing head upon the same
hotel pillow. They may escape from the whole world but, unless and until thought
is conquered, they cannot escape from themselves.
140
So long as man does not know the most important
part of himself and the best part of his possessions, so long will he remain the
blind creator of his own miseries and the duped plaything of his own
trivialities.
141
If we choose to be endlessly preoccupied with
external matters, business, and pleasure, if we will not turn lovingly in the
only direction to which we must turn if we are to behold our divine self, then
it is useless to blame life, God, or luck for our unhappy blindness.
142
Those who prefer their own ego's opinion to the
Overself's impersonal intuitions, remain in the ego's darkness.
143
No man who denies the Real and rejects the True
can attain happiness or peace of mind or have enough reason to be quite good.
144
The quest may seem a long and difficult affair:
it is. But since even a little effort in travelling it brings a noticeable
reward, while saving some avoidable suffering, and since the questless life is
in comparison a useless effort to hold on to many illusions, it still offers
enough inducement to make a start and exert oneself to enter on the first stage.
145
There is no other way to true happiness, as
distinct from the false kind, than to follow the path which the higher power has
set for him. This is to preach a hard doctrine but it is a true one.
146
So long as a man does not experience his real
self, so long will he be unhappy. The possession of material things and the
indulgence in material pleasures only alleviate and palliate this unhappiness,
and then temporarily, and do not remove it.
147
What is the greatest need of man? I reply quite
simply, Truth! For no other satisfaction will end his discontents.
148
The true mystic is always pleased to learn that
an individual has started upon the spiritual quest in earnest. He knows that
nothing else in life will yield such satisfaction, especially in these times of
world crisis when the need for inner support is greater than ever before. There
cannot be any true or lasting outward form of security today.
149
Most of his resources may carry a man through
many situations because they are purely material. But they cannot carry him
through all situations. There are others to meet for which he needs spiritual
resources, and if he lacks them he will be in a sorry state.
150
It is true that property, money, and possessions
give most men a sense of security. But it depends on them and they bring
anxieties, cares, even fears, along with their comfort and support. They still
need to find or to add a personal security which is independent of these
externals, which is personal. This can come only from within. But it must
be from a deeper level than their ordinary thoughts and emotions. They are too
unstable, too subject to moods.
151
So long as a man is a stranger to his own divine
soul, so long has he not even begun to live. All that he does is to exist. In
this matter most men deceive themselves. For they take comfort in the thought
that this attitude of indifference, being a common one, must also be a true one.
They feel that they cannot go far wrong if they think and behave as so many
other men think and behave. Such ideas are the grossest self-deceptions. When
the hour of calamity comes, they find out how empty is this comfort, how
isolated they really are in their spiritual helplessness.
152
Millions of other humans came into the world and
after a relatively short existence disappeared. He will be no exception: his
turn to vanish will also come. Thought, confronted with this terrible fact, must
either despair, take refuge in the hopes of religion, or resolve to find out the
truth behind the tremendous cosmic drama.
153
It is better to accept the loneliness of the
quester than the complacency of the worldling who lives without any
understanding of life's inner purpose.
154
Men and women try various ways to overcome their
innate loneliness and with various results in the end. So long as the expedient
used is something or someone outside themselves, their victories turn out to be
illusions. There is no final way other than the Way which everyone has had to
tread at last who ever succeeded in this objective, and which leads inwards to
the Overself.
155
In their search for satisfactions outside of and
apart from the Overself, men and women are really fugitives from it.
156
The response provoked in you by the entry of
these ideas will determine your future.
157
We suffer from stagnation and imagine that
existence in the intellect and body is enough; it is not. The primary emphasis
must be laid on the living principle of our being, the central self which
creates both body and intellect.
158
Here it is, the human creature put upon this
round planet and left to make nothing from life, merely survive, or to make
something out of it, and hold the great vision of the World-Idea, in company
with the gods.
159
The making of money, the earning of a livelihood,
and the attainment of professional or business success have their proper place
in life and should be accorded it but - in comparison with the fulfilment of
spiritual aspiration - ought to be regarded as having quite a secondary place.
160
No scientific technological advance, no political
gain, no economic improvement will ever be enough in and of itself to provide a
proper goal for human endeavour. It is easy to forget this in certain favourable
periods, and if we do we come close to disaster in the end.
161
We use every possible moment to cultivate the
uncertain fields of commerce or to grow the perishing flowers of pleasure, but
we are unable to spare one moment to cultivate the certain fields of the spirit
within ourselves or to grow the enduring asphodels of divine devotion.
162
The goals of progress are but imagined ones.
There is only one goal which is undeniably real, completely certain, and
authentically true - and that is an unchanging one, an eternal one. Yet it is
also the one that has escaped mankind!
163
Here in this country, men are more eager to
better their manufactures than themselves. They will accept their own
imperfections quite smugly and contentedly, but the imperfections of their
automobiles - never! Yet what is the use of their running from point to point on
this earth if they do not even know why they are standing upon it at all?
164
Man as scientist has put under observation
countless objects on earth, in sea and sky. He has thoroughly examined them. But
man as man has put himself under a shallower observation. He has limited his
scrutiny first to the body, second to what thinking can find. Yet a deeper level
exists, where a deeper hidden self can be found.
165
He will discover that it is not enough to regard
as good only that which is favourable to his physical life. He must complete the
definition and sometimes even contradict it by adding that which is favourable
to his spiritual life.
166
There is nothing more important in life than the
Quest, and the time will come when the student discovers that there is nothing
more enjoyable as well. This is inevitable in a Quest whose essential nature is
one of infinite harmony and unbroken peace. No worldly object, person, or
pleasure can ever bestow the satisfaction experienced in uniting with the
Overself.
167
It is not the animal needs and their
gratification but the realization of our divine possibilities which is the
hidden justification of our presence in this world.
168
The ceaseless longing for personal happiness
which exists in every human being is a right one, but is generally mistaken in
the direction along which satisfaction is sought. For all outward objects and
beings can yield only a transient and imperfect delight that can never be
equivalent to the uninterrupted happiness of life in the Overself.
169
An existence which has no higher aims than purely
physical ones, no nobler activities than merely personal ones, no inner
reference to a spiritual purpose, has to depend only on its own small resources.
It has failed to benefit by its connection with the power behind the universe.
170
That the truth of life must be deeper than what
we see and hear and touch, is suspected by intuitive persons, believed or felt
by pious persons, and directly known by wise persons. What the surface story
tells us is not the whole of it, they say.
171
No one who ever gives the philosophic life a
proper trial for a sufficient time is likely to desert it. Only the one who has
never given it a fair trial, or who has failed to understand philosophy's real
meaning, is ever likely to join the herd again and remain an unaspiring,
insensitive, and prosaic creature.
172
Humans demean themselves by not caring for the
dignity of their status, the ideals they ought to honour.
173
Our daily lives become mechanical, obedient to
the world's demands, and our daily activities a constantly turning treadmill;
but this only happens if there are no spiritual aims, spiritual aspirations, and
spiritual practices to provide a resistance to this course.
174
We are regarded as odd people because we trouble
our heads with the search for an intangible reality. But it never occurs to our
critics that it is much more odd that they should go on living without pausing
to inquire if there be any purpose in life at all.
175
A time comes in the intellectual growth of a man
when he knows that he must put aside the trivialities of life and come to terms
with the demands made upon him by his higher nature.
176
Those who wish to do something more than merely
glide over the surface of mystical life, who wish to be fully at peace with
themselves, must take to the quest.
177
To put one's own purposes in harmony with the
universe's purpose is the most sensible thing he can do. Therefore there is
nothing unpractical, irrational, or eccentric in the Quest. Only the unthinking
crowd, who suffer blindly and drift tragically, may believe so. No one who has
felt the inner peace, received the deep wisdom, and touched the rocklike
strength which mark the more advanced stages, could ever believe so.
178
The moment we become convinced that the universal
life has a higher purpose than the mere reproduction of the species, that moment
our own individual life takes on a higher meaning, a glorious significance.
179
It is this that gives our poor personal lives
their meaning and rescues them from their foamlike character.
180
Here is a concept on which the mind can linger,
braced by its reminder of our human possibilities.
181
Those who move through life hopeless and
dreamless, who see none of its beauty and hear none of its music, who have lost
most of its battles and won none of its prizes, these can console themselves
only by adopting a new set of values or by applying one if they merely theorized
before. If they do this, the end can be a new beginning.
182
The discovery that there are higher concepts of
human existence, that these have a validity not less than the meaner ones which
are all that so many people know, may prove a turning point at any age. For the
young it gives some guidance, for the old getting closer and closer to death it
offers some hope.
183
So short a time, so small a gain, so high a
quest. For what is best, serves better in the end.
184
The importance of this work is ignored by most
people and unknown to many people. They believe it to be the preoccupation of
time-wasting dreamers or ill-adjusted neurotics. If they do not treat it with
such indifference they treat it either with open abuse or with contemptuous
indulgence. But if they could understand that it penetrates to the foundations
of human living and affects the settlement of human problems, they might be less
arrogant in their attitude towards it. It is not less important to the
individual than to society at all times but immeasurably more so in these grave,
critical times.
185
It may be asked of what social use are those who
make this quest their primary occupation, and therefore make their worldly
occupation and way of life conform to it? First of all, they embody, and
therefore carry on and keep alive, the very idea of the quest. Secondly, their
very presence, by telepathic and auric existence, does touch the inner
beings of those who come into contact with them and does leaven the
mental atmosphere of those who do not - however minute the effect on any
particular day. Thirdly, although each has to live and express the quest in the
way referable to his temperament and circumstances, he does offer a model
- in general terms - for others to see, an example from which to draw
stimulation.
186
In choosing this Path, the aspirant has taken the
first step toward a Divine Power whose possession, or rather whose possession of
him, will, ultimately, enable him to become a real healer of suffering mankind.
187
The view that such an existence is selfish and
unproductive, is a shallow one. It takes no account of the value of higher
forces. For whoever, by this quest and practice, realizes the divine presence,
does so not only for himself but for all others in that little part of the world
confided to his care.
188
Who are the most important human beings in the
world? Those who try to bring sanity to an insane world or those who try to
perpetuate its condition?
189
Our artists can find new sources of inspiration
in it. Our dying religious hopes can receive an influx of unexpected new life
from it. The phoenix of Divine Truth can rise again out of the ashes of
materialism strewn around us if we turn our faces to that direction where the
sun rises in red dawn. Yet since the spiritual is the deepest part of our
nature, the process of our absorption of spiritual truths is a slow and not
obvious one.
190
He may be told contemptuously that that kind of
truth and reality have no practical value for us living in the world as it is,
active in the world and dealing with the facts as they are, not getting lost in
dreams. That in several ways this is not so can be demonstrated without too much
difficulty. But let it be said that such a supreme knowledge or experience may
possibly serve higher purposes which our small minds cannot yet glimpse.
191
All that really matters is how one lives one's
life. But relative-plane activities do not constitute all there is to living.
Consciousness rises from the plane behind the mind, and this region, like the
outer world, needs to be explored with competent guides - its possibilities and
benefits fully revealed by each individual for himself. Living will begin to
achieve its own purpose when one's outer life becomes motivated, guided, and
balanced by the fruits of one's inner findings.
192
You do not demolish the case for mystics when you
show up and censure the oddities and charlatanries, the unreasons and
fanaticisms of a few mystical cults.
193
If the mystical life were nothing more than a way
of forgetting the dark sorrows of earthly life, a means of escaping the hard
problems of earthly life, it would still be worthwhile. If its emotional
raptures were nothing more than make-believe, it would still be worthwhile. We
do not disdain theatres and books, films and music merely because the world into
which they lead us is only one of glorious unreality. But the fact is that
mysticism does seek reality, albeit an inner one.
194
He is not only an actor giving a performance on
the world-stage. He is also someone who must learn to live in the still centre
of his being.
195
The history of mysticism is marred by imposture
and fraud, superstition and credulity. Yet with all these defects it is still
the history of a tremendous discovery.
196
This is the higher purpose of life; to this men
must in the end dedicate themselves: for this they must work, study, and
meditate.
197
Our whole life on earth is in the end nothing
else than a kind of preparation for this quest.
198
As he advances on this quest his scheme of values
may change. This is partly because he learns by experience what every man has to
learn, quester or not, that all is passing and nothing is stable, that the
fruits of desire may turn to ashes, and that every day brings him nearer to
death and farther from life. But it is partly also what the non-questers too
often fail to perceive, that existence is like a dream, ultimately hollow, and
that without some sort of link, connection, communion, or glimpse bringing him
nearer to the inner reality his life remains unfulfilled.
199
Men of the world are not supposed to dabble in
mysticism, much less exalt it to the status of religion. Yet this is precisely
what they need, and need urgently.